Daily Reflector, May 6, 1983


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SPORTS TODAY

MISTAKES HURT

Rose High School was tied by Fike for the Big East track title because of several mistakes made by the Rose thinclads. (Page 15)

INSIDE TODAYCOMING SUNDAYTHE LEGISLATURE

Involuntary outpatient commitment, without showing the patient is dangerous, approved by N.C. House committee. (Page 13)

- The first of four winners of THE DAILY REFLECTOR Athlete of the Year Awards will be announced.

- A report on boating in Pitt County.

- Previews of the upcoming "Struttin" Southern follies being sponsored by the Greenville Service League. May 13 & 14.

- Interview with three time Tony award-wmner Joe Layton - producer, director and choreographer.

V

102ND YEAR NO. 108DAILY REFLECTOR

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION

GREENVILLE, N.C, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 6, 1983

28 PAGES TODAY

PRICE 25 CENTS

Noise Ordinance Is Given Approval Of City Council

FILING IN Holding their hats to keep the wind from lifting the mortar boards into the sk>, graduates filed in to take their seats on the bleachers in the early stages of the commence

ment ceremony. Degrees were conferred on 2,650 students at the 10 a.m. service. (Relfector Photo by Tommy Forrest)

Commencement For Thousands

By SUE HINSON Reflector Staff Writer

Gomti billowing, former U.S. Sen. Robert B. Morgan raised his voice over the wind today to tell graduates and guests at the 75th commencement ceremonies at East Carolina University that he was deeply moved by the universitys invitation to become a doctor of letters.

"This honor and tribute you give us today is not intended to honor Dr. Jenkins and me, but to symbolize the efforts and achievements of thousands of alumni, faculty and friends of this institution for more than 75 years," Morgan said.

Presentation of the first honorary degrees awarded in ECUs history, the doctor of letters, upon Chancellor-Emeritus Leo W. Jenkins and Morgan was only one of several firsts celebrated at ceremonies in Ficklen Stadium this morning.

Amid cheers, balloons and billowing flags, Chancellor John M. Howell presented

(PleaisetumtoPafielO)

REFLECTOR

By TOM BAINES Reflector Staff Writer

The City Council, in response to complaints from citizens, has given its approval to an ordinance that it hopes will enable authorities to regulate noise within the city limits through decibel level measurements.

Adoption of the new noise legislation, which _ culminated some nine months of staff work, did not completely satisfy all residents attending Thursday nights public hearing as objections were voiced to certain provisions.

The council vote was also one short of unanimous as Janice Buck expressed concern with an exemption provision relative to sound emanating from scheduled outdoor athletic events. Mrs. Buck endorsed the idea of eliminating the athletic provision and studying it as a separate ordinance.

Generally, the ordinance sets sound levels, as measured by decibels, that will be permitted in use occupancy categories, including residential (60 decibels allowed from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m., 55 decibels from ll p.m. to 7 a.m.); public space, commericial or business (65 from 7-11, 60 from 11-7); and manufacturing, industrial or agricultural areas i75 decibel limit allowed at all times).

Sound levels in excess of the general provisions will be allowed, with the exeption of residential space, on Thursday (5 p.m. to 11 p.m.), Friday (5 p.m. to 1 a.m. Saturday), and Saturday (10 a.m. to l a.m. Sunday); as well as on defined holidays (noon to 1 a.m.). ,

Petitioners may apply for permits to exceed the established levels.

Mac McCarley, assistant city attorney, said the ordinance would be enforced by the police department who would answer noise complaints and take decibel readings from property lines to determine if levels are within the ordinance provisions Policejould js_sue_ civil citations resulting in a $50 fine*

Fraternities and sororities, the subject of intensive discussions during the drafting stages of the new ordinance, will be granted one ''permit to exceed stated noise levels during the fall and spring academic semesters. McCarley said the provision dealing with fraternities and sororities was an attempt to offer a compromise to the university organizations.

W.J. Simmons and W.M. Smith, both residents of East Wright Road, expressed objections to the noise levels in the Jaycee Park complex located behind their homes. Smith took exception to the proposed exemption of scheduled athletic events from the ordinance provisions and asked that, at the least, playground equipment at the park should be moved to another area where the noise would be less objectionable,

Simmons, sayirrgHi^lad objected to the park and ball field from the beginning, said laws give citizens the right to unrestricted enjoyment and use of their property. He asked that no exemptions be given fropi the ordinance (Please turn to Page 14)

Shultz Plan Has Approval Of Israel

HONOREES Chancellor-Emeritus Leo W. Jenkins and former U.S. Sen. Robert B. Morgan were awarded the first honorary degrees in the hisotyr of East Carolina University during commencement ceremonies in Ficklen Stadium this

morning. Form left to right are ECU Chancellor John Howell, Morgan, Jenkins and Ralph Kinsey, chairman of the ECU Board of Trustees. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)

ByR, GREGORY NOKES Associated Press Writer

JERUSALEM (AP) - The Israeli Cabinet today approved in principle the agreement worked out by Secretary of State George P. Shultz for Israels withdrawal from Lebanon. But it said it had reservations on a number of securi

ty and political problems. The Cabinet announced its decision following a daylong debate among Prime Minister Menachem Begin and his ministers on the accord worked out over nine days by Shultz, sent to the Middle East by President Reagan to break the stalemate in Israeli-Lebanese ne-

ttOTUK

ECU Medical School Graduates Third Class

7.52-1.336

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

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.

TRASH SOUNDOFF RESPONSE

In response to the Hotline article dated May 5, F.E. evidently does not realize that the Greenville Public Works Commission has our wonderful city divided into zones for trash and garbage pickup. Any citizen who does not know the designated day of pickup on their street can find out by ailing the City Public Works Department, 7852-0307. Trash pickup is done once a week on a regularly scheduled basis.

The city requests that all trash be placed off the street so as not to hamper the flow of traffic. Anyone placing trash or garbage in the street may be cited by the Greenville Police Department and fined.

F.E., not everyone is able to or has the means in which to transport trash and garbage to the dump. Our taxes help pay for this service from the city. Mayo Allen and his staff are to be commended for the Job they are doing and have done for as long as I can rememter. H.K.

4

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GRADUATION SPEAKER ... A. Everette James Jr., professor and chairman of the department of radiology and rediological services at Vanderbiolt University, q;>eaks to the 1983 East Carolina University School of Medicine graduating class Thursday. (Reflector Staff Photo by AnglelaLingerfelt)

By ANGELA LINGERFELT Reflector Staff Writer

The East Carolina University School of Medicine graduated its third class of physicians Thursday and honored the first student to be awarded a doctorate degree by the university.

Thomas E. Curry Jr., ECUs first recipient of a doctor of philosophy degree, is the only student to complete requirements for doctoral study since the medical school inititated five doctoral programs in the sciences basic to medicine in 1979.

Speakers for the graduation included Dr. William E. Laupus, medical school vice chancellor and dean, and C. Ralph Kinsey, chairman of the ECU Board of Trustees.

The keynote speaker was A. Everette James Jr., professor and chairman of the department of radiology and radiological services at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine in Nashville, Tenn.    

Dr. James addressed the 39 graduates about The Responsibility of New Medical Imaging Technology, while giving a slide presentation. He emphasized that in this profession you have a unique opportunity to make the world better.

Kinsey told the class of physicians, We know that

you gladly accept your obligation to minister to all who need your help, black, white, rich and poor. We are comforted by the knowledge that you will walk humbly in service to our people.

Kinsey added, This class of physicians reaffirms our human commitment to human welfare in our state. These doctors, and those who follow, will fill needs which have been lacking in many communities in our state,

Awards were given to several graduates following the presentation of speeches: John Albert Dew Jr., Sandoz Award; Richard Lee Pippin, Upjohn Award and ' John Hunter Award; Joseph Stephen Babinski, Department of Anatomy Award and Philip G. Nelson Award; George Minson Bullard Jr., Family Practice Award; Jeffrey Scott Miller, Jacob Furth Research Prize; Jayne Elizabeth Holt, William E. Laupus Pediatric Award; Jeffrey Haskell Fair, Wilhelm R. Frisell Research Award; William Baxter Waddill III, Department of Radiology Award; William David Brown, Edgar T. Beddingfield Jr. M.D. Memorial Award and Charlotte Atkinson Sweeney, Faculty Award.

Department of Pathology Awards were given to John

Albert Dew Jr., Joseph Stephen Babinski, Paul Randall Bakerman, Jonathan Meigs Kurie, William David Brown, Richard Lee Pippin and Jeffrev Scott Miller.

American Medical Womens Association Awards were presented to Karen Pamela Davis, Charlotte Atkinson Sweeney and Mary Coleen Wassell.

Medical School Guild Awards (or the "Putting Him Of Her Through Awards) were presented to the 17 married members of the class.

Four awards were presented to faculty members of the medical school. Dr, Seymour Bakerman, professor and chairman of the department of pathology, received the Golden Caduseus Award for the third year in a row.

Other faculty awards were given to Dr, Billy E. Jones, professor of medicine; Dr. Paul S. Camnitz. clinical instructor of surgery, and Dr. Eugene Davis Day Jr., department of family medicine.

Following the awards, the Declaration of Geneva was said by Douglas DeWitt Boyette, a member of the graduating class. A response was made by Joseph Stephen Babinski.

gotiations.

Shultz, who plans to go to Paris on Sunday after visits to Syria and Saudi Arabia, had been hoping Israel would give him unqualified endorsement of the agreement before he leaves.

But Cabinet Secretaby Dan Meridor read a statement to reporters saying the government decided to approve in principle the proposed agreement between Israel and Lebanon. Regarding a number of security and political problems, the government will act to receive further clarifications.

Meridor did not elaborate on the statement.

In addition to the Cabinets reservations, the Israelis have said they will not pull their troops out of Lebanon until the Syrian army withdraws.

An Israeli official who attended the meeting, and declined to be identified, said the vote was 17-2, with nega-(Please turn to Page 10)

/

WEATHER

Fair toni^t with lows near 50. Mostly sunny Saturday, light winds and highs near 80.

Looking Ahead

Increasing cloudiness Sunday with chance of showers: becoming fair Monday into Tuesday. High In 70s to low 80s Sunday and in 70s Monday and Tuesday. Low in 50s Sunday, mostly 40s in rest of period.

Ha And,We Have

Page 9-French unrest Page 12 - In armed forces Page 14-Obituaries Page 28-Area items





Marriage: Economic And Emotional Partnership

By JEANNE LESEM UPI Family Editor

NEW YORK (UPD-Love and money are inseparable issues that often lead to separations and divorces.

Thats the view of Carol Colman, a working wife, who adds. "Were just starting tp view marriage as an economic partnership as well as an emotional one."

In hundreds of interviews for her book, Love and Money (Coward-McCann, $15.95), Ms. Colman found the same problems cropping up again and again.

People are hopelessly romantic, she said in an interview.

And romanticism leads most couples to avoid premarital discussions of the very issues that would help them avoid financial or emotional trouble after the knot is tied, she said.

"Working out a realistic budget and taking emergency expenses into account are high on her list. Emergency expenses might include car repairs, a surprise medical bill, even inviting someone to the wedding for which they would have to buy a new dress.

"Many people budget too tightly. Its like a diet -

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theyll forget the whole thing because theyve blown it away on one occasion.

Ms. Colman said she wrote the book because of a personal issue I had to resolve. My husband (a lawyer), really wanted to teach, write and lead an academic life.

"Then, he told me the salary.'My jaw dropped.

I consider myself a feminist. I work las director of public affairs for a New York radio station.) It disturbed me that I was so disturbed.

Failing to find books on the subject, she began interviewing friends and, eventually, dozens of other people around the country about the role finances play in marriage and other personal relationships.

"Setting up a budget can wreck a relationship, she found. It depends on how well a couple can talk to each other. They must be able to discuss their priorities and lifestyle without fighting over money.

She interviewed one wife who used money as a weapon.

Her husband didnt talk to 'her or pay any attention to her.

To get his attention the wife ran up a $2,000 bill at a department store for linens and other items.

The husband exploded when the bill came.

They went for marriage counseling and later divorced, Ms. Colman said.

She found another couple, suburbanites in their early 40s, who overspend together.

They married young, had kids in rapid sucession. The husband went to night school; the wife got a secretarial job while continuing to. care for their three young children.

Whenever one of them was depressed, theyd go to dinner, plan a vacation, buy

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They ended up with a budget counselor, then a marriage counselor, and now are trying to stop their destructive habits, Ms. Colman said.

People have unrealistic expectations because of difficult economic times.

She found women no longer content to perform traditional roles, and men want the power of the breadwinner but dont want the whole burden of supporting their family.

The main problem Ms. Colman found among two-paycheck couples was lack of time for each other and for , planning and deciding who will run the household.

Household operation should be shared 50-50, she said, with responsibilities assigned as you would in a^ office.

Instead of complaining that your husband doesnt clean or shop as well as you do, lower your standards, ladies. Take him to the store and show him how to shop. And accept the reality: Hes not going to be your household clone.

I think some women dont want to relinquish the enormous power of the household. Theyre the homemakers who shut their husband and often their children out of cooking and cleaning completely.

There are women who cant let go, who criticize their husband every time he does something around the house.

There are also men who buy soda and cookies and dont notice you need formula and diapers.

In both instances, gentle reminders are in order, she said.

Ms. Colman favors setting up a budget early in a relationships.

Figure out what your incomes are going to be. Talk about your values, your lifestyle, your mutual goals.

Do you want to be sur-banite with two cars and a kid or a free and easy lifestyle and no kids for a decade?

What happens if one of you loses your job?

If you havfe^; child, whos going to work'and assume rep'onsibility (for the child)"

Good advice - but whos listening?

Ms. Colman said she failed to find, during all her research, any couples who said they had discussed financial matters before forming a relationship or marrying.

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More than 270 organizations in 13 states are sharing Emharts 1983 outlay of $787,555, an increase of 3^ percent over grants made by the firm in 1982, says vice president John Budd. The monies will go to support cultural, civic, educational and health organizations nationwide.

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Cancel Dates In Interest Of Time

By Abigail Van Buren

1983 by Universal Press Syndicate

DEAR JOHNNY: Easy. Make an announcement: If youre not on time, the date is off!

You may have to cancel a couple of dates, but I promise you, if you follow this advice you will either cure her or lose her.

DEAR ABBY: Just finished reading Mitzi Gaynors letter to you. Yes, I agree, its a beautiful letter. She says: After being married to the same wonderful man for 28 years, were still best friends as well as lovers. It hasnt always been easy, but Ive worked at it. In order to get along with your guy, you have to play his game. If he likes watching sports, start off the game by sitting on his lap. If he likes to eat, learn to be a good cook. The song says, Woman needs man, and man must have his mate. Well, girls, get more interested in parlor, bedroom and bath. End of quote.

It seems to me that in our culture, in order to make a marriage work, the burden is about 90 percent on the woman.

For example, what do the women read? Magazines telling them how to be a better wife, mother, lover. How to prepare his favorite foods, how to make yourself more attractive for him. how to nourish his ego and build him up. In short, make up. make over and make do!

In the meantime, what do the men read? Sports Illustrated, Field and Stream, Popular Mechanics and science fiction. And last, but not least, Playboy!

Here is what 1 wish Mitzis husband would have written:

Dear Abby: Mitzi and I have been married for 28 years, and were still best friends as well as lovers. It hasnt always been easy, but Ive worked at it.

All you men out there, in order to get along with your woman, you have to learn to play her game. If shes in the kitchen, cooking or cleaning up, give her a hand. If she likes to dance, take her dancing at least once a week. As the song says, A good man is hard to find.' Hut I say a good woman is hard to find, too, so hug her in the morning, kiss her in the night, give her lots of lovin and treat her right, cause a good mate nowadays is hard to find.

I say, men, turn off the TV and get interested in the parlor, bedroom, bath and kitchen! Sincerely, Jack"

Abby, why is it when you reverse the letters, .Jack's sounds almost comical? Somehow women are expected to do nice things.for their men! If a man does the same nice things for a woman, he's suspected of being weak and wimpy.

Baby, weve still got a long wav to go. Sign me . . .

MARRIED 34 YEARS AND WE'RE BOTH STILL WORKING AT IT

DEAR ABBY: My fiance and I are planning our wedding for this fall.

,I know its customary for the bride to have her closest friend for her mqid of honor, but, Abby, my closest and dearest friend happens to be a man. My fiance doesnt know him very well, but he understands how much this man means to me, and he agrees that he should be part of the wedding party.

He cant be best man because my fiances brother is going to be best man, so where would it be appropriate to put my friend in the wedding party?

It will be a church wedding.

SINCERE

DEAR SINCERE: Your male friend could be an usher or a groomsman, or, instead of maid or matron of honor, he could be a man of honor. A bit unconventional perhaps, but its your wedding and it doesnt hurt to bend the rules a bit to show love and respect for your dearest friend.

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Auxiliary Names New

Officers

the state convention in June were Mrs. Armistead, President Rosa Lee Boyd, Ms. Askew, Mrs. West, Ms. Tyson, Ms. Brewer and

Estelle Steiner.

Meeting hostesses were Sallie Vainwright, Helen Poter, Lillian Bradshaw and Marie Stocks.

Highli^ting the meeting of the Ladies Auxiliary to the Veterans of Foreign Wars was the election of officers. Dorothy Armistead is the new president.

Others are Mattie Askew, senior vice president, Merle Austin, junior vice president, Alice Moseley, treasurer, Lillie Pearl Joyner, conductress, Margie Tyson, chaplain, Helen Liles, guard, and Lillian Bradshaw and

Carrie West, trustees.

DEAR ABBY: Im dating a wonderful woman. Shes beautiful, kind, loving and intelligent. Theres just, one drawback shes never on time! If I'm to pick her up at 7 p.m. I can always expect to wait for at least 30 minutes before shes ready to go.

I am always on time. I hate to be late for anything. If Im going to be late I would just as soon not go at all.

How can I cure this lovelv ladv of this terrible habit?

JOHNNY-ON-THE-SPOT

Doris Arnold and Lucille Tetterton were induced as new members. Raye Brewer reported $214.75 was realized on the sale of cakes and memorial donations to the Cancer Aid and Research Fund for the month.

Americanism Chairman West reported that 53 flags were given in seven elementary schools and 1,500 pledge of allegiance cards and 556 pencils were distributed.

Delegates elected to attend

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Counselors Help

By PATRICIA Me CORMACK United Press International School guidance counselors not only are steering children toward higher education but : helping ease the trauma faced by youngsters whose father or mother has been thrown out of work.

Were finding with the present recession and unemployment, there is a bad effect, a frightening effect, especially on schoolage children, Dr. Marlene Pinten of Falls Church, Va., said In a telephone interview.

Dr. Pinten, a former Minneapolis, Minn., guidance counselor, is president of the American School Counselors Association, a division of the American Personnel and Guidance .Association.

She recently reported to the Association after a series of conferences with fellow counselors in North Carolina, Georgia, Ohio, Florida, Missouri, the District of Columbia and South Dakota.

W'hen dad loses his job and paycheck, elementary school children especially are traumatized with worry about shelter, food and the future. Dr. Pinten said.

Parents are on edge. , Counselors are finding verbal and physical abuse of children increasing. Where there are pockets of unemployment, child abuse is up

To help the younger students cope, a counselor at Mann Elementary School in Detroit wrote a little book for children. Artie Morris-Vann titled it: My Dad is Unemployed But It is Not the End of the World.

What do guidance counselors do? And, if they are in short supply, as Dr. Pinten contends, how many more are needed?

"Our interest is to help all students maximize their educational experience ^d reach their potentiaf^he

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said, noting the job is complicated when students are involved in alcohol or drugs or or face social and emotional adjustments stemming from a divorce in the family, joblessness or other major assaults on a secure family life.

In high schools, the Association recommends that there be one guidance counselor for every 250 students, in junior high, one for every 250 to 350 students, and in elementary grades, one for every 300 to 400 students.

Unfortunately, in high schools the number assigned is on the order of one counselor for every 450 to 500 students, Dr. Pinten said. In junior highs and elementary schools, the situation is no better and often is worse.

But the situation is better than it was. In 1963, for example, there were only about 500 guidance counselors in elementary schools. There were more than 13,000 by 1980.

You would be inspired by their genuine concern for children and,their commitment to continued professional growth regardless of the hard times in education, Dr. Pinten said.

The profession of counsel-^ ing in the nations schools was boosted soon after the Soviets launched Sputnik and the space exploration era in the late 1950s.

Congress passed the National Defense Education Act that provided funds to improve the teaching of science, math and foreign languages in the nations schools.

The same act also funded programs for teachers wan-ting to be guidance counselors. Better school guidance programs were deemed vital if America was to be a serious contender in the space race launched by the Russians.

Dr. Pinten said more counselors were needed to help students with educational planning, such as propping for Scholastic Aptitude Tests and American College Testing examinations.

Today, the Sputnik era seems to be repeating Relf. The education establishment is focusing on deficiencies in the teaching of science and math once more.

The threat is not the Sputnik, per se, but the high-technology race that authorities say the United

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States America could lose to Japan, the Soviet Union and West Germany. Numerous proposals before. Congress once more call for massive federal aid to education programs to close the high-tech education-gap.

Ms. Odom Is Speaker

Mary Ann Odom, of Country Collectibles, gave a program of tole painting at the meeting of the Cherry Oaks Home and Garden Club Tuesday evening.

The yard of the month award went to Tracy and Carolyn Medlin.

Brenda Whichard and Phyllis Caruso were honored with gifts of pewter as outstanding club women of the year. Laurie Charleton, outgoing president, was also presented a gift of pewter in apprecition of her work during the past year.

Barbara Hall, incoming president, introduced new officers. Projects for the upcoming year were discussed.

Joyce Sawyer, Linda Hanrahan and Glenda McLawhom were meeting hostesses.

The next meeting will be held June 7.

Shower Given Bride-Elect

A floating bridal shower was given Barbara Jane Werdal, bride-elect of Dwayne Eric Tomlinson, at the home of Mrs. Ernest Stine Saturday afternoon.

Mrs. David Werdal and Lynda Werdal were cohostesses.

The honoree was remembered with a corsage of pink roses. The mother of the bride, Mrs. Ted Werdal, and the mother of the bridegroom-elect, Mrs. Claudette Fonseca, were given corsages of pink rosebuds.

The refreshment table, in the dining room, was covered with a lace cloth over pink and decorated with a five branch candelabrum holding pink candles flanked by magnolia leaves and pink azaleas.

The house was decorated with spring flowers.

Birth

Brugh

Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Blair Brugh, Greensboro, a son, Patrick Chase, on May 3, 1983, in Moses Cone Hospital in Greensboro. Mrs. Brugh is the former: Le Anne West of Greenville.

Buttering an ear of com is childs play, according to Family Circle, if you spread a thick layer of butter on a slice of bread, and wrap it around the com and turn the ear.

SOUTHERN PINES -Teresa Kay Haney, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Haney of Southern Pines, and Donald McKenny Hardison, son of Mr. and Mrs. McDonald Hardison of

and gladioli accented with peach orchids and purple iris.

The brides sister. Dona Haney, was maid of honor and bridesmaids included Carla Rose of Greenville, Marilyn Rowe and Josie "Hardison of Williamston. The flower girl was Joy Brook Flanagan, cousin of the bride from Lafayette, La.

The ripg bearer was Miles Patrick Flanagan, cousin of the bride, of Lafayette, La.

Honorary bridesmaids included Cathy Blevins, Cathy Yonnish, Kathy Chambers,

Jayne Wicker, Louise Thompson and Jenny Lynn Peele.

Register attendants were Laurie Webb, cousin of the bride from Maryland, and Kristy Barber, cousin of the bridegroom of Williamston.

Bruce L. Peele Jr. of Williamston was best man while ushers included Dexter White of Greenville, Thomas Hardison, cousin of the bridegroom, and Jimmy Griffin, both of Williamston.

Barbara Alpeter was pianist and Glenda Clendenin was vocalist. The wedding

was directed by Marian Maness of Greensboro, aunt of the bride

A reception was held in the Sheraton Convention Center hosted by the honorary bridesmaids. Jean Webb, aunt of the bride of Maryland, cut the-wedding cake.

Music was presented by B.C. Doyle, Don Hiestand i and George Angel.

The couple will live in Greenville after a wedding trip to Myrtle Beach, S.C.

The bridegroom is a grad

uate of East Carolina University and is employed with Fidelity Life. The bride is attending ECU and has recently completed an internship with the Pitt-Greenville Arts Council.

The rehearsal dinner was given by the bridegroom.

Eastern

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' Williamston, were united in marriage in the Southern Pines United Methodist Church, April 24 at 3 p.m.

The Rev. A.T. Robertson of Troy officiated at the double ring ceremony.

The bride, escorted by her father, wore a floor length gown with a chapel train of organza and silk Venise lace over taffeta. The fitted bodice featured a Victorian neckline with an illusion yoke, drop shoulders, Juliet pouff sleeves and basque waist. Silk Venise lace motifs encircled the collar, outlined the illusion yoke and appli-qued the bodice and sleeves. Seed pearls adorned the bodice. Garlands of scalloped lace bordered the hemline of the gown. She wore a white wide brim bridal hat layered with silk Venise lace motifs etched with seed pearls accented with silk flowers under the brim and illusion streamers with a cage veil. She wore an antique cameo brooch, a gift of her greatgrandmother. Her cascade bouquet was of white tulips, white quince, stephanotis

Founders Day Is Observed

Xi Gamma Xi chapter of Beta Sigma Phi celebrated , its 52nd Founders Day Friday at the King and Queen Restaurant.

Sandra Everette was honored with the woman of the year award. Awards for best program went to Linda McGehee for her program on Scotland, A Golden Land Across the Sea and to Carol Bishton for her program on television, A Golden Invention.

Beta Sigma Phi is a social, cultural and service organization for women. It was found in Abilene, Kans. April 30,1931.

BY ANSON

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Editorials

Paul T. O'Connor

Recognition is There

Is Courthouse Safe?

Martin Countys courthouse has been condemned as being unsafe and, according to the county building inspector, anyone goes in at his own risk. But, that same inspector says it is perfectly safe for the county to hold court or any other function in the courthouse.

" Inspector Robert Godard says the condemnation only makes it impossible for the county to rent out the courthouse for any non-governmental purposes.

To use the vernacular, something there just doesnt make sense. If the courthouse is unsafe for some, it is unsafe for all.

~ Disregarding the obvious the loss of life or personal injury in the event of a structural collapse, one has no difficulty in foreseeing the suits that would follow if such a tragedy struck. The grounds already have been set: the building is unsafe.

You cannot tell an individual that he enters the building at his own risk and, at the same time, hand him a subpoena to appear in that same building for a trial. If the building is safe to use but has been condemned, then the building code is a mockery; if the building is unsafe, then Martin County is playing with luck.

4'""

Rowland Evans and Robert Novak

Choice Is Cuomo

WASHINGTON - Close advisers of Sen. John Glenn, eager to win a presidential endorsement from Gov. Mario Cuomo of New York, are boldly leaking Glenn-Cuomo as their dream ticket even though the governor has flatly ruled out being anybodys running mate in 1984.

Although Cuomo seems closer ideologically to frontrunner Walter F. Mndale than to the more conservative Glenn, he never really has forgiven the, former vice president for not supporting him in the 1982 primary for governor. Consequently, Glenns tacticians are hoping for a New York- breakthrough I engineered by a Cuomo endorsement.

A footnote: Gov. Richard Celeste of Ohio is boosting a different running mate for Glenn - Sen. Bill Bradley of New Jersey. The combination of the astronaut and basketball star, low on charisma but high on glamour, might devastate Republicans s^king the independent vote.

Arab-Israeli struggle. Although naturally devastated by the death of other Americans in the embassy, it was Ames loss that, in the words of one official, really got to Reagan.

The president told national security adviser William P. Clark to order Shultz to the Middle East at once to arrange'an immediate withdrawal of foreign forces, starting with Israels, from Lebanon. That suited Clark just fine. He had been suggesting Shultzs first mission to the Middle East for weeks, but the secretary did not want to go.

Presidential grief over the death of Robert Ames, the CIAs top Mideast analyst, in the Beirut embassy bomb blast played a role in Ronald Reagans decision to send Secretary of State George Shultz to Jerusalem.

Not generally known is the close relationship that had built up since last fall between the president and Ames, the intelligence specialist who last summer became Reagans personal briefer on the

The Daily Reflector

INCORPORATED

209 CoUnche Street, Greenville, N.C. 27134

Established 1S82 Published Monday Through Friday Afternoon

and Sunday Morning

DAVID JULIAN WHICHARO Chairman of the Board JOHN S. WHICHARO-DAVID J. WHICHARO Publishers Second Class Postage Paid at Greenville. N.C.

(USPS145-400)

SUBSCRIPTION RATES Payable In Advance Home Delivery By Carrier or Motor Route Monthly 54.00

mail rates

(Piteas includa la* whara applteabla)

Pitt And Adjoining Counties 54.00 Per Month

Elsewhere In North Carolina 54.35 Per Month Outside North Carolina 55.50 Per Month

MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to use for publication all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited to this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights ot publications of special dispatches here are also reserved.

UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Advertising rales and deadlines available upon request.

/ Member Audit Bureau of Circulation

Presidential chief of staff James Rakers animosity toward veteran Reaganite Lyn Nofziger was demonstrated when Nofziger very nearly was barred admittance to a recent White House planning session on the 1984 presidential campaign.

When Reagans 1980 regional political directors were invited to the White House for a briefing, Nofziger asked to sit in, A staff functionary started to routinely arrange it, but to his surprise received orders from Baker subordinates that Nofziger was definitely not welcome. Rebuffed, Nofziger put a""so what face on it by telling friends there was not much to be learned from David Gergen and the other Baker subalterns in charge of the briefing.

Friends of Nofziger intervened to reverse the decision. Nevertheless, it was made clear he was not to become a fixture at campaign sessions. The lesson: Nofziger, whose service to Reagan goes back to 1966, will not be integrated into 1984 campaign planning so long as Jim Baker is in charge.No Fight Expected From Utilities

Dr. Leo Jenkins may or may not seek the office of governor as a Democratic candidate next year. It is clear, however that he is keeping busy now that he no longer administers the affairs of East Carolina University.

Jenkins has discussed running for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination in the past and his name was in the news in connection with the office again this week. He has many speaking engagements, which he terms non-political, and will speak at the groundbreaking for the Methodist retirement home here in June.

Currently he works on special assignments for Gov. Hunt and handles a television interview program. He is also interested in having military dependents declared instate residents for tuition purposes.

Jenkins will be entering a crowded Democratic field if he decides to make a serious race for governor. He has the name recognition and the reputation for getting things done and as the infighting intensifies among other candidates he could emerge as a front runner.

Soaring optimism among Iowa Democrats that liberal Rep. Tom Harkin will spearhead the partys recapture of the Senate next year by unseating conservative Sen. Roger Japsen has suddenly been transformed to gloomy apprehension.

The Des Moines Register poll showing a virtual Jepsen Harkin dead heat confirmed deepening fears among Democratic activists that Harkin might be just too liberal for Iowa. Party workers regard Harkin as well to the left of former senator John Culver, who carried the liberal label to defeat in 1980. Whats more, no moderate Republican has emerged to threaten Jepsen in the GOP primary.

A foptnote: The uphill Republican struggle to maintain Senate control is likely to get another boost with the expected re-election decision of Sen. Mark Hatfield, chairman of the Appropriations Committee. Although he is increasingly off the Reagan administration reservation on key votes, the liberal Hatfield is almost a certainty to keep the Oregon seat Republican. If he had stepped down, as seemed likely a few weeks ago, the Democrats would have been favored to fill the void.

Copyright 1983 Field |nterprises. Inc.

In the legislative hallways, the rumor persists: The states electric utilities will file a bill this session seeking the reinstatement of mandatory Construction Work in Process (CWIP) and a change in the fuel adjustment clause.

But in interviews, lobbyists for the utilities say it is highly unlikely theyll put any bills in the hopper this session. Public sentiment against them is just too strong.

Last June, in a wve of antiutility sentiment, the assembly repealed the states mandatory CWIP law. The N.C. Utilities Commission is now empowered to allow CWIP at its discretion.

CWIP allows a utility to recover costs associated with construction of new plants before those plants start produc ing electricity. The utilities say CWIP is needed if theyre to be able to afford to build the plants well need in the future.

Opponents say CWIP is unfair and that it breeds utility inefficiency.

For the past year, the utilities have lobbied strongly for a return to the old CWIP law and all indications were that such a bill would be introduced this year.

"Were not going to put a bill in, said Roy Wall, lobbyist for Duke Power. As far as I can see, there is nothing planned and there will be nothing put forward. Other industry lobbyists agreed.

The big reason is public sentiment. 1 dont sense any change in the public attitude about CWIP and the fuel clause since last June. And, I dont see any change among legislators, said one utility lobbyist who asked that he not be named.

The anti-utility sentiment remains strong enough that Wall expressed the concern that a new CWIP bill could

actually end up hurting the utilities. Amendments to any such bill could end up cloing them more harm than good. There is considerable feeling among some lawyer-legislators that Duke Power was instrumental in the demise of comparative fault legislation this year. Wall says hes afraid some of these lawyers would just love a chance to get even.

Hap Chalmers, VEPCO lobbyist, said the utilities dont have a good argument against the 1982 CWIP changes. The assembly left it up to the Utilities Commission to decide when CWIP will be granted, Ahd, in last summers rate cases, the utilities got pretty much all of what they sought.

Until the commission goes through the process, it is hard for us to make our case that weve been mortally wounded by last years change, Chalmers said.

The commissions rulings in 1982 do not necessarily indicate that the utilities will continue to fare well with CWIP this year. The commission might act differently, he said.

Bob Fischbach, director of the Public Staff, and Rep. Richard Wright, D-Columbus, architect of the 1982 CWIP change, both said they had heard only rumors of utility sponsored legislation. Elisa Wolper, coordinator of a group known as Citizens United for Fair Utility Rates, said her group is optimistic that the utilities wont file any bills this year. But, I think we have to be prepared. They spent all that time at the beginning of the year, meeting with every countys delegation.

The utilities have a core of supporters in the assembly whod love to help them. But, at this time, it looks like the utilities dont plan to fight this year.

Public Forum

lit

.El WE (5UESS.... ILL BE WORKING IN THIS AREA, RIGHT?'.

II

ItMMli

Art Buchwald

Odds On War Replace Football Talk

To the editor:

As parents of the late Danny Woods, wp would like to take this opportunity to express our sincere thanks to the Greenville Jaycees, the American Cancer Society, Rose Richards and all those wonderful people who went to jail and raised money to get out, the people who paid to have them sent to jail and the people who contributed to the Cancer Fund, along with the police and sheriff departments.

The Danny Woods Jail-A-Thon was a complete success and credit has to go to everyone who participated. Although we sincerely appreciate the honor of having the jail-a-thon named after our son. we both would like to state that all monies derived from the drive are in honor of all th(e people - young and old - who have succumbed to tliis dreaded disease, those who are now suffering, and to the families and friends of those afflicted with this killer of a disease.

Words seem so inadequate at this time to express our feelings for last weeks efforts, so all we can say is thanks from all of us who have gone through the cancer experience with a loved one. We hope that next year the cancer problem will be eased somewhat and it only can happen through monies gathered from efforts such as the jail-a-thon.

Barbara and Jim Woods    

P.O. Box 1862

Greenville

It used to be if you went into a bar you could always find an argument over the merits of a pro football team. But now, thanks to Ronald Reagans constant drumbeat concerning defense weapgns, hes got the whole country talking atwut whether we can win a nuclear war or not.

1 dropped by Dumbartons Bar & Grill the other afternoon for a beer. The man on the next stool said. "How do you think well do against the Russians this year? '

I couldnt tell which side he was on so I played it cool.

Its too early to tell. It depends if we can harden our Minuteman silos in time to put our MX missiles in place.

Exactly what I was thinking, he said. Of course the commies could still crawl through our window of vulnerability. Yeh; but if we get the B-1 bomber built; set up our Pershing and cruise missiles in Europe, and develop a tricky star wars defense, we can zap their land-based air attack before it gets off the ground, I said.

How many nuclear warheads do you think we need to smash them back, if they launch a first strike attack?

Weve got about 10,000 now. Id say we could use another 5,000 just to be on the safe side. Even if they knock out 7,000 we could pulverize them with the other 8,000.

You know where I think were making our big mistake? he said. Were trying to match the Soviets missile for missile. What we should do is go ahead with singlewarhead Midgetmen that the Russians couldnt hit because wed spread them all over the country. Theres something to be said for not putting all your MXs in one dense pack.

Dumbarton, who was washing glasses said, A guy was in here yesterday, and he heard from a friend at the Pentagon that the Soviets were violating the SALT II treaty when it came to underground testing.

I wouldnt put it past them, I said ordering another beer.

"You know what we have to do? the guy on the next stool said. We have to rethink MAD, the Mutual Assured Destruction strategy weve been using for the past 20 years. Its not working any more. I say we sit down with the Soviets in Geneva, offer them a zero option, and if they dont take it. tell them to buzz off. How do you feel about a limjted nuclear war"? asked him.

Im not against it, as long^as we^rtnnt kill more than 40 or 50 million people on each side. What about you, Dumbarton? Its an option, Dumbarton said. And 1 dont want to take away our bargaining chips. The Soviets have got us outnumbered when it comes to conventional war so if we up the ante and announce were prepared to fight a limited nuclear w^r it will give them something to chew on.

I said, What really gets me sore is that Congress is dragging its feet when it comes to spending money for a good

defense. Reagan knows what the country needs better than anj^y.

The guy on the next stool said, You better believe it. I saw him in Hellcats of the Navy the other night on TV, and the man really has the guts to stand up to the Russians.

Dumbarton refilled our glasses. I think Reagan has what it takes. But Im not too sure about Cap Weinberger. , Why not?

Hes too light. He could be knocked over by one SS 19 intermediate range missile. You want a big guy in that position who can take a lot of punishment when he gets hit by an ICBM.

A guy at the end of the bar said, Anybody hear the Baltimore Orioles score?

Dumbarton said to him angrily, Watch your language, buddy. There are ladies in this bar, and if you want to talk dirty you can go drink somewhere else.

(c) 1983, Los Angeles Times

Elisha Douglas

Strength For Today

Someone asked the philospher Henry David Thoreau if he did not agree that the railraod, then in its infancy, was a significant improvement over the stagecoach. Thoreaus answer was significant:

It is better if it carries better people. Otherwise, it is only meanness going faster.

This is a good answer to remember in assessing the improvements in our lives. Most of us continually look forward to some kind of change. We are

going to have more money and more leisure. We will move to a new house, make new friends.

Important as these changes are, they make no alteration in the kind of person we are and this is where improvement is most significant.

We live in a world which is rapidly being improved by science. But let us be sure, for ourselves at any rate, as we step from the railroad car nto the jet plane that it is not just meanness going faster.

To the editor:

On this day, May 6, in 1862, Henry David Thoreau was translated out of this world into another. He died of tuberculosis, which he probably had suffered from as early as his student days at Harvard. Despite his illness, he remained suffused with a radiant calm: -kind, humerous and happy.

Throughout his entire life he lived true to the words of the 13th century Persian poet favored by the Transcendentalists, Musee Huddeen Shiek Saadi of Shirz, who wrote in TTie Gulistan (Rose Garden):    *

The clouds, wind, moon, sun and sky, act in cooperation, that thou mayest get thy daily bread, and, not eat it with indifference.

According to PhUip and Kathryn Whitford Thoreaus interest in habitat groups of pond and stream documents Thoreau as a pioneer limnologist. He is considered one of the master of English' prose. Thoreau described himself as a mystic, a 'Transcendentalist, and a natural philosopher. When he felt it wa clearly necessary, he committed ciV^ disobedience. His fathers grandpareots were French Huguenots. On his mothws side were Scotch-English Quakers. -1 As he lay in his cane bed in the livi room during the spring of 1862, a steady flow of visitors arrived at the door. Children brought him flowers and questions. Surrounded by the extravagant greenery of his sisters houseplants, he received the news of nature from the world outside. Thanking a friend \ifto sent Thoreau a weekly chronicle of IJi birds as they arrived for ^ring, ^ sister wrote: I feel as if he were being translated rather than dying.    ^ r

ChariottePurringtiMi 2511-AE.TWrdSt.

Greaiville    'i'

Letters to Public Forum ^lould .be Umited to 300 words. The editor reseryes the right to cut longer letters.

Robert Burns

Dollar's Vatue Prompts Dogfight

NEW YORK (AP) France has a bone to pick with the Reagan ad ministration. And by the looks of it, the economic dispute could become a trans-Atlantic dogfight.

At issue is a U.S. government policy that has allowed the value of the dollar to reach unprecedented heights in relation to the French franc. That has meant lower prices for Americans buying imported French goods and more buying power for Americans in France.

But in France, the francs decline has aggravated that countrys economic crisis.

A. Both. The dollar has been gaining value in relation to other major currencies for more than a year, mainly because interest rates in the United States are higher than elsewhere. Many investors, attracted by the higher rate of return earned on doll^irs, have siiifted money out of other currencies. At the same time, the franc has been hurt by the economic problems that have dogged President Francois Mitterand since his Socialist government took office in 1981.

Q. Why does France care if the dollar is strong?

The dispute has intensified m recent days and could climax at a summit of the seven leading industrialized countries, scheduled for May 28-30 at WUliamsburg, Va.

Here are some questions and answers to help explain the reasons for the rift; ^

Q. Is the dollar strong, or the franc weak?    *

A. Earlier this week you could get 7.39 French francs for one U.S. dollar - the highest ratio on record. At the end of last year the ratio was 6.74 francs to the dollar, and two years before that it was 4.52 to the dollar. That trend is troublesome for France because it gives investors incentive to pull money out of France and put it in the United States, <fcere earnings retain more of their

value. Tliat is good for the U.S. economy but bad for the French.

Q. Cant France control the value of its currency?

A. It can influence, but not control, the francs value in relation to the dollar. The French central bank can buy francs and sell dollars, but that tactic has only limited effect since there are many other buyers and sellers in the market, acting independently of the French. A longer-range solution for France is to beef up its sagging economy. But that is a particularly difficult task since the economy grows weaker with each drop in the value of the franc.

Q. How can Frances economy be hurt by exchange rates?

' A. A good example is Frances energy bill. Each time the franc loses ground to the dollar, Frances oil import bill goes up. ITiat is because oil is sold on the world market in dollars. In the first two months of this year, the amount of oil imnorted'bv Fran^ WI 22 oercent from

a year earlier, yet the bill was 9 percent higher. TTiats because it had to pay more-francs for each dollars worth of oil.

Q. What do the French want the Americans to do?

A. Not only the French but many other of the U.S. trade partners in Europe want the Reagan administration to intervene more frequently in the currency market.** Their view is that the United States can help stabilize currency values by selling dollars. But the Reagan administration has refused to change its policy of not intervening in the market except in times of extraordinary imbalance.    '

Q. Whats the logic of the U.S. position?.

A. The Reagan administration con-, tends governments cannot estimate cor-! rectly what the i^ipropriate value of a currency should be, and by trying to do so they would only generate mor instability. That is in striking contrast td previous administrations, which had in* tervened frequently to buy and sell dollars    v    !





Sanitation Devices For Floating Homes Face Agencies'Objection

NAGS HEAD, N.C. (AP) -The state health director and director of shellfish sanitation say they are opposed to a proposal that would allow floating homes to continue using marine sanitation devices to dispose of their sewage.

Bob Benton, director of shellfish sanitation, spoke against the proposal at a Coastal Resources Commission public hearing Thursday. He also read a letter from state Health Director Ronald-H. Levine opposing the proposal.

A CRC committee that was scheduled to decide Thursday whether to recommend

Palm Trees In Police Garage

NEW YORK (AP) -Police said a forest of 655 palm trees that suddenly sprouted outside a Brooklyn precinct garage wasnt a new undercover operation, just the haul from an unlicensed street vendor.

Its like a petrified forest, Sgt. Kenneth Sloman of the 66th Precinct said of the plants, which range in height from 3>/i feet to more than 7 feet tall.

We have 655 house plants and 1 frog here, Sloman said, adding that the frog was found among the trees.

The forest sprang up Wednesday after the p^dler was given a summons and police carted the trees from a public park to the station house.

Sloman said the vegetation takes up 4,000 square feet, and police have been been getting calls from neighborhood women telling them to be sure to keep the trees watered.

The sergeant said the trees will remain until the police commissioners office decides what to do with them.

the proposal to the full commission ran out of time and adjourned without dis-. cussing the issue.

The CRC began discussing regulation of floating homes nearly a year ago. CRC members wfere concerned that the homes, which discharge sewage into the water around them, had the potential to cause serious pollution.

The commission discussed banning the homes or allowing only those floating homes connected to conventional sewer systems on shore. The committee abandoned both ideas because of heated opposition from floating home owners in New Hanover County.

Thursday, however, Benton and Levine asked the committee to restore the provision requiring onshore sewage disposal systems.

A marine sanitation device is not designed to handle the total waste water from a home, Benton said. We also have the problem of enforcement if we allow floating homes to use these.

No Deficit For Postal Service

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Postal Service, which had expected to end the . fiscal year with a deficit, will have a surplus because of the reduction in inflation. Postmaster General William F. Bolgersays.

There will be around $100 million in black ink in the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, Bolger told the agencys governing board.

Were going to have an operating surplus, Bolger said. That would make the second straight annual surplus after the $710 million gain in fiscal 1982.

ANCIENT SCALPELS L. Adrian Hannus, an archeologist, underwent colon surgery Thursday in Omaha after persuading doctors to use volcanic glass replicas of ancient scalpels. Doctors called the surgery a success and said they were impressed with the performance of the blades. Hannus says microscopic examination of the blades show they are sharper than the steel scalpels normally used in surgery. (APLaserphoto)

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New Slight Dip for Nation's Unemployment Rate

WASHINGTON (API -The nation's civilian unemployment rate dipped slightly' to 10.2 percent in April, matching the level of last September, as a burgeoning business recovery created some 360,000 jobs, the Labor Department said today.

It was the second decline in as many months and 0.6 percent below the post-. Depression high of 10.8 percent set in December, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported.

Matching the decline in the overall rate was a decrease in the roster of those officially listed by the government as unemployed. That total fell from li,38,000 toll,328.000

Unemployment-

,. ft Percent of n o- Force

Seasonally 10 5-

10.0

MJJAI

1982    *    83

Source Dept of Labor ^

A separate unemployment rate, which includes a constant 1.7 million military personnel stationed in the United States, remained at 10,1 percent.

The civilian unemployment rate is based on a monthly Census Bureau survey of

60.000 U.S. households. The April survey showed that total civilian employment jumped sharply from 99.1 million, where it had stood essentially unchanged since October, to more than 99,4 million.

Recovery from previous recessions has been followed by a rapid expansion of the labor force as jobless Americans, believing hiring prospects were improved, renewed their search for work. Before April, however, there had been no such quick spurts in the number of job-seekers this time, even though signals have abounded that there is at least a moderate business turn-around unden^ay,

A separate government sun-ey of non-agricultural business payrolls last month showed that total employment in this category, which includes most workers, went up by 260,000 - from 88.9 million to nearly.89.2 million.

The bulk of the 360.000 jobs created last month, the report showed, went to adult women, whose jobless rate fell from 8.8 percent to 8,4 percent.

The jobless rate for adult men. the traditional family breadwinners, rose by 0.2 percent to 9.'8 percent,'however.

One of the brightest spots in todays report was a statistic showing continued improvement in the number of hours put in by the nations factorv' workers. The average workweek rose to

40.1 hours, the highest level since June 1981, before the recession set in.

Similarly, the number of workers forced to accept only part-time hours because full-time work was not available declined by roughly 120,000.

Within the various population groups, there were few sizable increases in joblessness from March to April. Jobless rates were: -Teen-agers. 23.4 percent, down from 23 5 percent.

-W'hites, 8.9, down from 9.0,

-Blacks. 20.8, up from 19.9 and matching the record joblessness for blacks set in December and January.

-Hspanles, 14.5,' down from 16.2.

In testimony prepared tor the congressional Joint Economic Committee. Com missioner of Labor Statistics Janet L. Norwood said:

"The employment situation improved considerably in April. The number of jobs increased; hours of work were up: more people entered the labor force, and the unemployment rate held (relatively) steady."

She did note, however, that the labor force remains below the level of December.

"As employment conditions improve, more people

may be expected to enter the labor force." Mrs, Norwood said. "This is because many persons ... come into the

labor force when jobs become more plentiful. For this reason, the unemployment rate tends to decline

very slowly as labor market conditions begin to improve.

The bureaus report said, Jobless rates declined over

the month for workers in trade and continued to edge down in manufacturing, two of the major industries that

had been adversely affected by the recession.

The average length of unemployment was 11.3

weeks in April, a slight rise over the previous month, and the number of people out of work for six months or

longer remained at 2.7 million, accounting for nearly one in every four jobless Americans.

Swedes Hunting For At Least 2 'Minisubs'

ByROLFSODERUND

Associated Press Writer

SUNDSVALL, Sweden (AP) - The navy is hunting for at least two foreign minisubmarines in Sundsvall Bay, including one possibly left crippled by powerful mine explosions, a defense staff spokesman said today.

Divers, operating from three navy ships just northeast of Alno Island near here, this morning resumed their search of the icy waters on the ninth day of Swedens hunt for suspected Soviet submarines.

In Stockholm, Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme said today his government w;as 'extremely displeased" with a negative Soviet reply to a sharp Swedish protest against submarine violations of its coastal waters.

The Soviets had denied

Swedish official charges that Soviet subs had committed violations and denounced an alleged "anti-Soviet propaganda campaign in Swedish media.

The Sw'edish navy would not reveal what, if anything, divers had found Thursday evening in waters where two 880-pound mines were detonated Wednesday to stop an intruding minisub from escaping. But a spokesman said visibility on the seafloor is less than two feet.

Lt. Gen. Evert Dahlen, a defense staff spokesman, said two depth charges were dropped in south of Alno Island on Thursday after helicopters had sonar contact with presumed submarines.

He said the aim was to force them to the surface.

"We believe there are at least two minisubmarines in

the Alno Island area," Dahlen told The Associated Press_.

That belief suggested at least two conventional-size mother submai^nes were waiting outside ttie bay for the minisubs to escape and meet them.

The minisubs, perhaps 10 to 15 yards long and with a crew from two to five, are thought to have a limited range, Swedish military experts say.

Dahlen said a report of a submarine intrusion in Angerman River 30 miles north of here yielded no evidence. He said 3 helicopter was sent to the river but found no sign of any intruding vessels.

The Soviets reply to the sharp Swedish protest on April 26 was delivered orally to Palme by ambassador

BLIND COMPUTER WHIZ - Dexter Orange, 21, is shown at a braille computer terminal as he processes information at his job as a computer programmer at Floridas Public Service Commission in Tallahassee.

Orange graduates Saturday from Florida State University, the top student in the computer science program - the only student to make all As. Orange has been totalUy blind since 1970. (AP Laserphoto)

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Boris Pankin. Palme withheld the contents and his comments until a news conference today noon.

"The Soviets answered that the Swedish charges were totally groundless and considered as an unfriendly act, Palme said. "They said a careful investigation by

V

Soviet authorities had shown no Soviet subs had violated Swedish territory at the dates mentioned. Their answer added that the Soviet Union always respects others territory and had no interest in entering Swedish waters...

The Soviets rejected the

findings of a Swedish parliamentary commission, which charged that six Soviet subs violated inner Swedish waters last October.

Moscow asked for a new investigation and complained of an anti-Soviet propaganda campaign in Swedish mass media.

Palme said he had not expected an admission of guilt and would play it cool, taking appropriate action as developments demand.

In 1981, a Soviet submarine ran aground off a naval base at Karlskrona in southern Sweden.

Induct 10 Students Into Circle K Club

ECU News Bureau Ten East Carolina University students have been inducted into the Circle K Club, a collegiate branch of the international Kiwanis Club.

They are Susan Anderson of Greensboro, Richard Barnes of Springfield, Va., Karen Boyden of Huntington, N.Y., Robin Cole of Jackson Springs, Stephanie Edwards of Myrtle Beach, S.C., Susan Hazelton of Murfreesboro, Nancy Homa of Plhehurst, Terri Morgan of Cary, Nancy

His Own Pets Were Culprits

COBURG, Ore. (AP) -When a man complained about two large stray dogs in his garage, acting dog catcher Robert Rathsack show'ed up right away - to find his own pets were the culprits.

"We have a 5-foot fence in our yard, but one dog dug a hole and they both got out in the early morning, Rathsack explained after his embarrassing discovery Wednesday.

At least he got a friendlier reception than most officials of his breed. When the dogs saw Rathsack, they jumped into his truck and were quickly impounded - back home.

Nicol of Vienna, Va., and Charles Snow of Wilmington.

The new members were formally inducted at the clubs annual spring banquet, which also included formal retiring of the clubs 1882-83 officers and installation of new officers for the academic year 1983-84.

Newly installed officers are Glenn Brock of Fayetteville, president; Susan Hazelton, vice president; Joyce Longwell of Tarboro, treasurer, and Charles Snow, secretary.

Highlighting the banquet ceremony were presentations of Carolina district and club level awards and scholarships. ECU staff member Owen Kingsbury, club adviser, was given tlie district award for most out

standing non-Cirle K Club member.

Circle K-Andy Roos scholarships for members with records of outstanding service to the club were given to Tim Merch and Linda Jones, both of Wilmington. Each schol

arship is worth $375.

Roos scholarships are spohsred by the Roos family of Cary, the IBM Corp. and the Greenville Kiwanis Gub.

The ECU Circle K Club sponsors several projects each year on campus and in the local community.

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RECOVER TREASURES

MEXICO CITY (AP) -Police arrested four Mexicans for allegedly stealilng archeological and religious treasures and confiscated more than 200 objects at the home of an American in the southern state of Oaxaca, the El Nacional newspaper reports.

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Sentence Was 'Worst Chapter'

By FRED BAYLES Associated Press Writer

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) A llve-in babysitters conviction in the beating death of a 3-year-old girl was the worst chapter in a grim life of failed marriages and

domestic violence, her lawyer says.

Elizabeth Hutchinson was convicted Thursday of murder, assault and battery for the October 1982 slaying of Brandy Blair Mallett and was sentenced to a man-

HEARS THE VERDICT Defense attorney Charles Balliro, seated, with Elizabeth Hutchinson listen as a jury delilvered a guilty verdict in connection with the death of Brandy Mallett, 3, last year. (AP Laserphoto)

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datory life prison term.

The 31-year-old defendant accepted the verdict without emotion, wearing an eye patch and arm brace which she claimed were necessary treatments for old injuries.

Its the worst chapter in a very bad, very sad life, said her attorney, Frank Mon-dano.

It took the jury of seven men and five women less than five hours to review more than three weeks of testimony from 29 witnesses, including neighbors who detailed the sounds of abuse and screams of Dont hit me again. Mommy, heard from the Malletts rented rowhouse in Everett.

Theres no celebration, said juror Mary Langill. Its a very sad situation. The prosecution said Brandy suffered months of abuse, then received fatal injuries in a beating that left her with a blood clot in the brain and a broken teg. Defense lawyers argued that the child was injured when she fell down stairs.

I loved all three of those kids. I still do, Ms. Hutchinson shouted under cross examination, denying she harmed Brandy or the girls brother and sister.

In 1981, Ms. Hutchinson had met Roy Mallett, *a garage mechanic who offered her a room and instruction in electronics for $40 a week. Instead, she said, Mallett had sex with her on his living room couch while his wife and children slept upstairs.

Mallet faces a charge of manslaughter in Brandys death.

Malletts wife left two months later, leaving Ms. Hutchinson in charge of Brandy, brother Ray, 7, and sister Kimberly,

But Ms. Hutchinson testified Mallett beat her and the children. Ray Mallett said his new mother also beat him and his sisters.

The thin, nervous boy told the jury about what Mondano later called a collage of horribleness.

The boy said Ms. Hutchinson punched Brandy and dragged her by her hair, and said the woman struck him with a stick.

Ray testified that on the day Brandy died, Ms. Hutchinson hit the girl in the stomach. The boy said he went to the basement, where he heard a lot of banging ..." a lot of crying coming from upstairs.

It stopped when I heard the last bang, he said.

Ray also said his father held a knife to his throat while recounting how he killed little guys and girls in Vietnam. The youngster said Mallett made him eat hot peppers when he lied, slashed the tires of Rays bike, and smashed the boys watch with a hammer,

I was really afraid of my dad, the youngster said.

Ray and Kimberly now live with an uncle in Tewkesbury.

In emotional testimony, Ms. Hutchinson said she spent her own adolescence in foster homes and married soon after graduating from high school.

But her first husband got into drugs and alcohol, she testified, adding that he also beat her severely enough to cause a miscarriage in her sixth month of pregnancy.

.She said her second husband also beat her. That marriage ended when her husband drove away following an argument, accidently dragging her 50 feet on the left side of her head, Ms. Hutchinson testified.

She said she has worn an eye patch since then. But during the trial, her doctor testified he could find nothing wrong with her eye, or'^hef wrist, which Ms. Hutchinson wears in a brace.

Dr. Robert Singer said those complaints, and Ms. Hutchinsons continual

Agency Revokes Marina Permit

claims that she was pregnant, are rooted in emotional problems.

The case stirred public criticism*of the state Department of Social Services, which checked reports of child abuse in the Mallett home two months before Brandys death.

A social worker testified he found the home in disorder and saw bruises oh Brandy and Rays faces. But the state took no further action.

Port's Tobacco Activity Rose

NORFOLK, Va. (AP) -Tobacco Imports and exports through the port of Hampton Roads increased 7.7 percent, or 39.3 million pounds, in 1982 over 1981, the Virginia Port Authority reported Thursday.

Unmanufactured tobacco exports through the port increased by 21 million pounds and the import of manufactured tobacco products climbed nearly 30 million pounds, from 50.9 million pounds to 80.6 million pounds, the VPA said.

There were declines in imports of unmanufactured tobacco and exports of manufactured tobacco products, but VPA spokesman Chuck Nelson declined to release the figures.

J. Robert Bray, VPA executive director, attributed the overall increase to the authoritys marketing emphasis on tobacco.

Fountain Plans Walk-A-Thon

FOUNTAIN - The Fountain Cancer Society will hold a fund-raising Walk-A-Thon Saturday at 9 a.m.

Participants should meet at the Eason Street rock quarry entrance. Anyone wishing to be a walker or a sponsor may contact Robert McMillan, 749-6941.

WANT TO SELL LIVESTOCK? Run a Classified ad for quick response.

BATH - The Coastal Resources Commission, meeting at Nags Head Thursday, revoked a permit to build a large marina on the western shore of Bath Creek.

Ford S. Worthy Jr. of Raleigh received a permit from a local permit officer administering the Coastal Area Management Act to build the marina, with three large piers, in June 1982, after being told by Bath officials that the project complied with the towns -zoning ordinance.

But,two weeks later, the town board changed the zoning laws and notified Worthy the marina no longer complied with the zoning regulations as required for a CAMA permit.

Itll be a sad day in the history of CAMA when permits are denied on the basis of opposition from local government instead of environmental considerations, Worthys attorney, Lee E. Knott of Washington, told the commission.

Although commission member Arthur Cooper, who conducted a hearing in the case, concluded that the

permit violated local zoning, the commission skirted the zoning issue, ruling instead that the permit was invalid because Improper procedures were followed by the permit officer.

The permit officer, ac- cording to information presented Thursday,, had delegated the responsibility for approval of fueling facilities at the marina to a member of the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission.

The commission concluded that, because the permit officer delegated his responsi-bity for the fueling station to the Wildlife Commission member, the permit was invalid. /

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' ^ ^The Daily Renector, Greenville, N.C.Friday, May 6,1983Book Illustrator Captures Riches Of Childhood

The lady with silver hair and a soft, musical. Georgia accent held half a hundred young children spellbound one recent- Monday afternoon

at Eastern Elementary School. The second graders sat and kneeled on the library floor, their faces rapt with obvious enjoyment as

they listened to Susan Carlton Smith weave recollections of her childhood into the presentation of visual images she creates today in

drawings and sculptures drawn from natures miniature life forms.

Miss Smith, whose official job is assistant curator of the

Trent Collection of Rare and Historical Medical Books at Duke University in Durham, is^ unofficially an illustrator of childrens books

Attentive

Audience

AT EASTERN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL ... about 50 second graders recently gave Miss Smith (center backj^und) their rapt attention for an hour as she told them about her love for natur e and how it led to illustrating books and creating nature

sculpture. At ie end df her lecture/slide show,' the youngsters bombarded her with questions and comments about things they had observed in nature.

Drawings From Ladybug Book

TWO PAGES FROM LADYBUG, LADYBUG ... show the accuracy and imagination Susan Smith puts into art work. Most everything I draw is based on close observation of nature. says Miss Smith, who works in the rare book medical

library at Duke University. Her drawings and small sculptures made of found objects in nature have been widely exhibited in a number of states.

and creator of imaginative sculptures fashioned from natures treasures of leftovers and found objects which 1 find everywhere I go, even in my own backyard.

It is her reputation in the unofficial capacity that has made her a much sought-after person to appear in classrooms across the state and entertain receptive young minds with her abiding love for nature and how she transforms that love into works of art to delight millions of young (and youthful -minded adult) readers.

At Eastern Elementary, she talked to students in grades kindergarten through the third' grade in four sessions - two morning and two afternoon sessions on two separate days.

Ive always had a deep love of nature, a respect for life, Miss Smith told the children. Spiderwebs, sticks, beetles, butterflies, grass and moss, all of these have always been for me things to look at. to study, to try to understand, and to love.

Referring to attitudes she has formulated in respect to the world about us. Miss Smith said that, Early in life, at about your age, I discovered y^at everything around us, no matter where we are, is full of surprises, even the things which at first may -seem most commonplace.

To illustrate surprises that can be seen in the commonplace, Miss Smith showed a series of slides depicting some of the innovative miniature sculptures she has fashioned from lovely bits of nature I love to" collect for their shape, structure, texture. This cathedral, she traced on the screen the objects used to make the sculpture, is made from yellow jasmine seed pods, a small tendril, and an acorn cup. By the way, she added, the watercolor at the bottom of the acorn cup is the smallest painting Ive ever done. Its really very tiny, as you can see.

In language that 8-year olds easily understand, she encourged the children to look at things, not only for what they appear to be, but for all the things it could be or become in your imagina

tion. It you do that, you will make endless discoveries.

Another thing I want you to consider, another of my attitudes, is to be ready to acknowledge, to remember that there can be a real treasure hidden in what might first appear to be trash.

Miss Smith emphasized that she never destroys life to get bits and pieces for her sculptures orfor samples to draw from. I collect dead insects, seed pods, bile of branches, feathers. Th^a-diator of my car after a trip furnishes me with lots of butterfly wings.

One series of color slides depicted a frog I needed to draw from. He appeared on my front porch right at the time I needed him. I kept him in a large glass bowl, fed him and he was happy with me. I perhaps overfed him because he became quite fat by the time Id finished . drawing my pictures and released him outdoors. I regret I never kissed him before I turned him loose, she laughed. He might have been a handsome prince that I let get away.

Miss Smith said her childhood was a fortunate one. As a child, 1 grew up in Athens, Georgia. Our house was right at the edge of a woods on one side, and on the edge of the university campus on the other side. Ever>' year I could hardly wait for spring to come so that I could get back outdoors and explore and discover.

There was a kind gentleman in the biologj' laboratory on the campus who always took time to help me identify whatever I had found. I was lucky too because my mother and father were understanding. They let me keep all my treasures even when after a time the boxes Id stored things in filled and overflowed the garage.

I had a good friend, a wonderful buddy too, a boy-named Robert Sidbury who took me fishing a lot. Robert had nothing but a skinny stick to fish with, but he caught big fish and he loved being outdoors, so we became close friends.

When she grew up. Miss Smith attended the University of Georgia at Athens, where she majored, naturally, in biology. I wanted

to find answers. How a woodpecker pecked and didnt get a headache, for example.

When I graduated, my first job was drawing lice, fleas, ticks for scientific studies I couldnt resist adding features to tick heads to make them them into people or cars. My boss was a bit puzzled and I think, a little put out with me. So I resigned that job and went back to Athens to study drama.

Miss Smiths drama studies led her to write a play with everything taking place in one single drop of water. The main character is a cross-eyed flatworm. I even designed Spanish puppets to perform in the play, but it never got produced. Miss Smith noted that she has recently finished a book based on the play.

Once more in the work world, Miss Smith was employed I for several summers as a scientific illustrator at the University of Virginias biological field station. She worked, too, as an illustrator for the U.S. Public Health Service in Atlanta and did some freelance work.

It was after moving to Durham in the mid-1960s that she ventured into the field of illustrating childrens books. The first was a Heritage Press book, Ladybug, Ladybug, with a story by Kathleen M. Daly. In the intervening years, she has illustrated The Childs Book of Flowers and "Wildflowers Of North Carolina. Her illustrations have also appeared in Jack and Jill and in many other magazines.

The passing years have silvered Susan Smiths thick hair, but these years have also provided a span of time for the maturing of her vibrant and ever-youthful imagination that has produced a whole gallery of delightful creatures drawn from nature.

Whether its a root transformed into sculpture as a ballet dancer, the skeleton of a devils walking stick turned into a piano player, or the antenna of a moth that becomes a dancing ladys fan, Susan Smiths art confirms her conviction that nothing is so small that it is not at the same time big.

Texf And Photograph By Jerry RaynorAmerican Popular Culture Displayed In Rochester Museum

By DEBBIE FREEDMAN Manning, Selvage & Lee Consultants To New York State Commerce The recently opened Margaret Woodbury StrMg Museum in Rochester, N,Y., is just the kind of place that will appeal to people who say, I dont like museums.

- Those who aren't particulary captivated by ordered rows of paintings will find instead a huge and intriguing collection of memorabflia personifying American popular culture from 1820-1930.

Margaret' Woodbury Strong, who died in 1969, began collecting as a child. Her parents were collectors and, being affluent, they encouraged a daughter who showed a precocious flair for acquiring typical trappings of her society. Little Margaret had no notion that her juvenile hobby would turn into a lifelong pursuit.

People are amazed when they realize everything in the museum - some 30,000 exhibits and were still counting belonged to Margaret Woodbury Strong, says Karen Roger-Smith. tours and events coordinator. Can jou imagine an entire museum containing art acquired by one person It took our staff months just to remove all these things from her 30-room home on the outskirts of Rochester The museum itself is a result of more than 10 years of preparation.

result from shopping forays to American cities. W'hile today we are beguiled by the furnishings, dolls, costumes and objets-dart that reflect the rich elegance of Victorian times and glossy art deco motif of the 1920s, these items were merely conventional to those who lived during those periods.

If the passage of time adds curiosity value to everyday things, everyone owns potential collectors items. Walking through the various exhibits in the museum we might be tickled by .an old-fashioned calling card, a tom out recipe, a turn-of-the-century bicyle, an ironing board, but what would be the reacton decades form now to items that reflected the strange trends of the 60s and 70s? Bell bottom trousers, for example, a statement-making T-shirt, politicar bumper stickers, a moped or an Andy Warhol poster might be clucked and exclaimed over by 21-century museum-goers.

then current fashion. There are dolls in hi^-necked lace, velvet and satin gowns df the Victorian era to loose swinging sailor suits of the 20s. There are tall, elegantly groomed lady dolls and fat diapered baby dolls. And, dolls less than an inch high! There are gypsies and peddlers arid milkmaids, and men dolls in tuxedos and tails, dolls representing many nations and races. And there are the series dolls, such as Shirley Temples, Kewpies, Ginnies and Superman.

masculine toys, but as a young collector Margaret got to buy the slickest, newest toy train models in town. The bristly painted trains, fire engines, buses and buggies are on display next to the doll collection. And there are armies of toy soldiers, animals, marbles, board games, ferris wheels and wind-up carousels.

she says. Weve made it easy for them by numbering items which can be looked up in our file system. Each reference card has an explanation of the particular item, its date, its source, etc.

womans role in society at that time, the excerpts are mostly admonitions on correct feminine behavior.

Unusual Is Usual What is unusual about the collection is how usual are its components. As a child, and/as an adult, Margaret mostly assembled items that could be found in the average shop or in an average middle-class American home. W'ith the exception of an Oriental collection and pieces acquired during trips abroad, most items

Remarkably Preserved

In the meantime, these mundane artifacts representing an entire earlier century are not only remarkably preserved, but absolutely staggering in their sheer number. When Mrs. Strong bought, she bought in quantity as welt as quality.

The doll collection alone is unparalled. Gaze into the 98 glass exhibit cases and 24,000 pairs of china, bone and fabric eyes gaze back. Doll lovers will easily be beside themselves, but even J^ose with mildly interest^ in typical girls playthings will find the collection fascinating and be somewhat startled at the number of anatomically correct boy dolls, currently thought to be an innovation of the 20th century.

Side by side the dolls stand, each one impeccably dressed in the height of the

A Room in Ivory This astounding collection, over which the doll-o-phile will linger for hours, is augmented by 400 doll houses ranging from the modest to the palatial. They are outfitted with the tiniest and most intricate accoutrements imaginable. One room is furnished in ivory - complete with ivory cabinets and etageries, ' gazebos and grandfather clocks, chandeliers, bird cages and a full tea set. Truly mesmerizing is a country store with ceiling removed to allow maximum exposure of the interior. The realistic doll house is modeled after a store in Cum-mington, Mass., and is generously stocked with all manner of domestic items, medicines and candles.

Other specialty doll houses, all of which contain little dolls going about their daily chores, are a fabric store and spice shop, a room equipped with gadgets entitled - the inventors living room, a butcher shop, and fully outfitted kitchens, bathrooms, studies and play rooms. And, inhabiting their own showcases are row upon row of houses resembling a middle-class block on "Any-Old-Street, U.S.A.

For a girl growing up in tJie late 1800s, it would have ^een unseemly to fancy

Decorative Arts A fascinating array of decorative arts are also featured on the museums second floor. The Oriental section contains exotic vases and figurines procured during the Woodbury familys trip to China. A seemingly endless array of blue and white flow china dishes monopolize several cabinets and there are quantities of Early American art glass and cut glass, salt and pepper shakers, bottles, silverware and heavy glass paperweights in deep, luscious colors.

On the first floor, Mrs. Strongs possession are /showcased in an entirely ' different manner. They are divided into thematic exhibits which trace the evolution of decor, industry and fashion from the mid 1800s to the 1930s the story of Americas Industrial Revolution - and are titled The Great Transformation, Changing Patterns: Household Furnishings, 1820-1929, and Light of the Home: Middle Class Amerian Women, 1870-1910.

'They are all entertaining history lessons. According to Ms. Roger-Smith, the exhibits are excellent for students and researchers looking for authenticity.

Since we opened Oct. 12, weve had almost 50,000 visitors come through the museum, and many are here to examine interior desip, womens fa^ion or even changing social attitudes,

Feminine Behavior These exhibits are subdivided into categories such as Courtship, "Marriage, The Home, Leisure, Health, Religion, and Death. Each setting is painstakingly arranged and supplented with excerpts from popular magazines of the period in American history they are associated with. Since Mrs. Stomg had been heavily influenced bv

For example, young ladies were to be paragons of virtue and discretion during courtship so that the husband-to-be could be assured of having made a wise choice. Once married, mp were to sit in large comfortable chairs that had arm rets, while wives improved their posture in armless, straight-backed chairs. \Some recreational activities deemed proper for ladies were croquet, tennis, swimming and bicycling, and the attire and athletic

equipment for these are on display. Finally, when there was a death in the family, a woman was to be swathed in black for the mourning period, so that barely an inch of flesh was exposed.

Visitors Can Touch This modern, spacious museum was constructed so that visitors can touch examples of typical items. The exhibits are off limits to touching, but partial replicas of certain furnishings are attached to the exterior so that the wood, horsehair, brocade and other period materials used in construction can be handled. They are all fairly low to the floor.

accessible both to children and visitors in wheelcharis. Plates with descriptions in braille are available for the blind.

The museum has a reference library which now contains 20,000 books, plus trade catelogs and slides. And on the first floor is the Museum Shop where reproductions, books, miniatures, dolls, glassware and other items are on sale. The museum, located at One Manhattan Square in downtown Rochester, is open Tuesdays through Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and on Sundays from 1 to 5 p.m. The museum is closed on major holidays.

DOLLS, DOLLS, DOLLS... some 24,000 of them altogether. The Margaret Woodbury Strong Museum in Rochester, New York, ifi heaven Tor the doU-o-f^e, as well as apyone interested in

its astounding collection of memorabilia personifying American popular culture from 1820-1030.





The Daily ReHector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, May 6,1983-9

^ atiuajr,

Violent Unrest In France Grows; More To Come

VIOLENT CLASHES A member of the small businessmen union strikes with a wooden stick the head of a helmeted riot police officer during clashes between Paris security forces and

thousands of discontented businessmen in central Paris Thursday. Several people were taken to hospitals with serious injuries resulting in the scuffle. (APLaserphoto)

Developers Oppose Expanding Of Oceanfront Buffer Plans

. By CAROLYN LESH Associated Press Writer

PARIS (AP) Chanting students warned of more violence to come as they and thousands of shopkeepers rioted in the streets against the Socialist governments policies. Dozens of demonstrators and about 50 riot police were injured.

The two main disturbances Thursday were followed by more fighting during the night, when small groups of extremist students engaged police in a series of running battles in the Latin Quarter of Paris. Two policemen were hospitalized with injuries and about 100 demonstrators were arrested, although police said only four would be held for possible prosecution.

The demonstrators, believed to be right-wing, wore crash helmets and some carried iron bars, witnesses said.

The clashes were the latest in a two-week outbreak of the worst domestic upheaval since President Francois Mitterrand took office in May 1981. The students, who hurled rocks and gasoline bombs at police, made clear their protests would continue.

. "Hot! Hot! The springtime will be hot! they shouted during a march across the city to protest proposed reforms in the university system-.

In a separate clash, police fired tear gas at about 20,000

artisans and small businessmen who were lobbing garbage at them from overturned bins. Many of the demonstrators were seen on television with bloody fcs and limbs.

Mitterrands economic program, unveiled in March after the third deva'uation of the franc in two years, has been the target of growing unrest over the last two weeks. The plan included higher taxes, a forced loan to the government by most taxpayers and restricted foreign travel.

Theres a limit of tolerance and weve gone past it, Rene Bemasconi, president of Frances General Confederation of Small and Medium Businesses, said in a radio interview. "Were tired of being the scapegoats. We dont see why we should be held responsible for the errors of the economy. Demonstrators demanded the resignation of Mitterrand, who was in China on an official visit.

About 50 farmers herded flocks of sheep through the capital to press for higher prices for their products, and students and businessmen demonstrated in at least eight other major cities.

About 20 or 30 students received minor injuries during a demonstration that attracted 8,000 opponents of a government proposal to reform the university system. Police arrested' about 30 students.

The students aree angry

about plans to stiffen standards in university education and link the number of graduates from various schools more closely to future job openings.

The businessmen began their demonstration at LEsplanade des Invalides, a large plaza in front of Napoleons Tomb on the Left Bank of the Seine River. From there they headed west toward the Eiffel Tower.

Shortly before reaching the tower, police barricaded the demonstration route along a river front road and the clash began. It lasted for almost an hour before the crowd dispersed.

The students marched across the city in the opposite direction, beginning by the Eiffel Tower and heading east toward the Right Bank and the Place de la Bastille, the starting point of the French Revolution.

Violence broke out near a bridge leading to the Right Bank with students lobbing rocks and gasoline bombs at police. The young protesters tore up street pavement and hurriedly set up road barricades, sometimes setting them alight, to delay the advance of hundreds of helmeted officers.

The city was reported quiet Thursday night. Authorities said dozens of demonstrators and about 50 police were injured in the disturbances.

Other demonstrations by students and businessmen were held in cities throughout France, including Marseille, Strasbourg, Nice, Lille, Toulouse, Nancy and Caen. In Bordeaux, about 100 law students invaded the local television station and prevented it from broadcasting the evening new's.

There were no disturbances involving farmers reported in Paris but farmers elsewhere in the country blocked roads and intercepted trucks carrying foreign products to express their fury over cheap agricultural imports

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NAGS HEAD, N.C. (AP) -Coastal developers continued to object Thursday to a proposal to double the oceanfront buffer for multifamily and commercial buildings.

The complaints dominated most of a meeting of the Coastal Resources Commissions Implementation and Standards Committee. Because such discussions have twice kept the committee from making a rec-

Replica Had Long Flight

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - A replica of a Wri^t Brothers military plane lifted off the Wright-Patterson .\ir Force Base runway and flew 22 miles in its longest test flight.

The Wright B. Military Flyer was flown Thursday to its new testing site at Dayton General Airport as its two pilots sat in front with no protection from the elements - just like pilots of the original 1911 plane.

I expected it to be cold, so I dressed with three layers of clothes, said John H. Warlick, chairman of the board of the Wright B. Flyer project.

Warlick, an ex-Navy pilot, has been flying for 41 years. His co-pilot, W.A. Sloan, who Is retired from the Air Force, is the chief flight instructor at Wright-Patterson Aero Club and has been flying 42 years.

The aluminum and steel craft, built with donations over seven years, is modeled after the wood and canvas plane built by Orville and Wilbur Wright. That craft was the worlds first military production airplane.

The flight 'Thursday was the first by the replica to a new destination. On Nov. 27, Warlick and Sloan flew the rtane around the Wright-?|atterson base on a *7^-minute test flight.

* Construction of the plane began in 1976 as part of the nationa Bicentennial celebration, and the work has been done by volunteers :at the base.

r .Sloan said dimensions of Uie new plane are identical to those of the original, but the materials are stronger. In-shiunentation was installed to meet Federal Aviation Administration requirements.

DEATHSENTENCE BLANTYRE, Malawi (AP) A Former Malawian iUBtlce minister and his wife live been convicted of treason and sentenced to death for conspiring to over- 'ow the government, the awi news agency says.

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ommendation on the proposal, Chairman James Sykes asked the CRC staff to meet with opponents and supporters Of the idea before the next CRC meeting, in June, and try to reach a compromise.

"We have puta lot of effort into this, but the comments were getting here make a lot of sense, Sykes said after more than an hour of discussion. "Before the next meeting, lets put our heads together and try to work out some of these ideas,

Howard Claiborne, who is developing a large tract of land for a client in Nags Head, and Brian Newman, president of the Outer Banks Homebuilders Association, argued that establishing a minimum buffer of 120 feet would significantly reduce the value of many oceanfront ti^cts. Claiborne said the value of the tract he is working to develop would drop from $30 million to $6 million if the proposed change is adopted.

Currently, oceanfront development is required to leave a buffer area equal to 30 times the annual erosion rate on the property or a minimum of 60 feet. The buffer is a safety device designed to allow for normal

erosion.

Because of the proliferation of large condominium .and motel projects along the coast, the commission is considering a proposal to require a larger buffer for buildings larger than a duplex.

The rationale behind the proposal is that single-family homes and duplexes can be moved if threatened by erosion, but larger buildings

Rates For Gas File To Reduce

RALEIGH, N.C. (API -North Carolinas three major natural gas companies have applied for a reduction in rates that would cut the average residential bill by about $18.60 a year.

The N.C. Utilities Com-misision will consider tlie proposal Monday. If the cuts are approved, they would apply to bills issued after May 1.

Public Service Co. of North Carolina, North Carolina Natural Gas Corp. and Piedmont Natural Gas Co. have applied for the rate cuts because of lower wholesale rates from their wholesale supplier.

probably cannot. Therefore, the CRC reasons, a large building needs a bigger buffer to delay the time when a decision must be made on how to protect it.

The commission staff has recommended that the buffer for large buildings be figured by multiplying the annual erosion rate on the property by 60 twice the standard now required. Newman argued that the current buffer is working well and urged the commission not to change it.

CHOOSESCANADA

PARIS (AP) A Czech engineer returning home from Cuba jiimped from a Czech plane auring a stopover in Paris and asked to go to Canada, police said Thursday.

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Rep. Charles Rose, D-N.C., and Dr. Erdman Palmore will be the speakers for the North Carolina Senior Citizens Associations fourth annual banquet to be held May 24 at the Bordeaux Motor Inn in Fayetteville.

Joining Rose and Palmore, senior fellow in the Center for the Study of Aging of Duke University, will be Ernest Messer, director of the N.C. Division of Aging; Lura Tally, state senator from Fayetteville; and Bill Hurley, mayor of Fayetteville. Selections from the Broadway musical, Damn Yankees will be presented by the Bordeaux Dinner

Theatre Players of Fayetteville.

Anyone interested in attending may obtain information by contact the association, Box 34, Fayetfevle, N.C. 28302 or by calling 919-323-3641.

UNTRUSTWORTHY WARSAW, Poland (AP) -The dumber of Poles traveling fo East bloc countries is expected to increase, but trips to the West will be severely limited despite easing of martial law re-strictions,^ the Polish news agency says.

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Council 'Recognizes'More Psychiatric Care^eed

A resolution recognizing a need for additional psychiatric services in this region but making no reference to the support of any one agency to provide those services gained the approval of the City Council Thursday night.

The council resolved that, A? a service to the citizens of eastern North Carolina, and to supplement the existing medical servides already available in Greenville, we support the selection of Greenville as the site for construction of any new facilities to meet this need.

The resolution also stated, "Further, we support the provision of additional facilities in this region by private enterprise.

The council did not address in its resolution the application by Charter Medical Inc.

G>mmencement

(Continued from Pagel)

Thomas Edward Curry Jr. of Maitland, Fla., the first Ph.D. ever awarded at ECU. Curry was awarded a doctorate of philosophy in anatomy.

Degrees were also awarded to 2,650 graduates, including 39 new medical doctors graduating from the ECU Schooi of Medicine.

Morgan addressed the graduation crowd on a number of topics during his commencement address, including education, democracy, poverty and nuclear weapons. He told the crowd that the best way to preserve peace is throu^i strength. That strength will come partially through education of our best resources: young people.

This nation stands as a beacon to all the free world and to all those pe<^le in totalitarian countries who still hope and strive for freedom, Morgan said. "Our role is often obscured by our own seif depreciation, and the continuing crises that cioud international affairs, but it is stl there. Beset with such crises and our many problems, we tend to be too critical of ourselves. Economic and social problems are not unique to America, but are part of the times in which we live.

Leaning forward, Morgan told the students they must not let their liberties be chipped away - a little here and a little there.

But with faith in America, faith in our values, faith in our tradition of personal responsibilities, faith in our institutions and faith in ourselves, our hopes for continued freedom and a better America will prevail. You and your generation will help make it so, he said.

Morgan served as a university trustee for 15 years, being eiected vice chairman or chairman for 13 years. He is a native of Harnett County and a resident of Buies Creek and Lillington and served in the N.C. Senate for five terms, was the N.C. attorney general for six years and served as a U.S. senator for six years.

Jenkins, a great leader and the principal architect for progress during East Carolina Universitys most dynamic period of growth, said Howell, served ECU for 18 years and was instrumental in bringing about the ECU School of Medicine.

for a private psychiatric hospital in Greenville. The board of directors of the Pjtt-Greenville Chamber of Cbmmerce went on record in April as favoring the private corporations local bid.

Councilman Stuart Shinn moved to adopt the resolution and George Pugh provided the second for the motion. The vote on the motion was unanimous.

Mayor Percy Cox said following the meeting that the council supported the provision of needed additional psychiatric services for the area, whether it be by Pitt County Memorial Hospital, the medical school or by a private firm.

The governing board of the Eastern Carolina Health Systems Agency, following recommendations by an ECHSA project review committee, voted recently to deny Charters application for a 65-bed private psychiatric hospital here. The state Department of Human Resources will make the ultimate decision on the matter.

In other business, the council:

Approved a request by

Phil Carroll for satellite annnexation of the Carolina Opry House, located on the southwestern side of State Road 1534 and northwesterly of the Abron Best and Norman Winslow property;

Approved a petition by owners of sections one and

t,wo of Greenridge subdivision, located north of the Greenville Utilities Commission property on the eastern side of State Road 1204, for satellite annexation;

-improved a requtt by KenneU) M. Buck, Charles H. McGowan Jr., and Janice M.

Barbee to rezone one acre, located south of Ninth Stret, north of U.S. 264-lOth Street, west of W.S. Pollards property, and east of Clark Street, from unoffensive industry to downtown commercial fringe;

Approved a request by

Dawkins Is Honored For Distinguished Services

Howard Garrett Dawkins, director emeritus of the Eastern Carolina Vocational Center and member and first president of the Pitt County Committee on Employment of the Handicapped, is the recipient of a Distinguished Service Award of the Presi-dents Committee on Employment.

Harold Russell, president of the national committee, presented the award to Dawkins at the annual awards banquet held

MIsFor...

Sunday is Mothers Daya time to honor those-i wonderful women who made us what we are today. The nation is experiencing a "baby boomlet. The baby girls who were born during the post-World War Two baby boom have all grown up and are having babies of their own. But these moms are very different from their own mothers. On the average, they waited to marry and to have children of their own. Today, most babies are born to women age 2.5 to 29. Many mothers have careers. Fully 67 percent of women between 18 and 34 are in the labor force, and nearly one opt of every two mothers has a job outside the home. And many of todays moms are independent. Mothers head more than 9 million American families.

DO YOU KNOWWhat percentage of the U.S. population is female.^

THURSDAY'S ANSWERHarry Truman served as President from 1944 to 1952

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Thursday in Washington, D.C.

In 1981 the Pitt County Committee on Employment of the Handicapped selected Dawkins as the Distinguished Service Award recipient for Pitt County and aiso nominated him for the North Carolina State Award. When Dawkins received the state award. Gov. Jim Hunt nominated Dawkins for the national award.

Dawkins was director of-the Eastern Vocational Center from 1970 until his retirement on Dec. 31, 1981. Since his retirement, heJ^ continued to supporWlhe center in its capital fund campaign to raise the matching fmds needed to complete the $5,200,OQ facUty

Convict 5 Of

HOWARD DAWKINS

which is scheduled to be dedicated in August.

As the centers director, Dawkins coordinated the development of a work adjustment program for the blind, deaf, mentally re-M    tarded and physically dis-

urug-5muggimg abled and was instrumental

in securing a federal grant to build housing and recreational facilities for clients from a number of eastern North Carolina counties served by the center.

As a pastor in Kinston, Dawkins conducted religious services for people at the Caswell Training Center for the Mentallv Retarded.

the engineering department to adopt an ordinance for a 35-foot loading/unloading zone sign on the south side of West Third Street, 50 feet west of Evans Street;

- Approved a request by Tyson Bilbro of 100 E. Third St. to reinstate limited parking on the north side of Brookgreen Avenue at the intersection of Elm Street and Brookgreen;

- Approved a request by Ms. Janet Fischer of 202 Saint Andrews Drive to prohibit through truck traffic on the street;

- Scheduled a public hearing for June 9 on a petition by the owners of Colonial Mobile Home Park for satellite annexation;

- Approved an agreement with the state Department of Transportation for street and highway improvements, consisting of the improvement of N.C. 33 from the end of existing curb and gutter to the city limits;

- Scheduled a June 9 public hearing on an amendment to the thorough-fare plan relative to Brownlea Drive;

- Appointed Roscoe Norfleet to a five-year term

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on the Housing Authority, succeeding Dr. Andrew Best who was not eligible for reappointment; and - Presented perfect at-

Shultz Plan...

(Continued from Pagel)

tive votes from former Defense Minister Ariel Sharon, now a minister without portfolio, and Science Minister Yuval Neeman of the ultra-nationalist Tehiya Party.

Cabinet ministers who spoke with reporters were divided.

Energy Minister Yitzhak Modai said: Its not a good arrangement. We should have had a much better one.

Modai said he was displeased with provisions for Maj. Saad Haddad, the former Lebanese army major whose militia has served Israeli interests in soufhem Lebanon for seven years.

1 Haddad wont have the position we would have hoped he would have. Modai said.

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It was not known 4>recisely* what the accord said about I Haddad, but it was believed , to fall short of Israels de-' mand that he be in overall conunand of Lebanese forces' in south Lebanon.

Housing Minister David ' Levy and Labor Minister Aharon Uzan both called the agreement the best we could get.

Levy said it provided for an end to the technical state of war with Lebanon, security arrangements to protect-Israel from attack and' above all, a new era on our. northern border and a; springboard for understand-^ ing and coordination of posi- tions with the United States.

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WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) - Five Colombians have received active prison sentences five months after they were arrested in what was called the second-largest cocaine seizure ever in North Carolina.

Chief U.S. District Court Judge Hiram H. Ward sentenced the men, four of whom pleaded guilty and one who was convicted.

Jose Luis Naranjo-Sierra, who was convicted by a jury on Feb. 17 of plotting to smuggle 11 pounds of cocaine through Regional Airport, was sentenced to 15 years in prison. The sentence is to be added to a current sentence Naranjo-Sierra is serving on other drug charges in a federal prison in New York.

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THE FINAL LEG

KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) - Three American members of a German expedition climbing Mt. Everest are scheduled to begin the final leg of their journey up the peak Saturday, their base radio reports.

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Missing Engine Seals Caused Crisis For Airliner

By ANNE S. CROWLEY Associated Press Writer MIAMI (API - Teams of investigators began trying to learn why tiny rubber oil seals were missing from an Eastern Airlines jumbo jet that lost all power and glided within 2,800 feet of the ocean before limping back to land when one engine revived.

The three-engine Lockheed L-1011, carrying 172 people, dropped more than 16,OW feet in 10 minutes Thursday before pilot Dick Boddy managed to revive the tail jet and guide Flight 855 safely back to Miami International Airport.

Smoke spewed from the single working engine as the plane landed.

As many passengers shaken but relieved, and toasting their good fortune boarded another Eastern L-iOli to resume their journey to Nassau in the Bahamas, federal and airline officials began looking for the cause.

Eastern and National Transportation Safety Board officials' said the engines stalled because of oil leakage. due to failure to install small rubber seals called 0 rings." which cost pennies.

during nightly maintenance.

"With the 0 ring missing,' the oil was able to leak out, NTSB spokesman Ira Furman said. If oil leaks out, the engine will fail. Engines require lubrication.

Furman said the thumbsized, ring-shaped seals, which cost "pennies, fit into a notch on a magnetized oil plug that is removed nightly from the engines to check for any wear that would show up in the oil. Each plug is supposed to carry two rings.

New oil plugs were apparently installed without the seals Wednesday night, he said, leaving space for oil to leak under pressure.

"We have yet to determine whether the plugs are supposed to come out of the stock room with the 0 ring or whether the mechanics, are supposed to put the 0 ring on, he said, refusing to fix blame.

"Why they werent there is the next phase of the investigation, said Eastern spokesman Jim Ashlock. The airline said the other 27 L-lOlls in its fleet were inspected and all had the seals.

After a brief dispute between the Miami-based car

rier and the NTSB, Eastern gave the cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder to safety board investigators, Furman said.

The r^rders were being hand-carried to Washington today and will be transcrib as quickly as possible, he said. -

Three investigations of the incident were under way by Eastern, the NTSB and the Federal Aviation Administration.

The engine failure occurred 88 miles east of Miami, said FAA spokesman Roger Myers.

I was never so scared in all my life, never closer to death, said a passenger. Dr. Bruce Jacobs, a dentist from nearby Hollywood.

They came down pretty fast, said Myers. Officials later determined the aircraft plunged from an altitude of about 19,000 feet to 2,800 feet in 10 minutes, he said.

A cockpit instrument first signaled trouble as the plane was beginning its descent to Nassau, Ashlock said. Following standard procedure, the engine was shut down and the plane turned back to Miami.

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Quickly, however, oil pressure dropped in the other two engines and they shut down, leaving the aircraft without any power, he said.

As the plane lost altitude, the 162 passengers and 10 crew members prepared to ditch in the ocean, scrambling into inflatable life vests and grabbing seat-pocket cards to review evacuation instructions.

Air traffic was cleared away from the Miami airport and the Coast Guard was alwted.

But 10 miles from Miami, the tail engine coughed to life. It was smoking as the plane landed, but never caught fire, officials said.

Afterward, many passengers wore their life vests off-the aircraft and asked to keep them as souvenirs, but Ashlock said the vests had to

be given to federal investigators.

An Eastern maintenance employee, who asked not to be identified, said mechanics replace the 0-rings at planeside during maintenance.

The jet must then pass an inspection in which the ennes are run up to starting speed with air pressure to be sure the oil pressure is normal, he said.

For three of them to be missing on the same plane at the same time, it had to be something that fell through the cracks, he said.

The leaks would have been small enough that the oil pressure loss might not have been noticeable during testing, he said.

Forty-eight passengers chose not to resume the flight

to the Bahamas. As, the others waited to board, they consumed eight kits of liquor, or 384 one-shot bottles, courtesy of the airline, said Ashlock.

We are the luckiest people alive, said one relieved passenger, Janet Jacobs of Hollywood, Fla.

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ARMED FORCES

Russell E. Barnes, son of -Mrs. Dorothy M. Barnes of Roanoke Rapids, enlisted in the Air Force. Barnes joined, under the Delayed Enlistment Program, which allows him to accumulate time in the Air Force Reserve until he enters active duty on May 20. He is a 1981 graduate of Halifax Academy.

was previously assigned at Patrick AFB, FL.

Spec. 4 George T. Whitfield, son of Martin L. Whitfield of Route 3, Williamston, arrived for duty in Neu Ulm, West Germany. Whitfield, an artillery fire-direction specialist with the 4th Battalion, 5th Field .Artillery, was previously assigned at Fort Riley, KA. He is a 1981 graduate of Soddy-Daisy High School, TN.

Army National Guard Pfc. Peter E. Carmon, son of Mr. and Mrs. William 0. Carmon of Winterville, completed basic training as a military police specialist under the one station unit training program at Fort McClellan, AL. He was trained in civil and military law, traffic control, meap reading and self defense. He is a 1979 graduate of D.H. Conley High School.

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Several governors attending an education conference at Research Triangle Park Thursday said their states planned to borrow educa-' tional programs from North Carolina.

Gov. Thomas Kean of New Jersey said his state planned to set up a governors school along the North Carolina-model.

Seven of the 13 governors who served on the National Task Force on Education for Economic Growth, which called for drastic reforms in education Wednesday, said their programs could reflect what is needed in the schools.

"Our hope is that we can build on solid examples and make these small examples bigger examples and ultimately improve the quality of education for all

Air Force Asks Research Funds

' Sgt. Charles E. Mat-thewson. son of James D. M a t t h e w s 0 n of Robersonville, was awarded Army Commendation

an

Airman 1st Class Joy L. Bone arrived for duty at Lindsey Air Station, West Germany. Bone, an administrative specialist with the 2063rd Communications Squadron, was previously assigned at Patrick AFB, FL. Her husband. Staff Sgt. Archie C. Bone Jr., is the son of Archie C. Bone Sr. of Greenville.

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Air Force is asking Congress for more than half a billion dollars next year for research on a new small, single-warhead intercontinental ballistic missile for the 1990s.

The $600 million figure appeared in an announcement .that the Air Force has opened a Small Missile Program Office at Norton Air

Medal in Bamberg, West Germany for demonstrating outstanding achievement in the performance of his duties. Matthewson, assiged with the 82nd Engineer Battalion, is a 1979 graduate of Roanoke High School,

Pvt. Norman B. Knight, son of Aljonia Knight of Oak City, completed recruit training at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot, S,C., where he learned the basics of battlefield survival.

Force Base, Calif,, to manage development of the small missile.

President Reagan proposed the new missile to Congress, along with a plan to placft 100 giant new MX missilenn launch silos now holding Minuteman ICBMs, Reagans proposals are in line with the recommendations of a special presidential commission which sought a compromise solution to the politically tangled problem of how to base the MX,

Staff Sgt. Archie C. Bone Jr., son of Archie C. Bone Sr. of Greenville, arrived for duty at Lindsey Air Station, West Germany. Bone, a telecommunications control specialist with the 2063rd Communications Squadron,

Lance Cpl. Joseph T, Jenkins, son of Linda B. Adams of Route 2, Ayden, returned from a deployment to Okinawa, He is a member of thr 2nd Battalion, 9th Marine Regiment, Campo Pendleton, CA.

CHANGED UNIFORMS

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) A North Korean pilot who defected to South Korea in February in his MiG-19, has been commissioned as a major in the South Korean air force, military authorities said.

OUT OF BUSINESS - Easton, 'Mass. middle school teacher Ann Hoyle, center, poses at the school with students involved in a school bank project shut down by the state banking commission examiners for failure to

have a charter. The bank began as a project to teach students finance through loans to a maximum of $1.50. At left is bank bookkeeper Kari Biddle, 12, and at right bank president Kerri Rey, 11. (APUserphoto)

children, said Delaware Gov. Pierre S. duPont IV.

DuPont is chairfnan-elect of the Education Commission of the States, whose steering committee met Thursday. Gov. Jim Hunt gave committee members and the governors a tour of the . Research Triangle Park and the N.C. School of Science and Mathematics in Durham.

The ECS, chaired by Hunt, is a national association of state-level government and ^ education officials.

) Gov. Charles S, Robb of I Virginia said his state gave '.Jeachers a 10 percent pay raise this year and was upgrading graduation requirements.

DuPont said his .state opened basics plus schools with more emphasis on homework, discipline and the basics of reading, writing, math and science, where parents volunteer to send their children.

That program is so successful weve watched regular, schools pick up on it, he said.'

Minnesota Gov. Rudy Perpich said his state was emphasizing math and science education in the schools, but not at the expense of the arts.

Were not going to rob Peter to pay Paul, he said. We hope we dont have to be back here in 15 years saying, What happened to the arts?

OK Vote On Blue Laws

FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. (AP) - A bill authorizing a non-binding referendum on Sunday closing laws in Cumberland County was passed Thursday by the state House of Representatives.

The bill calls for a county-wide referendum on whether Fayetteville and unincorporated parts of Cumberland County should have a Blue Law, an ordinance that restricts the sale of non-essential goods on Sundays. Currently, Fayetteville has such a law, but the county does not.

The countys Blue Law was ruled unconstitutional and struck down Feb. 17 .by Distriet Court Judge Joe Dupree.    _

The county commissioners have said they will abide by the results of the referendum. even though it would be non-binding. A majority of Fayetteville City Council members have also said they will follow results of the voting in city precincts, but they plan to consider the outcome of the entire vote before making a decision on whether to repeal the xitys Blue Law.

The bill authorizing the vote must now be approved by the state Senate.

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Friday, May 6,198313N. C Outpatient Commitment BillJSeady In Jiouse

By F. ALAN BOYCE Associated Press Writer _ RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) - A State House committee has approved a bill to make ' North Carolina the first state to allow involuntary outpatient commitment without showing a mental health pa-Dent is dangerous.

However, after passing the measure Thursday, the Judiciary III Committee failed to act on a bill that would let ^dges take past ^danger-ousness into account in commitment hearings.

The committee agreed to remove provisions to let patients to be jailed or forcibly detained if they refused to comply with a judges order

- an action taken in response to questions about the bills constitutionality.

You cant pull in all these coercions, said Rep. Dan Blue, D-Wake, who chaired a subcommittee studying both bills. Youd probably be violating the patients rights to due process.

The subcommittee voted to kill the other bill, but members changed their mind before it was reported to the full committee. That measure would remove the word recent from" current laws governing what actions by a patient may be considered in determining his dangerousness.

The outpatient bill is de

signed to let the courts intervene when patients outside institutions stop taking prescribed medication, helping to keep them out of hospitals. Under current law, judges are powerless to act until such patients regress to the point that they are dangerous to themselves or to others. Then they must commit them to a hospital.

Because the bill would provide a lesser imfringe-ment on freedom than the in-patient commitment ordered under current laws, supporters agreed not to require legal representation for patients in the commitment hearings. But opponents have argued that any

Little-Known Laws Are On The Books In N. C.

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) - If you surf or water ski after dark in North Carolina, you could be In a lot of trouble.

And if your hog dies of natural causes and you dont bury it within 12 hours, you could face a fine of up to $10.

Water enthusiasts who pursue their recreation after dark can be fined $50, according to Joan C. Brannon and Susan Milnor of the Institute of Government at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

- They recently published a

Drinking Age Bill Is Ejtpecfed To Die In Senate Committee

ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Prospects are good that a bill to raise the minimum age for drinking beer and wine to 21 will die in the Senate Appropriations Committee, state legislators say.

That may be what happens, Sen. Bob Warren, D-Johnston, said Thursday after the bill he sponsored was removed from the Senate floor and referred to the Appropriatiops Cornmittee on a 29-20 vote.

Meanwhile, a joint conference committee settled several differences between House and Senate versions of Gov. Jim Hunts anti-drunken-driving program. However, they made no progress on the most controversial issues and postponed further discussions until next week.

Sen. Henson Barnes, D-Wayne, spwisor of Hunts bill which would raise the drinking "age fron| '|8j^t 19, moved that Warrens bill be sent to the Approprtations Committee after a half-hour debate of its merits.

Under Senate rules, any bill expected to decrease state revenues must go before the Appropriations Committee. Legislative leaders say raising the drinking age would deprive the state of tax revenues from alcoholic beverage sales.

Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green said the bill would create no additional costs during the current fiscal year. Thats because it would have phased in the drinking age increase over three years - raising the current minimum of 18 to 19 in 1984, to 20 in 1985 and to 21 in 1986 so losses would be felt when another Legislature is in session.

Barnes said he wanted the bill to go to Appropriations to avoid setting a precedent for other bills circumventing the legislative process, but he acknowledged the move hurt the bill.

Yes, I think it hurts the chances of this bill passing, he spid.

I think we should see how 19 (as a drinking age) is working. Then we could raise it (if necessary).

.Sen. Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir, said the measure would be takm up after the committee finished considering the base budget, possibly by Wednesday.

Warren fought the move, saying the bill should be voted ' up or down today. We could send the bill to committee ... and study it forever.

When the Senate debated Hunts bill in March, an amendment raising the drinking age to 21 was attached. But Warren withdrew it the next day after legislative leaders warned it would force the bill to the Appropriations Committee and possibly kill it.

Warren then introduced his bill, which the Senate Judiciary III Committee passed last week.

Earlier Thursday, the House-Senate Conference Committee made further progress in its negotiations on Hunts bill.

We started out with 42 differences and weve got five left, said Barnes, committee co-chairman. But from here the going gets tough.

list of misdemeanors with punishments not exceeding a fine of $50 or imprisonment for 30 days.

If your hog dies a natural death, and you dont bury it at least 2 feet deep within 12 hours, you pay a fine of between $5 and $10.

If you keep swine within a radius of one-quarter mile of the administration building of any state educational or charitable institution, you can be fined $50 if you dont stop when a majority of the legal voters living within that radius ask you to.'

For example, the General Statutes of North Carolina say that willfully addressing or communicating orally with students of a school or college for women is illegal while the students are on school property or elsewhere when they are in the charge of a teacher, officer or other student of the school.

*The owner or keeper of a dog who permits it to pursue, worry or harass any squirrel or other wild animal kept on Capitol Square in Raleigh can spend 30 days in jail or be fined $50.

The owner of a motor vehicle who displays any emblem or insignia of a club, lodge, fraternity, organization, etc. that he doesnt belong to can.,be similarly punished, state law holds. So can the person who refuses to clean his, license plates when a police officer requests it.

Failure to act as a drainage commissioner if a county surveyor requests it can attract a $50 fine or a 30-day jail sentence.

Perpetrators face a similar penalty if they:

- Catch fish with the hands in public mountain trout streams.

- Transport, buy, possess or stock in public waters any species of piranha, walking catfish or grass carp.

- Shoot raccoon during daylight hours west of U.S. 1 except in Richmond County, or carrying an ax or a saw while hunting opossum or raccoon.

- Allow a dog to enter any bedroom or rooms used for sleeping in any hotel or inn.

- Use indecent or profane language in a loud and boisterous manner on any public road or highway and in hearing of two or more persons - except in Pitt or Swain counties.

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infringement is enough to warrant legal aid.

Lynn Gunn, staff director for Mental Health Study Commission that recommended the bill, said removing the restrictions would weaken the bill.

It may cut out another 10 percent to 15 percent (of mehtaP patients) that we wont catch, she said. But were still going to get a lot more than we would before. Deborah Greenblatt, an attorney representing Carolina Legal Assistance for the Mentally Handicapped, said it was a reasonable compromise. But she said she did not support it.

Ill always have problems with it because theres no way to predict dangerousness, she said.

Ms. Greenblatt has argued that the bill would create a new revolving door in which patients will continually be shuttled from their homes to courts to enforce their treatments.

In other legislative action: Lottery The full Senate will consider next week a bill to set up a statewide lottery after a binding referendum after the measure was approved by the Senate Judiciary II Committee.

Sen. R.C. Soles, D-Columbus, committee chairman, said he would have the bill put on Wednesdays calendar at the request of members who would not be present Friday

and to avoid Tuesdays session at Camp Lejeune.

Sen. Richard Barnes, D-Forsyth, who introduced the bill, said he was pleased with its progress and expected it to pass the Senate with few changes.

The chances are improving every day, he said. We are reminded every day of our fiscal shortfall in the state.

If approved by the General Assembly and the voters, the lottery is expected to generate up to $100 million a year for the state. The bill calls for a referendum in November to consider the lottery, but Sen. Ollie Harris, D-Cleveland, has said he would introduce a floor amendment to postpone the date until November 1984.

The committee adopted amendments Thursday to have winnings by minors held in a trust fund until they reach the age of 18 and to let the state treasurer invest lottery funds in accordance with North Carolina law Day-Care

The House voted 83-12 to approve a compromise bill exempting church-operated day-care centers from state licensing requirements. Under the bill, church daycare facilities still would be required to obey state health and safety standards.

The only difference is that they are not required to display a license on their wall, said Rep. Richard Wright, D-Columbus.

The measure now goes to the Senate for concurrence in a House amendment.

The bill is a compromise over a measure proposed during the last session that would not have forced church -day-care centers to obey health and safety standards.

It is supported by fundamentalist churches, Gov. Jim Hunt and the state agencies that oversee daycare facilities.

Teacher Swap

The Senate Education Committee approved a bill to let university professors temporarily switch positions with public school teachers after removing a controversial provision that made the swaps mandatory.

Rep. Howard Chapin, D-Beaufort, told the committee he favored the mandatory institution of the pilot program. He has said voluntary attempts to start such a program have not been effective.

Chapin said the program would improve teaching at all levels by keeping professors abreast of public school methods and by informing teachers on the latest teaching innovations.

University officials have fought the mandatory provision, saying they have used the program when it would do the most good.

Sen. Bob Warren, D-Johnston, introduced the compromise bill, saying, If _we can train better teachers, thats the important thing.

The substitute bill encourages the University of North Carolina Board of Governors and the State Board of Education to set up exchanges among teachers and professors. It requires a report to the General Assembly next session.

If were not satisfied ... by next year. Ill work to support your bill, Sen Ken Harris, R-Mecklenburg, told Chapin.

Video Tax

A House Finance subcommittee debated but took no action on two bills to impose taxes on video game machines. One bill, sponsored by Rep. Herman Gist, D-Guilford, would put a $200 tax on each machine. The other, sponsored by Rep. D R. Mauney, D-Gaston, would apply the 3 percent

state and 1 percent local sales tax to gross receipts from the games.

Chairman Rep. Chris Barker, D-Craven, said the two bills may be combined into a substitute package.

Mauney said he considered taxing the machines receipts the best course because some might be taxed more than they produce. Others might be taxed only a tiny fraction of what they make, he said.

i

Gist said he based his bill on a South Carolina provision under which the machines are taxed up to $:100 a year.

Rep. Murray Pool. D-Sampson, who ^aid he distributes video games in southeastern counties, said he had evidence that the (Video game) fad is over'.'

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Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was steady to 50 cents lower. Kinston 46.25, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadboum, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurin-burg and Benson 46,25, Wilson 46.25, Salisbury un-reproted, Rowland 46,00, Spiveys Corner 45.75. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 43.00, Fayetteville 42.00, Whiteville 42.00, Wallace 43.00, Spiveys Corner 43.00, Rowland 42.00, Durham 42.00,

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Poultry

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b, dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 42.50 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 24 to 3 pound birds. Forty-five percent of the loads offered have been confirmed with a preliminary' weighted average of 44 cents f o b. dock or equivalent. The market is steady and the live supply is light to moderate for a good demand. Weights desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Friday was 1,755,000, compared to 1,711,000 last Friday.

Hens

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina hen market was steady with a weak undertone. Supplies adequate. Demand light. Prices paid per pound for hens over 7 pounds at farm for Monday and Tuesday slaughter was 15 cents.

GnD>nam Gen Elec ('.enlElec wi Gen Food Gen .Mills Gen Motors Gen Tire GenuParts GaPacif Goodrich Goodyear Grace Co Gl.Nor .Nek Greyhound Gulf OU Herculesinc Honey-well HosptCp s Ing Rand IBM

Intl Harv Ini Paper Inl Rectif Int T4T K mart KaisrAlum Kane Mill KanebSvc KrogerCo Lockheed Masonite n .McDrmlnt n Mead Corp MinnMM .Mobil Monsanto NCNB Cp NabiscoBrd Nat Distill NorflkSou n OlinC'p Owenslll PepsiCo Phelps Dod PhilipMorr PhUlpsPel Polaroid ProctGamb s Quaker Oat RC.A

RalslnPur

Repub.^ir

Republic StI

Revlon

Reynldlnd

Rockwelint

43',

48\

23

84,

78",

40,

63,

.35

22',

,37",

20

50",

46"

48',

46',

50"

110",

42S    42"

33" 33', 47",    48"

23",    23",

8"    8",

TI\ 77", 41    41>,

63 > 35

22"    22'j

37',    37",

20

50',    504

48    48

45",    46'i

45",

55',

70",

36',

40"

30",

42",

50'.,    50"

110", 110", 5,5",    55",

45 4    45",

54",    55,

35".

40",

34

45",

30

42',    42'

.33",    33"

23",

34",

121

49",

116',

114

55",

40",

33

18"

15",

45"    45",

45',    45',

' 23',    23",

34'.    34'-j

38",    39

119    1204

49",    49",

46",    46",

115", 115", 11', 11", 55",    55",

27",    27",

40'7    40",

16

32",

18', IB', 15",    15",

39',

119",

54",

19",

26",

83",

30',

15",

38",    39'

(Continued from pagel)

and that the council take steps to end what he termed the violation of his rights.

McCarley said he was not sure how the council could regulate athletic events from a noise standpoint and he questioned who would be cited for violations.

Jean Lowery, an Eastern Street resident, cited problems in her area .with noise and said she would like to hear a demonstration that would give her in indication of permissible levels.

George Shoe, who resides on Shady Lane, said his family had endured and tolerated fraternity house noise for 12 years and he offered "very strong suppport for some type of ordinance."

Jan Williams, a resident of Jackson Drive, said there have been problems recently with bands practicing at a nearby facility on 10th Street and she was concerned that the ordinance be as strict as possible regarding noise filtering from one zone to another. McCarley said the ordinance addresses property uses rather than zones.

John Anema, president of the Tar River Neighborhood Association, expressed support for the new ordinance on behalf of the TRNA. He said the organization feels most of the noise problems stem from chronic repeaters and the imposition of a $50 fine might tend to

eliminate repeat offenders.

Charles Clark of Jefferson Drive saidthe East Wright Road residents owned their property before Jaycee Park was developed and he contended they deserve some consideration.

Councilman Stuart Shinn suggested that the city could increase enforcement at the park. Cox noted that the city had been trying for some time to have the playground equipment relocated.

Elmer Meyer, vice chancellor for student jife at East Carolina University, said the cooperation and discussions between the city and university during the drafting of the ordinance was wonderful and enhanced the city-ECU relationship. Meyer offered support for the ordinance.

Mrs. Buck suggested that the council continue action on the ordinance until it could elaborate further on the athletic events exemption but her motion failed to gain a second.

Councilman George Pugh said the ordinance at least represented a start in addressing noise problems.

Cox said it is hoped the athletic events regulation can be addressed and researched further. He said the council will give continued consideration to the matter at future workshop sessions.

118", 118", 54",

19'j    19',

28",. 26"

83",    83",

30    .30',

RoyCrown

SlRegisi.'D

NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market pushed ahead in heavy trading today, flirting once again with record highs The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials climbed 6.58 to 1,226.30 by noontime, surpassing the closing high of 1,226.20 it reached at the nd of last week.

Gainers led losers by about 5 to 2 among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

LTV led the active list, up V4 at 15*8. A 1.49 million-share block traded atl4s.

Chrysler gained U2 to 28^8 on top of a 1'8-point rise Thursday, when the company said it planned to pay off a third of its government-guaranteed loans early.

The NYSEs composite index gained 0.61 to 95.01, At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up 3.65 at 440.46.

Volume on the Big Board came to 54.01 million shares at noontime, against 48.83 million at the same point Thursday.

egis.^ Scot I Paper SealdPow SearsRoeb Shaklee Skyline Gp Sony Corp Southern Co Sperry Cp StdOilCal StdOUlnd StdOUOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn CMC Ind I n Camp Un Carbide Cniroval CS Steel Cnocal Wachov Cp W al.Mart s

25',

37",

28,

57'i

31",

34",

39',

31",

66>,

33

.33',

584

49H

27",

22",

8j

22",

:i3,

56',

58",

23",

25    25

37",    37",

31',

57',

314

344    34',

39',

31',

65",

33

32",

58-",

49",

27".

22",

Tests Of 'Hitler Diary' Said To Prove Forgery

8",

34

22yr 22", 33',    3,3",

55",    56

58",    58",

231    23'..

WestPtPep WestRh EH

Weyerhsr WInnDix Woolworth Wrigley Xerox Cp

24",

52

42

64'i

25',

16",

16

37',

38

45",

46

24

72

:16,

56,

11

72",

65

14

23,

34

43',

63'.,

46',

48,

40',

48",

33,

51

46",

33",    3i>

24",

514    52

414    42

64",    64'

24",    25

16', 16, 15",    16

374    37,

45'.,

45",

234    23"

71",    72

55",

.364 55", 11 11 724    T2'7

644    65

13",

23    23

334 7331, 42 4 43', 62",    63

46    46

47",    48',

.39",    404

484    484

33'.,    33':,

50',    50',

46'v    464

Following are selected 11 am stock market quotations:

Ashland prC Burroughs

Carolina Power & Light Collins 4 Aikman Connor

Duke Eaton Eckerds Exxon Fieldcrest Hatteras Hilton Jefferson Deere Lowe's .McDonald's McGraw Piedmont Pizza Inn P4G

TRW, Inc CnitedTel Virginia Electnc Wachovia

OVER THE COL'N'TER

.Aviation

Branch

LitUeMint

Planters Bank

40',

52':

22',

26

21

23",

41',

34-"

:(4",

16'

554

35

23"

65",

444

36.,

58",

72

23

154

434

264-264

224-22",

1-4

164-17

NEW YORK . AP) -Midday slocks

.AMR Corp Abbtl.abs .Allis Chaim Alcoa Am Baker AmBrands Amer Can .Am Cyan AmFamily Am Motors AmStand Amer TiT Beat Food Beth Steel Boeing Boise Cased Borden Burlngt Ind

High

;io,

45

13",

34',

134

'Ixiw l^st 29",

44"    44"

15',    15",

Windmill Gets Very Low Bid

34'

15

15-4

20'

33'

CSX Corp CaroPwLt Celanese Cent Soya Champ Int Chrysler CocaCola Colg Palm Com Edis* CoaAgra

1)5    544    54-",

404    40',    40',

48',    47",    48',

20',    19",

9'    84

.33':    33',

69',    68",

27':    27',

214    21:

:i9':    39

44",    444

51    5:!,    .53",

364    :i!,    36',

65",    65",

27'

21'

394

65

224    22'

62', 62

22'

1.5",    154

26", 26'-,

62'

28",    27

554    55

23

27':

284

554

23':    234

274

29    284    29

FRIDAY

7 :30 p m - Red Men meet

ATLANTA (AP) - An experimental windmill that cost the government $30 million brought a high bid at auction of only $51,600 from a textile company that plans to dismantle most of the massive machine.

McBess Industries Inc. of Bessemer City, N.C., which was the apparent high bidder when sealed bids were opened Thursday, will use only the generator from the windmill to re-establish a company-owned hydroelectric facility in Lincoln, N.C.

The rest of the device, complete with 974-foot blades, will be disassembled and given to Georgia Tech for use in radar research.

The windmill was to have generated 2,000 kilowatts of electricity, but seldom worked, a U.S. government spokesman said.

SATURDAY

1:30 pm. -- Duplicate bridge game at Planters Bank 8:00 p m - AA open discussion group meets at St. Paul's Episcopal Church

HELP FIGHT INFLATION by

buying and selling through the Classified ads. Call 752-6166.

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FRANKFURT. West Germany (AP) - The government said today its experts had scientifically tested three of the 62 volumes in the purported diaries of Adolf Hitler and concluded they were forged.

Based on an analysis of the contents and the criminal-technical and scientific investigation, the archives have come to the conviction that the material handed them could not stem from Hitlers hand, but were made in the postwar period,. Interior Minister Friederich Zimmermann said in a statment issued in Bonn.

We regret that this examination could not be done before publication, he said.

In Frankfurt, Federal Archives President Hans Booms said experts from his agency, the Federal Criminal Office in Wiesbaden and the Federal Bureau of Standards had examined three volumes provided by Stem, the magazine that said it found the documents in a farming village in East Germany.

MAGNET SCHOOLS

ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) - Magnet schools can not only desegregate educational programs, but also help to stabilize racially changing neighborhoods, says a University of Rochester /acuity member.

Magnet programs can be effective school desegregation tools when placed in so-called transitional neighborhoods, says Associate Professor Eugene C. Royster of the Graduate School of Education and Human Development. In such areas neither black nor white students feel they will be greatly outnumbered.

Royster, who has studied magnet schools in school districts throughout the nation, says the jtabilizing effect on schools in changing neighborhoods spills over to housing patterns as well.

Parents both black and white see the improvements in the school and stop moving out.

Scientific tests showed that the paper and ink used in the volumes was manufactured after World War II, Booms said. He provided no specific date of manufacture and did not describe the tests.

He said the experts who examined the documents believe they were forged with the use of historical material on Hitler that was published in 1%2. Booms did not elaborate.

Stem Editor Henri Nannen said in a telex statement, The magazine cannot ignore the statements from the federal archives, but will take them into consideration in further publication. A final explanation of the details is not possible at this moment. The government study of the documents bgan last Tuesday, when Stem handed over three volumes of the purported Hitler diaries. Booms said, adding that his office had received four more volumes since then but had not tested them.

The seven volumes were said to cover the years 1934, 1937,1939,1941,1942 and 1943. Booms said they included the two books describing the Nazi dictators purported knowledge of his deputy Rudolf Hess flight to Scotland in May 1941, but did not say whether they 'were among those tested.*

Stem has been publishing excerpts from the documents, saying they are genuine and were traced by one of

Want Sums To Teach English

MASS DROWNING

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) - An overloaded river boat hit a sandbar and capsized in Borneos Kapnas River, drowning 32 persons, the Daily Komps reported today.

NEW YORK (AP) - The federal government should use money earmarked for bilingual education to promote efficiency in English, not teach other subjects in a foreign language, says a group of educators.

In a report 'Thursday for the Twentieth Century Fund, a private research foundation, the educators also proposed several incentive programs for teachers and students that would require $6 billion more annually in federal funds.

Diane Ravitch, a' member of the panel, said the federal government should support programs that teach children to speak, read and write English as quickly as possible by immersing them in the language.

HAVE YOU

WMTTBH A BOOK?

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Your letter will receive prompt and personal attention. Further, you will be mailed the informative 32-page brochure, How To Pubhth Your Book, which explains our reliable and time-tested publishing program.

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hayloft

its reporters to a where the magazine said former officer in Hitlers^ army had hidden them for decades.

It said the volumes were in an airplane carrying Hitlers archives that crashed near the village of Boemersdorf on April 21, 1945, shortly before Hitler killed himself in his Berlin bunker. Stem has declined to reveal its source for the documents.

Burney

Ms. Althesia Burney of Route 1, Box A-lOO, Grifton, died Wednesday. Funeral services will be conducted Sunday at 2:30 p.m. at Live Oak Free Will Baptist Church by Elder Elmer Jackson Jr. and Elder Nathan Darden. Burial will follow in the Live Oak Cemetery.

Ms. Burney was bom and reared in the Ayden community but had made her home in the Hanrahan community for the past 15 years. She was a member of Live Oak Free Will Baptist Church.

She is survived by two daughters, Ms. Carolyn Burney and Mrs. Cynthia B. Gray, both of Baltimore; her father, Ratha Burney of Ayden; her stepmother, Mrs. Emma Worthington Burney of Oxon Hill, Md.; three brothers, George Burney of Ayden, James Burney of Baltimore and Bobby Burney of Newark, N.J.; four stepbrothers, Daniel Worthington of Greenville, Harold Davis of Kinston, James Worthington of Junction City, La., and Felton Worthington of Brooklyn; one sister, Mrs. Alice Lucy Cannon of Newark, N.J.; two stepsisters, Mrs. Barbara Lou Worthington of Newark, N.J., and Mrs. Rebecca Younger of Ox5n Hill, Md.; three grandchildren and four_ -great-grandchildren. ^--

The body will be at Norcott Memorial Chapel in Ayden from 6 p.m. Saturday until carried to the church one hour before the funeral. Family visitation at the chapel will be from 8-9 p.m. Saturday.

Carawan

Miss Dorothy Rebecca Carawan, 69, died Friday in Pitt (^unty Memorial Hospital. Her funeral service will be conducted Sunday at 2 p.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by Major Ronald Davis. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery.

Miss Carawan, a Pitt County native, had been a resident of Greenville for the past 10 years. She was a retired Salvation Army officer who served a number of different appointments.

Surviving are three sisters, Mrs. Rena Howell of Greenville, Mrs. Charlie Flynn of New Bern and Mrs. Fred Edwards Jr. of Simpson; two brothers, Capt. Joseph Carawan of Winchester, Va., and Horace Carawan of Goldsboro.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home Saturday from 7 to 9 p.m.

Hernia And Heart Save Pig

Wedge Of Lava Seen In Crater

TACOMA, Wash. (AP) - A hernia and a kind heart saved this little piggy from the bacon pan.

Because of a hernia, the runt pi^et had to struggle in vain with his siblings for a share of dinner, and Sheran Hessers heart went out to him.

Now the 3-week-old pig, named Iggy the Piggy, has been given the run of the Hessers farmhouse in nearby Graham. Hes wearing a makeshift supporter and fed a mixture of baby food and molasses every three hours.

And someday hell have an operation to correct his hernia.

Hes even housebroken, according to Mrs. Hesser, a dental assistant, and her husband Bob, a battalion chief with the Tacoma fire department.

Mrs. Hesser said the piglet likes to nuzzle and kiss her on the nose.

Some day my other pigs will be spareribs, she said. But Iggy - well always keep him around the farm.

VANCOUVER, Wash. (AP) - A 200-foot-long wedge of lava is edging onto the surface of the crater of Mount St. Helens, a product of eruptive activity that began three months ago, scientists say.

Five scientists spotted the lava wedge Wednesday when they took a helicopter trip inside the 8,363-foot volcanos crater to take routine measurements, said Steve Brantley of the U.S. Geolog ical Surveys volcano servatory. The lava wedge was not apparent when the scientists made a previous measuring trip April 29.

The new lava is directly traceable to a non-explosive eruption at the mountain in southwest Washington, Brantley said 'Thursday.

Carr

Funeral services for Mr. Sam Carr of Route 4. Greenville, will be conducted Sunday at 2 p.m. at Cornerstone Baptist Church by the Rev. Arlee Griffin. Burial will be in Brown Hill Cemetery.

Mr. Carr spent his entire life in Pitt County. He served as a deacon of Cornerstone Missionary Baptist Church and was a member of the IBPEOW Elks Lodge No. 234.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Bessie Moore Carr of the home; -two daughters. Mrs. Mary Matthews of Brooklyn, N.Y., and Miss Carol Smith of Greenville; four sisters, Mrs. Mary Bell, Mrs. Hattie Stoutmire and Mrs. Dorothy Smithwick, all of Brooklyn, N.Y., and Mrs. Bertha Hardison of Greenville; four grandchildren; four greatgrandchildren and one great-great-grandson.

The family will receive friends Saturday from 7 to 8 prm. at Phillips Brothers Mortuary.

ob-

Diti

BETHEL - Mrs. Janis Dou^tie Diti, 44, died Saturday in Stover, Mo. She was vice president of All Points Travel Agency in Independence. Mo. Funeral Mrvices will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. at Johnson Memorial Presbyterian Church in Bethel by the Revs. Eric Bemelson, Ed Connor and Ellis J. Bedsworth. Burial will be in the Doughtie Family Cemetery.

Arrangements are being made by Ayers-Gray Funeral Home.

MASONIC NOTICE

, Winterville Masonic Lodge No. 232 announces a regular communication at the Masonic Hall Friday at 7:30 p.m. All members are asked to be present, t William Elbert, master AnniniasC. Smith, secy

ELKS NOTICE Pitt Elks Lodge No. 234 and Golden Rod Lodge No. 368 will meet Sunday at 12:30 p.m. at the Elks Hall for the funeral of Sam Carr.

June White, Exalted Ruler William Smith Jr., Stry

MASONIC NOTICE Mount Hemom Lodge No. 35 will hold regular communication Monday night at 7:30. 'This is election night and all brothers are asked to be present.

Benjamin Braswell, W.M. S.E. Hemby, secretary

Morgan

ASHEVILLE - A memorial service for Mrs. Marietta Northrop Morgan, 43, of 27 Busbee Road will be conducted Friday at 1 p.m. at All Souls Episcopal Church, Asheville.

A Greenville native, Mrs. Morgan had lived in Asheville for 12 years. She was a member of All Souls Episcopal Church.

Surviving are her husband. Dr. William W. Morgan Jr. of the home, a daughter. Miss Elizabeth Morgan of the home; t\yo sons, William

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Morgan and Jonathan Morgan, both of the home; her mother, Mrs. Martha Sugg Northrop of Greenville; and two brothers, Harriss Northrop of Greenville and Samuel Northrop of Winston-Salem.

Memorial contributions may be made to the Pathways Program, 16 All Souls Crescent, Asheville, N.C. 28803.

Groce Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Rouse

SNOW HILL - Mr. Thurman Carroll (Dock) Rouse, 67, died Thursday. His funeral service will be conducted Saturday at 3 p.m. in the Edwards Funeral Home Chapel by the Rev. William Brown. Burial will be in the Snow Hill Cemetery,

He was retired from employment by the North Carolina Department of Transportation. Surviving him is his wife. Mrs. Olivia Henderson Rouse, of the home.

The family will receive friends at the funieral home tonight from 7 to 9 oclock.

Telfair Mr. Willie James Telfair of 1701 McCullen St., died Thursday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. He was the husband of Mrs. Icelene - Telfair.

Funeral arrangements wil be announced later by Flanagan Funeral Home.

Vines

Mrs. Clara Vines died Thursday ip. Pitt County Memorial Hospital. She was the wife of James Vines of Greenville. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by Phillips Brothers Mortuary.

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Biggs Drugs

Evans St. Greenville, N.C.

Edwards Pharmacy

Ayden, N.C.

Bethel Pharmacy

Bethel, N.C.

Farmville Discount Drug

Farmville, N.C.

NOTICE OF REVENUE SHARING PROPOSED USE HEARING

Public notice is hereby given that the City of Greenville will conijuct a proposed use hearing on the appropriation of Revenue Sharing Funds for the 1983-84 fiscal year. The public hearing will be held before the City Manager and is scheduled for 7:30 p.m., Wednesday, May 18,1983, in the City Council Chambers on the third floor of the Municipal Building, 201 West Fifth Street. ^

The City of Greenville expects to receive the following revenues in the 1983-84 fiscal year:

Allocation Pyment ' Allocation Payments anticipated to be approved by Congress Fund Balance Interest on Investments

$695,732

All Interested citizens should be present at the public hearing at which time they will be afforded an opportunity to provide written and comments on the possible use of Revenue Sharing funds for 1983-84.

$354,532

315,000

25,000

1.200

oral

May 6,13,1963





THE DAILY

ClassifiedFRIDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 6, 1983

He's Safe

Cleveland Indian Rick Manning scores from third on a sacrifice fly by Jim Essiam to right during second inning action Thursday afternoon, leaving Minnesota Twins catcher Ray Smith diving in vain for the late throw. Cleveland won 7-5, sweeping the three-game series. (AP Laserphoto)

By The Associated Press

Bruce Sutter is supposed to save games for the rest of the St. Louis Cardinals pitching staff. So far into this young season, hes been taking things like wins - into his own hands.

Dave LaPoint' was trying to boost his record to 3-0 Thursday in San Diego, but going into the eighth inning the Cardinals were trailing the Padres 3-2, thanks in part to a Sixto Lezcano home run.

Lonnie Smiths home run for^ the Cards in the top of the eighth tied the score, and Sutter was sent in. And, after Ruppert Jones double-play grounder off a split-fingered fastball in the bottom of the eighth and Ken Oberkfells two-out, tie-breaking single in the top of the ninth, it was Sutter who strode off the mound with a 4-3 victory and a 3-0 record.

In the only other National League game, it was Atlanta 6, Houston~3 Thursday night. In the only American League game, Cleveland defeated Minnesota 7-5.

Im going to throw the split-fingered fastball and if they hit it, they'hit it, said Sutter. If they beat me, thats what theyre gonna beat me with." With the go-ahead run on third, Jones jumped on Sutters first serve and killed the threat with his grounder to first baseman Keith Hernandez, who started a 3-6-3 double-play.

Id rather have saves, Sutter deadpanned, but as longas we win. Im satisfied.

The Cards catcher Thursday, Jamie Quirk, said of Sutters unique split-fingered delivery: He lives or dies by one pitch and hell keep throwing it. I was suprised that Jones went after the first pitch in that situation. He hit the ball well, but luckily he hit it into the ground and to the

best first baseman in baseball.

The victory prevented the Padres from sweeping the three-game series. On Wednesday night they trounced the Cards 10-0.

When I went out there, said LaPoint, I just told myself to pitch a good game. We needed a win more than anything. It was our turn to go out and pitch a good game today.

He made only one really bad pitch - to Lezcano in the second inning. LaPoint said he was too concerned with keeping Steve Garvey from collecting his 2,00th career hit. (Garvey failed to get a hit in four at-bats). 1 pumped myself so up for Garvey that I forgot what to do with the next guy, LaPoint said.

Oberkfell got four hits in five at-bats, drove in two runs and scored one. His game-winner followed Willie McGees single and stolen

bse. Its jiist nice to get a two-out hit and have it be the game-winning RBI, he said. I consider myself a pretty good clutch-hitter, but I didnt come up with many RBIs last year.

Braves 6, Astros 3 Rookie Craig McMurtry yielded only four hits in six innings and Dale Murphy and Glenn Hubbard homered for Atlanta Braves.

McMurtry, 3-1, struck out two and walked just one before leaving for a pinch-hitter in the sixth. Steve Bedrosian, one of three Braves relievers, recorded his third save.

Murphy now leads the National League in home runs witli eight and also had singles in the fourth and sixth and stole two bases as the Braves won their 11th home game in 12 tries.

Who leads the league now is not important, he said. If youre ahead at the end of the season, now, thats nice.

Indians 7, Twins 5 Rookie reliever Neal Heaton kept putting Twins on base -and then wiping them out by serving up double-play balls. The Indians turned three twin-killings in his three innings to record third save of the week.

This is the toughest situation hes been in, Cleveland Manager Mike Ferraro said. His feet keep getting wetter and wetter.

We had the chance but we just couldnt get the big hit, said Twins Manager Billy Gamder.

Andre Thornton of the Indians drove in two runs and stretched his hitting streak to 10 games. He had a sacrifice fly in their three-run first inning against Brad Havens and an RBI single for the decisive run in the fifth inning.

All of Minnesotas runs against winner Rick Sutcliffe came in the fifth inning, three of them on Kent Hrbeks bases-loaded double.

Rose Golfers Vicforious

Rose High Schools golfers gained a seven stroke victory over strong Hunt High School yesterday in a three-way meet at Brook Valley Country Club.

The Rampants finished the days play with a 334 total, while Hunt came in with a 341. Kinston took third in the event with a 350 total.

Roses Craig Davies led all golfers with a 74. Other Rose scorers were John Jordan, 86; Chris Evans, 87; and Brian HU1,87.

Hunt was paced by Kent WUliams with a 76, while Jimmy AUen had 85, Richie Fulghum had 88 and Mike Kennedy, 92.

Tinsley Mitchell was low for

Sports Calendar

Editor's Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.

Todays Sports BasebaU Ayden-Grifton at Greene Central (8p.m.)

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

BeddingfleldatRose (7:30p m.) Conley atWhiteOak(7:30p.m.) Conley at White Oak JV (5 p.m.) Bertie at Roanoke (7:30 p.m.)

LitUe League Coca-Cola vs. Kiwanis True Value Hardware vs. Exchange

SoftbaU

Bertie at Roanoke (4 p m.)

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

Ayden-Grifton at Greene Central Beddingfield at Rose (4 p.m.) Beddingfleld at E.B. Aycock (4 pm.)

Conley at White Oak (5 p.m.)

Industrial League WNCT-TV vs. GUCO TRW vs. Wachovia Empire Brushes #2 vs. Enforcers Burroughs-Wellcome it2 vs. Burroughs Wellcome #1

Fire Fighters vs. Empire Brushes#!

Cox vs. CIS

Church League St, James vs. Grace Mt. Pleasant vs. Black Jack City League Pantana Bobs vs. Metal Craft Whittington vs. Pair California Concepts vs. Ormonds Sunnyside Eggs vs. Subway Tennis

Beddingfield at Rose (3:30 p.m.) Track

Girls Sectionals at Williamston Saturdays Sports Baseball

James Kenan at Greene Central JV(2p.m.)

Little League Wellcome vs. Carroll & Associates Pepsi-Cola vs. First Federal Jayceesvs.Sportswdrld Union Carbide vs. Lions Prep League Shop-Eze vs. Garris-Evans Hendrix & DaU vs. 1st State Bank Track

East Carolina women at Spec Towns Relays East Carolina at North Carolina-South Carolina Meet of Champions

Kinston with a 77. Frank Browlea added an 86, while Lee McGee had 93 and David Tolliver had 94.

The match was the final regular season contest for the Rampants who end the year at 13-6. The Big East Conference Tournament will be held on Monday at Rocky Mounts Northgren Country Club,

Farmville C......310

Eastern Wayne... 335 Zebulon.........385

FARMVILLE Farmville Central High School rolled up a pair of golfing victories yesterday at the Farmville Golf and Country Club, downing Eastern Wayne and Zebulon.

The Jaguars carded a 310 for the afternoon, while Eastern Wayne was well back in second place with a 335. Zebulon finished third with a 385.

Farmvilles Gary Hobgood took medalist honors with a 73, while other Jaguars scoring included Mel Williams, 77; Scott Lewis, 78; and Shawn Thompson, 82.

Zebulons Art Robinson led

his team with a 74, but got little help. Other Zebulon scores included: Lee Liles, 89; Patrick Williams, 103; and David Ellington, 109.

Kent Denton led Eastern Wayne with a 79. Other Warrior scores included Drew Nelson, 82; Greg McMillan, 87, and Randy Justice, 87.

Farmville Central is now 16-5 on the year, and plays host to Ayden-rifton on Monday in the final regular season match of the year.

Rose JVs Win

STANTONSBURG - Gary Scott fired a two-hitter and recorded nine strikeouts and Battle Emory slammed a homer to help the Rose High School junior varsity trounce Wilson Beddingfield 13-2 Thursday in Big East 4-A baseball action,

David Jester rapped three hits in four trips to the plate for the Rampants, while Tony Taylor went 3-5.

rhe Rampants are now 6-1 on the season and travel to Kinston Monday.

4 SALTWATER KILLER

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Tackle Counter 1221

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Rose 'Slips' Into Tie

Sutter Takes Over Duties

WILSON A series of mistakes allowed Wilson Fike to deadlock Rose High School in the Big East Track and Field Championships yesterday at the Fike track.

Fike and Rose finished with 136 points each, while Northeastern was third with 74. Kinston finished fourth with 60, followed by Rocky Mount with 37, Hunt with 33, Northern Nash with 27 and Beddingfield with 19.

Rose, heavily favored in the meet, lost a number of points when Edward Frazier, their class sprinter, false started in both the 100 and 200-meter events, and thus failed to pick up points. Also in the 100, Roderick Harrell pulled a hamstring and was unable to finish that race or compete in the 200 - costing Rose more points.

The Rampants also lost points in the 440-yard relay, when the team was disqualified after finishing third. Donnell Lee was detected going out of his lane following his handoff.

But the Rampants got a break in another event, the 880-yard relay - which had to be run a second time. Inthe first running. Rose finished third, and that margin would have allowed Fike to win its first-ever Big East title in track all alone.

However, after the race was run, a meet official noted that half the. field had started at the wrong spot - with Rose one of those teams which had farther to run. The race was then rerun, with Rose finishing second.

Rose captured first place in seven of the events: William Waugh won the shot put. Tommy Sparkman took the triple jump; Roswell Streeter captured the high jump; Burney Carraway was first in the pole vault; John Ormond won the 1,600; Frazier took the 400 and John Byrd won the 800.

There were no double winners in the meet.

Rose returns to action next Friday at Tarboro in the sectionals.

Summary:

Farley iR) 10-)i. Barnes .Ki 104,. Brice I Hi 10-0 110 high hurdles Morgan iRMi 14.9; Carraway iRi 1.>1; Speight (F) 15 2: Webb iBi 15 8. Harri.s iK)162;DanielsiRil71 100: Pittman (Ki 10,5 ties conference record i: Mercer NH. 10 7, Barnes iFi 10.8; Felton Fi 10 9; JacksontHi ll 2; Platt Ki 114 880 relay Fike 1 27 5 new con ference record, old 1 28 2. Fike,; Rose 1:29 1, Kinston, time un available. Hunt, time unavailable 1600: Ormond Ri 4:28 9 Battle <NNi 4:32. Braswell 'Fi 4:13, Bolen iRi 4:43 7, Homthal iNEi 4:45 7; Baker'KU 499 440 relay Fike 42.2 new con ference record, old 42 :i Rose. 1982); Kinston 42 6: .Northeastern 43 1; Beddingfield 4.5 0. Hunt 45 0 400: Frazier ,R, 49 7 Stokes iR.M) .50,5! Little ^F ,52 8; Tavlor (NEl ,53.3, Wilkins .NNi .53.3, Hines I K'5S >

:i00 intermediate hurdles Jenkins F) 37 4 'new conference record, old 39 2, James Smith. Bed dingfield). Cunnmgham i.NEi 40 8. .Morgan (R.M 4o9. I>ewis ,\Ei 418. Carrawav iRi 42 3, Daniels |R)425

800; Byrd Ri 1 59 4 Deans iHi 1:59 8, Braswell F' 2 04 2, Hines N.N'i    2 05 3 Spt'ight    ,R.    2:06.

Sanders (RM) 2:06 1 200:    Dickinson F)    215    'new

conference record, old    21 7. Walter

Bond. Bertie, and Kdward Frazier. Rose), Mercer NKi 21 7 Pledger 'NF'    22 3. Jackson    iH    22 6.

Sumler iN'Ni 22 7. Baker (NEi 22 8

3200: Battle ,.\.Ni 9 .5)1. Ormond Ri 9 56, Harris ID 10 21 5, Artis Fi 10:36. Sharpe i.NEi 10 54, Rook Kl 11:09 7

.Mile relay Fike 3 29 4, Northeastern 3:33 5. Rose 3 ,35 1, Kinston 3:37, Hunt3 :i9

Shot put: Waugh iR) Sl-S's; Land (F) 48-8'4; Barnes iB) 48-5: Koch (NE) 47-1,'2: Barnes (Ki 46-4'4 Johnson (NE) 46-3

Discus: Land (F) 135-6'>4; Suggs (K) 132-F4; Green (Fi 126-7; Koch (NE) 121-5; Hardy (Fl 118-11 Jones (Hi 118-io>4

Long jump: Pittman iK) 22-7>4: Carr iR) 22-5; Lynch iRM) 21-4 Sharpe (.NEi 20-Dh. Batts iB) 20-6>2 ; Lewis (NEl 20-24.

Triple jump: Sparkman kR) 44-1Carr (R) 43-4, Battle iRMi 42-10; Bynum (B) 42-10; Howard (F) 42-10; Pitt(F)42-9'2.

High jump: Streeter (Ri 6-2 Howard (Fi 6-0; lx?e iRi 64) Pledger (NE) 6-0; Carter (H) 64) Braswell (F) 5-10.

Polej/aaIl: Carraway (Ri 12-6, Brady (F) 114); Wiggins (K) 114);

Seniors Pace Lady Pirates

Bath Rallies Past Bear Grass; 13-12

BATH - Bath High School rallied for three runs in the bottom of the seventh to gain a 13-12 baseball victory over Bear Grass yesterday.

Bear Grass took the initial, lead |n the first inning, scorihg twice. Phil Peele opened with a single and Tony Leggett walked. Billy Fulford then singled both of them in.

Bath came back with two in the bottom of the frame to tie it up, then both teams scored single runs in the third. The Bears got two more in the fourth, but Bath took the lead with three in the bottom of the frame. The Bears came back with five in the top of the fifth, and Bath countered with three, then tied it at 10-10 with one in the sixth.

The Bears pushed back ahead in the seventh with a pair of runs, but then couldnt hold off Bath.

The Pirates opened things with a walk to D.R. Alligood in the seventh, and Brian Swain walked. Galen Braddy singled in Alligood, and Kevin Cutler walked, loading the bases. Rodney Braddy singled in Swain, and Hardin reached on an error, allowing, Galen Braddy to score the winning run.

Jimmy chipman and Galen Braddy led the Bath hitting with three each, while Jeff Tuten and Rodney Braddy each had two hits.

Bear Grass was led by Lawrence Watson with two, while Mark Taylor and Craig Gardner each had doubles.

The Bears are idle until next

Thursday when they travel to Jamesville.

Bear Grass . 201 2S0 2-12 7 S

BaUi........201    331 3-13 13 2

Gardner, Leggett (7), Watson i7i and Fulford; Cutler, G. Braddy i3) and Pittman.

GRAH.AM Senior outfielders Yvonne Williams and Cynthia Shepard each slapped three hits with a double to lead the Lady Pirates of East Carolina University to a 6-5 victory over the University of West Florida in^4he^,Nat)onal Invitational Slow Pitch Softball Tournament last night.

The Lady Pirates next opponent will be defending national champion Florida State University at 6 p.m. tonight. The Lady Seminles hold a 2-1 edge against the Pirates in 1983, having claimed a 14-8 win at the Florida State Invitational Tournament and a, 5-4 victory in a split of a doubleheader here in .April, The Lady Pirates won the first game ofthetwinbill,2-0.

Everyone hit the ball well, said ECU coach Sue

Manahan. 'West Florida had two super efforts in defeating Cleveland State and, an excellent game against us.

Senior rightfielder Mitzi Davis ripped a triple and a single in three trips to the plate, while second sacker Ginger Rothermel and Melody Ham each had a pair of singles in three at-bats for the Lady Pirates.

Jennette Roth went the distance on the mound for East Carolina, now 30-8 on the season.

Karen Fieri went 2-3 and Amy Cubanis was 2-4 with a ^double for West Florida.

' 'Every win will be difficult, Manahan said. "No one is to be taken lightly.

E. Carolina .200 102 016 14 1 West Florida 000 100 405 10 1

Roth and Cox; Williams and Autrev

Conley Third At Meet

HAVELOCK Steven King broke the tape ahead of the pack in the 100- and 200-meter races Thursday at the Coastal 3-A Conference track meet, but D.H. Conley managed to place third in the overall standings behind White Oak and North Lenoir.

White Oak tallied 144 points on the day, while North Lenoir had 110>/2, Conley 107^, West Craven 58, Havelock and West Carteret 51.

King sprinted to first place in the 100-meters in a time of 10.8 one tenth of a second ahead of T. Jones of White Oak. He won the 200-meters with a time of 22.3. '

Chester Paramore took the only other first place finish for Conley with a time of 10:2.5 in the 3200-meters.

Conley, now i8-7, remains idle until the sectional meet next Friday at Tarboro.

Shot put: Lundy (H) 46-11. Becton (WCr) 464, Sublet! (Hi 464), Pierce (WO) 43-6, W. Greene (O 42-11 Patrick (NL140-3.

Long jump: Harris (WCi 22-5 Oemons (Ci 21-2, Wooten (NLi 20-11, Dawson (C) 20-2, Waters (NL) 19-9, Kinsey (NL) 19-8 High jump. Harris iWC) 610. Raseberry (WC) 64, Wooten (NL) 6-2, Clemons (C) 62, Dawson (C) 64), Ingram (NL) 5-10

Discus: Kling iHi 143-3. Monk (WO) 142-2, Becton (WCri 1,38-2, Dixon (NL) 1:15-11. O'Conner iHi 127-9, Rochelle (H) 1194 Triple jump: Harris iWCi 454), Clemons (C) 42-lFG. Wooten (NLi 42-8, Capps (H) 41-3, Kinsev (NL) 38-2, Newton (WCai.36-8.

Pole vault: Schell (WO) 134). Toney iWO) 12-6, Riddle (WO) 11-6, Hersey (WO) 114), Cox 'H) 104). Bolden (NL) and Norris iC), tie for sixth, 104)

110 high hurdles: Fridder (WOi 15.0, Roach (C) 15 7. Ingram (NL) 15.95, Rhodes iVVOi 17 2. Tavlor (WO) 17.3.

100: King (C) 10 8, T Jones (WOi 10.9. Johnson (NL) 11 1. Waters (NL)    11.29,    Becton    (WCri    113,

Sutton (NL) 119 800    relay:    White    Oak L35.3,

Conley 1:35 6. North U-noir 1:38 1, Havelock 1:39 6, West Carteret 1:54 2

1600: Kuglar 'WOi 4:44.7, Hardison (WCai 4:46 5. Wooten (NL)    4:54,9.    Day    iWCai    5 01.

Erdman iWOi 5 0G 9, Poole iWO) 5:08.2.

400    relay    .North    l^enoir    44 4,

White Oak 45 2. Conley 46 4, West Craven 47.1, Havelock 49 5 400: S. Jones 'WO' 5197, Best

(NL) 52,85, Nobles (C) 53.5, Flagor (Hi 53 8, Clark (WO) 53.9.

300 hurdles: Fridder (WO) 41.6, Roach (C) 42.3, Bravmever (WCa) 43.5, Dixon (NL) 43.6, Taylor (WO) 43 9. Rhodes (WO) 44.1 800: Kuglar (WO) 2:08.9, Hardison (WCai 2:09,8, Day (WCa) 2:10 7, Edwards (C) 2:10.8, White (NL)2:11.7,Smith(H)2:11.8.

200: King (C) 22.3, Johnson (NLi 22 8, T Jones (WO) 23.1, Waters (NL) 23.2, S. Jones (WO) 23 8, Capps (Hi 24.0 3200: Paramore (C) 10:42.5, Wingard (WCai 10:44.9, Dixon (WCa) 10:48 1, Barfield (NL) 10:52.7, Harrison (NL) 10:53.1, Richards (C) 1113.5.

1600 relay. North Lenoir 3:32.8, Conley 3:34.6, White Oak 3:42.9, Havelock .3:47 2, West Carteret 3:52.3.

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Big Field, Niarfa's Roving Derby Woes

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -Worries of Marfa bothering other horses hover over Saturdays 109th Kentucky Derby, and, with the field at its 20-horse limit, there are fears of a traffic jam at the head of the stretch.

Wayne Lukas, who trains the sometimes wayward colt, plans no change of equipment to keep Marfa on the straight and narrow over IV4 miles at Churchill Downs.

He is putting the task of guiding the streteh-running colt home first to Jorge Velasquez, the veteran jockey who had his hands full in the Blue Grass Stakes April 27 when Marfa was disqualified -from second to foqrth after interfering with Copelan and

Desert Wine in the stretch.

"Training horses is like tuning a violin, Lukas said Thursday after he submitted his entry of Marfa, Balboa Native and Total Departure. You want to do it right and at the right time. Theres a lot of excitement in the air this morning and Marfa senses it. On the strength of Marfas impressive victories in the Jim Beam Spiral Stakes and Santa Anita Derby and the lack of a full-fledged 3-year-old standout, the Lukas entry was made the 5-2 early-line favorite.

But even Lukas cant be sure how Marfa will behave.

"I think Jorge learned something about him in the Blue Grass, Lukas said. He

(Marfa) needs to know whos in charge. He needs a driver and, for a while, Jorge became a passenger. In the Derby, Jorge needs to be a driver.

He needs to stay after him. In the Blue Grass, Marfa was doing so well and running so strongly that Jorge didnt see any need to get after him. I think he caught Jorge by surprise.

Marfa, who has three wins and three seconds in nine starts this year, will go from the No. 18 post position. The son of 1975 Derby winner Foolish Pleasure is owned by Robert French,- Barry Beal and Lukas.

It might be of some hope to Marfas backers should he

cause problems that a foul claim has never been upheld in the Derby.

Balboa Native, post No. 3, is the Louisiana Derby winner, while No. 9 Total Departure, was second in last Saturdays Derby Trial here. Sandy Hawley rides Balboa Native and Pat Valenzuela rides Total Departure.

Not since 1946 has there been a three-horse entry in the field.

Trainer Woody Stephens and Bwamazon Farm have two-horse entries for the Derby, which will draw more than 100,000 people.

Carl Lauer, Robert Victor and Nancy Vaniers Play Fellow, the 19-1 Blue Grass Stakes winner by a nose over Marfa, is tte second early choice at 4-1, going from post No. 2 under Jean Cruguet He became the oldest jockey ever to win the Derby when he rode home Seattle Slew at age 37 in 1977.

Stephens entry of Caveat, the Derby Trial winner, and Chumming, fifth in the Trial after stumbling at the start, is listed at 5-1.

August Belmonts Caveat, with Laffit Pincay board, leaves from the outside post

Jamesville's Unbeaten

Streak Now 12 In Row

Indy Testing Set Saturday

COLUMBIA Jamesville High Schools girls softball team continued unbeaten yesterday with a 12-3 romp over Columbia.

The Lady Bullets pushed over one in the top of the first, and Columbia came back with one in the bottom of the first. Jamesville went ahead for good with two in the second, adding one in the third, two more in the fifth and another pair in the sixth. The,Bullets closed it out with four in the seventh.

Columbia picked up one each in the second and sixth.

Seiita Cross and Kim Hale each had three hits to lead Jamesville, while Cathy Williams had two. Both Williams and Kim Floyd had homers for Jamesville.

The Lady Bullets are now

11-0 in conference play and

12-0 overall.

Jamesville plays host to Creswell on Tuesday.

JamesvUle .121 022 412 13 2 Columbia. . . 110 001 0 3 6 6

WP Robin Manning.

Greene C.........15

Ayden-Grifton.....2

SNOW HILL - Greene Central overwhelmed Ayden-Grifton yesterday in a girls softball game, holding onto second place in the Eastern Carolina Conference standings, 15-2.

Ayden-Grifton got both of its runs in the first inning, taking a brief lead. It didnt last long, however, as the Lady Rams pushed over three in the bottom of the inning to take the lead for good.

Greene Central then added two in the third, five in the fourth, two more in the fifth and three in the sixth for its 15-run total.

Pitcher Dalen Herring of Greene Central allowed only one hit by Ayden-Grifton, a single by Lyerly in the third inning.

Sharon Croom, Pat Woodard and Trynette Daniels each had three hits to lead Greene Centrals hitting. Crooms total included two doubles, while Woodard had'a-double and a three-run homer.

Jackie Holmes, Denise Warren, Andra Dixon, Lisa Radford and Melody Brown each added two hits for the Lady Rams. Warren had a

two-run homer as one of hers.

The win gives Greene Central a 13-5 overall record and a 6-2 ECC mark. The Lady Rams play host to league-leading Charles B. Aycock on Tuesday.

AydenAjtoo.200 000 0- 2 1 3 Greene C. . . .302 523 x-15 19 4 WP-Dalen Herring.

Bath  ..........14

Bear Grass    0

BATH - Bath utilized 11 hits and eight Bear Grass errors to take a 14-0 shutout in Tobacco Belt 1-A Conference softball action Thursday.

Askew and K. Tetterton slapped two hits each for Bath, while Braddy had a homer and Andrews a triple for the winners.

Amy Lilly had a pair of singles for Bear Grass.

Bath did most of the damage with four runs in the second inning and six in the fifth.

Bear Grass travels to Jamesville Tuesday.

Bear Grass.. 000 000 0- 0 7 8 Bath 142 061 x-14 11 2

WP-Askew.

Youth Baseball

Little Leogue

Union Carbide 6

Optimists.........0

Paul Powers threw a nohitter at the Optimsts as his Union Carbide team rolled up a 6-0 North State Little League victor) yesterday.

Powers struck out 11 and walked just two in getting the gem.

Union Carbide got all it needed in the second inning, scoring twice. Powers single and Jeff Bennett walked. Andre Hopkins singled them up, and as wild pitch scored Powers. Jonathan Powers walked as did Billy Turcotte, forcing in Bennett with the second run.

Union Carbide added four more in the third.

No one had more than one hit for Union Carbide, which got only three off the pitching of Nelson Galloway and Heath Clark.

10-8 Prep League victory over First State Bank in a preseason contest that opened play for both teams yesterday.

Dallas McPherson led the Shop-eze hitting with four, while Morris and Curtis each had two.

First State Bank got three of its runs in the fourth on a home run by Moye.

Further details were not available.

Jr. High Baseball

Winterville Leogue

Computerland .... 15 Sunshine GC 14

Pepsi-Cola.........8

Moose............7

Pepsi-Cola opened its 1983 Tar Heel Little League season with an 8-7 victory over the Moose yesterday.

The Moose struck first, getting three runs in the top of the first, two of them on a homer by Darren bullock, Pepsi came back with four in the bottom of the frame for a 4-3 lead, then added another run in the second and a sixth in the third on a solo homer by Robert Jenkins.

The Moose rallied for four in the fourth for a 7-6 lead, however.

In the bottom of the fifth, Pepsi came back with two to win it. Jenkins opened with a single and moved up on an .error. He took third on an out and Lance Goodman walked. Wes Mackenzie then singled in Jenkins moving up on David Allen's fielders choice and Chris Fuquas reaching on an error. A wild pitch then scored Mackenzie with what proved to be the winning run.

Jenkins led the Pepsi hitting with three, while Mackenzie had two. The Moose were led by Chris Christopher and Bullock, each with two.

Computerland edged past Sunshine Garden Center, 15-14 yesterday as the Winterville Little League opened its season.

Sunshine moved ahead with three runs in the first, but Computerland got one in the bottom of the frame. Sunshine then scored nine times in the third for a 12-1 lead, each team scoring once in the fourth. Sunshine got its 14th run in the fifth.

Computerland then rallied for seven in the bottom of the fifth to cut the lead to 14-9.- In the bottom of the seventh, they rallied for six more to win it. With the bases loaded Daryle Phelps doubled in Chris Lindsey and Tommy Baker. Then, after a walk by Adam Stocks, Michael Turner tripled to drive in three runs to win it.

Baker had three hits to lead Computerland, while Turner had two. John Whitehurst had two for Sunshine.

E.B. Aycock Junior High School rolled up a 10-6 baseball victory over Kinston yesterday.

Eric Jarman got the win in relief for Aycock. The Jaguar hitting was paced by Dwight Smith with two, one of them a triple. He had two runs batted in. James Matthews added a double.

Mason and Davis each had two for Kinston, both getting doubles. Whitley and Manning also added doubles for Kinston.

Aycock, now 8-1, travels to Nash Central on Tuesday.

Whitfield ....15

Chicoc  ....12

Aldridge-S'land ... 10 Pizza Inn  .....10

CHICOD - G.R. Whitfield outsluged Chicod, 15-12, yesterday in a junior high school baseball game.

James Boyd led the Whitfield hitting with three, while William Mizelle and Mark Hardy both had two. Hardy was thq,\Kinning pitcher.

Chicod was led by Russ Pittman with four hits, two of them doubles. Mike Mills and Donald Murray each had two.

Chicod is now 0-8 and Whitfield 6-2.

In the ^rls softball game, Chicod gained a 16-5 win. Lisa Stancill led the way wifh three hits, while Rhonda Jackson, Glenda Horton, Donna Beacham and,Teresa Stancill each had two. Jackson was the winning pitcher.

Linda Hardy and Juanita Moore each had two hits for Whitfield.

Chicods girls are now 8-0,

Prep League

Shop-eze Foodland 10 1st State Bank 8

Shop-eze Foodland gained a

Aldridge and Southerland rallied in the sixth to pull out a tie in a WintervUle Little League baseball game against Pizza Inn, 10-10.

A&S scored twice in the first inning, but Pizza Inn came back with four in the third. A&S got five more in the bottom of the third, with Jim Faulkner hitting a three-run homer.

Pizza Inn tied it up with thre ein the fourth at 7-7, then moved ahead at 10-7 in the next frames.

A&S tied it up in the bottom of the sxith when Hal Conger scored on an error.

Jay Jones led A&S with three hits, while Faulkner and Conger each had two. No one had more than one for Pizza Inn.

Net Event

Underway

Competition in the GTCS Tennis Tournament begins today at 1 p.m. at the River Birch Tennis Center and continues through Sunday.

The tourney, sponsored by the Greenville Tennis Club and the Greenville Recreation Department, is USTA sanctioned. Players from Hendersonville to Wilmington will be competing for points toward state rankings.

Competition includes mens single and doubles, mens and womens over 35 singles and doubles, mens over 45 singles and over 35 mixed doubles.

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Practice for the May 29 Indianapolis 500 begms on Saturday, but the testing and fine-tuning of the hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of racing equipment at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway has already gone into full swing.

Before a car turns a wheel onto the 2/2-mile track, the U.S. Auto Club must give its approval through a mandatory technical inspection. And drivers, crews and cars have begun a slow, steady trickle into the infield Gasoline Alley garages.

The first car to complete the inspection was the 1982 Chevrolet-powered Eagle racer to be driven by rookie Steve Chassey, a 38-year-old veteran of dirt, sprint and midget-car competiton seeking his first starting spot at Indy.

Chassey, a native of Indianapolis, is one of 22 rookie drivers who will try to qualify for the 33-car field. Sbc former winners, including defending .champion Gordon Johncock and four-time winner A.J. Foyt, also are entered.

Foyt, who also owns a string of race horses, remained in Louisville for Saturdays Kentucky Derby, but his new Cosworth-powered March race car arrived at Gasoline Alley on Thursday.

Other cars which began the various phases of inspection included those of veterans Pancho Carter, third-place finisher last year behind Johncock and Rick Mears; Herm Johnson, who finished ninth; brothers Gary and Tony Bettenhausen, Dennis Firestone, Pete Halsmer, Sheldon Kinser, Roger Rager and Graham McRae.

Although Foyt was absent, his teammate George Snider arrived Thursday to set up shop in an adjoining garage.

Cars for former winners Johncock, Mears, Johnny Rutherford, Mario Andretti and A1 Unser were expected to arrive at the Speedway later this weekend or early next week. Time trials are scheduled May 14-15 and May 21-22.

Johncock, who will be joined by Rutherford and Chip Ganassi on the Patrick Racing Team this year, opened the Indy-car series for 1983 with a

victory last month at Atlanta.

Among other changes, Unser has joined Mears on the Roger Penske team, Kevin Cogan has left Penske to join Tom Sneva on the Bignotti-Cotter team, and Andretti has left Patrick to join the Newman-Haas team, of which actor Paul Newman is a

co-owner.

Clhassey is one of 10 Indy rookies who have practiced here in past years and must take a refresher driving test. The others are Patrick Bedard, Jim Buick, Bob Frey, Phil Krueger, Chip Mead, Harry MacDonald, Bill Tempero, Rich Vogler and Desire WUson.

Phil Chliva, who passed a full test in 1980 and practiced here in 1981 and 1982, has been approved for competition without any additional test runs.

Five drivers with no Indy experience at all must take a complete rookie test of 20 laps at better than 170 mph and 20 laps above 180. They are Mark Alderson, Chuck Ciprich, Teo Fabi, Mack McClellan and Teddy Pilette.

Derek Daly, Doug Heveron, Chris Kneifel, John Paul Jr., Ken Schrader and A1 Unser Jr. must take only the final phase of the rookie text.

A year ago, Mears set track records in practice with a lap at 208.7 mph and in qualifications with an official four-lap average of 207.004 mph and a top single lap of 207.612. Johncock qualified in the middle of the second row, took the lead after 160 of the 200 laps, then held off Mears, who steadily narrowed the margin on each of the closing laps. Going into the final lap, the two leaders were virtually even, and Johncock outdueled Mears down the final straightaway for a margin of victory of only 16-hundredths of one second - a difference of 20 feet over the 500-mile test of endurance.

Johncocks average speed for the race was 162.029 mph - second-fastest in history. Mears stirring challenge produced an average speed of 162.026.

Beacham Takes

Putt Tourney

FRIDAY NIGHT

Henry Beacham captured first place in the Thursday Night Amateur tournament at Greenville Putt-Putt and Games. Beacham won a sudden death playoff against Ken Love after the two tied for first at the end of regulation play with nine under par 63s.

Third place went to Steve Silverthome with a seven under 65, while Lee Beacham took fourth with a 66 and Mike Shane gained fifth with a 67.

LATE MODELS*

Also...6 Cylinders, Sportsman, Intl Sedans, Stocks & Spectator THIS WEEK...

FRIDAY

NIGHT RACING 8 P.M.

TOP DIRT TRACK STARS Children Under 12 FREE

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No. 20, while Hickory Tree Farms Chumming, with Eddie Maple up, starts from No. 4.

David Fosters Sunnys Halo, who beat Caveat by four lengths in the Arkansas Derby, also istated at 5-1 and is in the lOth position. Eddie Delahoussaye, who rode Gato Del Sol to victory in last years Derby, rides the Canadian-bred whose only other' start this year was a three-length win in the Rebel Handicap. ^

Equusequity Stables Slew 0 Gold, son of 1977 Triple Crown winner Seattle Slew and winner of a division of the Wood Memorial, goes from No. 1 under Angel Cordero.

The rest of the starters in the crowded field are lightly regarded in the quest for the $426,000 first prize from a gross of $531,000 if all go.

Current Hope, 12-1, who hasnt raced since winning the Flamingo April 2, goes-from the No. 12 post under 17-year-old Alexis Soltis. Trainer Roger Laurins father, Lucien, won Derbies with Riva Ridge and Secretariat.

Desert Wine, the San Rafel and San Felipe winner who is the biggest money-winner in the group with $527,315, and Pax In Bello, third in the Derby Trial, are listed at 15-1 along with the Bwamazon entry of Freezing Rain and

Highland Park.

Parfaitement and Country Pine are rated at 20-1 while five horses were placed in the field for betting purposes at 30-1.

They are Paris Prince, the California Derby winner; Law Talk, Explosive Wagon, My Mac and Luv A Libra.

(Common Sense, a four-time winner from Suffolk Downs

actually entered the Derby, but the owners withdrew when Churchill Downs officials advised that the entry of Country Pine would bump their horse because Country Pine had won more money a requirement imposed to limit the field to 20 horses.

Instead, Common Sense will go in the $50,000-added Twin Spires Purse on Derby Day.

Bullets Romp Over Columbia

Bertie Rips Roanoke

COLUMBIA - Jamesville High School ripped Columbia, 14-0, behind a three-pitcher one-hitter yesterday in Tobacco Belt baseball.

Rusty Holliday started the game, going the first three innings and allowing the only hit. He fanned four and walked one. Kevin Perry then went the fourth, walking two, while Tony Hale pitched the fifth frame, fanning one and walking one. The game was called after five on the ten-run lead rule.

Jamesville got all it needed in the first, scoring six times. Matthew Moore singled and stole second. He scored when Greg Hardison singled and was thrown out going to second. Richie Ange singled and Rex Bell walked. Terry Perry singled to score both runers.

Kevin Perry reached on an error. Rusty Holliday then singled in both Perrys, and scored when Whit Brown got a hit.

The Bullets added five in the second and three in the third.

Hardison, Ange, Bell, Tim Norris and Brown each had two hits for Jamesville,

Now 11-0 in the conference, the Bullets play host to Creswell on Tuesday.

Jamesville 653 00-14 14 0

Columbia........000 00- 0 1    j

Holliday, K. Perry (4), Hale' (5) and T. Perry.

Save Up To *400* OnALLIS-CHALMERS LAWN MOWERS

Memorial Or. 7524122

WINDSOR - Bertie scattered its eight hits and utilized five Roanoke errors to claim an abbreviated lO-O victory over the Redskins in Northeastern 3-A Conference baseball action Thursday.

Winning pitcher Craig Dawson slapped two hits in three trips to the plate, while Calvin Holley had a pair of single in four at-bats.

Charles James posted a 2-2 performance at the plate for Roanoke, as Dawson allowed just three hits by the Redskins.

Roanoke, now 1-16 overall with .a Ml conference mark, travels to Tarboro Tuesday at 4 p.m.

Roanoke..........ooo 00- 0 3 5

Bertie............502    12-10 8 3

Wilson, Taylor (3) and Casper; Dawson and Ryan.

ATTENTION ALL

PEANUT GROWERS

If you plant Keel Seed Peanuts this year, Astor Perry, NC's leading peanut specialist for 35 years, can be your personal consultant. Periodically during the growing season, Astor will be available to visit your fields, answer your questions, make recommendations...all at NO CHARGE to you. This exclusive service is provided by Keel Peanut Co. because they dont stop caring about you when your check clears. Use Keel Seed Peanuts and let Astor Perry help you make the most of your peanut crop.

KEEL PEANUT CO, INC.

Call 752-7626

GREENVILLE. N.C.

RUFUS KEEL

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HARDWARE STORE

Greenville Square Shopping Center Phone 756-4949 8 to 6 Mon.-Sat.

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SCOREBOARD

ineuaiiy nenecLur. uretnvuie, L- r rjda>. Mayb. iam-17

RecSoftboll

Church League People's Baptist downed Immanuel 7-0. No details.

Church of God......310    121    3-11

Arlington St.........001    302    3-10

Leading hitters; CG Ricky Meeks 2-3, James Ross 3^; AS- -Scott Gallow ay 3-4.

Memorial Baptist . 000    132    06

Faith Pent..........444    400    x-l6

Leading    hitters;    FP        Scott

Brady 3-4, Chris McDaniel 2-3: MB TedPeele4A

St. James..............000    00-0

1st Pentecostal.........372    8x-20

Leading    hitters:    FP    -    Steve

Keeter 3-3, Greg Duncan 3-3; SJ -Jimmy Creech 2-2.

Grace...............010    110    5-8

Oakmont.......... 100    110    0-3

Leading hitters: G - Mike Holloman 3-4, Sidney Hardee 2-3, Chris Ross 2 3, Tony Godley 2-,'!.

1st Free Will.........000    010    o-l

Unity.............. 100    040    x-5

Leading hitters: U - Bruce Bullock 2-2

1st Christian lOO (KK) 0- 1

1st Presbyterian 110)00 (XK) x-io Leading    hitters:    FC    -    .Mose

Stocks 3-3: FP - Bobby Sasser 3-4, Ketj Rakestraw 3-4, Joe Smith 3-4, Garland Becton 3-4

Maranatha ....... 230    020    3-10

Trinity    802    003    x-13

leading hitters: M - J L Gray 3-3, Mike Brown 3-4, Tim Avery 3-4;

T - Jason Garris 4-4, Bobby Harris 3-4; iekie-    Haddock    i-3,    Tim

Moseley 2-2.

City League

Pair...............100    234    0-10

J.A.s..............501    012    0-9

Leading hitters: P Mike Mills 3-4, Lloyd    Johnston    4-4,    Eric

Sinclgir 3-4; JA - Greg Ashom 3-4, Ted Kinff2^3, Glenn Moore2-2

Co-Rec League

Bond's..............020    000    1-3

Bills................330    030    X-9

Leading hitters Bo Jim Bond 3-3, Greg Britt 2-3; Bi - Tony Perkins 2-3, Gloria Mayo 2-3.

Erwins won by forfeit over Western Sizzlin.

Bowling-

Earl Tripp and S. Wortliiiigton 213, Susan Pui'ear 220.

BurrougBs Wellcome

High Hopes............69'/i    54>/i

Anns Angels..........69^    M'y-

The Fritos.............65    59

Unicom Four..........63    61

E.T....................62    62

Carolina Cowboys 60/i    63/z

Pin Wreckers..........59    65

Strike Force...........58    66

Ebony and Ivory.......57>^    664

Lolly Pops.............56    68

High series: Roy Berbert 525; Jane Toothman 473. High game: William Battle 223; Grace Ward 187.

Bosebflll Stondings

By The AaiocUted Press

AMERICAN LEAGUE

ShirU& Skirts

EAST DIVISION

W L Pet.

W

L

Team if9.............

89

43

Planters Whse.......

85

47

R.E. Dean Oil........

85

47

Tar Landing Seafood.

. 84/2

47'a!

Odd Ones............

,77'^

54/i

The Jokers..........

69

63

Camelo! Inn.........

68'^

631/4

Cornwell Builders ...

.68

64

Big Macs............

66'!

65>/i

Pac Attack..........

..62

70

Family Affair.......

..60 '

72

Halos................

59

73

On Time.............

57

75

Playmates..........

57

75

The Lucky Strikes

57 o

75

Hot To Trot..........

53

79

Dail Music...........

.. IVf-z

84>/2

Strike Wishers.......

.42

90

Boston Baltimore aeveland Milwaukee Toronto New York Detroit

California Kansas City Oakland Texas Chicago Minnesota Seattle

WEST DIVISION

.591

565

.542

.522

.500

.458

.429

583

.571

.542

.520

.455

,423

.333

GB

High series: Rene Steiner 600; Sharon Matthews 552. Highigame: Richard Charles, Rene Steiner,

Wedneidays Gaines

Toronto 7, Texas 1 California 16, Baltimore 8 Boston 7, Oakland 1 Chicago 3, Milwaukee 2 Geveland It, Minnesota 7 New York 8, Kansas City 1 Seattle 5, Detroit 1

Thursdays Game Clc eland 7, Minnesota 5 Oi V game scheduled

Fridays Games Kansas City (Gura 4-1) at Toronto (Stieb4-2).(n)

Oakland (Codiroli 3-i) at Baltimore CD Martinez 1-5VUU Seattle (Perry 2-3) at Boston (Tudor 1-11, (n)

California (Kison 2-1) at Detroit (Wilcox 2-31, (n)

Cleveland (Sorenson 2-3) at Chicago (Bannister 1-4), I n)

Texas (Hough 2-2) at Milwaukee (Caldwell 2-2), (n)

New York (Guidry 2-2) at Minnesota (OConnor 1-1 ),(n)

Saturdays Gaines Kansas City at Toronto Oakland at Baltimore Seattle at Boston California at Detroit aeveland at Chicago Texas at Milwaukee New York at Minnesota, i n)

Sundays Games.

Kansas City at Toronto California at Detroit Oakland at Baltimore SeatUe at Boston New York at Minnesota Cleveland at Chicago Texas at Milwaukee

NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION

W L Pet. GB Philadelphia    14    8    .636    -

St. Louis    12    8    .600    1

Montreal    12    9    . 571    14

PitUburgh    9    11    450    4

New York    6    15    286    7 4

Chicago    6    17    .261    84

WEST DIVISION Atlanta    17    6    739    -

Los Angeles    17    7    .708    4

Cincinnati    13    13    500    54

San Diego    12    13    480    6

Houston    11    16    407    8

San Francisco 9    15    375    84

Thursdays Games St. Louis 4, San Diego 3 Atlanta 6, Houston 3 Only games scheduled

Fridays Games Philadelphia (Denny 3-1) at Montreal (Lea2-1), (n)

Houston (M.Scott 0-0) at Atlanta (P.Niekrol-2), (n)

Cincinnati (Soto 3-2) at New York (Seaverl-2), (n)

Chicago (Rainey 1-3) at San Diego lUllarM),(n)

St Louis (Stuper 2-1) al Los Angeles

TANK wmmM

byJeff Millar & Bill Hinds

)'vialenzuela3-2). <o)

Pittsburgh tfandelarta 2-2^ at San Francisco i Breining 2-3),) n i Saturdays Games Philadelphia at .Montrbal Houston at Atlanta Pittsburgh at San Francisco Cincinnati at New York, )n)

Chicago al San Diego, i n)

St Louis at Los Angeles. (n)

Sundays Games Philadelphia at MontreaJ Cinclnnab'at New-York-Houston at Atlanta Chicago at San Diego St. Louis at Los Aisles Pittsburgh at San f^rancisco

Leogue Leoders

''By The Associated Press

American league

BATTING 145 at bats): Carew. California. 489: Brett, Kansas City, 460. Thornton, Cleveland, 410, Beniquez. California. 400; Yount, Milwaukee. 374 RUNS: Gastmo, Minnesota, 21, Yount. Milwaukee, 19; Brett, Kansas City. 18; Downing. California. 18. Bernazard. Chicago, 17; E Murray, Baltimore, 17. Smalley, New York. 17 RBI: DeClnces, California. 21. Kitlle, Chicago. 21; Lynn. California, 21, Thornton, Cleveland, 21: Brett. Kansas City, 20.

HITS: Carew. California, 45; Caslino, Minnesota, 35;, Yount. Milwaukee, .34, Thornton, Cleveland, 32, Boggs. Boston, 31; Ford. Baltimore, 31; STienderson, Seattle. 31.DOUBLES: Brett, Kansas City, 12; Hrbek, Minnesota, 9. S.Henderson, Seattle, 9; Bernazard. Chicago. 8. Boggs. Boston. 8: Bush. Minnesota, 8.

TRIPLES: G.Wilson, Detroit, 4; Evans, Boston. 3; Herndon, Detroit, 3; Tabler. Clevelarid, 3, Winfield, New York, 3 HOME RUNS: DeCinces, California, 8, Lynn, California, 7, Barfield, Toronto. 6, Caslino, Minnesota. 6, Bretl. Kansas City, 5, TCruz. Seattle. 5. Kittle, Chicago, 5; L Parrish, Texas, 5; Rice, Boston, 5; Upshaw, Toronto, 5, Winfield. New York, 5; Yount, Milwaukee, 5 STOLEN BASES: J Cruz, SealUe, 1?: W.WUson, Kansas City, 13: M Davis, Oakland. 10; Garcia. Toronto. 9: Baylor. New York, 7; R Law, Chicago, 7 PITCHING (3 decisions): Flanagan, Baltimore, 4-0, 1 000 , 3 08; Forsch, California, 3-0, i ooo. 3.70; .Moffiit. Toronto, 3-0, 1 000 , 0 00, Petrv, Detroit. 3-0, I.OOO, 1 88, Slaton, Milwaukee, 3-0, 1 000,2 20

STRIKEOUTS: Blvleven. Cleveland. 37; Morris, Detroit, .33; Stieb, Toronto. 33; Rawley, New York, 31; Barker. Cleveland, 28, .Norris, Oakland. 28 SAVES: Stanley, Boston, 7; Quisen-berry. Kansas City. 6, Spillner. Cleveland. 5; Caudill, Seattle. 4 Beard, Oakland. 3; Davis, .Minnesota, 3: Heaton. Cleveland. 3; Hickey, Chicago. 3; Tobik, Texas, 3

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BATTING (45 at batsi; Dawson. Montreal, 383; T Kennedy, San Diego, 380; Murphy, Atlanta, 354; Hendrick, St Louis. 352, Schmidt. Philadelphia. 352

RUNS: Schmidt. Philadelphia. 23, Garvey, San Diego, 21, Murphv. Atlanta, 21; Morgan, Philadelphia, 19: Bonilla, San Diego. 18 RBI: Murphy, Allanta, 24, Schmidt. Philadelphia, 23; T Kennedy. San Diego, 23:    Hendrick, St Louis, 22, Bench,

Cincinnati. 20 HITS; Bonilla San Diego, 36. T Kennedy, San Diego, 35; Crpz. Houston, 32, Oestef, Cincinnati, 32, Thon, Houston, 32

DOUBLES J Ray, Pittsburgh. 9;

Dasason, MoiUreaL 6; Beiieh;-4fleif)natt. 7, C Davis, San Francisco, 7; Oester, Cincinnati, 7; Washington, Atlanta. 7 TRIPLES: Dawson, Montreal. 3; Green, St Louis, 3: Moreno, Houston. 3; Raines, Montreal. 3: 14 are tied with 2 HOME RUNS Murphy, Atlanta, 8 Guerrero, Los Angeles, 7; Schmidt, Philadelphia. 7; Hendrick, StLouis. 6, Horner, Atlanta, 6 STOLENJBASES: Lacy, Pittsburgh. 15; EJ!ilnfitv-Cijc4iMia4-hMoreno, Houston, 10; SSax. Los Angeles. 10, Wilson, New York, 8.

PITCHING (3 decisionsi: Monge, Philadelphia, tr-0, 1000. 5 23, P.Perez, Atlanta. 4-0, l.ooo, 1 45; Sutter. St Louis 3-0, 1000, 2 51, A Pena, Los Angeles, 4-1, 800, 2 14; Diavecky. San Diego, 4-1, 800, 3 14; Rogers. Montreal. 4-1, 800, 2 59, Show, San Diego, 4 1. 800,2 58 STRIKEOUTS: Carlton. PhiJadelphia 63; Berenyl, Cincinnati, 38; McWilliams Pittsburgh, 38, Rogers, Montreal, 31: Soto, Cincinnati. 30: Valenzuela. Los Angeles, 30 SAVES: S Howe, Los Angeles. Hume. Cincinnati. 4, Lucas. San Du 4, Bedrosian, AtlanU, 3. DeLeon. Diego, 3, Forster, Atlanta 3, Garber Atlanta 3; B.Smlth, Montreal, 3; Stewart Los Angeles, 3

porsoRfiel-seoat ---------

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS Sigm-rt Steve Parker, wide receiver kick re turner Signed Doug Guyer. linebacker and Dow Edwards and Johnathan NewLv wide receivers, to free agent com rads ST LOUIS C.ARDI.N.Al.S Signed Dave Stief, safely to a series of one vear contracts and Walter Ross running tiack to a free agent contract

United States Football League BOSTON- BREAK15RS- Signed- Marr Bradley, linebacker, and Ernie Rogers offensive tackle NEW JERSEY GENERALS -Cut Ben Watts, nose tackle

COLLEGE GEORGIA STATEl - .Announced the re signation of Jim Jarrett. men s basket ball coach S 0 C T H E R N MISSISSIPPI Announced the resignation ol K(ch Coachys, assistant football coach

NBA PlayoKs

Transactions

leeo    Associated    rress

CONFERENCE FINALS (Best of Seven) EASTERN CONFERENCE Philadelphia vs, Milwaukee Sunday, May 8 Milwaukee at Philadelp

By The Associated FYess BASEBALL American League

MINNESOTA TWINS-Senl Bryan Oelkers, pitcher, to Toledo ol the International League

BASKETBALL Continental Basketball Associatloo OHIO MIXERS-Fired John NUlen. head coach

FOOTBALL Canadian Football League

MONTREAL CONCORDES-Signed Scott Reppert, running back

National Football League KANSAS CITY CHIEFS-Signed Alien Lyday, Raymond Hairston. Jim Bob Moms, Glenn Cardelli, Marcus Fisher and Ban Jakes, defensive backs; Amos Donaldson, Rocky Hubble, Alfred .Mohammed. Lee Vernon, Joe Hardin and Charles Tucker, offensive linemen; Terry-Young, John Walsh, Barry Compton, Ted Jones and Terry Hawkins, wide receivers; Carlos Cunningham and Darrin McOelland, running backs; Isaiah West, Jay Trautwein, David Paffenroth. Walter Ballard, Tim Harwell, Robert Kardoes, Michael Lemlrande, Joe Stevens. Harrison Stokes and Russ Wood, linebackers, and Marlow Barnefl, Phil Bruneau, Chris Riehm, Phil O'Neil, defensive linemen, to free agent contracts LOS ANGELES RAIDERS-Named A^Shel^as^i^wchm^^id^^n^

elphia Wedriesday, May 11

.Milwaukee al Philadelphia Saturday. May 14 Philadelphia at .Milwaukee

Saturda

-Stmday, May-B -

Philadelphia at Milwaukci-Wednesday . .May 18 Milwaukee at Philadelplil.i if neee sarv

Friday May 20

Philadeipnia at 'Milwaukee it ueee sarv

Sunday . May 22

Milwaukee at Philadtjphia if nee.-sarv

WESTERNPONFERENieK LosAnwlesvs San Antonio Sunday, May 8 San .Antonio al Ikis Angeles Tuesday May lo San .Antonio al l>is Angeles Friday. .May 13 I/is Angeles at .San Anlunio Sunday .May 15 Uis -Angeles al San Anliinio Wednesday .Mav l

San Antonio at l/i- Xng'eies if neee sary

Fndav. .Mav 2U Uis Angeles at ,San Ai.tnnn, :f net e sarv

Sunday.,May 22

san .Antonio a; l>is Angeles it neee sarv

YOULL BE WELL satisfied with the service our classified staffers provide; Try us!

GRACE IS THE PLACE

Grace Free Will Baptist

400 Watauga Avenue

757-3888

Come & Worship With us

9:45 a m Sunday School

11:00 a m.

Worship Service

7 00 p.m

Evening Service 7:30 p.m

Wednesday Service

Fred Lockwood. Paslor Jon Forlmes. Associate

Carolina east mall ^^greenville

Motheris

GARDEN SHOP

Structo

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Regular 149.95 to 249.95

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Hanging Baskets!

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Patented and nonpatented roses including climbing roses hybrid tea. Grand iflora and Flonbunda m many different colors Ready to-blant'

Friday

and

Saturday

J Bedding Plants 2.1.00

Now IS the time to shop and save on Diantas. Petunias Impatiens. tomatoes, peppers and much more' Hurry m today''

Mothers Day is May 8

Give Her Fresh Cut Flowers

Great Buy On Lyon Shaw*

Patio Furniture!

Regularlo 700.00

Select from stock of beautiful Patio furniture, just in time tor warm days.

Shop Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9p.m.Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)

SirvgtoStem $H 00 Cirnilion I iIIUm

?r*"" ^3.00.

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From    JiVJup

Speclel orders Available

Perrier-Jouet, Extra-Dry Fleur De Champagne

43.78

Regular

54.72 .....................

Refreshing champagne from France. Its in a collectors bottle with hand painted flowers.

Blue Nun Sparkling White German Wine

Regular '

5.62......................

A delicious and delectable white wine that will please your palate.

Falcon Crest Chardonnay

15.26

Spring Mountain Vinyard named from TVsF^tgon Crest Reg. 19.

Seasoned Salami

Gre^lavor tor sandwiches, cheese trays and dips.

Reg. 4.75

Danish Kirsberry Drink

The leading Danish speciality drink.

A great mixer!

Reg. 5.76.

Wine and 4.61 Cheese Shop

Delicious Jarlsberg, Norwegian Swiss Cheese

Regular    0    QQ

4.68...............  W     W W

Cream colored body with natural rind.

Excellent Summer Sausage

4.00

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Pork sausage, seasoned to a great taste. Perfect for sandwiches, cheese trays and much more!

Shop Mpiiday through Saturday 10 a.m. Until9p.m.Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)

LJl_-_

i





18-The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.-Friday, May 6,1983

Copyright, 1980, John A. lehti. Distributed by Linoge-Plus, P. 0, Box 884,Middletown, N Y 10940, through Hutchinson Associates, 18110 Villoge 18, Comorilio Co. 93010

1^>

/-It

A/

MSponsors Of This Page, Along With Ministers of All Faiths, Urge You to Attend Your House of Worship This Week, To Believe In God and to Trust In His Guidance For Your life.

COZARTS AUTO SUPPLY, INC. 8U Dickinson Ave. 752-3194 Banks CozartS Employees

Compliments Of HEILIG MEYERS CO.

518 E. Greenville Blvd. K6-4145

LESTER TURNAGE

Beal Estate & Insurance Agency

Get More With Les

Corner Third & Cotanche St. 752-2715

WHiniNGTON.INC.

Charles St.. Greenville, N.C. Ray Whittington 756-8537

Compliments of PHELPS CHEVROLET IVesfertdC/r. 756-2150

WINTERVILLE INSURANCE AGENCY

756-0317

123 S Railroad. Winterville

JA-LYN SPORT SHOP Hwy 33. Chicod Creek Bridge 752-2676, Grimesland James S Lynda Faulkner

VAN'S HARDWARE 1300 N. Greene St. 758-2420

QUALITY TIRE SERVICE and Employees at N. Greenest, and2900E. 10thSt. 752-7177    757-3762    .

COLONEL SANDERS KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN

2a05 E. 5ih

Take out only 752-5184 600 S. W Greenville Blvd.

Eat in or take out 756-6434

BOND-HODGES SPORTING GOODS

218 Arlington Blvd. lOth St. Greenville 756-6001    752-4156

PLAZA GULF SERVICE 7567616 701E. Greenville Blvd.

Ryder Truck Rentals 756-8045 Wrecker Setyice day 7567616 nile 756-6479

AaCTION MOVING & STORAGE 1007ChesnulSt 7567000

ANNE'S TEMPORARIES, INC. 756-6610120 Reade SI. Greenville

BARWICK'S HOUSE OF MEATS, INC. 7562277100 Pollard St. Greenville Allen Berwick, owner

EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN MERCURY-GMC 2201 Dickinson Ave. 7564267

EARLS CONVENIENCE MART

Route 1 7566278

Earl Faulkner & Employees

ALDRIDGE AND SOUTHERLAND REALTORS 7563500

226 Commerce St. Greenville

EAST COAST COFFEE DISTRIBUTORS 758-35681514 N. Greene St.

A complete restaurant & office coffee service''

ROBERT C. DUNN CO 301 Ridgeway 7565278

HENDRIX-BARNHILLCO.

Memorial Dr. 752-4122 All employees .

Ck)mpliments of LOVEJOY AGENCY Daybreak records 7564774118 Oakniont Dr. Larry Whittington

PARKERS BARBECUE RESTAURANT 7562388S. Memorial Dr.

Doug Parkers Employees

C.H. EDWARDS, INC. Hwy. IIS. 7568500

Compliments of FRED WEBB. INC.

Compliments of

Pin MOTOR PARTS, INC.

758-4171911 S. Washington St.

TOM'S RESTAURANT

The Very Best In Home Cooking" 7561012 Maxwell St. West End Area

GRANT BUICK, INC. 7561877Greenville Blvd. BUI Grants Employees

OVERTONS SUPERMARKETS, INC.

211 S. Jarvis 752-5025    *

All Employees

TAPSCOTT DESIGNS 222 E. 5th St. 757-3558 Kate Phillips, Interior Designer Associate member ASID

Compliments of

HOLLOWELLS DRUG STORE

no.l 911 Dickinson Ave.

no. 2 Memorial Dr. S 6th St.

no. 3 Stantonsburg Rd. at Doctors Park

PIGGLY WIGGLY OF GREENVILLE 2105Dickinson Ave. 7562444 Ricky Jackson S Employees

FARRIOR& SONS, INC.

General Contractors

7562005 Hwy. 264 ByPass Farmville

LAUTARES JEWELERS 414 Evans 752-3831

ELECTROLUX Sales and Service

Known For Quality For Over 55 Years."

Free Estimates Free Pick-Up S Delivery 104 Trade St. 7566711

INA'S HOUSE OF FLOWERS N. Memorial Dr. Ext. 752-5656 Managements Staff

PITT-GREENE PCA & FEDERAL LAND BANK ASSOCIATION "Short, Intermediates Long Term Agricultural Credit"

100E. 1st St. 7561512

BUCK'S GULF STATION & EMPLOYEES E 10th St. Ext. 752-3228 "RoadS Wrecker Service"

Jartran Trucks Trailer Rental^^

INTEGON LIFE INSURANCE CO.

W.M.Scales, Jr. General Agent Weighty Scales, Rep.

Clarke Stokes, Rep.

7563738

PUGH'S TIRE & SERVICE CENTER 752-6125

Corner of 5th S Greene, Greenville

HAHN CONSTRUCTION CO. Residential S Commercial Building 400 N. 10th St. 752-1553

FOUNTAIN OF LIFE, INC.

Jim Whittington Oakmont Professional Plaza Greenville, N.C. 7560000

PAIR ELECTRONICS. INC. Electronics Suppliers 7S62291107 Trade St Greenville, N.C.

Compliments of YAMAHA OF PITT COUNTY 752-08761506 N. Greene St Greenville, N.C.

HARGETTS DRUG STORE 2500 S. Charles Ext 7563344

DAUGHTRIDGE OIL & GAS CO. 2102 Dickinson Ave. 7561345 Bobby Tripp S Employees

CAROLINA MICROFILM SERVICE 1405 Dickinson Ave. 752-3776 Jerry Creech, Owner

PEPSI COLA BOTTLING CO. 7562113 Greenville

EAT CAROLINA INSURANCE AGENCY, INC 2739E. 10th St P.O. Box3785 752-4323 Greenville

REDI SUPPLY, INC.

Industrial S Construction Supplies 1902 Chesnut 7563200

HARRIS SUPERMARKETS, INC.

"Whete Shopping Is A Pleasure"' no.l Memorial Dr. 7560110 no. 2 2612 E. 10th Ext 757-1880 no. 4 Bethel , rto. 5 N. Greene 752-4110 no. 6 Ayden no. 7Tarboro

HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN 101 Hooker Rd. 756-3115

JOHNNYS MOBILE HOME SALES, INC. "the Finest In Manufactured Housing'

316 W. Greenville Blvd. 7564687 Johnny L. Jackson 8 Employees

WESTERN SIZZlllN STEAK HOUSE "We put It on the plate"

500 W. Greenville Blvd. 7560040 2903E. 10th St. 7562712

JIMMYS PHILLIPS 66 SERVICE All Types Minor Repair Work Wrecker Service Corner 14th St 8 264 ByPass J.F. Baker, owner 7561445

EASTERN INSULATION, INC.

Owens Corning Fiberglass Phone Day or Night 752-1154

Compliments of THOMAS W. RIVERS

ESTATE REALTY CO.

1304 Charles SI. Greenville 752-5058

Jarvis or Dortis Mills

FAITH is your haven of refuge in a troubled world

m.

i

->3





Come To CHURCH

gloria DEI LUTHERAN CHURCH The Womans Qub. 2306 Green Springs

_PaitRd. ________

The Rev Richard A. Miller. Phone 75M038 9:00 a m Sun - Sunday School 10:15 a.m. - The Morning Worship Service

4:00 p.m. Mon - Sr. Conl. CTass 7:30 p.m. Tue-LWML Meeting 7:30 p.m. Thur. - Adult Bible Class

OUR REDEEMER LUTHERAN 1800 S Elm R. Graham .Nahouse 9:00 a m Sun. - Holy Communion 9:45am-SundaySchool 11:00 a m. - Worship Service-conducted by Lutheran Church Women 7:30pm.-Church Counc il 8 OOp.m Mon -LCW at the church 10:00 a m Tue - LCW Eleanor Hostess 211 Steward Lane 4:15pm - 1st Year Confirmation 7:30pm. - Building Committee 7:30p m Wed. - Choir Rehearsal

ARLINGTON STREET BAPTIST CHURCH 1007 W Arlington Blvd Pastor, Rev Harold Greene 9:45a m Sun -SundaySchool 11:00am. - Morning Worship 11:00a m - Mission Friends 7:30 p m. - Business Meeting 7:30 p m Mon. - Building and Grounds 7:30 p m Tue - Bible Study Hostess Frances Dorey 7:30pm Wed - Worship Service 8:30p m - Choir

7:30 pm Thur - Pre-School Committee

CEDAR GROVE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Rt 9 Cherry Oaks Subdivision Greenville, NC.

Pastor Rev James Wright 7:30 p m Fri, - General Conference 10:00a m Sun - SundaySchool 11:00 a m. Morning Worship. Sermon by the Pastor Music will be rendered by the Senior Choir 12 30 p m . - Holy Communion 7 30 p m Tue - Male Chorus will have rehearsal 7:30 p.m. - Christian Aide will meet 10:00 a in.-1:00 p.m Wed. - Clothes Clo^l will be open for the, needy. CalJ _ 7M-757 for information.

7:30pm Wed - Prayer Meeting 7:30 p m Thur - Traveling Choir will have rehearsal 7:30 p m. Fn - The Pastor. Traveling Choir, Senior Ushers, and Church Family will render services at Mt Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church. Williamston,

N C The Bus will leave from the Church 7:30pm Mon. 16th - Revival will begin - Monday night after the 3rd Sunday The ' Speaker will be Rev. W.J Best

ST. PAULS EPISCOPAL CHURCH

401 East Fourth Street The Rev Uwrence P. Houston, Jr . Rector

The Rev J Dana Pecheles, Asst Rector The Sixth Sunday in Eastertide 7:30 a m Sun. - Holy Eucharist 9:00 a m.-Holy Eucharist 10:00 a m. - Christian Education 11:00a m -HolyEucharist

6 00 p.m - Jr. EYC, Meeting

7 30 p m - Al-anon, Friendly Hall 7:30 pm Mon. - Vestry Meeting,

Friendly Hall 7:30 p m Tue - Greenville Parent Support Group. Guild Room 7 00 a m Wed. - Holy Eucharist 10:00 a.m. - Holy Eucharist and Laying-On of Hands    *

6 30 p m. - Parish Dinner and Bible Study

7:30 p m - Choir Rehearsal, Chapel 4:00 pm. Fri - Children's Choir Rehearsal. Chapel 5:00 p.m. - Jr. Choir Rehearsal. Chapel 8:00 pm Sat. - AA Open Group Discussion. Friendly Hall

SAINT PETERS CATHOUC CHURCH 2700 E. 4 th Street Greenville, N.C.

757-3259

Rev. William E. Frost 5:30 p.m. Sat.-Vigil 8:00 a.m. Sun.-Liturgy 10 30a.m.-Liturgy

GREENVILLE CHURCH OF CHRIST 264 By Pass & Emerson Road Brian Whelchel, Community Evangelist Carl Etchlson, Campus Evangelist 8:00 a m Sun. - Amazing Grace TV Bible School Channel 12 10:00 a.m. - Bible Study Classes for all ages

11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship "Hannah A Great Mother With God, (1 Samuel 1 &

2i

6 no p.m. - Evening Worship "God Made Her Powerful"

7.00 p.m. Wed - Bible Study Classes Jor all ages

< For Information and or Transportation . please call 752-5991 or 752-6376

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH Fourth and Meade Streets

11.00 a. m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a. m.-Sunday Service

7:45 p.m. Wed. - Wed Evening Meeting 2:00to4:00p.m.-Readmg Room 400 S. Meade Street

PEOPLES BAPTIST TEMPLE

Rev. J M Bragg. Pastor 2001 W Greenville Blvd , Greenville. N.C.27834 7:30 a m Sun - Laymens Prayer Breakfast (ThreeSteersi 10:00 a m - Sunday School 11:00 a m. - Morning Worship, Mother's Day 5:30p m -ChoirPractice 6:30 p. m Evening Worship 7:15 a m. Mon -Fri - Radio Program - Together Again'-WBZQ 7:00pm Wed -Hour of Power 8:00 p m. - Choir Practice

THE CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY 1206 Mumford Road James C, Brown Pastor 10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a. m Morning Worship Service 6:30 p. m. -Young People ServIce 7:00 p m . - Evangelistic Service 7 30 p.m Wed - Prayer Meeting

THE MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH (Southern Baptist I

1510 G reenville Boulevard E T Vinson. Senior Minister; Hal Melton. Minister with Education/Youth 9:45a m. Sun - SundaySchool 11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship, Mini & Junior Church 6:30 p.m. - Jr High Youth at church.

Sr. High Youth with the Harold Jones'. 202 Queen Anne Rd 2:30 p.m. Mon. - Afternoon Bible Study with Mrs. L.L. Overton. 1805 Drewry Lane, Bible Study with Mrs Helen Christwher, 1606 Berkley Road 9:45 a.m. 'Tue - Morning Current Mission Group with Mrs. Janet Rodgers, 1304 Evergreen Dr 7:00p,m.-ChurchCouncil 5:45 p.m. Wed. - FamUy Night

1:30 p.m - Devotional, Mission Friends, Cherub and Carol Choirs 7:00p.m. -GAsRAsSundaySchool Workera 8:00p.m.-Chancel Choir 7:30 p.m - RA & Brotherhood Training at Immanuel 6:00 p.m. Fri - Young Married Couples Retreat

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Comer 14th and Elm Streets Richard R. Gammon and Gerald M. Anders, Ministers; Brett Watson, Director of Music; E Robert Irwin, Organist

9:00 a.m. Sun - Church School Council 9:00 a.m.-Worship 9:45 a.m. - Church School 11 ;00 a.m.-Worship 6:00 p.m - Youth Fellowship 6:30 p.m. -OA Study :00 p.m. Itoard of Deacons 10:00 aid. Mon.-Circles 1,2,3 12:00p.m.-Cirlce9 2:00p.m.-Circles 6:30 p.m. Brownia 7:00't>.m. Girl Scouts 7:00 p.m.-Boy ScouU 8:00p.m - Circlet 9:00a.m.Tue - Park A Tot 10:00 a.m.-Circles, 7 12:00p.m. - Newsletter Deadline 7:00p.m.-Cub Scouts 7:30p.m - Worship Committee 7:30pm.-OfficerTralnlng 8:00p.m.Clrcle8 2i30 p.m. Wed. - Address Angels 7:00p.i^-Brownia 7 00 D nl- Evangelism Explosion

7:30p.m. - Gallery cnoir 9:00 a.m. Thur. Park-A-Tot 5:1)0 p.m. - Bulletin Deadline 7:30pm.-OA

10:00 a m. Fri. - Pandora's Box 10:00 a m. Sat. - Pandoras Box

HOLYTEMPLE A.F.C.O.G (Salntsvllle)

Routes, Greenville, N.C.

Elder I. J Robinson    

8:00 pm Fri - Bible Studia Teacher: Missionary L Debrew 10:00 a m Sun Sunday School (Supt. I Deacon Lornell Whitaker 11:30 am Sun. - Deacon Day Speaker Elder I.J Robinson Mother Day Program, Missionary Winnie Robinson (M.C.)

7:30p.m Sun.-WorshipService 8:00 p.m Tue - Midweek Service

ST JOHN MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH P 0, Box 134 Falkland. NC 27827 Rev Anton T. Wesley, Pastor 6:30 p.m. Fri - Mission Meeting 7:30pm-Church Conference 10:00 a m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 am. Morning Worship and Holy Communion 10:00 a m. Tue 4 Wed - The United Eastern District Baptist Convention of G B.S.C. and Woman's Convention meet at St. Paul Baptist Church of Tarboro, N.C.

7 :30 p.m. Tue. - Prayer Meeting and Bible Study 6:30 p.m. - Pastor 4 Deacons Meet 7 30 p.m Wed - Young Adult Choir Rehearsal

CHURCH OF GOD Comer of Spruce and Skinner Streets, Greenville, NC Rev Paul Lanier, Jr. Pastor 9:45a m Sun.SundaySchool 11:00 a m - Worship Service

7 OOp m - Evangelistic Service 7:00 p m Tue - Worship Service-

I'niversity Nursing Home 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Family Training Hour

7:00 p m Thur, - Worship Service-Greenville Villa Nursing Home Dial-A- Prayer 752-1362

HOLLYWOOD PRESBYTERIAN - CHURCH HWT43 South Minister Rev C Wesley Jennings S S Supt.-Elsie Evans Music Director-Vivlan Mills 4 Steve Aslinger Organist Leida McGowan Youth Leaders-Debbie and Sieve Asimger 10:00a m:Sim. -SundaySchool 11:00a m. - WorshipService 5:00 p m - Youth Fellowship 8:00 p m Mon. - Circles meet

10 00 a m . Tue. - Morning Circle

8 OOp m -Rowley Circle 7:00 p m Wed. - Bible Study 8 00 p m - Choir Practice

MORNING GLORY APOSTOUC FAITH HOLINESS CHURCH

1012 West 5th Street, GreenvUle, N.C. Eldress Irene G. Epps Every Sunday

10:00a m Sun.-BibleSchool 12:00p.m. - WorhsipService .    7:30 p m - Worship 4 Preaching

7 30 p.m Tue - Worship    4

Preaching    '

7:30 pm Thur - Worship    4

Preaching

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS 307 Martinsborough Rd., Greenville, NC 27834 Bishop Danny Brew 9:00 a.m. Sun. - Fast and Testimony Meeting

10:20 a.m. /- Special Mothers Day Program '<

11:10 am. - Priesthood, Relief Society, Young Women, Young Men 4 Primary Meetings 10:00 a.m. Sun. May 22- Stake Conference in Kinston

UNIVERISTY CHURCH OF CHRIST 100 Crestline Blvd Minister, Rick Townsend 756-6545

10:00a.m Sun. - Sunday School

11 :00 a m Morning Worship 11:00a.m.Jr. Church 6:00p.m -ChoirRehearsal

7:00 p rp. - Evening Worship 4 Youth .Meeting

CORNERSTONE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Statonburg Road at Alien Road Reverend Arlee Griffin, Jr , Pastor 9:15 a.m. Sun. Church School I Kindergarten-I2th Grade)

11:00 a.m. WorshipService 6:30 p.m. Thur. - Vouthstones meet for Bible Study 7:30 p.m. - Prayer Meeting and Bible Study

HOOKER MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH 111 Greenville Blvd.

Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Ralph G. Messick, Minister Phone 7562275 9:45 a.m. Sun - Coffee 10:00a m. -ChurchSchool 11:00 a m. - Church at Worship 4:30 p m.- Beginner Choir 5;00pm-Junior Choir 7:30 p m Tue. - General Board Meeting

8 00 p. m. Wed.-Senior Choir

RED OAK CHRISTIAN CHURCH

264 By-Pass West

Dr Harold Doster, Interim Minikter 9:45a m Sun - SundaySchool li OOa.m - Dr Doster Preaching 5:00 p m.-The New Beginning 6:00 p m - Youth Program lor all ages

7:00 p. m,-Choir Rehearsal 7:00 a m Mon. Men's Prayer Breakfast 10:00 a.m. - Wilma James Group with Patti Worthington 2:30p.m. Rubelle Going group with Esther Roberts 7:30 p.m. Penny Cox group with Agnes Gladson 7:30 p. m. - Sandra Stocks group with Gail Wynne Nursery School - Monday through Friday-7:00a m -6:00p m

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SRI727 (Lake Glenwood Rd. I Mr Melvin Rawls Pastor 10:00 am. Sun - Bible School 11:00 a.m. - WorshipService 7:00 p.m - Evening Worhsip 4 Youth Meeting 7:30p.m. - Prayer Meeting

HOLY TRINITY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 1400 Red Bank Road, Greenville, N.C. Rev Don Paul Lee 9:45a m.Sun. -SundaySchool 11:00a m. WorshipService 6:30 p.m. United Methodist Youth Fellowship 6;00p m. Tue Troop 19Brownies 7:30 p m. Womens Bible Study 7:30 p m. Thur. - Choir Practice

SELVIA CHAPEL FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH

1701 South Green Street Rev Clifton Gardner, Pastor 7:30 p.m Sat. - The Interdenominational Choir will render a musical program 9:45 a m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00a.m. - WorshipService 4:00 p.m The Gospel Chorus will meet with Mrs Clydla M. Austin, AydeaN.C.

7:00 p m Mon - Junior Choir rehearsal 7:30 p.m. Tue. Gospel Chorus Rehearsal 7 30 p.m. Wed - Prayer Meeting 8:00 p.m. Thur. - The Senior Choir Club will meet with Mrs. Clara Gark, WintervUle, N.C

te 11:00 a.m. 4 3:00 p.m May 15-Annual Womens Day 7:30 p.m May 19 - We wUI participate in revival at Cedar Grove MB Church 5:00 p.m May 22 - No. 1 Ushers Anniversary

OAKMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 1100 Red Banks Road E . Gordon Conklin, Pastor Neil D. Booth, Jr., Min. of Education Treva FIdler, Min. of Music 9:45 a m Sun. - Library Open 10:00 a.m.

9:45a.m-SundaySchool

iu:43a.m. - Library Open 11:00 a m. 11.00 a m - Morning Worship. Childrens Church 5:00p.m.-Carol Choir Rehearsal 6:00p.m.-GA's _ 9:15 a.m.JiVed Staff Devotional BroapTm.^ Prayer-Meeting 8:00 p.m Thur. - Chancel Choir Rehearsal

SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH

2611 East 10th St

Robert H Kerr, Pastor 757-3082 or 758-5717 t:06p Fri. BiWe Highlights' WBZ(il550 9:30 a.m. Sat. - Church at Sludy, Topic: "Ruth-Heroine of Experienced Redemption'

10:45 a.m. - Church Concerns 11:00 a m - Church at Worship, Robert H Kerr: topic: "What is God's Work for You?

12:15 p.m. - Fellowship Dinger 2:0O-p m. - Share your Faith 7;30 p m. - Vespers and Prayer Time

7:00 a m Sun - TV Ministry Cable

13

9:OOpm.-TV. Ministry Cable *16 1:00 p.m Mon. - "Bible Highlights " WBZQ 1550 1:00 p.m Tue. "Bible Highlights ' WBZQ 1550 6:30pm.-Pathfinders 1:00 p.m. Wed. - Bible Highlights " WBZQ 1550 7:00p.m - Prayer and Fellowship 1:00p.m Thur - "Bible Highlights " WBZQ 1550

SAINT JAMES CHURCH UNITED METHODIST 200 East Sixth at Forest Hill Circle Greenville, North Carolina 27834 (9191752-6154

M. Dewey Tyson, Minister, Ralph A. Brown. Associate Minister; Stephen W Vaughn, Diaconal'Minister 9:40amSun.-Church School 10:30 a m - Chancel Choir 11:00 a m Worship of God Sermon "A Good Foundation" Mr Brown 9:00-12:00 p.m. Mon-Fri. - Weekday School

7:00 p.m. Mon, - UMW Spring Festival Covered-Dish Dinner 7:30p,m - Bible Study Groups:

*1 (Brown)'The Picketts    ,

*2 (Tyson) Blanche Smith 4:30 p m Tue - Chapel Choir 7:15 p.m Wed. - St. James Ringers 7:30pm. - Boy Scout Troop #340 8:00pm. - Chancel Choir 1:00 p.m Fri. - UMW Group 1 Parlor

3:00 p.m.-Cub Den *3    "

Ushers

11:00 am Bruce Hudson, Charles Whiteford, Tom Brown, Mike Board, Larry Hough Acolytes

11:00 a m. - Paige Brannon, Robin Ratcliffe

PINEY GROVE FREE WILL BAPTIST f Rt 1 Box 674 Greenville, N.C Bro Allan Sterbin, Pastor 10:00a.m.Sun. -SundaySchool 11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship 7:00 p.m. - Evening Worship 8:00 p.m. - Choir Practice 7:30pm Wed - Bible Study

BROWNS CHAPEL APOLOSTIC FAITH CHURCH OF GOD AND CHRIST

(BelvoirHwy.)

Rte4, Greenville, North Carolina Bishop RA Griswould, Pastor 8:00 pm Thur - Bibie Studies (Sister Ida Staton, Teacher i 8:00 p.m. Fri. - Prayer Meeting 7:00 p.m 2nd Sat. - Prison Camp Ministry (Maury, NC)

10:30 a m 2nd Sun. - Sunday School (Deacon J Sharpe, Supenntendant) 11:30 a m 2nd Sun - Mother's Day Program (Sister H Joyner in Charge) 7:00 p.m. 2nd Sun. - Prison Ministry (Missionary M. Sheppard I 8:00 p.m. 2nd Mon - Pastor Aide Meeting (Deacon J Sheppard, President)

3:00p.m. 4thSat - Business Meeting 8:00 p.m. 4th Sat. - 1 Hour Prayer (Bishop R.A. Griswould I 10:8) a'm. 4th Sun. - Sunday School (Deacon J. Sharpe, Superintendent 11:30 a.m. 4th Sun. - Pastor Day (Bishop R.A. Griswould)

8:00 p.m. 4th Sun. - Pastor Day (Bishop R.A. Griswould I

ARTHUR CHRISTIAN CHURCH Bell Arthur. North Carolina 27828 Ben James. Minister 9:45a.m. Sun. - Bible School II :00 a m. - Morning Worship 5:00 p.m. - Youth Fellowship 6:00p.m. -EveningWorship

7:30 p m Tue - V isitat ion 7:0Up.m Wed - Men's Fellowship 8:00 p m - Board Meeting 7:30 p m Thur. - Choir Practice 6:00 p m. Fri. - Prayer Breakfast _^Toms)

T OO prnr "SaT '- Anniversary' Celebration " A Going Church for Coming Lord '

COREYS CHAPEL F W B CHURCH Route!, WintervUle J B Taylor Pastor 7:00 p.m. Fri Prayer Service 4:00 pm. Sat - Home Mission Meeting ^

3:00 p.m Sun - Rev. Ralph E Love and Holy Trinity Church will render a program for the J.B Taylor Traveling Choir

7:30p.m. Wed.-BibleStudy

FIRST FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH 2600 S. Charles Street Greenvillle, North Carolina 27834 Harry Grubbs, Pastor 9:45a m Sun SundaySchool 11:00am Morning Worship There wilf be no Evening Worship Service

,7:00 p.m. Wed. - Women's Aux and Laymen's League

HARVEST BAPTIST CHURCH P O Box 8046. Greenville N C.

Meets and Carolina Country Day School David J LeBlanc. Pastor 10:00a m. Sun - SundaySchool 11:00 am - Sunday Morning Worship

6:00pm - Sunday Evening Worship 7:30 p m Wed - Wednesday Prayer Service

FIRST PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS Corner of Brinkley Road and Plaza DRive Pastor, Frank Gentry 9:45 a m Sun - Sunday School, Dickie Rook. Supt II :00a m, - Worship Service

6 OOp.m -ChoirPractice

7:00 pm - Prayer and Praise Service

7:30pm Mon -(Women'sAuxUlary 7:30 pm Wed Bible Study Lifelmers

7 30 p m. - Children's/Teen Choir 7:00 p m Thur - Nursing Home

Chocowinty 9:30 am Fri - Sunday School Lesson WBZQ 7:00 pm - University Nursing Home

FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH

520 East Greenville Boulevard 756-3138

Dr Will R Wallace, Minister 9:45 a. m Suii. - Chiirch School 11:00a m-Worship 10:45a m Mon -Circles1,4,5,7,8,

9, Church 11:45 am. - CWF Luncheon and General .Meeting, Ladies' Parlor 7:30 p m. - Cirle *3. Hazel Lovetfs home

10:30 am Tue Bible Study. Conference Room 7:30 p m Wed - Chancel Choir Rehearsal, Choir Room

SAINT TIMOTHY S EPSICOPAL 107 Louis Street

The Reverend John Randolph Price 8:00 a.m. Sun. - Holy Eucharist-Rlte

9:30 a. m. - Christian Education 10:30am -HolyEucharist,Rite 11 5:00 p.m. Episcopal Young (Tiurchmen 7:30 a.m. Mon. - Mens Breakfast-Three Steers Restaurant 7:30 p.m. - Vestry Meeting 7:30 p.m. Tue - Lobster Faijr Craft Workshop 12:15 p.m. Thur. - Ascension Day Service

UNITARIAN-UNIVERSALIST

FELLOWSHIP

Sydney Barnwell, president Local telephone 752-0787 10 30 p.m - Meet at the parking lot | where Fifth Street joins east Tenth Street Charpool to the Sutton's place on the river May 8 Planning

12:00 p m - Covered-Dish Picnic SIMPSON CHAPTER F.W B Eldress Mary L Phillips 7:30 p.m 7th Preacher wil be preacher on 7 up Preachers names Eldress E Best Eldress E. Hooks Eldress M. Stronge EldressS Braxton Eldress S. Smallwood Eldress S Mack Eldress Phillips

me uauy Keiietior, Greenville, N.C,Friday, May 6,198319

Ar ea Ch u rc h News

Haitis Handicapped Offered Help, Hope

By DAN SEWELL Associated Press Writer

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) - The woman called Sister Joan offers hope to the physically handicapped who otherwise would be shoved aside in the general struggle to survive the Western Hemispheres worst poverty.

The 77-year-old Roman Catholic nun came here from Boston 38 years ago, intent on helping children who faced overwhelming odds.

Roaming the mountains by horse and buggy in search of handicapped children and maintaining letter-writing campaigns to gain financial help from international agencies, she was able to build in 1950 what remains today Haitis only school for the handicapped.

In an impoverished nation where many women have children only for the future support they will provide, handicapped children face being treated like a lap dog, or just pushed into a comer and forgotten about, Sister Joan says.

The first thing we try to teach them ic that these are children, too, says. Sister Joan, who declined to relate anything about her pre-Haiti life, including her full name.

Her St. Vincent School provides room and board for 250 handicapped students, as well as medical services that include facilities for plastic, orthopedic and eye surgery.

Former students make artifical legs and other prosthetics and sell them from a nearby shop.

Medical care in Haiti is very limited; the infant mortality rate is 130 deaths per 1,000.    j

The Haitian government doesnt have statistics on the number of handicapped children in the counti^ of nearly 6 million, but an official acknowledged that Sister Joan is the only such school. The government provides support, including poachers and aides, to her.

In the Haitian there are just ltoo.-rnany,, students per class. The hand: ' icapped children arent able to get much special attem tion, says Sister BanT'sTu*"' ting next to a giant playpen in which children, some blind, some deaf, some wobbling on artificial legs or crutches, play together happily.

One of the first things Sister Joan stresses to mothers is that her school isnt a dumping ground. Students are kept here only until they are deemed able to cope in public schools.

We feel very strongly they should go outside the school; we send them out as soon as we think theyre ready. We send them out in wheelchairs. Its important to get them into a real environment, she says.

Another ^rule is that parents must contribute something to the childrens keep.

If we tell the mother that Tommy needs shoes and leg braces and she says she cant afford them, then we tell her: Well, pay what you can for the shoes, and we will pay the rest and provide the leg braces. We want to get them, involved.

Parents must take their children home for Christmas and Easter.

While she tries to keep the number of students to 250, the only true limit is the elasticity of our walls. We cant say to a mother who brings in a polio patient, Sorry, theres no room. We put cots out in the hall if necessary. But we try to keep as many as possible on an outpatient basis.

She follows the careers of her students, and says many find work in the foreign assembly plants here. Other alumni include a New York Hospital lab technician and a bank executive.    f

Film Series To Be Shown

Focus on the Family a film series featuring Dr. James C. Dobson, a psychologist and family counselor, will be shown at Bethel United Methodist Church on seven consecutive Sunday evening beginning Sunday at 7:30jr.m.

The films include:,;The Strong-Willed Child, Shaping the Will Without Breaking the Spirit, Christian Fathering. Preparing for Adolescence, and Wliat Wives Wish Their Husbands Knew About Women.

Dobson is associate clinical professor of pediatrics at the University of Southern California School of Medicine and a member of the attending staff of Childrens Hospital of Los Angeles in the division of medical genetics.

Salvation Army Plans Revival

The Salvation Army will hold revial services at 7 p.m. Sunday through Thursday at the Salvation Army building, 2337 Dickinson Ave. Brigadier Warren Fulton of St. Petersburg, Fla., will be the guest speaker.

Mother's Day Service Set

A regular monthly meeting and Mothers Day service will be held at Arthurs Chapel Free Will Baptist Church Sunday at 11 a.m. Gladys Newton and the No. 2 choir and ushers will render services.

The Vines Sisters of Farmville will present a musical program at the church Saturday at 7 p.m. The program is sposnsored by the churchs youth department.

Choir To Present Program

The Pitt-Greenville Interdenominational Choir will render a musical program at Selvia Chapel Free Will Baptist Church at 7:30 p.m. Saturday. The church is located at 171 S. Green St.

The pastor and congregation of Holy Trinity Holiness Church will render services at Coreys Chapel Free Will Baptist Church, Worthington Crossroads. Sunday. The service will begin at 3 p.m.

Mount Shiloh Schedules Services

Mount Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church in Winterville will hold Womens and Mothers Day services Sunday at 11 a.m. Eldress Rhurman Knox and the Holly Hill Church Choir and Ushers will render the service.

Revival Will Begin Sunday

Gateway Christian Center, at 1606 Dickinson Av.. will hold a holy ghost revival Sunday through Saturday with the Rev. and Mrs. John Chappel as evangelists.

A Sunday night service will be held at 7 p.m. Daily morning services will start at 10:30 a.m. and evening services will be held at 7:30 p.m.

Guest To Preach May 4

Pastor Paul Thomas of the Tabernacle of Victory will preach at the Church of God in Christ on May 14. The church is located at 1515 S. Pitt St.

Pastoral Day Service Scheduled

Rock Springs Free Will Baptist Church will hold its regular Pastoral Day service Sunday at 11 a.m. The pastor. Bishop M L. Phillips, and the senior choir will be in charge of the service. An appreciation service in honor of Elizabeth Thigpen will be held at 7:30 p.m. Sunday.

IssueGuidebookFor Seminaries

NEW YORK (AP) -.Termed the first step of its kind, the National Catholic Education Association has issued a guidebook for Christian seminary faculties and students on key issues of Christian-Jewish relations.

Msgr. William Baumgaertner of Washin^on, head of the the associations seminary education department, said the

Call For Action On Obscenity

TUPELO, Miss. (AP) -The National Federation for Decency says more than 400 business, religious and professional leaders have presented a petition to President Reagan, urging him to enforce vigorously the laws on obscenity.

The signers include 44 Roman Catholic bishops, 16 United Methodist bishops and top leaders of 21 Protestant denominations, including the largest one, the Southern Baptists.

They say pornography is debasing and degrading and a cancer to the human spirit, and ask Reagan to direct the attorney general to apply the laws on it.

publication marks a milestone in the links between the faiths, and added:

This is the first time in the history of the Catholic Church that a major guidebook has been designed to make available to Christian seminaries the rich spiritual resources emerging from the contemporary dialogue between the church and the Jewish people.

Rabbi Marc Tanenbaum, interreligious affairs director for the American Jewish committee, which cooperated in producing the guidebook, said the project seeks to bring about a revolution in esteem between Christians and Jews on the part of the next generation of religious leadership.

Book Explains Divorce Impact

WACO, Texas (AP) -Divorce is hard on children and it takes them three to four years to recover from the effects, says Archibald Hart, psychologist of the Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena, Calif.

In a new book, Children and Divorce, published here by Word Books, he says 45 percent of all American children are subjected to broken homes before they are 18.

A WARM WELCOME AWAITS YOU AT

lED OAK CHRISTIUI CHURCH

264 Bypass West

9:45 a.m. Bible School. Classes for all ages. 11:00 a.m. Message by Dr. Harold Doster 6:00 p.m. Great Youth program for all ages.

Go To Church On Sunday Like Mother Used To Do

Nursery School Monday thru Friday 7:00 a.m. til 6:00 p.m. THE END OF YOUR SEARCH FOR A FRIENDLY CHURCH

Church Dinner Sale Set Saturday

Barbecue pork and chicken dinners will be sold Saturday at Mount Calvary Free Will Baptist Church, located at the comer of Hudson and Ward streets. Proceeds will be used to sponsor Natasha Hines for church conference queen Dinners will have barbecue and chicken as well as chitlerlings, collards, string beans, yams, potato salad, cole slaw and com bread. Orders may be placed bv calling 355-6693 on Friday and 758-2532 Saturday.

Little Creek Plans Conference

A special members conference session will be held at Little Creek-Free Will Baptist Church tonight at 7:30 p m The session is open to all members of the church

Mother's Day Service Scheduled

Mothers Day services will be held at Elm Grove Free Will Baptist Church near Ayden Sunday at 11 a m. with Elder Elmer Jackson and the junior choir and ushers in charge.

At 3 p.m. Eldress Shirley Braxton from Cherry Lane and Elm Grove Youth Choir will be in charge.

Building Fund Service Planned

The Rev. Alonza L. Mills will preach Sunday at Burney's Chapel Church at 3 p.m. The service is open to the public and will benefit the building fund.

Bell Arthur To Have Speaker

Brian Grimes III of Greenville, will speak at the Bell Arthur Christian Church Wednesday at 7 p.m. Grimes, who recently attended a three-month seminar at a Bath. Ohio, theological seminary, will speak on youth ministry. the topic of the seminar.

Best Chapel Plans Service

A Mother's Day service will be held at Best Chapel Free Will Baptist Church Church Sunday at 11 a m with Eldress Dorothy Harrington, the senior choir and ushers of St Luke FWB Church in charge. Sunday school will begin at 9:45 a m.

Holly Hill To Hold Revival

Revival services will be held Monday through Friday at Holly Hill Free Will Baptist Church Church in Belvoir with the Rev. Kenneth A. Worrell, pastor of Davis Chapel Baptist Church in Philadelphia, as the guest speaker The following churches will be in charge:

Monday, St. John Missionary Baptist Church of Stokes; Tuesday, St. Peters Missionary Baptist Church of Greenville; Wednesday, Cherry Lane FWB Church of Greenville; Thursday, St. Matthews FWB Chuch of Greenville; Friday, Corey Chapel Baptist Church of Greenville.

Devotion begins at 7:30 p^m. and the services start at 8 p.m. daily.    ,

Church Observes Women's Day

The women of W'hite Oak Missionary Baptist Church at Grimesland will celebrate the church's 24th annual Women's Day Sunday at 11 a.m. The guest speaker will be the Rev. Naomi Andrea Williams of Goldsboro.

Youth Day Service Set Sunday

Youth Day services will be held Sunday at 11 a.m. at Poplar Hill Free Will Baptist Church. Sunday at 6 p.m. the DEFG Gospel Singers will be in concert at Poplar Hill.

Kinston Congregation To Visit

The Rev. James Vance, the choir, ushers and congregation of St. Mark Church of Kinston will render senices at Sweet Hope Free Will Baptist Church Sunday at 7:30 p.m

Tribute To Mothers Planned

Regular 11 a.m. Sunday worship services will be.4ield at Nazarene Church of Christ with the Rev. Elbert V^ams, pastor, delivering the sermon. A Mother's Day tribute will be given.

At 3 p.m. the Rev. Jimmy Stokes will deliver a sermon accompanied by St. Paul Church Choir of Kinston.

EVERYTHING MUST GO!!!!!

YARD SALE

SATURDAY MAY 7,1983

|\ HOOKER MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH

150 Families

RAIN OR SHINE

Greenville Boulevard near Elm Street PLENTY OF PARKING 7A.M.-NOON

Greenville Church ^ Of The Nazarene

Presently Meeting In The First Federal Building, Community Room, Greenville Boulevard.

Cliff Jones, Pastor

Sunday School  ........... 9:45    A.M,

Morning Worship.....................  11:00    A.M.

Sunday Evening Service.....................6:00    P.M.

355-6329 or 756-5872    ,

mcanin^fui lAJoiifiifi | ExfiEiuncE can je    |

^ouxi. tL <Suna^!    |

)n. Minister

SUNDAY SCHOOL

9:45AM

WORSHIP ..........11:00    A    M

I I I

I GREENVILLE'S FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH    |

J _    "A    Southern    Baptist    Church"    .    

1510 Greenville Blvd S E





20- The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, May 6,

GEORGES NEW BOOK - George Bums, 87, who is celebrating his 80th year in show business, is surrounded by three good reasons to stay young and in shape at a New York news conference Thursday where he in

troduced his new book, "How to Live To Be 100 - Or More. The book is billed as the ultimate diet, sex apd exercise book, even thou^ "at my age, sex gets second billing. (APLaserphoto)

A Review

'Bye-Bye Birdie'Suited To A High School Cast

'Bye-Bye Birdie is a a musical that requires plenty of youthful voices, high-pitc'h energy and charismatic, players. The D.h: Conley High School production, which opened Thursday night, amply fulfills these -requirements. (The show can be seen for two more performances, tonight at 8 p.m. and Sunday afternoon at 3 p.m. in the auditorium at D.H. Conley.

The show has Conrad Birdie (Chun Duncan), a 1950s teen idol, about to be drafted into the army. His manager, Albert Peterson (Vandy Behn, and his secretary, Rosie (Lucretia West), devise a last public appearance in Sweetapple, Ohio. They arrange for Birdie (and T\"s Ed Sullivan Show) to comg to the home of Fan Club president Kim MacAfee (Stephanie Creech) for a televised farewell kiss. But the gimmick falls through when romance gets in the wav

Salisbury Plans liddy DoleDay'

SALISBURY, N.C. (AP) -U.S. Secretary of Transportation Elizabeth Hanford Dole will be honored during a "Liddy Dole Day when she and her husband. Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan.. visit Salisbury on May 21.

Mrs. Dole will help dedicate the adult day-care center established by the Services for Older Adults of Rowan. The Hanford family donated the Cathey-Hanford House to a Presbyterian church and the house will be used as the site of the center.

After the Saturday ceremony, the city plans an appreciation event at the Salisbury Civic Center,

Radio Club Will Meet Tuesday

The Brightleaf Amateur Radio Club will meet Tuesday (7:45 p.m.). at the Planters National Bank basement conference room. Third and Washington Streets, Greenville,

One of the topics at the meeting will be the planning for the clubs 16th annual field day to be held the last weekend in June.

The cast from Conley turns in good performances. Vandy Behr and Lucretia West both possess powerful stage presence. Mary Ellen Lyons as Petersons mother and Ragan Spain as Mr, MacAfee played comedic roles which were especially appreciated by 'the audience. Michelle Deal as the sassy, swaggering Ursula also gave a nice comedic flair to her role.

Excellent vocal performances were delivered by Stephanie Creech and Paul Haddock as Kim and Randolph MacAfee, and Chun Duncan was visually if not,-* vocally convincing as Conrad Birdie.

The production moved well with smooth scene changes and a well rehearsed stage crew, with the three-piece band providing competent accompaniment and musical

'Gandhi' Spurs India Tourism

. NEW YORK (AP) - The movie Gandhi has been the best promotional piece ever for tourism in India, where tours are now packaged to capitalize on the life storv' of the non-violent leader, a government official says.

Kanta Thakur, regional director of the Indian Government Tourist Office, said tourism could soar as much as ,30 percent as the result of a publicity campaign that features tours such as The World of Gandhi and In the Footsteps of Gandhi.

The film, directed by Richard Attenborough and based on the life of Mohandas Gandhi, wfon ei^t Academy Awards, including best picture.    ,    i

Additional Airport Gates

CHARLOTTE, N.C (AP)

- Piedmont Airlines officials said Wednesday they plan to build additional gate space at Charlotte-Douglas International Airport.

Piedmont officials have expressed interestin adding six to eight gates at its 12-gate concourse, said airport manager Josh Birmingham.

The airlines offers 122 flights daily and has said it would add two more daily flights in Charlotte June 1.

interludes. There were times when the audience lost some of the lyrics of the faster songs or a cue was missed, but the flaws of these young performers were minimized by their enthusiasm.

It's easy for an audience to enjoy a show when the cast so obviously has fun putting it on. The opening night audience definitely enjoyed Bye-Byrdie, The directors, Julie Moore and Greg Smith, and the students in the show should be pleased and proud of their fine production, Michele Lang

Jerry Lee Sees Property Sold

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -Jerry Lee Lewis electric piano, a baby grand piano and other furniture from his home in Nesbit, Miss., are ' being sold by the federal government because of a tax lien.

Dianne Wallace, an Internal Revenue Service spokeswoman in Nashville, said Thursday that proceeds from the May 17 sale at OK Storage and Transfer Co. of Memphis will go toward retiring a $274,000 tax lien. She would not estimate the value of the goods.

The lien was filed in 1977 against the 47-year-old entertainer and his wife. Jaren, who drowned last June. She and Lewis were separated at the time and each had filed for divorce.

Ms. Wallace said the IRS has two other liens against Lewis, but would not di^lose the amount.

In October 1980, the IRS raised $91,382 by auctioning 63 articles belonging to Lewis, including a 1979 Lin-coln Continental, motorcycles, jewelry and a Thompson submachine gun.

First Adult Sitcom Has Debut

ByFREDROTHENBEBG AP Television Writer NEW YORK (AP) - The latest breakthrough on cable is that the Playboy Channel can make situation comedies that are even worse than the networks. The low art of televised humor now has sunk from bad bathroom jokes to bad bedroom jokes.

"4Play, which debuts on the Playboy Channel tonight, is billed by the pay-TV network as the first adult sitcom. But its scarcely for discretionary adults. This tasteless, boorish show is a case of profanity and nudity merely for profanity and nuditys sake.

In one scene in a dress designers shop, a model keeps dropping her top to reveal her chest and the word "FRONT. Men are getting dumber every day, she says.

Because the network censors arent around, the characters in "4Play are able to curse and parade around in states of undress

TV Log

Fof compl*t0 TV pfoflramming In-fonnaMon. conaull your waoWy TV SHOWTIME from Sundaya Dally Rofteclor. --

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

FRIDAY

7 00 Jokers Wild 7,30 TicTac

8 00 Dukes

9 00 Dallas

10 00 Mississippi

11 00 News 9 11 30 Play 0(1 2.00 Nlghtwatch

SATURDAY

6 30 Rascals 7:00 Kangaroo 8 00 Popeye

8 30 Pan

9 00 AAeatballs

9 30 Bugs Bunny

10 00 Dukes

11 OO Bugs Bunny

12 00 Soul Train 1:00 Matinee

3 30 Sports Center 4:00 Sports 6 00 News 6 30 News 7.00 Solid Gold 8:00 TBA 9 00 AAovie

11 00 News

11:30 Dance Fever

12 00 Special 1:00 Solid Gold

WITN-TV-Ch.7

FRIDAY

7 00 Jettersons

7 30 Family Feud

8 00 Matthew

9 00 Knight R

10 00 Bare Essence

11 00 News

11 30'Tonight

12 30 Comedy 2:00 Overnight 3 OO News SATURDAY

7 00 Better Way

7 30 Treehouse

8 00 Flintstones

8 30 ShirtTaleS

9 00 Smurts

10:30 Gary Coleman 11:00 Hulk

12 00 Jetsons 12:30. Flash Gordon

1 00 R Martin 1:30 8 Bunch

2 00 Baseball

5 00 Wrestling

6 00 News 6 30 News

7:00 Love Sidney 7:30 Family Ties 8 00 Ditt Strokes

8 30 Silver Spoons

9 00 Mama's F 9 30 Teacher s 10:00 Monitor 11:00 News

11 30 Sat Nite 1 00 Closeup 1 30 News

WCTI-TV-Ch.12

FRIDAY    11:00 Morki

7 00 Three sCo    12 OO    Special

7 30 Alice    12:30    Bandstand

8:00 Movie    1:30    Tennis

11:00 ActionNews    3 30    Sports

11:30 Nightline    4:30    Derby

l2 00 Starsky&    5 00    Sports

100 An Evening    4.00    Sports

2 OO Early Edition    4 30    In Search at

SATURDAY    ^ O Wrestling

5.30 Telestory    8 00    T.J. Hooker

4:00 Great Space    : OO    Love Boat

4:30 Snuggles    10:00    F. Island

7:00 Cartoon Time II 00'Action News 8:00 Supertriends H 15 ABC Weekend 8:30PacMan 1130 Cinema 10 00 Scoobj    k.oo^Edition

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

FRIDAY 7:00 Report 7:30 Stateline 8:00 Washington 8 30 Wall St.

9:00 I Claudius

10 00 Special 11:00 A. Hitchcock

11 30 Morecambe 12:00 SignOtf SATURDAY

7:00 Gen Ed.

8 00 Nuclear War 8 X Building with 9:00 Business 9:X Quilting 10:00 Oil Painting IO:X Painting II 00 Cookino

11 M Great Chefs 12.00 Computer 12:X Sport Fishing 1:00 Soccer 2:00 Dr Who 3:M Adventure 4:00 Victory G 4:X Almanac 5:00 Woodwright's 5:X Last Chance 4:00 Previews 4 :30 Neptune 8 OO Nature of 9:00 Mystery 10:00 Avengers 11:00 Twilight Zone

11 :X Twilight Zone

12 00 SignOft

T-Bone Unlimiti Friday Mav 9:00 P.M. Jazz Lo Beef Ba

designed to divert attention from a juvenile, loud and pointless script.

The story is about a fortyish husband who has an affair with a U-year-old feminist. But shes the kind of feminist that only Playboy could dream up - a beautiful airhead who tells the wife about the cheating relationship because thats what it says to do in her favorite womens magazine.

This sex triangle also is destined to become more muirisiTre;"wrr tire girlfriends father making advances toward the wife.

"4Play is going to make television history, says Madeline David, who wrote and produced the series, its the first sitcom to come to grips with the contemporary urban scene and its sexual angst.

Ms. Davids partner in crime is Paul Klein, president of the Playboy Channel, who asked her to do the show They once worked together at NBC when Klein was the networks top programmer and Ms. David was head of daytime TV.

"4Play is the most exciting project Ive ever seen bar none, says Klein. The work is fresh, contemporary, honest, full of energy and hilarious. -

The audience last March at the 4Play taping - at the the^^ame studio where the soap r opera scenes from Tootsie were shot - must be wondering what show Klein was watching. The studio crowd was barely tickled, even after it was warmed up by a hardworking Borscht-Belt comic named Mickey Freeman, who played Pvt. Zimmerman on The Phil Silvers Show.

We need your reaction, begged Freeman. Otherwise, it will be an expensive home movie. ... Remember, youre not watching Little House on the Prairie.

Freemans pleas fell on deaf ears, but you wouldnt know from tonights finished program, since Playboy brings to cable TV that master fibber, the laugh track. In one of the best cases of artificial sweetening since the discovery of saccharin, the mechanical soft touch is in stitche-s, thoroughly enjoying a bedroom farce that should have kept its door closed.

Tonights episode begins in bed - where else' - with Barbara (Sally Stark) giving her husband Leonard (Larry

264 PLAYHOUSE

INDOOR THEATRE 6 Miles West Of Greenville On U.S. 264 (Farmville Hwy.)

NOW SHOWING

...AN ERonc CUMAX TO THE 20th CENJURY!

-c

ftsltio

4lsa Sitrnng JACQUEUNE LdMANS JONATHAN FORD

Sptcitl Gu*sl PvnlliouM P*l

LOM SANDERS

756-0648    OoorsOpen

Showtime 6:00    5:45

Pine) a morning back rub. The tone of the broadcast is set quickly. Barbara suggests some pre-breakfast

togetherness, but their plans -are interrupted by their children.

About

weensy value from 4P!ay is that it proves that network TV could actually be worse than it is.

SPECIAL ADNMNCE PREVIEW

n)NWHTAT9!00n HES OUT THERE..

Flying the most lethal weapon ever made...    _

The Blue Thunder Special.

At his fingertips, an infrared camera that can see right through your bedroom walls.

A microphone that can record your most intimate conversations.

And a 20mm electric cannon with six barrels that can tiun your neighborhood into a raging inferno.

But hes not headed for a war-torn country.

Hell be cruising the skies of America.

And only one man can stop him from using it on you.

I..'-

ROY

SCffKimSH

THIIIMIIER

COLL MBIA PICTURES Presents , RASTAR GORDON CARROLL Production 4 JOHN BADHA.M Film BOY SCKEIDER BLUE THUNDER WARREN OATES CANDY CLJLRK DANIEL STERN and MALCOLM McDOWELL

Musicbv ARTHUR B RUBINSTEIN Editedbv FRANK MORRISS DirectorotPhologrnphy JOHN A ALONZO A SC Executive Producers PHIL FELDMAN indANDKEt^ FOGELSON Vt ruten by DAN 0 BANNON A DON JAKOBY Produced by GORDON CARROLL Directed bv JOHN BADHAM

I'-VM. s;.    1.    M-    -ICHS:CCCMI-

tta

B

PLITT

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MON.-FRI. 7:30 ONLY SAT. & SUN. 3:15 & 7:30

STARTS MAY 25TH RETURN OF THE JEDI!

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SHOWS MON.-FRI. 3:00-7:10-9:00 SAT. SUN. 3:30-5:20-7:10-9:00

CHARLES

BRONSON

A COP... A KILLER... A DEADLINE...

CHMUSWOISIM

..J.LKTHOMPSOIi4'IITOWMtNr    .    _

^UUEUAOKR MMm STEVENS EEKOWtS KOFFMT lEWS.MUtM HMUT.MAINE WNAHEM (IAN . yom 61DIUS a,. fniEin 0 AACUW a.. 1^

MON.-FRK 3:00-7:00-0:00 SAT. SUN. 3:00-5:00-7:00-9

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SUMMER KID SHOWS SEASON TICKETS NOW ON SALE-10 MOVIES ONLY $2.00

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cnmswotd ByEugnusheffer Agon Obect To Drilling Sales

ACROSS- 3?L<d(WJcloek DOWN MThumiffi -    _____     ^i3f    _    _    __

beU

ACROSS 1 Member (rf Cong.

DOWN MTbumhs 1 Pokes fun at down

39 Great amount 2 Famous

4 Graf-(Ger-40 Finale man ship)    41 Entertained

8 h^ral    45 Tom Sawyers

oaths    vessel

12 Author Levin 48 New York

13 Urge    City

14 Record    50 Way out

15 Blabberer    51 Hymn close

52 Broadcast

53 Refuse

54 Indiana city

55 Beige

17 Concept

18 Usher to the door

19 Tavern

21 Apr. 15

^ ageniy"

22 lion or tiger

26 Seaweed ;ls

29 Die roll

30 Color

31 Irritate

32 Steaming

33 Rational

34 Get on in years

35ice

addibve

36 Leases

canal 3 Senate worker #Scrubs

5 Is petulant

6 Consume

7 Show

8 Bees weapon

9 Tablet

10 Simian

11 Baltic, e.g.

23 Movie sleuth 24Em,io Dorothy 25 Golf ai^ 26Mideast . native

27 Caron role

28 Shake-(get going)

29 Baseballs Red or White

32 Purse

33 Prepare

NAGS HEAD, N.C. (AP) -North Carolina officials have notified the U.S. Department of the Interior that its plans to sell 131 tracts near the state coast for oil and gas drilling are inconsistent with

the state coastal management act.

Gov. "Jim Hunt requested in December that the 151 tracts, located 15 to 25 miles off the coast, be deleted from Interiors proposed sale of

GOREN BRIDGE

16 Watered silk 35 Decimal base

Avg. solution time: 23 min.

rW

shn

rasn mim

5-6

Answer to yesterdays puzzle.

36Gypsy

38 Rosalynns predecessor

39 Beer type

42 Tiff

43 Lambs pen name

44 Actor Bruce

45 Buttons of comedy

46 Hacking tool

47 "Fiver

49 - Yankee Doodle...

CRYPTOQUIP

HZWTMHF JHS AHJAW VTHFVCTU ZV

MFPZUS IPF IZCFV.

Yesterdays Cryptoquip SAGE FIFTH-GRADE FACTION hated FRACTIONS.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: Z equals I.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands fw another. If you think that X equals 0, it wUl equal 0 throughout the puz^. Sii^e lettoa, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accompUshed by trial and error.

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

1963 Tribune Compmy Syndicete. Inc

East West vulnerable. West deals.

NORTH

J98 9QJ652 0K643

K

WEST    EAST

43    4 10765

:7K1043    '7A87

0 105    OQ92

4Q10752    4J98

SOUTH 4 AKQ2

OAJ87

4A043

The bidding:

West North Eut South Pass Pass 1 0 1 ^    Pass    1    4

3 0    Pass    4    4

4 0    Pass    4    4

5 4    Pass    6    0

Pass    Pass

Opening lead: Five of 0.

Failed Deposit Withholdings

NEW BERN, N.C. (AP) -The president of Hanover Co. Inc. has pleaded guilty to five counts of a 35-count indictment charging him with failure to deposit federal and Social Security taxes withheld from employees-wages, officials say.

Thomas W. Sneeden, 63, received a one-year suspended sentence and was placed on five years probation Thursday bytJ.S. Magistrate Charles K. McCotter Jr.

The Internal Revenue Service said evidence revealed that the undeposited taxes totaled $76,776:36 for 35 of the 39 pay periods from June 14,1981, through March 13,1982.

FREE FINESSE CAN BE COSTLY

We don't blame you for wanting to take a free finesse when it is offered. However, don't let one trick blind you to your major goal-making your contract.

This deal cropped up in a match between a touring Canadian team and a South African squad. The South African declarer ended in five diamonds and received a trump lead. She let it ride to her hand, and ended up mak ing 11 tricks. In the other room, the Canadians reached the diamond slam as shown. Here, too. West led a trump to cut down on a possible crossruff.

The declarer was George ^Mittelman of Montreal. No one could accuse him of being reticent during the auction, but he was able to justify his aggressive bidding in the play. He realized that he would need entries to his hand to ruff out his club losers, so he won the first trick in dummy with the king!

He cashed the king of clubs and came to hand with a trump to the jack. There followed a club ruff, spade to the ace, another club ruff and a spade to the king. Now declarer cashed the ace of diamonds to draw, the last trump, crossed to the jack of spades and conceded a heart. He made the last three tricks with a trump, the queen of spades ahdHhe aof clubs. -

I^te that, if declarer wins the first trick in hand, his position is distinctly precarious. He can still prevail if he guesses the distribution, but that would be a poor substitute for the elegance of Mittelman's line jf play.

PAROLED - WUliam Harris, the one-time Symbionese Liberation Army terrorist who pleaded guilty to the 1974 kidnapping of Patricia Hearst, has been paroled from prison, his attorney said Thursday. (AP Laserphoto)

Urge Role For Private Sector

Wy^HlNGTON (AP) -America will lose its leadership in space unless the government and private in-dustQr join to commercialize this pew frontier, a panel head^ by former Commerce Secretary Philip M. Klutiick told Congress.

Th6 panel is urpg the Natidnal Aeronautics and Spacf Administration to take the 4ead in encouraging prive sector involvement and Icapital investment in utilizing the weightlessness and ;yacuum of space for commercial development of products that cant be made in Eahhs gravity.

Tht former secretary pres^ited the report, Encouraging Business Ventures in Sj^ce Technologies, to the House subcommittee on spaed sciences and applications; It was prepared at the requ^t of NASA by the National Academy of Public Admfiiistration.

4

lEARCHING for the right ownhOuse? Watch Classified very day.

TNNIiEEFERS

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 bn 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 A price, children 5 and under free. 11:30 AM to 3;00 PM in Pageantry Hail.

Please call for reservations

756-2792

KAMADA

INN

Greenville Blvd.

several thousand tracts along the coast in North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. Interior Secretary James Watt recently notifiwl Hunt he had rejected that request.

Thursday's letter again asks Interior to drop the disputed tracts from the sale. It is signed by James Summers, assistant secretary of natural resources.

The federal Coastal Zone Management Program, in -which Nwttv Garolina participates, requires that all federal projects in coastal states be consistent with the provisions of a state coastal management program. Activities found to be inconsistent are prohibited.

Summers letter notifies Interior that the state has determined that the proposed sale is not consistent with the state program.

The sale conflicts with the program because it underestimates the risk that oil spills from the nearshore tracts will soil state beaches or interfere with the commercial fishing industry. Summers letter states Oil on the beaches could devastate coastal resources as well as the tourist industry, the letter states.

Two years ago. Hunt ob

jected to Watts plan to include six tracts within 13 miles of Cape Lookout. When Watt refused to remove the tracts from the sale. North Carolina filed suit to stop it.

An agreement between the state and federal governments delayed the suit until the sale could be held. When no bids were made on the disputed tracts, the suit

The Daily Reflector' Greenville, N .C Friday, May 6,198321 was dropped. Those tracts    intention to file suit again if

are not included in the cur-    watt continues to ignore the    -

rent sales proposal    states wishes in the current

Hunt has announced-hisgate;--^-

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SATURDAY-SUNDAY Z:05-3:50-5:35-7:20-9;05 FRIDAY 7:20 ONLY

Somefhing happens when she hears fhe nnusic...lf's her passion. Its her fire. Ifs her life.





i 1 ne UdU} fteuccujt

Ufe As It's Lived

Mr. Rogers Has A New Admirer, No Listener

Lumberfire

loss+ieovy-

Public Notices

By GAIL MICHAELS Zachary is the second child in our home to hecom" entranced with Mr. Rogers, and I can no more understand it now than I could when Meg first fell under his spell.

I can only conclude that he has hypnotized them with his monotonous voice. \Miy else would they sit still and listen to him expound at length upon the proper way to hang up a sweater when they tune me out at the very moment that my lips begin to form the word clean":

Of course, I realize that Im probably being unfair. There have got to be other reasons for Mr. Rogers appeal. Perhaps my children are so relieved by the chance to listen to an adult who never raises his voice that they forgive the content of his program.

But a more likely explanation for Mr. Rogers popularity is that, to a small child who hasnt yet been exposed to a surfeit of "action programs, Mr. Rogers may be a

reassuring slowpoke in a world obsessed with speed. The orJy things even slightly suggestive of any kind of momentum on his show are a toy trolley and a stooped mailman with a swooping gray mustache who invariably croaks into the camera, Speedy delivery, speedy delivery .

I really have nothing against Mr. Rogers aside from the shock his show gives my system. The mere sight of him makes me want to escape the onset of torpor by scrubbing floors, jogging several miles, or doing pull-ups on the closet rods, all activities that my body 'has avoided assiduously for many years,

But 1 do think that his show is a case in point against those who would argue for the beneficial effects of television. Mr. Rogers is a good influence on the kids, mothers assure themselves after laughing at the enervating effect he has on parents. Baloney. I say. I know from their expressions

FORECAST FOR SATURDAY, MAY 7. 1983

GENERAL TENDENCIES: A good day to engage in activities that can give you the greatest satisfaction. Be sure to use your full mental and physical qualifications to gain your aims. Use common sense.

ARIES iMar 21 to Apr. 19) Study your appearance and take the right treatments to improve it. Seek the company of those who can make you feel happier.

TAURUS lApr. 20 to May 20) Don't neglect to handle duties that are important to your future. Your intuition is accurate now, so be sure to follow it.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Make notes of new ideas that can bring a better set of conditions into your life. Try to please the one you love.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Take care of small tasks first before handling larger ones. Study your environment and make plans for improvement.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Make plans to cultivate one whose thinking is different from yours. Make sure you don't spend money foolishly now.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Show close ties that you are deeply devoted to them. Make sure you arrive on time for appointments. Express your talents.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Make plans for having greater abundance in the future. Take health treatments and improve your appearance,

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Contact friends and make mutual plans for the days ahead. You need to improve your health if you wish to accomplish more.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Make plans to engage in amusements withxongeniaJs.rLw_ed, one is now more willing to go    ,    

CAPRICOR.N (Dec. 22Tm^^) Firm out what conpi-'^ tion is causing disharmony at home and get rid of it. Make any concessions that are necessary.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Study your surroundings. and make needed improvements. Be sure to take needed health treatments.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Ideal day to handle a monetary matter that is important to your future. Plan new wavs to have greater abundance,

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will have the right solution to problems and would do well in any field of importance, so be sure to give the finest education you can afford. Give ethical and religious training early in life. Sports are a must here.

"The Stars impel, they do not compel, " What you make of your life is largely up to you!

1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

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when they watch him that my kids brain waves are vacillating between the alpha waves, characteristic of television viewing, and death. Beta waves simply cant exist in such an environment.

Besides, I find that my children do not make any connectioir between his show. and real life. To return to his emphasis on neatness, never once has Zachary been inspired after half an hour with the man to pick up a toy or a piece of clothing. Playthings still lie scattered throughout my house, the most effective deterrent to burglary since the guillotine.

Every, room is carpeted in the excess of grandparental affection. Even my closet has been turned into a kennel for Digger the Dog.

I wont say that Mr. Rogers' influence on our household is nil, however. He came to mind just the other night when Phillip came to bed late, stepped into a dump truck, hurtled across the room, and luckily landed on the bed.

I immediately thou^t of the perfect phrase with which to cmfort him, Speedy delivery.

SHELBY, N.C. (AP) - A fire that destroyed a \vood-working building at the Ellis Lumber Company south of Shelby Thursday night caused several hundred Lhousand dollars in damage, company officials said.

No injuries were reported in the blaze, which began shortly after 9 p.m. Cleveland County Fire Marshal Delane Davis said the cause of the fire is under investigation.

Company President Yancey Ellis said the fire began in a small room in the w(^-working building at the center of the lumber company complex. That building, one of several in the complex, is the primary facility.

Ellis said he attempted to put the fire out himself, but was driven back by the heat.

About a dozen people worked in the damaged building, he said, with about 25 other jobs also tied to operations there.

Heat ffom the fire could be felt two blocks away, with flames and smoke shooting up some 200 feet in the air.

Firefighters from six fire departments had the fire under control within a half hour but remained at the scene late Thursday night.

An unidentified employee, in the building at the time of the fire, had contacted Ellis.

FILE NO 82CvD1638 FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE

district court division

NORTH CAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex ret.

PHYLLIS GRIMES JOHNSON VS

JAMES EARL JOHNSON

notice OF SERVICE OF process by PUBLICATION To: JAMES EARL JOHNSON TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (I) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of the minor children Venson E. Johnson, born February 16, 1969, Bridgette A Johnson, born December 23, 1970; Ashley L. Johnson, born June 26, 1972 up to the time of entry of judgment; (2) to obtain an order for proepecttv support for . >uch, children; and (3) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June 1, 1983, and upon your failure to do

P O Bo 1220 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758 4257 April 22, 29; May 6, 1983

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE RE SALE

Under and by virtue! of the

so, the party seekino^e_rvice against relief sougt'

you will

to

Court tor the

This the twenty-second day of April, 1983.

EVERETT 8.CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS

Edward J. Haiyer, II eys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street

P.O Box 1220 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758-4257 April 22, 29, May 6, 1983

FILE NO

FILE

;cr

475

Wells Polluted By A Bug Spray

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) -Seven people who left their Durham homes after their well water was contaminated with bug spray should be able to return in about one month, a state official says.

Jim Sheppard, spokesman for the state Division of Environmental Management, said the division met Wednesday with representatives of the pesticide company that sprayed some of the homes.' He said the division approved a cleanup plan that "should get the

problem straightened out in about 30 days.

One family had to move out after finding the spray in their water supply.

Clegg Termite & Pest Control Inc. of Durham used a common bug spray containing lindane, chlordane and heptachlor to rid one of the homes of termites. ' Lindane and heptachlor have produced cancer in mice, while chlordane stimulates the nervous system and can caiise trimors and convulsions.^^

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

DOROTHY JEAN HARRIS VS

JOHNNY WAYNE BARRETT notice OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: JOHNNY WAYNE'BARRETT

TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above-entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child Terry Leon Harris, born April 17, 1974; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such child up to the time of entry of judgment;, and (3). to obtain an order for prospective support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June 1, 1983. and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking sej;vice against you will apply relief sought.

This the twenty second day of April, 1983

EVERETT 8. CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J Hayier, 11 Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street

ALERTIS LIFTED SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - Prime Minister Kim Song-hyup has lifted an emergency duty alert for government officials, imposed April 4, to guard against possible provocations from the communist North, a spokesman said today.

of sate contained In a trtain deed of trust made by Patsy R Sullivan to Lawrence R Graham, trustee, dated the 24th day of October, 1981, and recorded in Book K 50, Page 403, of the Pitt County Registry, T^orth Carolina, default having been made in the payment of the note thereby secured by the said deed of trust and the undersigned James A. Nelson. Jr., having been substituted as trustee in said deed of trust by an instrument duly recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Pitt County, North Carolina, and the holder of the note evidencing said indebtedness having directed that the deed of trust be foreclosed, and the sale of the property having been conducted on April 8, 1983 and the bid at said sale having been raised to m,TtStt.(t07 theDTTdeTTtgnetf Substitute Trustee will otter for sale at the Courthouse Door, in the City of Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina, at 12:00 Noon, on Wednesday, May 11. 1983. and will sell to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate, situate In Swift Creek Township, Pitt County, North Carolina, and being more particularly described as follows:

BEGINNING at an iron pijie set in the northern right-of-way line of NCSR 1931, said iron pipe being located as follows: Begin at the intersection of the centerlines of NCSR 1725 and NCSR 1931 and ryn thence S. 81 20 06 E. 594.21 feet to a point in the centerline of NCSR 1931, thence run N. 72 48 21 E. 660.44 feet to a point in the centerline of NCSR 1931, thence run N. 17-10-36 W. 30.00 feet to an iron pipe set in the northern right-of-way line of NCSR 1931; the point of beginning, and running from said beginning point as fixed N. 17 10 36 W 197.08 feet to an iron pipe set in the centerline of a ditch, a corner; thence along and with the centerline of said ditch S. 73 52-28 E. 182.17 feet to an iron pipe se.t in the center of said, a corner; thence S. 15-22 00 E. 97.96 feet to an iron pipe set in the northern right of-way line of NCSR 1931, a corner, thence along and with said right ot way line S. 73 09 00 W. 149.16 feet to an iron pipe set; the point of beginning and containing .512 acres, more or less, and shown on that survey entitled "Survey for Patsy R Sullivan", dated April IS, 1981, and drawn by Gary S. Miller, R.L.S., reference to which Is hereby made for a clearer and more accurate description.

This sale is made subject to all taxes and prior liens or encumbrances or record against the said property and any recorded releases.

The bidding will start at $21,050.00 and a cash deposit of ten percent

establisnment ot a irusi creating a burial ground tor the colored rate ot the Haddocks Community TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature ot the relief being sought is as follows:

To appoint Successor Trustees for the above mentioned trust pursuant to G .S. 36A 33, by reason of the death ot the original Trustees

You are required to make detense to such pleading within forty days after April 22,1983, exclusive of such date (not later than June 1, 1983), and upon your failure to do so. the parties seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE ' district COURT DIVISION

ught

rfiist

1983.

i the 18th day of April, MATTOX8, DAVIS, P /

BY:

Fred T. Mattox Attorney tor Petitioners Post Office Box 686 Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Phone: 919/758 3430 April 22. 29, May 6. 1983

Having qualified as Executrix ot the estate ot Jimmie White Cobb late ot Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before October 24, 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate

please make immediate payment. This 20th day of April, 1983. Carole S. Tola

101 Poplar Drive Greenville, N.C. 27834 Executrix ot the estate of Jimmie White Cobb, deceased. April 22, 29, May 6, 13, 1983

north CAROLINA PITTCOUNTY

eowAROi garrison. ;

Director, Pitt County Department ot Social Services ex rel.

LISAG BRYAN VS

JOHNNY RAY BRYAN

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PR^OCESS BY PUBLICATION To JOHNNY RAY BRYAN

TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has ^n tiled in the above-enfitled acti^ The nature of the relief sought is (1) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of the minor child Johnny Ray Bryan, Jr., born September 2, 1979, up to the time of entry of judgment; (2) to obtain an order for prospective support tor such child; and (3) to recover the costs? (including reasonable attorney's fees) ot such action

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June 1, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court tor the relief sought.

This the twenty second day ot

April, 1983    -

EVERETT 8, CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street P O Box 1220 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758 4257 April 22, 29, May 6, 1983

to the Court for the

(10%) of the purchase price will be required at the time of the sale.

This the 25 day of April, 1983. James A. Nelson. Jr.

Substitute Trustee Owens, Rouse 8i Nelson P O Box 302

Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Telephone: (919) 758 4276 April 29; May 6, 1983

; NO : 83SP153 INO

FILE .

FILMI--, IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURTDIVISION BEFORE THE CLERK NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

IN THE MATTER OF THE APPOINTMENT OF SUCCESSOR TRUSTEES OF BRANCH COLOREDCEMETARY

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION TO: All persons who are related to heirs of or spouses of those persons inferred in the Branch Colored Cemetary, Haddocks Community, Pitt County, North Carolina, and all persons who are or claim to be beneficiaries of that certain trust created on the 7th day of January. 1937, between Annie Haddock and husband, Arthur Haddock as Trustejrs, and L.S. Patrick and Jesse Smith, as Trustees, relating to the

n^jiixaiion

on

)

X 1

U2 an

cHoUX of iPo(JUX

Sunday 9KW a.m. WCTI-12 11:30 a.fn. WWAY-3 8.*00 a.m. WRAL-5 10KM PTL

Monday 2.-00p.m. PTL-2 Tuesday iM p.m. PTL-3

IMPIii ADULTS $2:00 TIL 5:30

BUCCANEER MOVIES

1:10,3:10,5:10,7:10,

ROCKY IN

SYLVESTER STALLONE TALIA SHIRE

PG

751-3307 Granvill Square Shopping Cantar

1:20,3:70,5:70,7:20,9:20

DR. DETROIT

DAN AYKROYD

(R)

FORCEDENTRY

TANYA ROBERTS

STARTS TODAY!

BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND! ONE WEEK ONLY! DONT MISS IT!

PG| PABENTAL GUWAIiCE SUGGESTtP ^

OOMilMTWmiMYWOTBIIUITAOLtFOWCMKDWeN

STARTS TODAY! EXCLUSIVE!

DR. DETROIT

1:20,3:20 5:20,7:20, 9:20

DAN AYKROYD AS

WITH HOWARD HESSEMAN

R RESTRICTED^

STARTS TODAY!

LIMITED ENGAGEMENT SEE IT NOW! I

1:00,3:00,

5:00,7:00,

9:00

STARRING

TANYA ROBERTS FROM CHARLIES ANGELS AND NANCY ALLEN

R RESTRICnOc^

SEASON TICKETS ARE NOW ON SALE FOR OUR CHILDRENS SUMMER MOVIES. THE COST IS ONLY $3.00 FOR ALL EIGHT MOVIES. FOR DETAILS CALL 756-5235

r





PUBLIC

NOTICES

NOTICE TOCREDITORS Having qualified as Adminstratrix CT.A of the Estate of Ada Hardee, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, the undersigned hereby authorises all persons having claims against said Estate to present them to the undersigned, whose mailing address is >05 Osceola Drive, Greenville, North Carolina 7834, on or before 37fh day of October, >983, or this Notice wili be pleaded in bar of^heir recovery. All persons indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned This the 27th day of April, 1983. JENNIE SUTTON Administratrix CTA 105 Osceola Drive Greenville, NC 27834 DAVIDT GREER Attorney at Law 313 A West Second Street P.O. Box 664

Greenville, North Carolina 27835 0664

April 29, May 6, 13,20, 1983

FILE NO 83CvD.57    ~

~ FILMNO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

BARBARAJ EDWARDS VS

TRAVIS P FARMER

NOTICE OF SERIVCE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: TRAVIS P FARMER TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking, relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paterniW of the minor child Towander Edwards, born September n, 1974, (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or fore the benefit of such child up to the time of entry of judgment, and (3) to obtain an order lor prospective support tor such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June 1, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service agianst you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

fhis the twenty second day of April, 1983

EVE RETT & CHEATMAN, ATTORNEYS

Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street

lintiff

P 0. Box 1220 Greenville, N.C 27834 Telephone (919) 758 4257 April 7>, 29, May , 1983

FILE NO 70 SP 242 FILMNO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY

IN RE: PITT COUNTY DRAINAGE niSTRICTNUMBER FOUR LATERAL!

NOTICE

OF ASSESSMENT ANTICIPATION NOTE ISSURE

NOTICE is hereby given that the Commissioners of Pitt County Drainage District Number Four have levied an assessment for the amount of Eleven Thousand Six Hundred and Six (11,606) Dollars upon the lands within the watershed of Lateral I of the said Drainage District. The assessment has been made in accordance with the Certificate of Cost (showing the total costs of improvement) filed by the Board of Commissioners of the said Drainage District with the Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County on the 27 day of April, 1983

All persons owning land, or any interest in land, within the boundaries of the watershed ol Lateral l of Pitt County Drainage District Number Four are hereby notified that the Board of Commissioners of said Drainage District propose to issue an Assessment Antieipafion Nofe, to provide money for the payment of the total cost ot the renovations of Lateral 1, tor the amount which the owners of the land have not paid in cash, which amount is not to exceed Eleven Thousand Six Hundred and Six ( 1 1.606) Dollars. The A^ssment Anticipation Note is to

PUBLIC NOTICES

bear interest at a rate not to exceed ten (10) percent per anum and the principal is to be paid in ten (10) equal annual' installments, according fo the following Scheduie

r Commencing with the year r83, the iandowners owe. as the first year's payment, only interest on the assessment levied upon their land The interest is due on the first

Monday in September, 1983, and is asf due as ot 1 January 1984.

2. Commencing with the second

year 1984, the landowners will owe a payment of one tenth (1/10) of their assessment principal together with interest on the unpaid balance tor a twelve (12) month period This payment is due on the first Monday in September, 1984, and is past due on 1 January 1985, The remaining nine (9) annuai installments ot principal and interest are due on the first Monday of September, and are past due on the first day of January lor each of the succeeding .nine (9) years,

3. The first annual payment of principal by the Drainage District on the Assessment Anticipation Nofe is to be paid on or about twenty tour (24) months from the date of the issuance of said Notes, and the subsequent payments are made on the same day of the month for each of the succeeding nine (9) years.

' The owner of land within the watershed of Lateral 1 of the said Drainage District, not wanting to pay the interest on the Assessment Anticipation Note, may within sixty (60) days after public of this Notice, or by the 30th day of June, 1983, pay to the Treasurer Accountant of Pitt County Drainage District Number Four at the Office of Frank M Woofen, Jr., 113 W. Third Street, Greenville, NC 27834, the    full

amount for which his land is liable, to be ascertained from    the

classification of benefits as approved by the Clerk of Superior Court, and from the Certificate of cost (showing the total cost of improvemenls), filed by    the

Commissioners of Pitt County

Drainage District Number Four with the Clerk of the Superior Court of Pitt County, as stated hereinbefore, and have his land released from liability to be assessed for the improvement. Such land shall continue to be liable for any future assessment for maintenance or for any increased assessment authorized pursuant to law

This the 24th day of January, 1983. PITT COUNTY DRAINAGE DISTRICT NUMBER FOUR C H Hagan, Commissioner Chairman

Milton R Spain, Commissioner Vice Chairman Carl Scott, Commissioner Frank M Wooten. Jr., Secretary Attorney

Frank M Wooten, Jr April 29; May 6, 13, 1983

NOTICE OF SALE STATE OF NORTHCAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of the power of sale contained in that certain deed of trust executed by Ronnie Lee Stocks and wife, Joyce L. Stocks, dated September 4,"1981: and recorded in Book H 50, Page 348, in the Office of the Register of tJeeds ot Pitf County; and under and by virtue of the authority vested in the undersigned as Substituted Trustee by that certain instrument dated March 4, 1983, and recorded in Book P 51, Page 280, in the office of the Register of Deeds of Pitt County, and under and by virtue of that certain Authorization, Findings and Order entered by the Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County on April 13, 1983 and ot record in File 83 SP 115, default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness secured by said deed of trust and the said deed of trust being by its terms subject to toreclosure, and the holder of the indebtedness thereby secured having demanded the foreclosure thereof for the purpose of sati'Sfying said indebtedness, and due notice having been given to those entitled to same, the undersigned Substituted Trustee will offer for sale at public auction, to the highest bidder, for cash, at the Courthouse door in Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina, at 2:30 o'clock P.M. on May 17, 1983, the lands conveyed in said deed of trust, the same being owned ol record by Ronnie Lee Stocks, and wife. Joyce L. Stocks, and being more particuiariy described as follows: Generally described as a house and approximately 6,4 acres of land located on the East side of NCSR 1725 near Burneys Cross Roads and more particularly described as follows

TRACT NO 1: Lvinq and being in

PUBLIC NOTICES

Swift Creek Township, Pitt County, North Carolina, on the least side of NCSR 1725 and BEGINNING at a point in the centei of said road 840 feet ' northwest (when measured along the center ot said road) from the intersection of the center of said road with ttie center of NCSR 1753, running thence with the center of said road in a northwesterly direction 486.16 feet to a corner, thence with the Coggins and Leaphart line N. 69 37 E 359 8 feet to an iron pipe in the corner ot a lot, described in deed recorded in Book M 44, page 19, Pitt County Registry; running thence S. 51 05 E 252.25 feet to an iron pipe in the crook of a ditch in the W B McLawhorn line; thence with the McLawhorn line and the center of a ditch S. 36 19 W. 433.16 feef to the BEGINNING. Containing 3 07 acres net, exclusive of the highway right of way, which is .334 aci'es. being the western tract of land shown on that map made by Algie D Hicks, R .S. dated March 15, 1976, and recorded with deed in Book M 44, page 19, Pitt County Registry. Being TRACT 1 of the property deeded to Ronnie L Stocks and wife, Joyce L. Stckks, by Betty Elizabeth Stocks and hubaqd, William E. Stocks, by deed recorded in Book M 47, page 269, Pitt County Registry

Tract no 2 Lying and being in Swifi Ci'cck TuwtiSliip, Pill Cuunly, North Carolina, east of and adjoining Tract No 1 above. BEGINNING at the northeast corner of said Tract No. I a stake in the Leaphart and Cash line, and runnng thence with the Cash line N. 78 01 E 667.11 feet to an iron stake; thence S. 33 56 W. 521.43 feet to a corner in a ditch; thence with the ditch and the W B McLawhorn

properly N. 50 37 W. 213 87 feet to the southeast corner of Tract No l above; thence with said Tract No. 1, N 5105 E. 252.25 feet to the BEGINNING, containing 2.77 acres, more or less. Being the eastern tract of land shown on fhal map referred to above. See also deed recorded in Book N 37, page 551, Pift County Registry. Being Tract No. 2 of the property deeded to Ronnie L Stocks and wife, Joyce L Stocks, by Betty Elizabeth Stocks and husband. William E. Stocks, by deed recorded in Book M 47, page 269, Pitt County Registry

Together with all the buildings, fixtures and improvements thereon, and all rights, easements, hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging, including all heating, plumbing, ventilating, lighting goods, equipment and other tangibfe and intangible property attached to or reasonably necessary to the use of such premises The aforesaid sale will be made subject to all encumbrantes existing prior to the recording of the above reterenced deed of Trust and also will be subject to all taxes and special assessments outstanding against the property

The successful bidder at sale will be required to make an immediate cash deposit ol ten percent (10%) of the amount bid up to and including One Thousand Dollars ($1,000) plus five percent (5%) of any excess over OneThousandDollars (^$1,000)

This I3lh day of April, 1983 Philip W. Steiner Subshtuted Trustee Route 2, Box 145A Arapahoe,.North Carolina 28510 TelephoneNo : (919) 249 1337 78L0520 (AA)

12LGH

May6, 13, 1983    vv    ,

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'SSArE OF REAL ESTATE UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of the power and authority contained ii. that certain Deed of Trust executed and delivered by Sharon M Howard, unmarried, Alex Stancil and wife, Mary Stancil, dated the 21st of April, 1983, and recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds for Pitt County, North Carolina, in Book U50 at page 463. and because of default in the

fiayment of the indebtedness hereby secured and failure to carry out and perform the stipulations and agreements therein contained and, pursuant to demand of the owner and undersigned Trustee will expose for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the usual place of sale in the County Courthouse of Pitt County, in the

City at 2:

00 p.m on Friday, the 20th day of May, 1983, all that certain lot or larcel ol land situate, lying and

Cify of Greenville, North Carolina, he 20tl rtain lying

ing in Belvoir township, Pitt County, State of North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows:

Type of property and location: Residence and lot located at 207 Haw Road, Greenville, North Carolina.

Legal description: Being all of Lot 4, Block"!", as shown on mao ot

PUBLIC NOTICES

"North River Estates. Section Two. Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina,"prepared by Dickerson Adams B. Associates, dated August 9. 1976, and recorded in Map Book 25, 163, ot the Pitt County

iegistry.

Presen

^resnt record owners at property:    Sharon M. Howard,

unmarried, Alex Stancil and wife, Mary Stancil.

The sale will be made subject to ail unpaid taxes and assessments and the sale will i%main open ten days for upset bid as required by law. The Trustee will require a cash deposit of five per cent of the amount of the bid from the-successful bidder at the sale.

This 29th day of April, 1983.

John B. Whitley Substitute Trustee 320 Law Building 730 E ast Trade Street Charlotte, N.C. 28202 May 6, 13, 1983

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE

UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of the power and authority contained in that certain Deed of Trust executed and delivered by George S. Washington and Betty W Washington, dated the I2th of December, 1980, and recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds tor Pitt County, Norft-. Carolina, in 049 at page 352. and because of default in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured and failure to carry out and perform the stipulations and agreements therein contained and. pursuant to demand of the owner and holder of the indebtedness secured by said Deed of Trust, the undersigned Trustee will expose for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the usual place of sale in the County Courthouse of Pitt County, in the City ot Greenville, North Carolina, at 2:00 p m on Friday, the 20th day of May, 1983, all that certain lot or

&arcel of land situate, lying and eing in Greenville Township, Pitt County. State of North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows

Type of property and location: Residence and lot located at 204 Trey Drive. Greenville, North Carolina.

Legal description: Being all of Lot No 6, in Block "D" of Lake Ellsworth Subdivision, Section I, as shown, on map of Rivers and Associates, Inc., dated January 17 1973, and recorded in Map Book 22, at page 27, of the Pitt County Registry

Present record owners of property George S Washington and Betty W Washington

The sale will be made subject to all unpaid taxes and assessments and the sale will remain open ten days for upset bid as required by law The Trustee will require a cash deposit of five per cent of the amount ol the bid from the successlul bidder at the sale.

This 29th day of April, 1983,

John B Whitley Substitute Trustee 320 Law Building 730 East Trade Street Charlotte, N C. 28202 May 6, 13, 1983

"SPECIAL INVITATION TO BID'~

Norflor Construction Corporation, 360 Landstreet Road, P.O. Box 13008 A. Orlando. Florida 32859 0008, (305)859 9133, invites Minority Subcontractors and/or Minority Vendors to submit written proposals TSr work or supplies for the WASTEWATER TREATMENT PLANT, CONTRACT NO 1, EPA PROJECT NO C370487 03, GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA Make inquiries or submit bids to the above address through May 17,    1983 Specific

quantities wilt be made available as they are developed or will be prepared on the basis of a direct

inquiry Nortlor's representatives

 ICAI -------

9T qi

ONLY at the Holiday Inn, 702 S.

8. P

accept

ROCi

SS EQUIPMENT quotes

Memorial Drive, Greenville. NC on May 17 & 18 Nortlor's Private Phone on those dates 919/757 0102. ALL OTHER QUOTES ARE TO BE DIRECTED TO OUR ORLANDO OFFICE A preliminary analysis of 'the Bid Documents indicates the following work efforts will be requiretT Excavation; Sod & Seeding; Paving 13,500 sy; Fence 4,200 It, Concrete 5,300 cy; Rebar 245 T; Brick 140,000 Ut; Cone Block 8,800 Ut; B/U Roofing 140 sq, H/M Doors 32 Ut; Alum Windows 51 Ut, Painting 40,000 st; Misc Toilet Access; Misc Specialty Items; Cranes & Hoists 4 Ut; Mechanical Process Piping; Equip Erection 33 Ut; Instrumentation.

May 6, 1983

Ladici'DavforBoandLuke! THE DUKES OF HAZZARD 8PM

THIS SEASON'S SHOCKINC CLIMAX!

RACING INFERNO ENGULFS SOUTHFORK! WHO WIU SURVIVE?

; I

GREATMOMENTSONCBS WKCT-TV 9 GREENVILLE

COUNT ON WNCT-TV NEWS TONIGHT AT ELEVEN

1 -

PUBL.IC NOT ICES

OTICE

Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of Emily C. Moore late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify aJ) persons having ctaims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix on,or before October 17, 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar ot their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment. This 13th day of April, w83.

Parmie M. Byrd 509 Duke Drive Raleigh, North Carolina 27601 E xecutrix ol the estate of Emily C Moore, deceased.

April 11 22,29, May 6, 1983

FILENO 81CVD1610 FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

GLORIA ELAINE EDWARDS VS

ERNEST L CARMON

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF SERVICE BY PUBLICATION To: ERNEST L CARMON TAKF wnTICF that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action The nature ot the relief sought is (1) fo establish your paternity of the minor children Chonkili Renata Edwards, born March 13, 1981, and Donkili ReCarter Edwards, born March 13, 1981, (2) to recover all sums paid in pubiic assistance to or for the benefit of such children up fo the time of entry of judgment, and (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such children, and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleadings not later than June 1, 1983, and upon your failure fo do so, the party seeking service against you win apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the twenty second day of April, 1983.

EVERETT 8. CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS

Edward J. Harger, II Afforneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street

P.O. Box 1220 Greenville, N.C, 27834 Telephone: (919 ) 758 4257 April 22, 29, May 6, 1983

FILE NO 83Cv0 234 FILMNO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel. DELORISSPELLMAN VS

HENRY JONES

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PRIXESS BY PUBLICATION To: HENRY JONES TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor children Henry Jr, Spellman, born July 4. 1977, Yvonne Spellman, born June 7, 1978, and Tyronica Denise Spellman, born November 23, 1980. (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such children up to the time of entry of judgment, and (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such children, and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense fo such pleading not later than June 1, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the rel lef sought.

This the twenty second day of April, 1983.

EVERETT 8. CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Ha^er, II Attorneys for Fuainfiff 200 South Washington Street P.O. Box 1220 Greenviile, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758 4257 April 22, 29, May, 1983

FILENO 83CvD128 FILMNO IN THE GENERAL COURT . OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON.

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

ANNIE NICHOLSON THIGPEN VS

HENRY JONES

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: HENRY JONES TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor children Gregory Eugene Nicholson, born May 28, 1973, and Bridget Belinda Nicholson, born September 5, 1974; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such children up to the time of entry of judgment; and (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such children; and (4) to recover the costs (including reaso.nable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June 1, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the twenty second day of April, 1983.

EVERETT fcCHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J, Harper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street P.O Box 1220 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758 4257 April 22, 29, May, 1983

PUBLIC NOTICESThe Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, May 6,1983-23

FILENO 82CvD 1612 FILMNO ^

IN THE GENERALCOURT

DISTRICT COUrV DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

ELLA SMALLWOOD VS

LINWOOD EARL SMALLWOOD NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION

To: LINW(X)D EARL SMALLWOOD TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to recover all sums paid in public assistance fo or for the benefit of the minor children Dietrich Smallwood, born March 17, 1973, and Frederick Smaliwood, born August 28, 1974 up to the time of entry oT judgment; (2) to obtain an order for prospective support for such children; and (3) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorneys fees) ot such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June 1, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the twenty second day of April. 1983.

EVERETT 8. CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS

Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street

P 0 Box 1220 Greenville. N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758-4257 April 22, 29; May, 1983

FILENO 83CvD31t FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT

district^court'division

NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON, Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

JOANN TRIMBLE VS

SIMON RAY TYSON

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION

TO; SIMON RAY TYSON TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed In fhe above-enfitled action. The nature ot the relief sought is (i) to establish your paternity of the minor child Laterra Lavette Trimble, born August 6, 1978; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such child up to the time ot entry of judgment; and (3) to obtain an order tor prospective support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) ot such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June 1, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the twenty-second day of April, 1983.

EVERETT a. CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS

Edward J. Harjjer, II Afforneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street

P.O. Box 1220 Greenville. N.C. 27834 Telephone; (919) 758 4257 April 22, 29, May, 1983

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

Having qualified as Administratrix of the . Estate of Clark Kent Ross, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, the under^ned hereby authorizes all persons lining claims against said Estate to present them to fhe undersigned, whose mailing address is 837 Drexei Lane, Post Office Box 138, Winterville, North Carolina 28590. on or before the 11th day of October, 1983, or this Notice will be pleaded in

bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the

undersigned.

day ot ANITAW R(3SS

This the nth day of April, 1983.

837 Drexei Lane P O Box 138 Winterville, North Carolina 28590 DAVIDT GREER Attorney at Law 313 A West Second Street P.O. Box 664

Greenville, North Carolina 27835 0664

April 29, May 6, 13, 20, 1983

NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY Having this day qualified as Administratrix ot the Estate of Lynwood C Dorman, late of Pitt County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them fo the undersigned Administratrix on or before the 22nd day of October, 1983, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate settlement.

This the 19th. day of April, 1983 Mrs Maidline Dorman Route 3, Box 108

Ayden, N.C. 28513 William I Wooten, Jr , Attorney Greenville, North Carolina 27834 April 22, 29, May6,-I3. 1983

FILE NO 83CvD235 FILMNO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel LINDA JOYCE SMITH VS

MILESMILTON JONES

PEANUTS

public NOTICES

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To MILESMILTON JONES TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action The nature of the reliet sought is (1) fo estalbish your paternity minor child Stacy Shontelle Smith, born April 12, 1979, (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or tor the benefit of such child up to the time of entry of judgment, and (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such child, and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June I, 1983. and upon your tailure to do

PUBLIC NOTICES

so. the party seeking service against you will apply relief sought

to the Court for the

This the twenty second day ot April, 1983

EVERETT .CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J Harper. II Attorney (or Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street P O. Box 1220 Greenville, N C 27834 Telephone: (919) 758 4257 April 22, 29, May, 1983

, FILE NO 83CvD233 FILMNO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON,

Director. Pitt County'

Department of Social Services ex rel.

DELOR1S SPELLMAN VS

JOHNNY LLOYDCRANDOL NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To JOHNNY LLOYDCRANDOL TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking reliet against you has been filed in the above entitled action The nature of the relief sought is (I) to establish your paternity ot the minor child Mark Christopher Spellman, born April 10, 1973, (2) to recover all sums paid in- public assistance to or for the benefit ot such child up to the lime of entry of judgment; and (3) to obtain an order tor prospective support (or such child, and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action

such pleading not later than June 1, 1983. and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court tor the relief sought This the twenty second day of Xpril, 1983

EVERETT 8. CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS

Edward J Hamer, II Attorneys tor Plaintifi 200 South Washington Street

lintiff

P O Box 1220 Greenville, N C 27834 Telephone (919) 758 4257 April 22, 29; May, 1983

FILE NO 81 CvD 398 FILMNO INTHEGENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA -PITT COUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County (Department of Social Services ex rel ALICE FAYE COPPEDGE VS

WILLIAM EARL WOOTEN NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To WILLIAM EARL WOOTEN TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establishment your paternity of the minor child Alexander Coppedge, born September 19, 1976. (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or fore the benefit of such child up fo the time of entry of ludgment, and (3) to obtain an order tor prospective support (or such child, and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June I, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought This the twenty second day ot April, 1983

EVERETT .CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS

Edward J Harper. II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street

P O Box 1220 Greenville, N C 27834 Telephone (919)758 4257 April 22. 29, May, 1983

RichT EVERtOhE iN ^Ml5 MOOSE hATES me 50 .MUCH I'LL J5T lEA\E:;

B C

U'H't SMOl'lO I MAkE h TMEM All HAPP>t ' y

J-

NUBBIN

P0E6 M8BIM PUY A &00D (2rA7vie OP &OLP? ,

PHANTOM

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^EN her photo

,HE KNOWe . SHE 16 yOUN<5 . beautiful

FRANK & ERNEST

You'fie $0 much at

ffACE \NiTH THE UNlvEff; MORCOME

you fiOT Hit that M^Tfog lMT week?





24-The DaUy ReHector, GreenvUle, N.C.-FYiday, May 6,1983

I^UBLIC NOTICES

FILE NO SlCv0 21

FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel RHONA BARNES VS

MOSE HENRY HARRIS

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION

To MOSE HENRY HARRIS lAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been tiled in the above entitled action. The nature ot the relief soughf is (U to establish your paternity of the minor child Kamu Jabbor Barnes, born August 10. 1980, (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit ot such child up to the time of entry ot judgment; and 131 to obtain an order for prospective support tor such child, and (4) fo recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June 1 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the reliet sought This the twenty second day ot April, 1983

EVERETT 8i CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 700 South Washington Street P O Box 1220 Greenville, N.C 27834 Telephone: (919) 758 4257 April 22, 29 May, 1983

024

Foreign

1972 FIAT Excellent condition S950 Call 752 1648_

1 9 7 4 TOYOTA CORONA Stationwagon, 4 door, automatic, AM/FM, tape player, luggage rack.

SHOO. 752 907.______

1975 TOYOTA COROLLA, 5 speed, AM/FM. very good condition. J15(X) 752 907.__

1978 HONDA ACCORD 5 speed, good condition, good gas mileage. Perfect car for young graduate. 752 0454^_

1978 TOYOTA Clica Littback Air, AM/FM stereo, 5 speed. Excellent condition. 746 2628after 5._

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.

1982 HONDA CIVIC 4 door Metalic brown, 5 speed. AM/FM cassette. 4 speaker stereo S6200 or best offer Call 746 4887._

032

Boats For Sale

MERCRUISER 120 horsepower engine; Mercruiser 165 engine with manifolds; extra set 165 manifolds. 140 or 165 Sterndrive complete. 120 Mercury Cylinder head new 756 4765 after 5 30 p

O'DAY MARINER SAILBOAT, 19

Excellent condition with trailer S4500 946 3111    _ _

WINCHESTER BASS BOAT, 60 horsepower, Evmrude and trailer, loaded with extras $1900 752 5986

12' SAILBOAT, Sandpiper $695. 756 6840 alter 6 p. m

13' CHRYSLER Fiberglass Day Sailer with trailer, 18' mast and sails, $850 758 0428 or 758 0703

FILE NO S3CvD228 FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON,

DI rec tor, P i tt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

DELORIS SHACKLEFORD VS

FREDERICK DOUGLAS CARMON NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION

To FREDERICK DOUGLAS CARMON TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above-entitled action The nature ot the relief sought is (I) to establish your paternity ot the minor child Jeflrey Earl Shackleford, born June 6, 1971; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit ot such child up to the time ot entry ot ludgment and (3) fo obtain an order for prospective support for such chilcl. and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such acfion.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June I, 1983, and upon your failure to do

so, the party seeking service against you will apply relief sought

you wil

to the Court tor the

This the twenty second day of April, 1983.

EVERETT&CHEATHAM. ATTORNEY Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Fnainfiff 200 South Washington Street P O Box 1220 Greenville, N.C 27834 Telephone: (919) 758 4257 April 22, 29, May, 1983

007 SPECIAL noti:es

FREE! stop in and register at Floyd G Robinson Jewelers. Downtown Evans Mall tor tree gift to be given away weekly. No purchase necessary_

010

AUTOMOTIVE

Taylor's Imports Spofis Ltd

COCOA AUTO FLOOR MATS

All colors 2 piece, $29 99, 4 piece. $45 00

AUTO NOSE BRA Available for variety ot sport cars and mini pick up $69 00

CALL 757-1974

 ' 102

Oil

Autos For Sale

NEEDACAR?

Rent a used car and save! CALL RENT A WRECK 752-2277

SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Aufhorized Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758 0114._

013

Buick

LeSABRE LIMITED 1982. 4 door, tully equipped, like new. Cali Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141

1974 BUICK CENTURY Good body, needs motor $325. Call 756-0546 after 5.30.

1974 BUICK ELECTRA $695 753

4409

1975 BUICK Limited, A I condition Loaded. $1500firm. 756-5564_

1978 LIMITED BUICK Loaded $3650 E C Averette, 756 2924.

1980 SKYLARK LIMITED 2 door, fully equipped Excellenf condition $4000 756 9520

1981 CENTURY ESTATE Wagon Low miles Excellenf cndmon.

Loaded. 752 4807

015

Chevrolet

NOVA 1976. 4 door, 24,000 actual miles, like new. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet. Ayden, 746-3141._

1980 CITATION White, V6, air, power steering, brakes, and win dows 4 speecT 4 door hatchback. Priced to sell $2295 Mileage 76,000

756 3673 _

1981 CHEVETTE, 4 speed, AM/FM, air. new radials, excellent condi lion 756 2448 after 5.

018

Ford

PINTO RUNABOUT, 1974, good condition, 4 speed, air, reliable, $1150 Call Richard, 355 2362

1966 MUSTANG 6 cylinder, automatic, compietely rebuilt. $2000 Call 756 1760 days. 756 5791

nights.    _

1966 MUSTANG New paint (blue and white) 6 cylinder, 4 speed, needs small amount of inside interi or work $1600 825 7111 affer 6:

1968 FORD TORINO Runs good, fair condition, no title. $300, 756 4933

1970 FORD TORINO Automatic transmission. Runs good. $428. 756 5862 after 6.

1971 PINTO $300. Call 752 7691 1974 FORD Grand Torino. Power steering, power brakes, automatic transmission, air. Good condition. 752 7461

1974 PINTO Stationwagon. Automatic. 56,000 miles. Exc^lent condition. $1195. 756 0108.

1975 FORD LTD Stationwagon. power steering and brakes, power seats, air, AM/FM stereo, very clean. $1295 756 1904.

1976 THUNDERBIRD. excellent condition. Many extras. 355 6215.

1978 PINTO SEDAN Green, sun root, 56,000 actual miles, very clean, 28 miles per gallon. Excellent condition, $1695. 756 3974.

019

Lincoln

1974 LINCOLN Continental, 4 door You must see to appreciate at this price, $1650. Call 756 0492

022

Plymouth

PLYMOUTH FURY 1978 4 door. All power $1335 Call 756 3958.

023

Pontiac

BEST OFFER over $1800. 1975 I Pontiac Gran Prix. Power windows and sun roof, AAA/FM, 8-track stereo Excellent condition. Call 355 2589 alter 5 :30 p.m

1980 PONTIAC PHOENIX 4 speed, air. stereo radio, wire wheels, low miles. $4295. 756 5621._

024

Foreign

CELICA, 1973 Toyota. Factory air, AM/FM radio and tape player, radial tires Good condition, $1950. 752 0336 or 752 2625 after 6 p.m

1969 VOLKSWAGON Beetle. Rebuilt engine. Excetlent condition. Call 3516354 after 6 p.m.__

Sell your used television the Classified way. Call 752 6166

16' Glaspar, 55 Johnson, plus extras $1.000 Call 752 4597_

16' STARCRAFT, new carpet. 70 horsepower Chrysler, long trailer, new tires. 6 life lackets. Slalom ski. ski board Good condifion. Negotiable. 756 1253.

1972 GLASTRON 16' with 65 horse power Evinrude and trailer $1595. 355 2970.    __

1981 HOBIE CAT lor sale Call 756 6834,__

26' TROJAN 1977 Fly bridge, head. galley, and DF radio Call 946 6127.

28' CARVER Twin screw Bridge, head, galley, sieeps. Call 756 1386. 75 HORSEPOWER Evinrude out board engine, 1976 two props. Call 756 5797 alter 5 30 __

034 Campers For Sale

STAR CRAFT camper tor sale. Sleeps 6 Closet, stove, and icebox. Good condition. $1200. Call 756 5255 after 4.__

STAR CRAFT hard top, pop up camper Sleeps 8. Excellenf condi tion. $1100 firm. 746 3530 days, 746 4203 nights

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman fops 250 units in stock O'Briants.

Raleigh, N C 834 2774_

16' TRAVEL TRAILER Very good condifion Sleeps 6 Shower, oven, and other extras Must see! $1650. 946 7332_

1973 CONCORD 25 , sleeps 6 Self contained with air Located Arrow Head campground. $2800.756 7881

1979 31' COACHMAN Travel Trail er Excellent condition Fuliy equipped Including air, 10' refrig erator, and awning. Call 527 6102

036

Cycles For Sale

HODAKA 100. $250 756 4787

HONDA MT 125. On off road. Excellent condition. $400 Call 756 9005. _

1969 TRIUMPH Bonneville 10" over front end King and Queen seat, motor just rebuilt, 2 new tires. $500. 756 162j after 6 30 p.m

1971 HONDA CL350 tor sale Black, in good condition. Only 7.440 miles. $325. Call 756 5439 after 6

1974 HARLEY DAVIDSON

Excellent condition. Call 752 2540 after 6.

1977 HONDA GOLD WING 1000. Windjammer jnd stereo. Excellent condftign. 758'2907 after 5.__

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, 2900 miles; $2jp(f 756 7849 after 5_

1981 MOPED, 508 miles, A i condi tion. $250 firm. 756 5564.

1982 HONDA CB750 CUSTOM, helmets and jackets included. $2300 Call 827 5300or 827 5480_

1983 HONDA XL 250, new. 600 miles High powered on off road bike with extras $1350 or $400 down and take up payments. 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 687800 miles, new paint job, blue. Good condition. $19(Xr 756 6319.

1975WAGONEER $2250 756 9866 1977 FORD COURIER XLT with new camper shell and tires. $3,000 746 3301

1977 FORD F150. V8 with straig^ht drive. Air, good condition, $2750 355 2621 after 6p.m._

1978 FORD FlOO RANGER, automatic, air, power steering, AM/FM, 300 cubic inch 6 cylinder $3800 Call 758 0789

1979 JEEP CJ5 Renegade White with V8 and hedders Excellent condifion. Call 758 7200, ask for Matt.

1980 CHEVROLET LUV Automatic transmission, air condifion. AM/FM stereo, 5 Michelin tires, camper top, 16,000 miles Extra clean. Call 752 2864 after 6 p.m

1980 DATSUN pickup 5 speed Cali 758 7252 or 758 (1243. _

1982 JEEP WAGONEER, Limited, iow mileage All options $14.000. 975 2012 756 0439 after 6 pm_

040

Child Care

EXPERIENCED, wonderful house keeper/child caretaker available 16 May References, own car 758 5345. No calls after 8 p.m please._

MATURE RESPONSIBLE lady will take care of children in her home Meals furnished Reasonable price. 746 2790,

NEED MATURE LADY to care for infant in my home part time Must be reliable and loving. Have good references and must furnish own transportation. Call Mrs Smith, 756 0^.    

RESPONSIBLE MOTHER of 2 year old would like to keep 1-2 more children (approximately same age) in my home on weekdays. Located on Red Banks Road, 756 9327

WILL BABYSIT Monday Sunday in my home. Drop ins are welcome. Stokes area. 795 3839.

046

PETS

AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER pups All shots, dewormed. $1(X). C^ll Jerry. 752 8019

AKC LHASA APSO puppies 2 males, born March 15. $150 Call 756 8803 nights and weekends; 752 5093 weekdays

AKC MINIATURE Longhaired Dachshund. 11 week old male, red and black. 355 6476. Greenville

AKC REGISTERED female poodle Call 752 0084 after 5 p.m.

AKC REGISTERED German Sheo herd puppies:    black/silver,

black/tan and solid white Male and female 758 4237_

AKC SPRINGER SPANIELS 3

male, 2 females Liver/while, black/white $125 males, $100 females Have both mother and

father 756 2087 _____

AKC WHITE POODLES 8 weks old. 746 3033 -

CHAMPIONSlftED Pekingese, 3 months old. $150. Call 758 8296,

046

PETS

051

Help Wanted

ANNE'S TEMPORARIES is now

accepting applications for experi enced secretaries. Must type 50 words per minute. Call for an appointment, 120 Reade Street, 7610.    _

AHENTION TEACHERS AND STUDENTS!!!

You can earn good money as an AVON Representative. Choose your own hours, win prizes and make up to 50% eaminos. Call 752 7006. AUTOMOTIVE SALES career. Excellent starting salary and benefits Good working conditions Sales experience preferred. East Carolina Lincoln Mercury-GMC, 756 4267    __

CARING PERSON to live in and help care for my Invalid father. Call 752 4 204.__

COAAMISSIONED SALES person for local area. Will train. Average $18.000 up. Must have car. Call tor appointment. 752 3557._

DISPATCHER

Rapidly growing trucking company has immediate need tor a Dispat cher in our Greenville terminal. This entry level position requires long hours, but provides excellent opportunities tor advancement Candidate should have a minimum of 2 years solid work experience or allege degree. Call or visit Randy nf.

Flyn

national freight INC Industrial Boulevard Greenville, N C 27834 800-682 6574

DOMESTIC HELP WANTED; for a

new^Maid Service Must be neat and have good references. Call 758 6066 for an interview._

1978 COX TILT trailer. 17' GW deep Vee boat, 115 horsepower Evinrude motor, power winch with many extras Good shape 752 4837

1978    18'    CHECKMATE    with

Mercruiser 170 I'O, trailer, cover, good condition. Call 756 9060 after 6

1978 20' WELLCRAFT BOAT Deep V, cuddy cabin, 140 horsepower outboard Tandem galvanized trail er Excellent for salf water fishing. Call 322 5348 after 5 p.m

COCKER SPANIELS, AKC Regis tered, 7 weeks old, buff males. $100 1 633 4350.

EXPERT DOG OBEDIENCE training and boarding. Call 758 5590. LABRADOR RETRIEVERS AKC puppies. Field trail and gun dog stock. Wormed, shots, and de wclaws removed. 1 242 6529 or 1 242 4830

SIBERIAN HUSKIES, registered. 4 red with blue eyes, 6 weeks old, wormed $150. 752 5333

TWO BLACK AND while female Siberian Huskies, 5 months old, tully registered, all shots given. Good pefs, apod with children. $150 each, call 355-6119 anytime._

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY!

Large corporation has outstanding sales opening tor a sales representative Individual must be local resident with managerial ability, ambition and show progress tor age Business or sales background helpful In requesting personal interview, please submit resume stating personal history, education, business experience, write Box 406, Greenville, NC 27834._

EXPERIENCED UPHOLSTEROR

needed. Must be able to cut materi al and sew Call days 758 3276, nights 758 0041.___

FULL TIME, year round ranch hand. Livestock, haying, crop expe rience desired. Send resume to Ranch Hand PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834._

HOUSEMOTHER POSITION Must be mature lady, have experience in food preparation, meal planning, light bookkeeping and managing a household. Living quarters provided. Must have own trans portation. Salary negotiable. Call 758 5632 tor more Information

KEYBOARD PLAYER tor local country southern rock back. Usually booked every weekend. Call Billy after 6. 752 4103

LEGAL SECRETARY Local law firm needs attractive 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 tary, PO Box 802, Greenville, NC 27834 0802.    _

LEGAL SECRETARY Experienced, salary negotiable. Send resume to Secretary, PO Box 5091. Greenville, NC__

LIVE IN housekeeper needed. Call 825 0653 after 6.__

LPN's NEEDED part time to work 3 11 or 117. Competitive salaries. Shift differentials 3 11 and 11 7 Interested persons contact L Morgan. RN, 758 7100._

MAINTENANCE PERSON needed for apartment complex. Must be knowledgeable in all areas of gen eral maintenance, which includes heating, air conditioning, and plumbing Salary plus an apart ment. Must be able to live on the property. Send description ot qualifications and work experience to Maintenance, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834    _

MANAGER FOR CONVENIENT

store and gas combination $20,000 with commission. Apply at Dodges Store, 3209 South Memorial Drive, Greenville.___

NATIONAL PORTRAIT STUDIO

now hiring phone room appointment secretaries to help set portrait appointments for the local gift book promotion. No experience necessary. Will train, full or part time, 9 to 1, 5 to 9 Call for appointment, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. 758 4789._

NEED SHEET METAL workers tor insulation of duct work. Experience preferred, but not mandatory. Phone 756 4624.    _

NICE WOAAAN to babysit tor 16 month girl in your home. 3 mornindsper week Prefer 12 other children 756 9947._'    -

NUTRITIONIST to direct Women's, Infant's, and Children's Supplemental Foods Program. Masters Degree in foods and nutri fion 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 tor 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, 7()1 East Fifth St., East Carolina University

OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS Recently acquired Wall Street concept requires individuals tor ground floor opportunity. Excellent salary plus bonus. Resume to fecial Events, PO Box 2651, Greenville. NC 27834__

PART TIME bookkeeper/Wpist needed. Send resume to Office Manager, PO Box 116, Greenville. NC__

PARTS COUNTER PERSON needed. Must have at least 1 year GM parts experience. Apply to Jesse Boyd. Service Manager, Grant Buick, 603 Greenville Blvtf

POSITION AVAILABLE Junior Army ROTC Instructor. Write PO Drawer 1797. Goldsboro, NC 27530.

RECEPTIONIST WANTED Apply in person at Great Expectations, Carolina East Mall.

RETIRED COUPLE to manage income producing property. Experience in bookkeeping and meeting public necessary. Living quarters provided Send qualifications to Retired, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834 _ _

RETIRED OR SEMI RETIRED in

dividual to do light delivery work on Wednesdays Must be in good health and have automobile. Write "De iivery ", PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834

101 DALMATION BREED puppies for sale 753 3152 days, ?5S600 nights_

RN'S, LPN'S and OR Technicians. Pungo District Hospital needs you. Contact Barbara McDonald. Director ot Nursing, (919) 943 2111.

ROOM AT THE TOP

Due to the promotions in this area, two openings exist now for young minded persons in the local branch of a large corporation. If selected, you will receive complete training, we provide good company benefits, major medical, profit sharing, dental care and retirement plan. Stirling pay will be $260 $350 depending on your ability- All promotions are based on merit, not seniority.

We are particularly interested In those with leadership ability who are looking tor a career opportunity

CALL757-084 10:00 to6:00

SALES-MONEY MEN-WOMEN (26 years or older)

Help enuretk 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 AAANAGER needed. Start ing salary, $125 plus commission on total sales in territory. Send resume to East Way Wholesale, PO Box 3767, Greenville

SEMI retired person to do yard work and general maintenance around apartment complex. Must be able todrive. Call 758 (T49I.

WANTED:    Field sales repre

^ntative tor solid established firm Works approximately 3 counties. Excellent commission opportunities. Send resume and references to Sales Representative, PO Box 130, Washington. NC 27889

2 hairdressers needed

059

Work Wanted

BASIC programming service tor small business computers. Random and sequential data tiles, formated printing, etc 756 5204, ask for Mark.

CALL SEARS ROEBUCK 8. Co. tor free estimates on siding, guttering, mobile home roofover, insulation, interior and exterior painting and root vents. Call 756 9700, exf 232. Mondav-Saturdav 10 a.m. - 9 p.m

CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use. Eliminate creosote and musty odors. Wood stove specialist. Tar Road Enterprises. 756-9123 day, 756 1007 night._

COMPLETE YARD SERVICE Lawnmowing, trimming shrubs, etc Call 752 7341._

CREATIVE HOME IMPROVEMENTS CO

Quality construction and renova-tion Phone 757 (1799 after 6 pm.

DARLEEN'S DOMESTICS Tired, need more time? Let someone else do your housecleaning. Call 752 3758

FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood and metal. Equipment formally of Dip and Strip. All items returned within 7 days. Tar Road Antiques. Call tor free estimate Days 756-9123. Night 756 1007

WorkWantMl

ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK Carpenfryi masonry and rooting. 35 years experience in building. Tall James Harrington after 6 pm. 752 7765^_ ^

T

HOMES PAINTED interior and ex terior. Graduate student with exjje rience in painting. We give excellent work with substantial savings over professional prices. 756 8948 anytime.

LAWNMOWER REPAIRS We will pick up and deliver. All work guaranteed. Call 757 3353 after 4 p.m ., weekends anytime

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_

PAINTING

No job too small. Interior and exterior. Low rates. McEarl Paint Co.

757-3604

SANDING and finishing floors Small carpenter jobs, counter fops Jack Baker Floor Service. 756 2868 anytime, it no answer call back

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 p.m.__

Have pets to sell? Reach more peo pie with an economical Classified ad Call 752 6166

SIGN PAINTING Truck lettering as low as $59.95. Call Steve Atkins for all vour sign needs. 756 9117.

STORAGE SHEDS, son decks, and fences built. Painting and sand blasting. Call 756 8790after 5

STUDENT INTERESTED in lawn cutting. Reasonable rates. Call b^ijre 10 a m 758 3216

WILL CARE tor children in my home. Near Ayden Sports Shop. Have references. 746-6043._

060

FOR SALE

WASHING AAACHINE ^ Hotpoint, $75. In good working condition. Call 355 258$Tatter 5:30p.m._

WHEN SOMEONE IS ready to buy, they torn to the Classified Ads Place your Ad today for quick results

061

Antiques

ANTIQUES-Nevj^Shipment

Visit our showroom and see our collection ot tine 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 thrgugh Saturday, 10 am to 6 pm, Sunday 1 to 6 pm. Antique Market of Kinston, Highway 70 W Bypass, Kinston, N C 527 83(.

VISIT SIGNS OF THE TIMES tor antiques, gifts, and collectables. We have loads ot old books, something tor everyone. Open 9 to 5. Monday through Friday, ,10 to 10, Saturday. 1 fo 6 Sunday. Located 9 miles south of Chocowlnity on Highway 17. 946 8481.___

CLASSIFIED ADS are as close as your telephone. Just dial 752-6166 and ask tor a friendly Ad-Vlsor.

062

Auctions

COME VISIT US every Saturday night at 7:30 tor an old time country auction. We sell everything from puppies and cakes to genuine an tiques, NCAFL 2774 Signs of the Times is located 9 miles south ot Chocowinity on Highway 17. 946 8481. We are licensed and bonded, available to auction tor you. Estate; whatever._

WHY STORE THINGS you never use? Sell them for cash with a Classified Ad.

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood tor sale J P Stancil, 752 6331

TO PLACE YOUR Classified Ad, just call 752 6166 and let a friendly Ad-Visor help you word your Ad.

065 Farm Equipment

DISC BLADES cut 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 tit most discs availa ble. Other gauage blades and sizes up to 32" are ih 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.

JOHN DEERE 850, 4 cylinder diesel. Only 61 hours. Just like new. Call for appointment, 756-7382 days; 757 0723 mohts.

TOBACCO TRUCK CURTAINS Less than half dealers price. Hat-teras Canvas Products, 758-0641. 1104 Clark Street._

Help tight Inflation by buying and selling Through the Classified ads Call 752 6166

067 Garage-Yard Sale

ABWA IS HAVING A "Porch" sale rain or shine Saturday May 7 from 8 until lz noon at corner ot 7th and Cotanche Streets. Includes clothes, lamps, odds and ends, proceeds for scholarship fund.

ANNUAL YARDSALE

Five families. Saturday, 7:30 til sold out. Tools, fishing equipment, ice cream maker, couches, lamps, Skil saw, dishes, and numerous house items. Also many new

IWrTMrTfy^s^

AYDEN YARD SALE Several tarn Hies. Household goods, childrens's clofhes. toys, gfciSt bargains. Win

clofhes, toys, great bargains. W Chester Drive. May 7, Saturday. 7

BABY CLOTHES, 6 months 2 yews; household goods, exercise bike, wood chisels, backpack, watch, boat winch, truck gun rack, trailer lights, battery boxes, tools, 8-1, Saturday, 5 miles out from hospital on Stantonsburo Road.

BIG YARD SALE Red Oak Shop ping Center. Saturday. 9-3. Clothes, books, mlscelleaneous household items, toys, etc.

CHILDREN'S CLOTHES, lots of extras. Small furniture. Saturday, 8 a.m. 201 South Sylvan Drive.

DON'T MISS THIS ONEI 4 family yard sale. Saturday, 8 to 12.

dresses, excellent Tie heater, dishes, utility trailer, many more Items. 1757 Beaumont Drive.

yaro saie. oaTuroay, s Teenage clothes, prom ladles and men's clothing, 1 condition. Curtains, electrii

FARMVILLE FLEA MARKET Open Friday and Saturday. Rent a space tor any Items. 264 ^pass at Marlboro. Planters Tobacco Warehouse._

FRIENDS OF THE EPILEPSY Chapter. Yard Sale. Saturday, May 7 from 8 until noon Location: Rose High School, front lawn on Elm Street. Antennas, books, clothing, knick knacks, kitchenware, - re cords, and much more!_

GIGANTIC YARD SALE, Saturday. Furniture, lamps, appliances, pots, pants, etc. Take road beside Staton House Fire Department (across from Empire Brush), 2nd trailer on right.

GIGANTIC YARD SALE Several families. Bedroom furniture, dining room suit with 6 chairs, 1 stereo, glassware, tools, clothesj many good bargains. 101 Plnewopd Roao. SHirtiffy.Iwntji; _^_

GREAT YARD SALE Saturday. May 7, 8 until. 2706 South AAemorlal Drive, yellow house between Harris and London Inn. Clothing, household miscellaneous items and much more. Cancel If ralnlno.

HOUSEHOLD ITEMS,_ clothing, etc. 20rHwTell Street. 8:j9(B I._

067 Garage-Yard Sale

HUGENEIGHBORHCX>0 YARD SALE

Saturday, u May 7. Nothing sold before 7 a.m. Singer zig zag sewing machine, 4 lawnmowers, maternity clothes, antique pine bureau, riding toys, bedspreads, curtains, adding machine, dishes, GE self cleaning range, sofa, chairs, bicycle, lots ot clothes all sizes and much more. 109 Westhaven Road, Greenville. 12 families. RaindateAAav 14

LARGE 1ST TIME yard sale. Many different Items includiM baby clothes and toys. 102 uellwood Drive from 8 am fo 1 pm

MOVING GARAGE SALE

Saturday. May 7.    101 Roanoke

Place, Greenville. Household items, clothing, living room suit. Call 756 2778 or 355 2258._

MOVING SALE, Saturday, May 7, 615 Sooth Elm Street. 8 a.m. until. Grill, window fan. small appliances, kitchen items, linens, curtains, and much more._

MULTI FAMILY SALE 7:30 10:30 Furniture, household Items and clothing 412 Kirkland Drive oft Greenville Boulevard across from Kroger's

NEW PITT COUNTY Fair Grounds Flea Market open Saturday and Sunday 8 til 5. Attention all dealers. Outside dealer spaces $2.00. Inside spaces $6 00. Call Bill 746 3541. Mike 746 3550, Fair Grounds 758 6916.

ODD SHEETS, home interior items at small discount, clothes, boots, and lots ot other odds and ends. 9 to 12 only 8 miles from Pitt Plaza on Highway 43. Cox's crossing take left, 5th brick house on right._

ON BACK PORCH Saturday. 8 a.m., 2000 Evans Street. Dryer, appliances, books, clothing and miscellaneous._

ON STANTONSBURG ROAD,

Saturday, May 7, 7 to 12. Bicycles, clothes, linens, toys, odds and ends.

RAYNOR FORBESANDCLARK

Flea.Market open Saturdays 7 til 1, across from Moose Lodge. 756-4090.

jATURDAY, may 7. a to 2. 508 Crestline Boulevard Club Pines. Antiques, glassware, folk art, handcrafts, pine benches, old dolls. clothes, furniture._

SATURDAY, MAY 7. 2 miles from Ayden. off Country Club Road. Antique chopping block, antique round table, plus much more. Sev eral families included. 8 until

SATURDAY, May 7, From 9 to 4. Bicycles, children and adult clothes, toys, lots ot other Items. State Road 1128, behind Pitt Community Colleoe.

SATURDAY, 8 12, 112 Dickinson. Queen clothes, furniture, nice items.

SATURDAY, AAAY 7th- Women's clothes, bicycle. shoes, shoe hangers, pocketbooks, valises, hats, slacks, sea shells, other Items at low prices. 8 AM to 1 PM 2414 Umsfead Avenue oft East Wright Road. Beasley and Jones._

SATURDAY, MAY 7,    8    12    101

Singletree Drive. Hooker Road. Adult and children's clothes, toys and other items._

SATURDAY, May 7, Club Pines, 401 Crestline Boulevard. 8-12. Toys, curtains, bicycle, clothes, miscelia-neous._

SATURDAY, 7:30 12:30, Stan tonsburg Road, 4 miles past hospi tal. Woodcraft items, furniture, toys, books, household treasures and much much more._

SATURDAY, 8 1 Garden plow, 14" mag wheels and tires, odd hub caps, lots ot clothes, much more. Cheap. 2 miles out Belvoir Highway.

SEVERAL FAMILIES 264 By Pass, Edgewood Trailer Park, Saf-urdav, 7 until Raindate May 14.

THE GREENVILLE YOUTH Bowlers are having a. yard sale Saturday. May 7, 82 at Hillcrest Lanes on Memorial Drive. We will have lots ot items to choose from. So come on out and look around.

YARD SALE 5 families. Saturday, at 10 on Highway 17, 9 miles south ot Chocowinity.

YARD SALE CHURCH WIDE, 150 families! Hooker Memorial Chris fian Church parking lot, Saturday. May 7 7 a.m. Noon Rain or shine. Elm Street 8, Greenville Boulevard. Everything must 00!!!

YARD sale Saturday, May 7. 8 until 12. Approximately 7 miles North ot Greenville on Highway 43 towards Falkland, just beyond water tower. Some furniture and lots of miscellaneous items. It raining, Inside building

YARD SALE, Saturday, May 7, 9 a.m. 12 noon 104 Guinevere Lane (Camelot)

YARD SALE, Saturday, May 7, 7 a.m., St. James United Methodist Church, 2000 East 6th Street._

YARD SALE 7 12 Saturday Falkland Highway. Corner ot VOA site C Small appliances, bedroom suite, sofa, bicycle, clothing, mis-cellaneous items

YARD SALE 904 Easf2nd Street, Ayden. 8 until.

YARD SALE 106 North Warrerv Street. Saturday and Sundayr Household, children's clothes, queen size bed, TV's, rug, and

recliner

YARD SALE Friday and Saturday. From 8 until 302 North Sylvan Drive._ .

YARD SALE, 946 East Main Street, Wintervilie, 7 a m Lots ot good stuff._^_    1-...

YARD SALE, 117 North*L1bfry Street. Saturday. 9 to 1. Furniture and miscellaneous items. _

YARD SALE 5 families. Miscella neous. 722 Hooker Road.

YARD SALE Saturday, May 7. 9 to 2. Paul Circle, Vj block off Hooker Road. First left past Carolina Tele phone. Several families.

074

Miscellaneous

ASSUME PAYMENTS ot $39.95 on a 6 piece Western living room suit. Sofa, chair, rocker, and 3 tables. Furniture World, 757 0451. We take trade ins.

BABY CARRIAGE/STROLLER

combination by Sears, like new. Call 756 7038.__

SOMEONE IS looking tor your unus ed power mower. Why not advertise it with a iow cost Classified Ad?

BEDDING &WATE~RBEDS

Why pay retail when you can save up to Vi and more on bedding and waterbeds. Factory Mattress & Waterbed Outlet (Next to Pitt Plaza), 355 2626._

BLOND MINK STOLE Excellent condition. $400 or best otter. 758-6343.

BRICKS 1,000 old common bricks, $100.752 1231

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and installation 919 763 9734.

BRUNSWICK POOL TABLE

Official size, slate top. Excellent condition. $600. 756 4787

BUTCHER BLOCK TOP portable dishwasher. Contemporary Armoire, oecan finish, 6',i'x3'/4 . $125 each 756 9835__

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work._

CARPET, CARPET, CARPET! Assorted sizes and colors. 9xl2's, 9xl5's, 12xl2's, 12x15's. Priced to move. Financing available. Furniture World 2808 East 10th Street, 75 7 0451._

CENTIPEDE SOD 758 2704, T52 4994^_

CLEAN 55 gallon metal drums, $7.00 each. 75f6166. extension 272.

CLOTHES FOR SALE Men's clothes: coat 40, pants 36, 29, shirts 15.752 7422

CLOTHES GALORE I Prices range from $-25 to $3.00. Boys, girls, ladies, and maternity wear. Also shoes, in excellent condition. Call 752 6140

COFFEE MACHINE, $50 Call 756 2121.    _

DOLL SALE Wide variety. From modern finals to hard plastic and composition. Alexanders. Barbies, Ideal, and others. 9 a.m. Saturday. May 7    206    Patrick    Street

Westwood Subdivision, off 264 busi-ness, Greenville.

FACTORY 2nds NOW available direct from manufacturer Hand woven rope hammocks, $19.95 to $53. Hatferas Hammocks, 1104 Clark Street, Greenville

FOR EXPERT TV repair, bring set to Four Way TV In Hookerton. (We sell new RCA sets). 747 2412.

FOR SALE Oil tanks: 150 gallon tanks with racks, $40 per or $(50 tor all. Smith Insurance 8, Realty, 752-2754._

FOR SALE: yellow collards and cabbage plants. Marion Mae Mills, 756 32 or 355 2793__

FOR SALE; Rotary antenna picks up channels 5, 7, 9, 11, 12. Excellent buy. Call 752 5628after 9a m

FOR SALE: sofa and chair. $150. Call 758 2433.__

FOR SALE; Model trains. HO gage Call 756 5012 after 5.

FOR SALE; Quality furniture. 3 piece living room or den. Coffee tabie. 2 end tables, and lamp. Excellent condition. Call 758 30)6 after 6._

FOR SALE: GE frost tree retriger ator. Almond color. Used only I month, $400. Call 758 2433.

FOR SALE . 23 Channel Base sta tion with standup power microphone. $60. 355-6551 or 355 6892, 24 hours_

FORMICA TOP dinette set with 4 swivel chairs, $150. Hammond M2 spinet organ, $250. Walnut bedroom suit with 9 drawer dresser, 9 drawer chest of drawers, large mirror and doubl bed, $350. Large size wooden rocking chair. $90. Simmons Hide a Bed sofa, $35. Call 752 7411.

FULLER BRUSH PRODUCTS Call 758 5590,,_

GEM DANDY Whirlowind. toy tor children, like new, assembled. $75. Call 756 5937.__

GEORGIA RED sweet potato sprouts $25 tor 1,000. Call 752 3015 lavs, 756 7159 nights

GOLF CART, electric. Excellent condition. $500. 756 3084.

GOWNS FOR SALE Ideal for pageants or proms. Large selection. Sizes 7-12. Some worn only once. Reasonably priced Call 757 0379 after 5, ask tor [Jonna._.

GRADUATION IDEA? Moftitt's Magnavox has 12" black and white TVs for only $74.95! 2803 Evans Street Extension, 756-8444.

ICEMAKERS and Reach In Coolers. Sale 40% oft. Barkers Refrigeration, 2227 Memorial Drive, 756 6417

IRISES FOR SALE Over 300 varieties. Free Iris to every buying custorher. Call 746-3084.

JOIN MOFFITTiS MAGNAVOX Video tape club.- Greenville's first and lrgest. 2803' Evans Street Extension. 756-8444. a:

IRSE- LOADSJ)f'.spi3<#*iid top _jil, -lot cleaning, backhoc ' also available. 756 4742 after 6 p.m.. Jim Hudson._

MOVING, MUST SELL! 2 sofas. 3 Lazy Boy chairs, 5 piece bedroom set, lamps, chest, table, pictures. 355 6977. _ .

YARD SALE Women's clothes and accessories, micellaneous items, etc.. Saturday. 7 a.m. until. Dickinson Avenue, Greenville._

YARD SALE, 1400 Ragsdale Road. Saturday, May 7, 8 a.m. Some ot everything.

YARO SALE, Saturday, Neighbors invited to participate. Highway 33, Pitt Street. Grimesland._

YARD SALE Clothes, household items. Saturday, from 7 to 12:30. 114 Belmont Drive.____

YARD SALE, SATURDAY, 8 a.m. Family items, clothing, aluminum ladders, household goods. 202 South Library Street, between 1st and 3rd Streets.

YARD SALE, toys, men and ladies clothes. 1801 Fairvlew Wav. 8-12.

YARD SALE, Saturday a.m. 6 families. Lake Ellsworth, 300 Courtney Place. Tandem bike, bike seat, lawnmower, TV, stereo. Mens, ladies, and children's clothing. Excellent condition._.

YARD SALE, Saturday. May 7, 8 to 12. 1204 Greenville Boufevaro_

126 HARRELL street. Cherry Oaks. May 7, 8 to 12 p.m.

141 If 14th Street

NEAR PEPPERMINT PARK

Bathing suits, housewares, albums, linens, much more.

2 FAMILY yard sale, Saturday. May 7. Auto, furniture, clothes, books, etc 9 until. 2402 Umstead Avenue^_ _

4 FAMILY yard sale. Saturday, May 7, 7 12 600 Snow Hill Street, Ayden. TV, typewriter, trombone, clothes, miscellaneous household items.__

5 FAMILIES Miscellaneous furniture, upholstery sewing machine and more. A8en's clothes 34 44, ladies 7-20, some little boys things, boys 14 18, Levis 31-36, dragon shirts, toys, and just some of absolutely everything. Go down Belvoir Highway (33) fo first road on left where new water treatment plant is. 2 miles on right. See signs and good prices. Saturday, May 7, 8 untiL_ __

If you're not using your exercise equipment, sell it fnis fall in fhese columns. Call 752-6166.

072

Livestock

cox STABLES has available stalls tor boarding horses. Large green pasture. Reasonable rates. Riding area. Wintervilie 756 2234._

HORSEBACK RIDING

Stables. 752 5237.

Jarman

10 YEAR OLD Sorrell Gelding tor sale to good home. Used primarily for trail riding. Eastern or Western. 15.2 hands. $650. 752 6250._

DON'T THROW IT away! Sell it for cash with a tast-action Classified Ad!

074

Miscellaneous

ALL SIZES USED air conditioners Window and central units priced for quick sale! Upright 30 cubic foot frost free freezer, $500. 19 cubic foot frost free refrigerator with ice maker, $325. 18 cubic foot frost free refrigerator, $250. Approximately 25 cubic foot side by side, harvest gold Kelvlnator refrigerator with new compressor, tSOO. Gurantaed and like newl Call B J Mills at Black Jack, 746 2446.

ALL USED REFRIGERATORS, air condltoners, freezers, ranges, washers and dryers are reduced for quick sale. Call B J Mills. Authorized Appliance Service, 746 2446 at Blackjack._

APPLE //e Starter Systems. Brand new; $1695. Also Apple accessories 15% discount. Call 7Sf3820._

MOVING! Stereo component set with AM/FM stereo and 8-track cassette, or can be used tor regular cassette with record player and 2 speakers, like new, only $85. 19" fiable color TV with simulated woodgrain design, $165, like new. 25" color console TV, has sharp picture and beautiful cabinet, only $185, like new. Call 756 0492.

NEW SHARP cqpierssale, lease, rent. Large selection of used copiers- Xerox, Sharp, IBM, Savin, 3M 756-6167._

ONE EVANS COMMERCIAL up right freezer. Double glass doors; stainless steel front. 1 year old. 753 4715.

ONE GOOD CENTRAL 3 ton air conditioner. 758 4576 or 746 4587. RAINBOWS - cartoons, nursery scenes, murals painted on walls, also signs. 758-BH3.

rattan dining table with 4 chairs. $800 new. Will sell for $300. Call 756 6041._

RCA XL 100. Solid state 25" color TV Like new. Must sell. Will sacrifice for $250. Sears washer. Good condition, $145. Call 746-6929.

SEARS 19.1 FOOT refrigerator with comaker, $300. 5 horsepower tiller, $250. 12" color TV, $50. Call Curtis 756 1877 or 752 9382.___

SELLING EVERYTHING!

Furniture, china, household goods, etc Call 752 2027.__

SET OF 750 motor cycle pipes. Fair condition, $75. 752 2968._

SHAMPOO FOR FALL! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company.

SOLID OAK American Drew bedroom suit, queen size, $650. 7 piece solid oak den suit, Herculon, $600. Call 756 5859.__

STURDY BUNK beds, solid pine, painted blue and yellow. 300 gallon oil storage tank, best offer. Call 756 8436 after 5 weekdays._

TOPSOIL, mortar sand, till sand and gravel. Davenport Hauling, 756 5247._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

074

Miscellaneous

I ORO PUSH MOWER 4 horse power Good condition, $75. 746-6860.

TOSHIBA COPIER, $750 Call 758 5246 from 9 to 5.

TRUCK COVERS Sea Hawk, Cobra. All colors and slzesrwi Camptown R V '5, Ayden. 746 3530

TRUCK COVER, tinted, roltout windows, like new, $195. 8' box. 752 0017, Brownie Motor Sales.

designer jeans ltd (As seen on TV). You now have the opportu nity to get involved with the fast growing multi million dollar Designer Jean Industry and own your own business. Extlting new market ing pr()gram, commercial and starting inventory supplied. $13.900 -Ca 11 Mr G reen, 8()4 463 7650.

USED WASHERS Good condition $75 with trade, $85 without trade 756 2479

WANTED SMALL portaWe am compressor. 100 pounds PSI 825-7111 after 6.

WARNING ALL HUSBANDS! If

you don't want your wives to do any buying just now then try to keep them from visiting our Antique Barn & Swap Shop. We are loaded with bargains. W L Dunn & Sons, Pinetops, NC_

WESTINGHOUSE Clothes dryer Works well. $50. 752 5986._

WOULD LIKE to buy used retrig erators. air conditioners, freezers, and ranges that need repair. 746 2446

YOU CAN'T BEAT THIS deal. '/i carat diamond solitaire in a 6 prong 14K gold setting. $500. Call 752 7520 after 6 p.m.

1 FULL SIZE bed mattress set. Good condition, $75. 752 2968._

13,000 BTU AIR conditioner. Call 756 5591 atterpm. $150.

14' GARAGE DCX)R Complete with all hardware. Like new. $200 or best otter. 758 7693.

19" COLOR TV Rent to own $23.11 >er month. Furniture World. 757 1451

5 PIECE SET ot den furniture, $250. 2 couches, $35 each 756 0108.

6 DINING CHAIRS, Crattique, solid mahogany, $50 each Crattique ma hogany drop leaf dining tabfe, $300 Mahogany poster double bed. $125. Call 756 5091._

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

BRAND NEW 1983 top ot the line double wide. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, many extras including masonite siding, shingle roof, frost tree refrigerator, garden tub. cathedral ceiling and much, much more. Regular price, $21,995 Limited Time Only

$16,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing Delivery and set up included) Hours, 6 AM to 8 pm CROSSLAND HOMES (formerly Mobile Home Brokers) 630 West Greenville Boulevard _756-0191_

BRAND NEW 1983 top quality 14 wide, 2 bedroom mobile home loaded with extras, plywood floors, plywood counter tops, total electric, range, refrigerator. Regular price, $12,995'

Limited Time Only

$9,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up includecTHours, 8am to8pm.

CROSSLAND HOMES (Formerly Mobile Home Brokers) 630 West Greenville Boulevard _756-0191_

DOUBLEWIDE, 3 bedrqoms, 2 baths, all appliances. Central air. Underpinned. Barn attached. Set up on 1 acre ot land. 946 8436.

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.

12x60 OAKWOOD 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, carpet, central air, and appli anees. All rooms closed oft. $6500 Call 756 5372.

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, 1' 5 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! 75 2 8846 after 2p.m.

1979, 14x65 Oakwood, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, heat pump, unfurnished. $800 equity and take up payments Call 756 5741    _ _

1979 CONNER Low down payment. Low monthly payments. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, oil heat. Call 756-9874. Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville.

1979 14x70 MOBILE HOME $11,000 assume pay Unfurnished.

or $3,000 equity and assume pay menfs ot $117.87

756 7915 after 4.

1980 KNOX 14X60 Fully furnished, air condition, steps under pinning Like new. Call Greg, 757 7227 days, 747 2052 nights.__

1981, 14x58 Redman, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath with garden tub. Fully furnished, inclOdind' appliances and ws^c/di^y*W chfr'al pir Located in^l^y Kooll. No equity, assume loaq v$237 8Wmpnthly 752-1304 nights:

1983 EASTWOOa-NW home Total electric 2 bedrooms, I bath, A root, ceiling tan, cathedral .ceilftrt All tor $8W5,_ Payment Under $*25 a inqpfb tali' 756-9874, CeO^y Sqbire Mpbile-'HOmes,, 264 Bybass. Greenville._

1983 RICHCRAFT, 3 bedrooms, living room, kitchen, 2 baths. $800 and assume payments. Un furnished. Call 746^^6035 after 5 pm.

076 AAobile Home Insurance

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage tor less money. Smith' Insurance and Realty, 752-2754    _

077 Musical Instryments

KIMBALL CONSOLE piano. New pecan or walnut finish. $1,599 with bench, delivery and 10 year warranty. Piano & Organ Distributors, Greenville. 355 600f_

SET OF GIBSON PA speakers with mikes and stand. Acoustic bass amolitier. Call 746 4539 aHer 6.

UPRIGHT PIANO tor sale, $150. 757-0510 after 6 p.m__

7 PIECE SET ot Blue Tama Oums. 1 snare drum, 4 mounted tom toms, 1 floor tom. 1 22" base drum, 3 zildien cymbols, high hat with 2 zildien cymbols. Price negotiable. Call 758 o206after 6__

082    LOST AND FOUND

LOST YELLOW Labrador Refriev er in vicinity of Cotanche and 10th Street Owner wants dog back real bad! Call 752 6612._

LOST:    White    female    cat.

752 2757_

Call

LOST: 14 week old male Cocker Spaniel mixed with Poodle on Farmvllle Boulevard April 27. Call 752-4181 after 3:30 p.m. and on weekends._

085 Loans And Mortgages

2ND MORTGAGES by phone commercial loans-mortgages bouoht Call tree 1-800 845 3929.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

093 OPPORTUNITY

FIGURE AND Exercise Salon. Established. A money maker. Well equipped. Repeat cfientele. Must sell. S^wden Associates. 752 3575.

list or buy your business with C J Harris A Co., Inc. Financial 8. Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N C 757 OOOI, nights 753 4015.

TO BUY OR SELL a business^ Appraisals. Financiruj Contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATES, Llcensz^ Brokers, 401 W First Street. 752

095 PROFESSIONAL

BRYAN'S PLASTER REPAIR and

drywall. Call 757 0678 or 756 2689. ter 6 355 6952

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Cad day or night. 753 3503. Farmvllle. GUTTERS CLEANED and re paired 752 1080

100

REAL ESTATE

8 WOODED ACRES 7 minutes east of Greenville. Owner financing. Good buy!!!!! Darden Realty, 758 1983, nights and weekends 758 2230_____

104 Condominiums For Sale

ANOTHER RENT INCREASE?????

Now you can have monthly pay ments lower than rent that wilf not increase! Three locations with 2 and 3 bedroom units. Call Jane Warren at 758 6050 or 758 7029 and Wil Reid at 758 6050 or 756 0446 for details

MOORE & SAUTE R

110 South Evans 758-6050

CONDOMINIUM SALE

Dresden Place

Conveniently located near the Uni versity, at the corner ot Charles and 11th Street.

2 Bedrooms, )' 3 baths, tOOO square feet with 12% Financing $43,600

Why pay rent when you can own your condominium.

Shown By Appoiniment Only, Call W G Blount & Associates

756-3000

FOR SALE OR LBASE with option to buy. University Condominiums. 2 bedrooms. I"3 baths, great condi tion Make an otter. $32,500. Speight Realty 756 3220, night 758 7741

NEW TOwNHOMES for sale Oakmont Drive 2 and 3 bedroom units available. J R Yorke Con structionCo.. Inc., 355 2286_

106

Farms For Sale

109 Hou^s For Sale

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY,

FLEMING FURNITURE: & APPLIANCE

NowSanfOM CrertyApplkMWM KeMnatorAppNMCM Speed Queen Laundry FeddanAlrCondmonart IHtOleMnaonAva.    7U-N8

WINDY RIDGE 3 bedroom customized fownhouse. Near clubhouse Sauna, pool, and tennis courts $54.500 Call 756 8794 after 6 p m. or weekends._

SAAALL FARM 22 acres . Near Chocowinity Some timber Darden Realty. 758 1983, nights and weekends 758 2230

126 ACRE FARM 110 acres cleared in Craven and Beaufort counties at the Pitt County line. Call Raleigh (919) 847 0915_

58 ACRE FARM Good road tron fage on SR 1753 and SR 1110. 51 acres cleared. 6,209 pounds tobacco allotment, pond and 2 bedroom house. St. Johns Community. Call for more details. Call Moseley Marcus Realty at 746-2166 tor full details.__

A DREAM COME TRUE! Can you imagine having the opportunity to swim anytime day or night. Take advantage of this great benefit no

eool hours while you enjoy the eauty of this home $69,900. *453 CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-6666.

A RARE FIND Very seldom lor sale. Mobile home located on over an acre lot In city with additional mobile home spaces to be rented out for additional income We have It! Call Davis Realty. 752 3000. 756 2904, 756 1997

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, gxtra 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

BY OWNER on Drexelbrook, Oakmont. 4 bedrooms, formal entry foyer. 2 full baths, formal living and dining room, den with tirepJace, screened porch, central air, carport with storage room, storm win-downs. beautiful lot Mid 70's. Czdl 757 6715 or 756 0788.

BY OWNER IN Club Pines 534 Crestline Blvd. 2 story brick Williamsburg. 3-4 bedrooms. TYt baths. Great room with flrralace, large spacious kitchen Double carptort with storage. Fence. All electric. Assumable 9Vi% VA loan. Call 756-8953 for appointment. No realtors please.

CHARMING two bedroom home in Ayden lust right tor the beginner qr small family; living/dining rooqt with fireplace, central heat and air. Estate Realty Company. 752 5058; nights 758 4476 or 752 3647.____

CLUB PINES Treat yourself! Impressed you'll be when you enter this four bedroom home. Skylighte, Casablanca fan and greenhouse are just a few of the extras. Owners ransterred $89,900. *481. CEN TURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666.

CLUB PINES Located on one of the most desirable lots in the area. Greatroom with fireplace lots at built ins. tastefully diecorated and has a split-system heatpump for more energy savings. $94,950. *508. CENTURYil Bass Realty, 756 6666.

COLONIAL HEIGHTS 3 bedroom bungalow $3.000 down, $410 montg. Move in immediately. Call Peggy Morrison, 756-0942; Alridge Southerland, 756 3500._

NEW OLDS FRWZAOT

JUST

S944C00*

Low 9.9% financing avoilable to qualified buyers

Heres wiiat a norty car can be wiien its an OhnoUe.

Hie OUs Fhma GT-ils sporty Mdeandonl.

RKUNIIW BLKXa SEATS SPWRC I TIIEAilieiS sroia STHitING WHffl WITH LEATHER GRIPS HID RB) AOBITS ON TNSTRMENT MNa

SPEQRA RED OOERIOR WITH SILVER TRIM AND MUCHMOIL

* Does Not Include Tax And Tags

HOLT OLDS-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd.

Greenville

756-3115

I





W9 Houses For Sale

NEAR FAIRGROUNDS 3

bedrooms, brick, treshly painted Good starter home. S41,500 Speight Rea,ltyJ56 3220, night 758 7741.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

109

Houses For Sale

COUNTRY HOME > j acre lot with detached garage-with 1200 square feet living area. Steve Evans & Associates, 355 2727 or 758 3338

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

at

M&MMOTORS

Grimesland -976 Mercedes 240D

Dark Blue. One Owner. Very nice............

1982 Chevrolet Durango S-10

Truck. Red................................

1982 Chevrolet Citation

Four door, w^iite...........................

1981 Ford Granada

Two door, beige...........................

1981 Pontiac LeMans

Four door, brown and beige  ...........

1981 Chevrolet Malibu

Wagon, beige.........................'

1980 Chevrolet El Camino Truck

Super Sport. Black with sliver...............

1980 Chevrolet Beauville Van

Windows, 1 ton, 15 passenger............

1980 Pontiac Grand Prix

Two door, blue on blue.....................

1980 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

Beige....................................

1980 Oldsmobile Cutlass

Two door, green.....................

1980 Chevrolet V2 Ton Truck

Green... .................................

1979 Ford Future

Two door coupe, white.....................

T979 Cadillac Seville

Four door, white & black vinyl top...........

1979 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

Grey with red interior......................

1977 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

Four ooor. brown..........................

1977 Dodge

Fouraoor, burgundy with white top.........

1977 Chrysler New Yorker Broughan

Four door hard top, white.....................

1980 Honda 750 Custom

like new. 5,000 miles........................

1979 G&WBoat

19' Ski boat, very nice.......................

1976 Sport Craft Boat

23' With cabin, very nice.....................

140 Farmall Tractor

With Cultivator..............................

58,500

56.995

55.295

54.295

56.195

57.195

54,895

57.195

55.995

55.995

55.995

54.295

53.295

58.995

54,395

55.495

52.295 52,700

51.995

56.495

55.995 53,000

757-1191

109

Houses For Sale

DOWN HOME COUNTRY

Feeling" in this new saltbox style home with wood siding . nestled among the trees on a large lot outside city limits. Offers fireplace in living room. I downstairs bedroom and full bath, quaint country kitchen/dining room with vaulted ceiling up to balcony hous ing 2 bedrooms and full bath, front porch and rear deck. FHA. VA and cdrtventional financing available. $56,500 Call CECO Realty, Inc., 355 6889or ElaineTroiano, 756 6346.

EXCLUSIVE AGENCY Excellent location 3 bedrooms, large family room with fireplace, garage, deck, patio, extra large room for office, study or etc Some equity (possible owner financing). Only $42,500. Call Davis fiealty. 7523000,    756    2904,

756 1997    __

FARMERS HOME ASSUMPTION 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, private lot Only $38.500. Steve Evans & Associates, 355 2727or 758 3338.

FARMVILLE, nice neighborhood. 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick home Formal areas, family room with fireplace, kitchen with eating nook, utility room, garage and storage room Lot, 117 X 150'. Assumable loan Call 753 5809.

FIVE BEDROOM executive type home in Baywood on spacious lot; this home offers formal areas 3' j baths, two car garage, mainte nance free exterior Estate Realty Company, 752 5058, nights 758 4476 or 752 3647 _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

MANAGER

TRAINEE

WANTED

Restaurant experience helpful but not necessary. Apply at;

Mr. Gattis

Between 2-4 p.m.

On Monday, Tuesday Or Wednesday

109

Houses For Sale

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 room, den with fireplace, large tuTty eguippee kitchen, patio, outside storage. $60'$, Call 355 2857 from 9 to 5, 355 2067 after 5.__

FOUR BEDROOM home in at fordable price range, step down family room, two baths, corner lot with fenced backyard. A lot of house for only $56,500. Estate Real 1y Company, 75? 5058, nights 758 4476 or 752 3647.

IDEAL HOME for young family Located on large lot in country. 3 bedrooms, deck. Assume loan plus equity (owner will finance equity) only $34.500. Call Davis Realty,

752 3000, 756 2904, 756 T997.______

IMPRESSIVE! This five bedroom home has spacious room, great floor plan, formal areas, double car garage and located on a beautiful rot! $101,500    482.    CENTURY 21

Bass Realty, 756 6666

LOADED WITH EXTRA'S! Two story 3 bedroom. 2'j bath home Living room with fireplace, double garage, and more. High $80's CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 758 9549

LOADED WITH EXTRA'S! Two story 3 bedroom. 2'j bath home. Living room with fireplace, double garage, and more. High $80's CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 758 9549.

LOCATED NEAR HOSPITAL Neat Brick Veneer starter home. Re cently decorated, new carpet. For less than $3500. You may purchase and close this home Only $38,500. Call Davis Realty, 752 3000, 756 2904, 756 1997

LOOKS ARE DECEIVING! You iust can't tell the spaciousness of his home until you've been inside. Three bedroom, lovely fireplace in den. spacious living room with dining area and sunny kitchen with breakfast nook located in Cherry Oaks, $79,900. *490 CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666

LOVELY OLDER HOME, Universi ty area $55,000 Call Joe Bowen, East Carolina Builders, Inc 752 7194.

LYNNDALE Very unique 2' j story home offers superb living areas plus study, playroom, 2 fireplaces and screened porch Listed at $117,500, but take a look and make an otter! Call Ball 8. Lane, 752 0025. or Richard Lane, 752 8819

Pick Yoof Own

STRAWBERRIES

. -'jsl    Other    Vegetables.    Peaches and Apples

n;v Ripen in June and July.

OPEN: Monday-Saturday, 7AM-8PM. Sunday, 1-8PM. Call 756-3343 between 7PM 4 9PM

RENSTON GARDEN MARKET

Eva & Andy McLawhorn    *

3.5 milats ol Wlnttnllla on N c 03 You can llnd itM liaKt 500 yanta down lha dirt road bahind iha Rcntlon Corn MHI

MATERIALS MANAGEMENT DIRECTOR

needed for modern 151 bed hospital located on the Pamlico River. Business administration degree preferred. 2 to 5 years experience. Excellent benefits. Salary commensurate with qualifications and experience. Send resume and salary history to:

PERSONNEL MANAGER BEAUFORT COUNTY HOSPITAL 628 EAST12TH STREET WASHINGTON, NC 27889

An Equal Opportunity Employer

GRANTMAZDA

603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.

1983 MAZDA TRUCKS

All Models NOW THRU MAY 31ST

DEALER COST

Plus N.C. Tax!!

NO HIDDEN COST!!

NO SALES GIMMICKS!!

JUST COST plus N.C. SALES TAX

Dont Wait Move While The Selection Is Good!

Open: Weekdays 8:30 to 6:30 Saturday 9:00 to 2:00

Phone: 756-1877

109 - Houses For Sale

A SUNDECK enhances this energy efficient, 3 bedroom house located in a quite subdivision in Greenville. FHA 235 assumable loan Total price $46,0(X) Call 355 6314.

A-SS-tFM-ABtE- FHA    3

bedrooms, I's baths. 10x14 workshop, 204 Burrington Road, Singletree $47,000 355 2647    _

ASSUME THIS FHA 245 loan of 10% with payments of $439.45 PIT I Save on closing costs and qualifying necessary on this 3 bedroom, two bath brick home $51,900    *508.

CENTURY 21 Bass Realty. 756 6666 BETHEL 3 bedroom house, 710 Moore Drive Sunnyfield Sub -division Priced right Must sell. Call James A Manning Real Estate

Agency^ M5 56JL__________

BR.ICK RANCH situated on a wooded lot Excellent neighborhood Winterville school district No city taxes 3 bedrooms, baths, recently painted inside Only $56,900 Call Davis Realty,

7W 3000, 756 2904, 756 J99T___

BRICK VENEER DUPLEX reduced to $48,000 Assume 9J.% loan Cash flow. Owner financing possibly equity Almost 3 years oltr Heat pump 2 bedrooms. I bath, each side Call Today! Davis Real ty, 752 3000, 756 2904, 756 1997.

BY OWNER in Farmville. 3 bedroom brick veneer, living room, dining room, kitchen, (dishwasher, refrigerator), ) bathroom fully carpeted and insulated Utility house in rear Only $35,000. 753 2038.

BY OWNER College Court 3 bedroom house. Assume II'2% VA loan. $6500 down. Closing cost under $200. Call 758 6200or 756 52IT_

BY OWNER Just outside city limits 3 bedroom, 1 bath, lot size 85 x180' Low $20's 752 7323 between

5:30 7 30p.m____

COUNTRY LIVING can be yours Over 1400 square feet modular home on brick foundation, ' 2 acre lot, heat pump 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, all appliances remain Only $43,900 Call Davis Realty, 752 3000, 756 790A. 756 1997    __

OWNER anxious to sell! 3 bedroom brick ranch Living room, kitchen combination, approximately 1142 square feet. Low $30's. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or

758 9^^_________________

OWNER FINANCING available 5 bedroom home, two fireplaces, ap proximatqiy 2100 square teet Large lot with pecan trees Mid $30 s CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency

756 2121 or 758 9549__

PERFECT BEGINNER! You'll enjoy this 2 bedroom home with approximately 1448 square feet Large lot Possibiijty ol some owner financing Mid $20's. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 758 9549.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAYThe Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C -Friday, May 6,1983-25

109

Houses For Sale

SPACIOUS 4 bedroom ranch, living room, family room, fireplace", fenced in back High $40's CEN TURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 758 9549 SPVkCfOUS THREE BEDROOM home with formal areas Pinewood Forest situated on corner wooded lot, family room with fireplace, two car garage. Estate Realty Company, 752 5058, nights 758 4476 or 752 3647

STANTONSBURG ESTATES Hard to believe you can purchase a new 1400 square foot contemporary home with all the features this home has to offer tor only $59,900 Ottering foyer, dramatic 14.6 X 18

reat room with fireplace, separate ininq room, step saver kitchen complete with dishwasher and solid birch cabinets, laundry/mud room, 3 spacious bedrooms (master measures 12,6 X 16 4 with walk in closet, 2 full baths, concrete patio FHA, VA. conventional financing available. Call CECO Realty, Inc , 355 6889 or E laine Troiano, 756 6346

SUPER BUY! 3 or 4 bedrooms. I' 2 baths, carpet, 2 car detached garage, that is perfect for workshop. 8% loan assumption Located near Carolina East Mall Only $42,500 Better hurry Speight Realty 756 3220, night 758 7741.

THIS HOME IS ready for a new owner. Seller is moving and wants to leave his home in the hands of someone who cares about the country kitchen, the workshop with all the electrical wiring or could be used a a single car garage Reduced to $42,900 with an FHA 83x% loan assumption with payments of $310 PITI *453 CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666._

TOWNHOUSE^SALE

Village East

Conveniently located near downtown and the Universiiy. Library, Recreation Center and the Jaycees Park at Cedar Court Two bedrooms. I'2 baths, all brick construction with outside storage building 10'>4% Financing $41,9<X)

Shown By Appointment Only Call W G Blount & Associates

756-3000

VA LOAN ASSUMPTION of 8% with payments ol $239 81 This 3 bedroom home -has mych to offer along with having a garage (^11 today for all the details on this assumption! $32.500    *454    CEN

TU^ 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666.

955 E TENTH St near University Newly painted outside, 3 bedrooms. I'2 baths, hot water heat. $54.500 E 13 Dick Evans, Realtor, 758 1119 Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SOLICITING-^

SUBCONTRATORBIDS

from minority contractors for Pump Station Improvements and Force Mains, Greenville, NC

to be bid I MAY 181983 AT 3 PM

Sub-bids for clearing and grubbing, grass, manholes, pipe laying, miscellaneous concrete, pavement patching, material hauling, pump station installation and other.

Please Contact:

Bill Norwood DICKERSON UTILITY INC.

P.O. Box 400

704-789-2011

EOEM/F

Monroe, N.C. 28110

SHOP THE BEST SHOP HOLT QUALITY USED CARS

1982 Plymouth Sapporo

2 door, silver with silver veluor interior, 5 speed, loaded, one :oym6L lL0PP miles.

1982 Pontiac Bonneville Wagn

Navy blue, buckskin interior. Loaded. 15,000 miles.

1982 Olds Delta 88 Royale

Brougham. 2 door. Loaded, diesel engine, 36,000 miles, gray with gray velour interior.

1981 Datsun280-ZX

Copper with tan leather inferior, T-fop, 5 speed,loaded, one owner.

1981 Volvo

4 door, 21,000 miles. Automatic, air. AM-FM stereo. Brown with saddle interior.

1981 Mazda 626

White with gray velour interior, 4 door, automatic, air condition. AM-FM. one owner. 38,000 miles.

1981 Datsun 4X4 Truck

Long bed, 4 speed, air, AM-FM, red wijh black interior.

1981 Plymouth TC-3

Blue, blue cloth interior, loaded. -

1981 Mercury Marquis

4 door, tan and brown, beige cloth Interior, loaded. 22,000 miles, one owner.

1981 Datsun 280-ZX

2 plus 2 Dark brown, tan leather interior, loaded, one owner,

21.000 miles.

1981 Honda Accord

4 door. Silver, burgundy interior, loaded.

1981 Datsun 280-ZX Turbo

Gold with tan leather interior, loaded.    .

1981 Datsun 210 Coupe

2 door, 5 speed, AM-FM radio, silver with black interior.

1981 Datsun 210 Hatchback

2 door. Light blue with blue cloth interior, 5 speed, air.

1980 Ford Fairmont

Two tone blue, blue vinyl interior, automatic, air. AM-FM radio, one owner, 40.000 miles.

1980 Buick Skylark Limited

Yellow with light brown velour interior.

1980 Pontiac Sunbird

Silver, burgundy vinyl interior, 4 speed, air, AM-FM stereo,

34.000 miles, looks.new,

1980 Chevrolet Malibu Classic

4 door. Automatic, air, brown wifh buckskin velour interior.

1980 Pontiac Firebird

Silver with white vinyl interior, automatic, air, tilt wheel, AM-FM, one owner, 39,000 miles.

1979 Olds Delta 88

2 door. Blue with white landau top, white interior, 44,000 atetual miles, looks new.

1978 Lincoln Mark V

Yellow, burgundy interior, loaded. 49.000 miles.

1977 Datsun 280-Z

Light blue with black interior, loaded, 48,000 actual miles, nice car.

1977 Chevrolet Nova

Brown with beige velour interior, automatic, air, AM-FM radio,

56.000 miles, one owner.

1975 Datsun 210

4 speed, air, AM-FM radio, one owner, 52,000 actual miles, red with black interior.

HOLT OLDS-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd.

756-315

109

Houses For Sale

109

Houses For Sale

WINTERVILLE Corner lot. new root, new paint. 2 bedroom house Central location Excellent rental history $18.000 . Call owner after 5

756 4980_____________ _

W( I hiN wacKING distance ol pooh tennis, and club house 3 bedroom, 2 bath home living room, fireplace, and palio Assumable FHA loan Low $60's CENTURY 21 8 Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 758 9549    ______________

2 BEDRCX3MS, living room dining room, 2 full baths, den and kitchen Call after 6. 757 1489    ________

2 BEDROOMS, storage shed, garden T mile West of hospital on

High^wax43 $23.000 758 45___

2403 EAST FOURTH 'street 3 bedrooms, I bath 1214 square feet ot living area Very nice neighborhood $38,500 Bill Williams

Real Estate. 752 2615_____

3108 ^HRW(X)D Drive Over 2000 square foot Williamsburg, all formal areas, den with (ireplacei heat pump $77,900 Must sell E 18 Dick Evans Realtor, 758 V1I9 Aidridqe & Southerland. 756 3500_

4 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, living room, dining room, central hear well built older home, new rool. on large lot. garage Must sell

1 WAREHOUSE Metal concrete floor with office, approximately 4000 square leel On P4 acre Streets on three sides 60 000 pound concrete platform scales Asking $47,000

Ayden Loan & Insurance Co. 746 3761______ 746 6474

$5:000 price'redu'cYion

Spacious ranch in Brentwood 3 bedrooms 2 baths, tormal areas den with fireplace, playroom tor the kids $58,500 Call Jell Aldridge Aldridge 8. Southerland, 756 3500. nights 756 2807 ______ _____

MAVIS BUTTS REALTY

758-0655

PINERIDGE This cute ranch is loo good to be true! Features 3 bedrootns, Uz baths, living room with Ireestanding wood stove, eat in kitchen with slicfing doors lo patio outside storage and carport $42,900

ROBERSNVILLE If you prefer out of town living this one's tor you Features 3 bedrooms 2 baths, eat in^kitchen, living room and den with built ins %Ab.900

NORTH HILLS Ayden is the setting for this quiet mily home This home oilers 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, country kitchen living room., patio and garage with workshoo $49,500

GSEENBRIAR Spacious brick rancher oilers 3 bedrooms I'v baths, living and dining rooms, den with fireplace and, built ins, eat in kitchen, utility, room with doors to deck, garage and central air $59,900

TWIN OAKS The charm of Williamsburg abounds in this yjacipus 2 bedrixim. I' 2 bath home dther features include great room with fireplace and french doors to deck, large kitchen and dining

YOU'VE SEEN THE rest Now buy the best! This home currently under construction in Cherry Oaks has the elegance and warmtli only a true Williamsburg, home ran oftec Ois_ fine five features include oak floors in foyer and tornial dining room oversized brick used on exterior and fireplace in 15 X 20 great room

Cdinted ceilings throughout, cheery ay window m breakfast room Also 3 spacious bedrooms 2 tull balhs patio. E 300 insulation heat pump Buy now and choo^ your decor ; 12j% fixed rate Conventional fi I nancing available up to 95% loan 1 $74,900 Call CECO Realty inc 355 6889 or Elaine Troiano. 7fo 6346 $15,000 DOWN assuable con ventional loan with approximately $38,700 balance Owner tmancinq balance at H% tor 15 years Custom built 4 bedroom, 2*2 bath brick ranch, den with fireplace and built in bookshelf double care paneled garage, all formal areas plus eat m area in kitchen Built m desk, dishwasher compactor heatpump carpet Lots ot extra cabinets in kitchen $89 900 Lily Richardson RerlifY .762.6536

1950 SQUARE FEET, garage living room 3 or 4 bedrooms workshop large great room with 8' pool table

room $53,yOO

Jane Butts Mavis Butts.

Shirley Morrison___

756 2851 752 7073 758 5463

What We Like...

We Hope You Like!

NEW LISTING NEAR the Universi ty Schools, churches and the col lege all nearby this one owner home at 802 Forest Hills Cirfle There are many features such as a separate den or study with fireplace, large foyer and formal living room with fireplace, formal dining room, kitcfien, three bedrooms, two full baths Nice hardwood doors throughout Located on a wooded corner lot Nearly 2000 square feet of heated area priced at $72,000.

YOU COULDN'T BEGIN to/build this house at this price Try and match the quality of construction in this custom built home today and there's no way you could replace Ithe almost I8OO square feet of heafd area this plan offers Nice foyer and separate formal living and dining rooms, large kitchen with eating area, family room with fireplace, three bedrooms, two full baths, larger than usual garage with big storage area, fenced in back yard with lots ol room to roam Possible VA loan a'ssump lion Call tor details Located at 104 Ragland Road in Winteville Priced at $65,900.

TWO NEW HOMES under con strucfion in Orchard Hill Sub division These homnes otter floor plan unique to the area Just being started you may still pick out colors, efc. for these floor plans which feature walk around fireplace, dining area, great room, nice kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths. Seller pays all discount points and closing costs on FHA VA financing plans. Prices start at S4,900. Call for more info

D G NICHOLS AGENCY

752-4012    752-7666

and fireplace Newjy carpeted with dishwasher, cable TV, 7 years old Located 3 miles from (jreenville Priced in the $50's    758 0)44 or

752 7663

What We Like...

We Hope You Like!

NEW LISTING on-the market at 1113 Hillside Drive Hard to find tour tiedrooms at this price and m this location Located in the Elmhurst area on a quiet private street Formal living room wi,th dining area and fireplace large kitchen and eating areS tour bedrooms. I', baths, large rec or play room, covered patio Possible fixed rate 7'4% VA loan assumption with payments of $247 PS.I and balance ot approkimately $20 300 Priced at $59 900

A GREAT BUY this this price in this neighborhood^ Located at 300 Westhaven Road on a large corner lot in Westhaven Subdivisin House has appraised for more than the asking price but    owner has

transferred and needs to sell Almost 1600 square leet of heated area plus a large garage Floor plan features foyer, formal living and dimng room family    room    large

kitchen with eating    area    three

bedrooms, two toll    baths    Great

price for this location $59,900

WE'VE SAID IT before and we'll say it again You can't find a buy as good as this home at 264 Circle Drive in popular Hardee Acres Subdivision Owner wants to sell and we have priced to sell Plan features living room large kitch en dining area, three bedrooms. I' v baths, garage, nice lot with lots of room Another plus is a possible 8% fixed rate FHA toan assumption with payments of $262,12 PITI and loan balance of approximately $27,800 Priced at $48 56(T

D G NICHOLS AGENCY

752-4012    752-7666

What We Like...

We Hope You Like!

I IN A CLASS BY ITSELF! This , custom built home has lots ot extras worth paying extra for Like a kitchen skylight_,wgdd stove insert, ceiling fan. extra large deck and many other features Great room with fireplace dining area, three bedrooms, two full baths, large Iheated lutility room $63,500.

THE TWO DECKS on this two story . home are a great place to spend Ithe spring and Isummer Yes. one deck off master bedroom,and another large deck koff the back of the house Very functional floor plan with foyer, formal living and dining rooms, great kitchen with extra large eating or sitting area, family room with fireplace, three bedrooms two tull baths, garage lor car or storage If you hurry there's still a 10'20 fixed rate loan assumption possible Loan balance : of approximately $49,000 with I payments ot $544 00 PITI Priced at ! $69,500.

i NEW LISTING and believe us 1 when we say it's one ot a kind,

I Approximately 3'2 acres of woods I on a hilly lof only minutes fron;i I downtown Greenville Located at 102 Chippendale Drive in Oakhurst ' Subdivision Lots of glass and light j abound in this plan which features I large family' room with cathedral J ceiling, spacious kitche with sepa I rate eating area, formal dining I room, foyer, sunken living room, i three bedrooms, two full baths, tremendous deck|, small basement for storage Privacy galore!$104,500

DG NICHOLS AGENCY 752-4012    752-7666

111    I nvestment Property

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SWIMMING POOL

Cash Or Monthly Payments Above And Inground

Seaboard Home Center

602 Grimes BO    *

Washington. N.C 946-2156

BY OWNER Investment property Two story very large home re modeled into two apartments, half a block from ECU Excellent condi tion Over $700 per month income Mid 70 s Call 757 6715 or 756 0788.

Enjoy the benefits of working with us! We are

THEMESTIQUE

AGENCY

and we are looking for Individuals who want to enjoy the chaltenge of success! If you have a positive attitude and like dealing with the public, then you can qualify for our generous pay structure of between 18K and 30K. We offer flexible hours, excellent working conditions and an opportunity tor advancement. All serious inquiries should include resumes addressed to the above agency. P.O. Box 397, Washington, N.C. 27889. We are an equal opportuni-

BY OWNER Investment Property Two story, very large home re modeled into two apartments, half a block from ECU Excellent condi tion. Over 700 per month income Mid 70 s Call 757 6715 or 756 0788 INVESTMENT PROPERTY 2 houses, I duplex with rental income of $750 per month Possibility of some owner financing CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or

758^9^9,__________

NEW ' TOWNHOMES for sale Oakmont Drive 2 and 3 bedroom units available J R Vorke Con struction Co . Inc., 355 2286.

CLASSIFIED- DISPLAY

PRODUCTION

SUPERINTENDENT

SECOND SHIFT

A Steel fabricator in Eastern North Carolina is expanding its second shift operations and has' created a position of Production Superintendent, 2nd Shift. This position will be responsible for coordinating the efforts of a press room, welding shop, paint department, quality inspections and maintenance mechanics. Only an energetic, aggressive person with growth potential, a proven track record in production and production supervision with a minimum of 6 years combined experience in metals and metal fabrication need apply. Salary commensurate with experience. Send resume in strict confidence to:

P.O.Box 338 Grifton, N.C. 28530

FOR LEASE 2500 Square Feet

PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE ON ARLINGTON

BOULEVARD

756-8111





26-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.r imuj, ..*ay o,

113

Land For Sale

3 ACRES OF LAND All road Irontaqe Small 3 room house on it

SH 4II or ;S2 4017 anytime___^

74 ACRES between Greenville and tarmville T 12 Call Aldridge & Southerland Realty 75 3500 Nights Rodi:ijg,we,U..75i4302__    _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE BUY USED CARS HI$ON MOTOR CO.

Across From Wachovia Computer Cantar Mamortal Dr.    756-6221

115

Lots For Sale

BAYTREE SUBDIVISION

Attractive wooded lots within the city 90% financing available Call 758 3421

EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY

BELVOIR HIGHWAY Mobile home 'Tots S5900. Spefghr Really 756 3220. night 758 7741

BROOK VALLEY, on golf course. High and dry, trees, beautiful view. Best lot available in Greenville $25,000 Call owner agent Louise Hodge (804) 794 1532 (evenings) or Mike Aldridge, Aldridge & Southerland Realtors, 756 3500.

CANDLE WICK ESTATES >2 acre wooded lot near pool $9000 . 752 5986    ___

EVAN WOOD WOODED building lot on quiet street $14,000. Call Ball & Lane, 752 0025.___

CLASSIFIED DISPl AY

115

itofs For Sale

HUNTINGRIDGE Large lots con venient to Hospital and Med School. Restricted. FHA and VA approved subdivision with community water. 752 4)39. Millie Lilley. Owner Broker__

LAKE ROYALE wooded buildin Tot: Mohawk Drtve. 75')r2eo^.

756 8722 before 10 p m

LOT FOR 16 apartments. Ready for bmldin^. Near hospital. $25,000 Call

LOT FOR 8 apartments Hooker Road. $23.000. Call 756 7417__

PREFERRED PROPERTIES

presently has lots available in Westhaven Club Pines area. There are only a few lots left in this most desirable area Call 756 7799 or nights call 756 1507 or 756 7633 Ask tor Tommie Little or Tom Chapin.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Drive A New

1983 Datsun Pickup

For As Little As

138

per month

Based on selling price of S6265.00. State taxes not included Down payment or equvalent trade $900.00. 9.9 Annual Percentage Rate, 48 mon-thly payments, tinance charges $1T80.28. Total of payments $6665.28.

Datsun Deluxe Li'l Hustler

HOLTOLDS-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd

Greenville

756-3115

115

Lots For Sale

Vj ACRE TO 5 ACRES, over 100 lots to choose from. Locations on Highway 43 south, Chicod Creek, Griffon area, Highway 33 south. Call 757 0277; after 5 p.m. 756 2682

STOKES 3 acres, $11,500. Speight Realty 756 3220, night 758 7741.

117 Resort Property For Sale

RIVER COTTAGE 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Beautiful wooded lot. Pier. 1 hour from Greenville. Good buy!!!! Darden Realty. 758 1983; nights and weekends 758 2230._

RIVER FRONT Pamlico Beach cottage. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, all furnishings included Owner linanc ing at I0% E 14. Aldrit^e & Southerland, 756 3500. Dick Evans, Realtor. 758 1119.__

TWO STORY COTTAGE with screened In porch, located at Bayview, across the street from water. Waterfront rights with pier. $20.000. Call 752 2565.

12x60 MOBILE HOME Paradise Bay at Saulter Path. $5600. Call 746 3194 after 6 p.m.

14x70 FULLY FURNISHED trailer with air, large deck omcorner lot at Porfside Retreat in Washington, NC 825 5156 after 5_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING '

C.L. Lupton, Co.

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets Call 75^4413 between 8 and 5._

NEED STORAGE? We have any to I

'a*'    -

day Frtday.9-6,atT?56-9932. -

____  any

size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Self Storage, Open Mon

121 Apartments For Rent

ALMOST NEW 2 bedroom duplex in quiet location. Lots of privacy $300 per month. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756 2121._

AVAILABLE MAY I. New 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. Draptes. wall to wall carpet, central heat and air, outside storage. Griffon area. Office hours 10 a.m. to 2 p.m , Monday through Friday, 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Phone 524 4239.       .

AZALEA GARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnishe<% 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

121 Apartment For Rent

AVAILABLE AAAY 1. Energy effi cient 2 bedroom townhouse duplex. Carpeted, appliances. IVj baths, wood deck. Ridge Place. Call 756 2879

BRAND NEW DUPLEX townhouse 2 bedrooms, P j baths. 1 mile from med school and hospttat. Available May 15. Deposit and lease. $300 825 4931.

121 Apartment For Rent

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with Pj baths. Also t bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, tree cable TV, washer dryer hook ups, laundr room, sauna, tennis court, clu 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 thiy. 752 4639._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

AUCTION

BARGAINS EVERY FRIDAY, SATURDAY & MONDAY NIGHT '

7:30 PM

On Pactolus Highway Next To Old Greenville Stock Yard

I    TOOLS,    PORCELAIN,    FIGURINES

'STEREO EQUIPMENT (AUTO & HOME), MANY MORE ITEMS

ALL NEW MERCHANDISE OTHER ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS TO LIST PRESTON HEATH, AUCTIONEER    LICENSE    NO.    1600

The Real Estate Corner

VI

VMien you first enter Tt^tops, you think you are entering a gracious country estate.

Innovative design, prime location, ecstatically exciting, carefi^e living and aflbrdable quality construction are only a fevv of the accolades vvtiich have been used to describe this new concept in gracious living. I    Homes    nestled    in    this beautiful

' environment are enhanced by natural landscaping, creating a park-like atmosphere.

Qregjppij^designed for people who alue good design ancTfine    ^

workmanship at affordable prices

OPEN HOUSE \

SATURDAY AND SUNDAY

Quiet cul-de-sacs add to the liveability, privacy and security.

The floor plans include both a one level and a two lev el design and can best be described as a villa or townhouse. There are two bedroom plans with two baths and three bedroom plans with two and a half baths. Prices start at $53,900.

Visit TTeetops today and learn how you can afford to be part of this exciting community.

Prices start at 53,900.

Chapin And Associates, Inc./3106 S. Memorial Dr./Greenville, N.C. 27834

U/ppkpnH alz..:    0-700

Weekend Sales 756-873.^

J

h

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

FOR RENT furnished apartment, also private room with kitchen privacy. Call 758-2201

FORREST ACRES APARTMENTS

Large 1 bedroom apartment, fireplace, dishwasher, washer/dryer, hook ups, pool privileges. Close to college. Available immediately. Call 757 6824, 8 to'5 ask for Gail or 756 5577 atter 5.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

RIGGAN SHOE REPAIR

113 W. 4th Street-Phone 758-0204 Downtown Greenville

758-0204

Open: Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m. til 6 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m. til 3 p.m.

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.

121 Apartment For Rent

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments. carpeted, dish washer, cable Tv. laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical -vUUties- ana P(X)L Adiacent to Greenville Country Club. 756 6869

FISCHER VILLAGE apartments, Aurora, NC , available for occupancy. Elderly, handicapped and disabled. Rent based on income. Barbara Miller. 322 4990 or 322 4913. Equal Opportunity Housing._

JOHNSTON STREET APART MENTS 1 bedroom unfurnished

/ater and appliances furnished. No pets. Call Judy at 756 6336 before 5

apartments available immediate. Water and appliances pets. Call Judy at 75t p.m., Monday Friday

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, re trigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools. Located |usi off toth Street

Call 752-3519

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door.

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs s6% less than comparable units), dishwash er, washer/dryer hook ups, cable TV.wall-to wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation

Office Open 9 5 Weekdays

9 5 Saturday    15    Sunday

Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.

756-5067

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

C.L. Lupton Co.

IN WINTERVILLE 3 bedroom apartment, Appliances furnished. No children, no pets. Deposit and lease. $195 month. 756-5(W7.

NEW TASTEFULLY decorated townhouse. 2 bedrooms. I' z baths, washer/dryer hook ups, heat pump. Efficient. $310 per month. 752 2040

NEW 1 BEDROOM with patios. Water/sewer furnished $2)0 month. 756-7417.    _

NEW 2 BEDRCXJM duplex apart me rtt .-With appliances, washer/dryer hookups, carpet,

central heat and air. No pets 756 1821.___

NEW 3 BEDRCX3M duplex, near ECU, energy efficient, dishwasher, washer/dryer hookups, no pets. $330. 756 5346

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS'

Two bedroom townhouse apart ments )212 Redbanks Road Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included. We also have Cable Tv Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University., Also some furnished apartments available.

756-4151

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815_

ONE BEDROOM apartment Near campus No pets. $215 a month. 756 3923

ONE BEDROOM apartment country. Call 756 9132_

ONE EXTRA LARGE ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT

Completely furnished, next to campus, available NOW $2)5 per month. Call 752 2691.    _

RENT FURNITURE: Living, din ing, bedroom complete $79joO

month. Option to 756 3862

buy. U REN

RIDGE PLACE, 2 bedroom townhouse. $275 month. Call 756 8436._

SINGLE APARTMENT $140 rent, $140deposit. Calf 758-9758evenings.

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Office hours 10a m.to5p.m. Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours aday at

756-4800

SUB LEASE apartment Available now! 752 9070__

M5.50

AND UP WITH GOOD TRADE IN

[/IMPORTED RADIALS $29.50 and up

'    Plus    FET

FRONT& BACK BRAKES $38.00

All mechanical work and tires guaranteed! When you buy before seeing us, we both lose.

24 HOUR WRECKER SERVICE

QUALITY TIRE & AUTO SERVICE

2900 E, 10th St. 757-3762

Two Locations To betve

N. Greenest. 752-7177

Vis.i - MasteicafO

fTnrind^ Savinirc Snpniali 1

I

Spring Savings Special!

FRONT END ALIGNMENT

BALANCE FOUR JIRES I

TAR RIVER ESTATES

I, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook ups. cable TV, pool, club house, playground, Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex "

140) Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow

_752    4225

TWO BEDROOM apartments available No pets. Call Smith

Insurances Realty, 752 2754_

TWO BEDROOM furnished apartment in Winterville, Call

7M 0407 or 756 1743_

UNIVERSITY AREA Upstairs duplex. Available May i. 2 bedrooms. $200    1204 A Forbes

Street. 756 0765._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS

C.L. Lupton. Co.

FREE TIRE ROTATION WITH THIS COUPON |

f. HOLT I k ( OLDS-DATSUN

\ 101 Hooker Road    756-3115    I

MOVING Used Stair-Glide STAIRWAY LIFT

Easily Installed No Special Wiring Traci is 12Wide Resta on Stair

CALL 355-6977

GRANT BUICK-MAZDA, INC.

603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.

We Have In Stock For Immediate Delivery LUXURY

1980 Buick Electra Limited 36,000miles,nce, localcar 1979 Cadillac Coupe De Villesiiver, sharp car-

1979 Buick Electra Limited 32,000 miles, very nice!

1980 Olds 88 Royale Brougham Loaded, very dean

1980 Chevrolet Caprice Classic Every available option

INTERMEDIATES 1982 Pontiac Bonneville white and burgundy, sharp!!

1982 Olds Cutlass Supreme 4 door, burgundy, very clean

1981 Olds Cutlass LS 4 door, sHver and burgundy, low mileage 1981 Buick Regal Limited 2 door, silver, lots of equipment

1981 Buick Century 4 door, beige, cruise, AM-FM with cassette

1979 Buick Century Wagon Light blue, good soiid car.

1979 Dodge Diplomat 4 door, 45,000 miles. Special $2995.00!!

ECONOMY

1982 Honda Civic 4 dpor, low mileage, very clean 1982 Mazda GLC 2 door, 12,000 miles, like new! >

1981 Honda Accord 2 door, burgundy, pretty car!

1981 Mazda GLC White, nice little car!

1981 Olds Omega Brougham Cruise, low mileage.

1981 Buick Skylark Limited Every option offered!-

1980 Pontiac Phoenix 2 door, white, very sharp!

1978 Datsun 510 2 door, low mileage, good car.

SPORTS DEPARTMENT (2) 1983 Chevrolet Custom Vans Both loaded with equipment

1981 Chevrolet Custom Van Brand new conversion.

1980 Chevrolet Camaro Red, spoiler, sport wheels.

TRUCKS

1978 Chevrolet LUV Light blue, cleant    

1978 Ford F-150 Pickup 48,000 miles, regular gas!

Open: Weekdays 8:30 to 6:30 Saturday 9:00 to 2:00

Phone: 756-1877





121 Apartments For Rent

VILLAGE EAST

2 bedroom, I'j bath townhouses Available now. $295/month.

9 to 5 Monday Friday

756-7711

WEDGE WOOD ARMS

NOW AVAILABLE

2 bedroom, I'j bath townhouses Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hooKups, pool, tnnis court.

756-0987

1 AND 2 BEDROOM apartments. Available immediately. 752 3311.

1 BEDROOM APARTMENT Heat and hot water turnished. 201 North Woodlawn. t215. 756 0545 or 758 0635

2 BEDROOM apartment. Central air, carpeted, appliances. 804 Willow Street, AparTmehn."S250. 758 3311. _ _

2 BEDROOM apartment. Central air, carpeted, appliances. $250 a month. Bryton Hills. 758 3311.

2 BEDROOM, carpet, refrigerator, dishwasher, air 5 blocks from campus. $265 a month. Also duplex. 752 0180, 756 3210.__

2 BEDROOM with appliances and air No pets or children. $250 plus deposit. Call 752 3750 3 to6 p.m.

121 Apartments For Rent

2 BEDROOM near ECU, utilities. Appliances. $300 a month Deposit. No pets Available June 1. 758 0491 or 756 7809 before 9 p.m.

122

Business Rentals

2 BEDROOM duplex. Energy efti cient Washer/dryer connections. Excellent location. $275. Call 757 0001. 753 4015.    _

2 BEDftOOM apartment $325 per

76-

month. Call 756 7647.

2 BEDROOM APARTMENT, wall to wallcarpet Call 753 3101 days

2 NEW DUPLEXES near the hospi tal/med school. Available for oc cupancy in 1 week. $300 per month. 752 3152, 752 6715 ask for Bryant or John.

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX, 2509 A East 3rd Street near Wahl Coates Elementery School and St. Peters Church Nice kitchen with refriger ator and stove. Central air, yard, large attic for storage, driveway. -Washer/dryer hookups. $285 per month. Call 758 0502 Thursday and Friday between 6 and 9 p.m.; Sunday 9a.m. 9p.m.___

122

Business Rentals

EXCELLENT BUSINESS location 5400 square foot 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 LEASE Prime retail space, Arlington Boulevard. 4500 square feet Call 756 9315 or 756 5097._

FOR RENT 10,000 square foot building Ideally located on Highway 33 In Chocowinity Call Donnie Smith at 946 5887._

-WAREHOUSE AMOattiee space tor lease 20.000 square feet available. Will subdivide. 756 5097 or 756 9315.

125 Condominiums For Rent

UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM 2

bedroom, 1' j bath, carpeted, major appliances furnished No pets. 82S7321 after 5 p.m._

YORKTOWN SQUARE 3

bedrooms, I' j baths, fully carpeted, fireplace, stove, refrigerator. Near athletic club. Available June I. $350 plus deposit. Days 756 5225, Nights 758 5505. _ __

3 BEDROOM, 2'j bath con dominium at Windy Ridge Draperies and appliances turnished. Pool, sauna, and tennis courts. Available July I. Call 756 9061 alter 7 p.m._

127

Houses For Rent

AVAILABLE JUNE 1. 4 bedrooms, I block from Pitt Pla2a, Oakmont. 756 1243._ i

127

Houses For Rent

COZY ONE bedroom, in a quite neighborhood. I block from tennis courts. 756 8160, 756 7768.

EAST 10th STREET 3 bedrooms, 1' 2 baths, nice yard, $325 Speight Realty, 758-7741 evenings._

LARGE 2 STORY HOUSE Excellent condition. 107 Columbia Avenue. $300 monthly. Call De borah, 758 3191 from 8 to 5.

NEW 2 BEDROOM duplex off Hooker Road Appliances and hook ups. $295 plus deposit. No pets. Call Mary, days 752 3000, nights 756

SUPER NICE 3 bedroom, 2 bath, close to university. $375 month. 756 7417.

THREE BEDROOM home in quiet family neighborhood, 3 blocks from University. Living room, large dining room, wall to wall carpet. Available immediately. Family or mature party $325. 758 5299.

2 BEDROOMS, fireplace, all electric. No pets. Hillcrest Drive. Available June 1. Call 726 7615.

3 BEDROOM HOUSE near univer sity. 1 bath, garage, all appliances turnished. 2412 Umstead Drive. $385 a month. Call 758 6200 or 756 5217.

3 BEDROOM, I'j bath, central heat and air conditioning, dishwasher, $330 month. No pets. Available, May 15, 113 North Jarvis Street Call 758 7997.

127

Houses For Rent

4 BEDROOM HOUSE, 2 baths in Farmville $300 month. Call 753 3101 days._ _

133 AAobi le Homes For Rent

FOR RENT OR SALE 1973 Bowen, 52x12, 2 bedroom trailer. Calf 756-7067.

SPECIAL RATES on furnished 2 bedroom mobile homes. $135 and up. No pets, no children 758 4541 or 754 9491.

TWO - 2 bedroom mobile homes, turnished, one in Griffon, one near Griffon. Two bedroom furnished log cabin located at Tic Bite. One bedroom furnished cottage located on Contentnea Creek. No pets. For appointment call 524-5428._

12X60,    2    bedroom,    partially

turnished, washer/dryer, air, 6 rn.iles from hospital. No pets. $175 plus deposit. Call 752 30 or 758 1800.

12x60    2 BEDROOMS, washer,

dr^er, ^carpet, air. No pets Call

2 BEDROOM Mobile Home for rent Call 756 4687.

2 BEDROOMS, washer, dryer, air, carpet. No pets. 756-0792._

2 BEDROOMS, all electric, 6 miles out on New Bern Highway No pets 756 0975.

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

No

2 BEDROOMS furnished

children, no pets Call 758 6679._

2 BEDROOM, furnished, washer, air, good location. No pets, no children Call 758 4857.

2 BEDROOMS, l bath 8 miles from Greenville. $160 a month, Speight Realty, 758 7741 evenings

2 BEDROOMS on wooded private lot 2 miles from Greenville No pets Married couples only. Lease and security. $160. 756 0070 alter 7 p.m

50X12, 2 bedrooms, air, washer, $160 month. $75 deposit. Call Tommy, 756 7815.

60X12, 2 bedrooms, air, washer, $170 month, $75 deposit. Call Tommy, 756 7815_

135 Oftice Space For Rent

DOWNTOWN, just oft mall. Singles and multiples. Coaveaient to courthouse. Call 756 0041 or 756 3466.

FOR RENT 2500 square feet Suitable for office space or com mercial. 604 Arlington Boulevard 756 8111.

OFFICES FQjR LEASE Contact JT or TommyWilliams. 756 7815.

137 Resort Property For Rent

EMERALD ISLE beach house. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air. Cable TV $300 a week. 919 354 3301.

137 Resort Property For Rent. 1142 Roommate Wanted

ATLANTIC BEACH/ EMERALD ISLE

SUMMER RENTALS

3/4 bedroom, 2-t bath units com pletely turnished, most with TVs Sleeps 6 12 on ocean or with Ian tastic view. Families only

Call KETTERER REALTY 1-354-2254

FEMALE ROOMMATES needed to share very nice house ' 2 block from campus $75 plus '4 utilities For first and or second session 752 0913

FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to share 2 bedroom house Working person preferred Call 756 3571 after 5pm________

144

Wanted To Buy

138

Rooms For Rent

AIR CONDITIONED room with kitchen privileges tor summer term for 2 students 1/2 block from college Call 752 3546

LARGE PRIVATE ROOM for rent $25 per week Nice neighborhood, nice clean house Light cooking 758 7904anytime

FOR RENT both sessions summer school Wilson Acres Apartments $90 deposit plus and ' 3 utilities Rent $130 per month May free Call 758 0847 between 7 10 pm__

142 Roommate Wanted

RESPONSIBLE MALE roommate wanted to share 3 bedroom home with2others 752 1579 atter6p m ROOMMATE NEEDED $65 rent', '4 utilities 752 3103

ANTIQUE BRASS BED Call Jean 3t. 756 3500 days or 756 9142 nights___

148

Wanted To Rent

CHRISTIAN COUPLE desires house to rent or buy Must occupy by June 1 'Preferably within 15 miles radius of Greenville Call Robin 758 9505, 9 a m to 5 p m or

Lj?7ry 778 2978 after 1 p m____

COUPLE SEEKING 2 bedroom house or duplex apartment, $200 $225 rent Must allow pet Call collect 522 5794 for Paula

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 _____ ___

3 MATURE MALE medicar stu dents wish 3 0/ 4 bedroom house near hospital or country club 758 4221 anytime

THE REAL ESTATE

CORNER

New Homes

By Builder

Two new 3 bedroom homes presently being constructed by Preferred Properties In Westhaven IV: Oreatroom, formal dining, large master bedrooms, walk-in closets, decks, and beautiful wooded lots. Buyer may select finishing items if purchased now. Call Tommie Little or Tom Chapin at 756-7799 or nights 811 756-1507 or 756-7633.

OFFICE OPEN 9-12 SATURDAY AND 1-5 SUNDAY

On Cali This Weekend SUE HENSON Realtor

During NON-Office Hours Please Call

756-3375

DUFFUS REALTY, INC.

7564395

HERE IT IS FOLKS!

Nearly 13V2 acres of land with a 1767 square foot home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 car garage. Central heat and air. Highway 33 East -10 miles from Greenville. $69,900.

ALDRIDGE & SOUTHERLAND

756-3500 Dick Evans, REALTOR 758-1119

OWNER BEING TRANSFERED SO DONT MISS THIS CHANCE To be the first to Inspect this contemporary ranch located on a iTs x 177 lot in Cherry Oaks. Offers sparkling hardwood floor, sunken great room with fireplace and cathedral ceiling, 3 bedrooms, 21/2 baths and garage with work area. Numerous extras.

Call ABC.REALTY for details.

_752-3942

Lexington Square Phase HI

Near The Greenville Athletic Club

2 And 3 Bedroom Units Ottered

J.R. Yorke Construction Co., Inc.

355-2286

REALTY, INC. 355-6889

NEW LISTING

207 N. Harding Street

Large, corner lot gracefully shaded by trees Is the setting for this brick veneer ranch home in the university area. Features include front porch, living room with fireplace, separate dining room, kitchen complete with range & breakfast bar, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, enclosed garage with washer/dryer hookups & attic access. The 4 year old heat system, new paint/wallpaper, and 9% fixed rate loan assumption with total payments of $230.78 makes this one worth seeing!

$47,500.

Elaine Troiano REALTOR 756-6346

See Our Other Listings Under HOUSES FOR SALE

^INVESTMENT POTENTIAL. This home has 4-5 Xbedrooms and two full baths and could easily be con-verted to a duplex. If youre in need of a good tax shelter, let us show you this one. VA loan assumption. Low Twenties. Break even cash flow.

FISH, SKI AND SAIL on the Pamlico. Cute cottage available now at Core Point for $29,500. You'll love the view from the glassed in room overlooking the river. Some owner financing possible, too.

UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM. Why pay rent when you can own a 2 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath townhouse for the same monthly payment as rent. This unit was recently re-carpeted. Call today. Low $30s.

-SELECT YOUR OWN lot in convenient Lindbeth. 1020 -square feet. 2 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths. Cape Cod style .duplex. Builder pays closing costs and discount points. Move in for under $1400. Energy efficient heat pump. Call today for this unusual opportunity. Beat the rent racket with low payments.

NEED PAYMENTS less than $300 per month? Try our shared-ownership loan on this duplex near the hospital and get your payments below $300 per month on this two bedroom townhouse. Select your own decor and move in for approximately $1550. Offered at $38,000.

NEW OFFERINGS

DREXELBROOK

Immaculate best describes this 3 bedroom home with all large rooms and spacious back yard, not to mention the rear sc.aened proch. Over 2000 square feet in one of Greenville's most prestigious areas. New heat pump and roof. Call today. Offered in the upper $80s.

INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY

This twe-bedroom ranch offers excellent tax advantages with little initial investment. Call today. Offered In the $20s. Approximately 1000'square feet, oil heat and window air condition unit.

SIMPSON

Dont ignore this home! If you're looking for a spacious home in a wooded, country setting it may be the one. This solidly built brick 3 bedroom home is carpeted throughout and has beautiful stained woodwork, living room and cozy den and family kitchen, $48.500.

-NEW LISTING. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. New construction. Townhouse with 12% fixed rate financing. Less than $2000 equity required. Available in May. Select your own decor. Off Hwy. 43 near the Med school. Offered in the mid $30s.

NEW LISTING. Save time and money and assume this FHA loan of 81/2% with payments of $292.87 on this 1500 square feet home conveniently located to the university. Spacious great room with fireplace, dining room, fenced-in back yard with a garage. Offered in the $40s. NEED A TOWNHOUSE but payments like rent. Assume this loan on a two bedroom townhouse in Windy Ridge and move in March. Fixed rate at 12 3/4% plus owner financing if necessary. Offered at $42,000.

9% FmHA LOAN ASSUMPTION available in Hollywood Acres. One of the finest FmHA homes on the market. Over 1123 square feet of heated space plus carport. Wont last long at this interest rate. Call today. Low $40s.

JUST MINUTES from the hospital, this well designed 3 bedroom ranch has nearly 300 square feet plus 16x20 outside storage workshop. Wood stove included. 9 2/3% VA loan assumption. Full garage with automatic door opener. Built-in desk in den. Offered at $60,900.

FLEXIBILITY. This home, ponveniently located to the university, qualified as a single family dwelling dr one area can be used as a source of income to assist in making that monthly investment. FHA 8 1/2% assumption with total payments of $292.87. Seller will consider points on new financing. Offered at $46,500.

LOOKING FOR AN executive home? Need 2576 square feet, 4 bedrooms and 3 full baths but can't really afford the prices in Greenville? Take a look at this with all the modern conveniences. Large country kitchen with oak cabinets and center bar with Jenn-Aire range plus breakfast nook and formal dining room. Large family room with fireplace plus formal living room with fireplace. Extra large closets and baths. Call today! Convenient to Greenville, Farmville, Wilson and Tarboro. Offered In the mid $60s.

A DREAM COME TRUE! Country home located on an acre of trees, azaleas and camelias abound. This beautifully decorated 3,000 square foot home has been completely renovated with central heat and air conditioning, 2 1/2 baths, formal dining, living room with fireplace, chairrail and crown molding, four bedrooms, 19'x36 family room and double car garage. Conveniently located within twenty minutes of industry in Rober-sonville, Williamston and Greenville. Offered at $88,000.

9 1/2% VA LOAN assumption available in Griffon with total payments of less than $350.00. This home has 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, family room with fireplace. Home is heated and cooled by heat pump. Call today. Offered at $40,000.

HORSESHOE ACRES. 11 1/2% FHA loan assumption just off Stantonsburg Highway near hospital. This ranch has 3 bedrooms and 2 full baths with lots of storage and large lot. Call today for appointment. Mid $50s. Low equity.

GREENFIELD. Ayden. FHA 235 Lpan assumption. Not many of this kind left. This home has 2 bedrooms, large master bedroom with 1112 baths. Fireplace and carport. Call today. Low $40s.

THE PINES, Ayden. New home available with 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths and over 1450 square feet of living space. This home has a large family room with fireplace, separate utility room and an energy efficient heat pump. Call today. Offered in the $50s.

FARMVILLE. Beautiful 4 bedroom home with 2 bedrooms upstairs, two downstairs, 2 full baths with formal living room and dining room. This home has a rustic den that will make everyone feel at home. 2 car carport with lots of storage. Walking distance to all schools. Call today. Low $70s.

NEW OFFERING in Club Pines. Get in Club Pines for $74,000. This Williamsburg decor may suit your needs with hardwood floors, brick patios, cozy den with firfplace, lots of extra trim and built-ins. Double garage^ or playroom is offered. 1 year warranty. Call today and' move in now. Owner will paint and you select the colors.

THE CHOICE is yours! Assume the existing loan of 9 7/8% with total payments of $314.48 or seller will pay points for a new loan. Convenient to the hospital.

$40s.    ,    A

QUAIL RIDGE

Three bedroom flat with deck and lots of backyard. Offered in the mid $60s, occupy in June and select your decor. Last Weaver plan available until late this year. Builder pays closing costs. Get the best at Quail Ridge.

CHERRY OAKS. Like traditional exteriors with a modern floor plan. Room and more room in this plan with over 1600 square feet. Master bedroom 16 xl2, walk-in closet, large breakfast area plus dining room. Separate laundry room near fhe bedrooms. Fully ap-pfianced and under construction. Select your own decor. Lyw$70s.

CLUB PINES. Luxury abounds in this new 3 bedroom home to be completed in May. Wet bar, extra molding and excellent floor plan. Select your own decor in style. Offered at $81,600. Excellent financing available.

FHA 235 loan assumption. Wooded lot in Oakgrove. Offered at $41,500 includes carport and plenty of shaded privacy on a dead end street. Income should be under $21,000. Call today.

ELMHURST. Located on a quiet, dead end street close to shopping and the university. Lovely, eye appealing ranch features formal rooms, kitchen with din.ette, bver-sized family room with fireplace and built-ins. 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, deck. Almost new roof and gas heat. Drapes remain. A real buy in the upper $60s.

CAMELOT. Under construction, this Cape Cod has 1612 square feet, 3 bedrooms and deck on wooded lot. An exceptional buy at $72,500. Call today. To be completed in June for you to select your own decor,

CLUB PINES. Be the first to see this elegant home in one of Greenvilles best neighborhoods. Large family room, 2 car garage, loaded with extras. All formal areas. 83/4% assumable loan. Mid $80*s. Call today.

FANTASTIC FOR FAMILY living. Located in one of Greenvilles most prestigious areas an on a well landscaped corner lot. this home is Ideal for entertaining and family living. Quality built with 5 bedrooms, or 1 bedroom downstairs with built-ins can be used as a study, 3 full baths, fenced in back yard. Close to the university. A must see priced in the upper $90s.

REALTY WORLD CLARK- BRANCH, REALTORS

Marie Davis 756-5402

Tim Smith 752-9811

r*

Ray Holloman 753-5147

Gene Quinn 756-6037 on call

Sharon Lewis 756-9987

756-6336

John Jackson

756-4360

I

RUSTIC BEAUTY. A touch of country in Windermere. Over an acre of wooded lot surrounds this cedar home built for the warm of heart. Four bedrooms, three baths, cozy kitchen with eat-in area and separate dining room. Garage plus large front porch and wooden deck out back. 12 3/4% loan assumption. Call todayrLow $100s.





Ayden Plans May Day in The Park

Aydens second May Day in the Park celebration will be held at the Third Street Park Saturday beginning at 10 a.m. Festivities include music, the opening of the new Toddler Park, footraces, softball and Frisbee throws.    ,    <

A picnic is also planned with the Ayden Rescue Squad serving its annual barbeque pork and chicken dinner in the park at lunchtime. Plates are $3^h.

The day will begin with music at 10 a.m. Guests will be introduced and the Toddler Park dedicated at 10:30-10:45 a.m. From 10:45-11:15 a.m. students from Ayden Middle and Ayden Eementary'schools will perform under the direction of Rebecca Norcott.

A Frisbee contest for children under 8 years old will be held from 11:15 a.m.- noon. Footraces are scheduled for noon-12:30 p.m. and a tennis exhibition and tournament will be from 12:30-3 p.m. Mixed softball (three innings) will be played from 1-3 p.m.on/W To Be TV Guest

Dr. Gene D. Lanier will be the featured guest on Tar Heel Portraits to be aired over WITN-TV at 1 p.m. Sunday. The program is hosted by Dr. Leo W. Jenkins, chancellor emeritus of East Carolina University.

Jenkins and Lanier will discuss the current ccene in North Carolina coceming censorship attempts and Laniers activities as chairman of the Intellectural Freedom Committee of the N.C. Library Association.Nurses' Society Inducts 44 Members

Forty-four student and graduate nurses were inducted into East Carolina Universitys Beta Nu chapter of Sigma Theta Tau honor society recently at the chapters annual ceremony in Jenkins Fine Arts Center, campus Saturday.

Dr. Helen Yura, professor and director of graduate studies at Old Dominion University, was the keynote speaker.

The new members include three nursing community leaders: Sylvia Hunt of Ahoskie, Marilee Schmelzer of Greenville and Dr. Geraldine Jordan of Rocky Mount.In The AreaLions' Broom Sale To Start

The Greenville Host Lions Club will launch its annual broom sale Monday. Richard McKibben, project chairman, said the fund-raising project to help blln<l citizens will continue in the Greenville area until around July with club members conducting house-to-house and other solicitation efforts.

Lions Gubs have sold products made by blind citizens for approximately 40 years. In 1982, Lions sold nearly $750,000 worth qf blind made items.Cadets Receive Commissions

Brig. Gen. Stanton R. Musser was to be guest speaker at the 33rd annual Air Force Reserve Officers Training Corps commissioning ceremony today at East Carolina Uniyersity.

Musser is vice commander of the Ogen Air Logistic Center at HUIAFB, Utah.

ECU seniors receiving commissions as second lieutenants were Greta L. Bartley, Steven D. Benton, Mack W. Biggs, George Bunty, Donald C. Carter, Kevin T. Chappell, Sampson ^ E. Dixon, Keith D. Golden, ^ Olga E. Herring, Scott D. Irons, Stephn R. Jones, Gregory D. Lee, Andre L. Lovett, Carol A. Mohl, Keith A. Pranke, William G, Roberson, Laurine S. Ross, Gerald D. Schott, Henry P. Sermons, Thomas G. Thompson, Debra A, West, William B. Westbury, John W. White and Anthony R. Williams.

GEN. STANTON MUSSER

State Employees Contribute To Hospital Language Society Inducts Members

The North Carolina State Employees Association, in its most successful volunteer project, has raised $10,000 for the Lenox Baker Crippled Childrens Hospital in Durham.

More than 3,000 individuals contributed to the project, which will purchase television sets and other educational-recreational equipment for the hospital, project chairman Kay Goins of Spruce Pine said.Parents Form West Point Club

Andy Warren of Greenville has been elected treasurer of the newly organized North Carolina West Point Club, a parents group formed to recognize the 70 Tar Heels now enrolled at the U.S. Military Academy.

The current cadets include Tim Faulkner of Winterville and Van Warren of Gi^nville.

The club is designed to provide support and fellowship to the families and to help new cadets face the challenges of being a West Point Cadet. It will also supply information and guidance to parents who have children being considered for attendance at the academy.

Persons wanting more information on the club may contact its president. Gene Thompson, at 6017 Caroline Drive, Matthews, N.C., 28105.

Five students and a faculty member in the East Carolina University Department of Foreign Languages and Literature have been inducted into ECUs Sigma Upsilon chapter of Phi Sigma Iota honor society in foreign languages.

The new members include Patricia Hiner of Greenville, Jean Christy Maroules of Kinston and Dr Yuri Vidov Karageorge of the ECU faculty.

Awards were presented to retiring faculty member Dr. Agnes Hostettler and to three outstanding senior students: Julia Adams of New London, Arminda Israel of Greenville and Linda Pridgen of Murfreesboro. Faculty adviser to the chapter os Dr. Joseph Fernandez.Pitt Schools Air 'Viewpoint'

"The Role of the School Psychologist will be the topic of this weeks Pitt County Schools Viewpoint, a radio show aired on several local stations.

Host Barry Gaskins will talk with Susan Danin, school psychologist for Pitt County schools.

'The show is scheduled at the following times and stations: Saturday, 7:30 a.m. WITN-FM, 8:30 a.m. WGHB-AM, 8:25 a.m. WOOW-AM; Sunday, 8:30 a.m. WRQR-FM; 1:06 p.m. WNCT-AM, and Monday, 3:05 p.m. WBZQ-FM.

For further information contact Pitt County Community Schools at 752-6106, extension 249.

8 oz. Charcoaled

Mothers Day Special

Rib Eye Steak    5.99

Baked Potato, Salad

Free Banana Pudding Dessert For All Mothers

(Sunday May 8 Only)

Your choice of one seafood or meat and two vegetables

Meats and Seafood

Shrimp Trout Oysters Deviled Crabs Crab Cakes Clam Strips

Flounder Fried Chicken BBQ Chicken Country Style Steak Veal Cutlets Hamburger Steak

3.00

(Includes beverage and tax)

All You Can Eat Seafood Bonanza

Friday - Saturday and Sunday

Your Choice Of Any Or All

Seafood

Vegetables

Beets

Slaw

Boiled Potatoes Potato Salad French Fries Yams

Black-eyed Peas Rice

Mashed Potatoes String Beans Apple Sauce Brunswick Stew Cabbage

Turkey & Dressing Plus 2 Vegetables

*3.00

Hours: Sunday-Thursday 11:00 AM-9:00 PM Friday

11:00 A.M.to 10:00 P.M. Saturday 4:00 P.M. to 10:00 P.M.

Barbecu

Oystcp Bap P

Take Outs Welcome

710 N. Greene St. Greenville, N.C. 27834

Catering Specialists We Cater: Anything Anywhere AnytimeFire Station To Hold Open House

Open House will be held at the Carolina Township Volunteer Fire Department Station No. 2 in Stokes Sunday from 3 to 5 p.m. The newly finished station is located beside Oak Grove Christian Church.Moots Chlrged In Assault Case

Greenville police arrested Frank Wanamaker Moots Jr., 23,_ of 158 West Gum Road early today on charges of assault with a deadly weapon, a knife, and assault by pointing a gun.

Chief Glenn Cannon said Moots was charged after James Mitchell Boyd of Route 8, Greenville, was stabbed in the side and threatened with a shotgun.Gulati To Appear On Program

This weeks ECU Concepts Sunday at 8 a.m. on radio station WOOW will feature a discussion by Dr. Umesh Gulati of the ECU School of Business of the factors leading Japans high speed industrial growth.

Gulati, who was a U.S. representative to the recent Japan-U.S.A. Business Conference in Tokyo, will also comment on how future trade agreements with Japan can help North Carolina industry.

James Rees of the ECU Department of Drama and Speech is host for the 15-minute program.Woman Charged For DUI Twice

A 28-year-old Simpson woman was arrested by Greenville police twice Thursday on driving under the influence charges.

Officers said Wanda Best Ohara was charged with driving under the influence and driving the wrong direction on the wrong side of the road after her car collided with a Pitt County Memorial Hospital ambulance about 6:30 a.m. on N.C.

11 about 600 feet north of the Airport Road intersection. Investigators said practically no damage resulted from the collision.

Ms. Ohara was arrested on driving under the influence charges again about 10:35 p.m. on East Fifth Street, police said.PCC Joins Nursing Celebration

Pitt Community College, with about 150 nursing students, is participating this week in a celebration of Nurses Week by the North Carolina community college system.

PCC President William E. Fulford Jr. said the college offers a nursing education options program in addition to an associate degree in nursing program. The college admits 75 students to these programs each fall.

Approximately 50 students each year attend PCC on a part-time basis taking general college courses which count toward the associate degree in nursing.Shooting Brings Assault Charge

Charlie Edward Highsmith, 27, of 400B Howell St. was arrested early today by Greenville police and charged with assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill.

Chief Glenn Cannon said Highsmithallegedly shot Curtis Brown, 35, of Paris Avenue in the face and chest with a shotgum. The shooting occurred between 3 a.m. and 4 a.m. on Albemarle Avenue, the chief said.

Highsmith was placed under a $10,000 bond pending court action in the case.Police Investigate Two Break-Ins

Greenville police today were continuing their investigation of break-ins at Coreys Exxon service station and at 1609 H(^kins Drive Thursday.

Chief Glenn Cannon said thieves broke out a window to gain entrance to the service station and took four tires, valued at $260. He said thieves entered the front door of the Hopkins Drive home and took $300 in cash from a bedroom.Man Held On Exposure Charge ^

Greenville police arrested Anthony Jennings Kinlaw, 22, of 407H Eastbrook Apartments Thursday on indecent exposure charges. Chief Glenn Cannon said Kinlaw was taken into custody about 11:30 a.m. after allegedly exposing himself to Sue Holloman of 401G Eastbrook Apartments.Faculty Member Speaks At Conference

Dr. Sylvia Brown of the East Carolina University School of Nursing faculty addressed a recent research conference in San Francisco.

She spoke on Leadership and Management Competencies Needed by Nec^hyte Nurses at the Sigma Theta Tau Tri-Chapter Research Conference. Sigma Theta Tau is the national honor society in the field of nursing.Counsel To Receive ABT Award

Annie Marable Brown, a guidance counselor at D.H. Conley High School, has been selected to receive the annual distinguished service award of the A&T State University National Alunrni Association. The award will be presented to Ms. Brown during the associations annual awards luncheon Saturday on the A&T campus.

Ms. Brown will be cited for her longtime involvement in the universitys alumni and student recruitment programs.

During the 1982-83 academic year, Ms. Brown took more than 100 high school students to the campus. She serves as vice president of the Pitt County Chapter of the A&T Alumni Association.

Ms. Brown has taught in Ayden and Belhaven as well as Cambridge, Md., and Philadelphia. She served as a counselor in Greenville and Winterville.

She has been cited by the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction, the N.C. Conference of Branches of the NAACP. the United States Navy Recruiting Command and the N C Status of Women.

She formerly chaired the Ayden Good Neighbor Council and the Ayden Citizens Advisory bounty. She also served on the Ayden Housing Authority.Jail-A -Thon Pledges Grow

Pledges of $10,638 to the Greenville Jaycees-sponsored Danny Wood Memorial Jail-A-Thon have been received to date, according to co-chairman Shay Weir. '

He said the Jaycees had support and assistance from 80 jailees, the Greenville Police Department, the Pitt County Sheriff Department, the Winterville Police Department, the Ayden Police Department and American Cancer Society volunteers.

Proceeds will go to the Pitt County Cancer Society.

ANNIE MARABLE BROWN


Title
Daily Reflector, May 6, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - 30442
Date
May 06, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
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NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
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