Daily Reflector, May 12, 1983


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INSIDE TODAYTHIS IS SPRING?

Cold and a snowstorm in Utah and Wyoming combined to claim lives of two motorists and stranded scores of truckers. (Page 11)

INSIDE TODAYTHE LEGISLATURE

Its beauty versus money in arguments over proposed law prohibiting mountaintop development in the scenic f^.C. mountains. (Page 15)SPORTS TO0AVLEFTY DRIESELL

Maryland basketball coach Lefty Driesell spoke at D.H. Conley last night, while back home students called for his resignation. (Page 17)DAILY REFLECTOR

102ND YEAR

NO. 113

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION

GREENVILLE, N.C. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 12, 1983

32 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

County Budget Hearing

,    Budgeteers

Sheriff Asks More Personnel Threatenina

increase in crime this year. Sometime its the coming year, as compared with a oresent budm nf        W

Pupil Tests

By STUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer

The Pitt County Board of Commissioners, as the first step in preparing a budget for the 1983-1984 fiscal year, continued to hear requests Wednesday from various county departments.

The total budget for fiscal 1983-1984, including local, state and federal rvenue (not including state and federal funds that go directly to schools), is expected to be about the same as for the current fiscal year - about $23 million.

The Sheriffs Departments request was the first heard by commissioners Wednesday. Sheriff Ralph Tyson asked for $971,609 in the coming fiscal year, as compared to current appropriations totaling $755,247.

Included in the proposal was a request for 10 additional men - two investigators, two narcotics officers, two court officers, two field deputies, an additional'identification officer, and a crime prevention and juvenile officer.

Tyson told the board, We dont have enough people. We've

State Board Actions

had an 11 percent increase in crime this year. Sometime its impossible to follow up on the cases that we have.

Tyson also asked the board for $272,195 ($229,792 this year) to operate the jail for 1983-1984, and $116,976 to operate the county communications center ($89,946 this year). The proposals included a request for two additional jailers and two additional dispatchers for the communications center.

Gene Windham, who heads the countys data processing center, asked for $620,660 for the coming fiscal year, as compared to the present budget of $580,737.

Windham said $265,952 of the proposed budget is for the purchase of scanner equipment for use by the city and county school systems.

He noted that the data processing center will develop pupil accounting, pupil scheduling, bus scheduling, student testing, grade reporting and other programs for the two school systems during 1983-1984.

The county inspections departments chief code enforcement officer, John Payne, requested a budget of $67,259 for

the coming year, as compared with a present budget of $73,698, while Don Davenport, acting county planner, requested $38,445 as compared to the current budget of $48,929.

Davenport, who is assistant county manager, also presented the budget proposed to operate the countys solid waste disposal program ior 1983-1984 - $601,327.

Davenport noted that the major difference between the proposed budget and the budget for the current year -$979,930 - is the deletion of $300,000 in fees for contract hauling of solid waste containers.

The board, earlier this year, approved the purchase of three trucks to be used to haul 40 cubic yard containers from the countys solid waste disposal sites to the landfill. County hauling of the containers is scheduled to begin about Aug. 1.

The proposed solid waste-landfill budget includes $92,500 to prepare and pave solid waste disposal sites at Fountain and

(PieasetumtoPagel6)

Set Changes In Education Regulations

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The state Board of Education approved a series of major changes in regulations last week, including a requirement that teachers be certified in their field by Junel.

J. Arthur Taylor, director

of the Division of Certification of the Department of Public Instruction, said the board had studied the issue of teacher field certification for five years, and decided to implement the program.

He said there has been substantial dispute in the

$100 Billion

WASHINGTON (AP) - The Reagan Administration told Congress today that the current national debt limit of $1.29 trillion must be increased by $100 billion by the end of the month or the government will be unable to meet its obligations.

Action on the debt limit bill this month is absolutely essential, Deputy Treasury Secretary R.T. McNamar told the House Ways and Means Committee.

Without action, the current debt limit will be reached by May 31, he said, and the government will need to determine which obligations should te paid ... or, indeed, whether, for the first time in history, the United States will default on its securities

The debt limit ceiling restricts the amount the federal government may borrow to pay its obligations. Thus, if the ceiling is reached, no additional money can be borrowed.

Reaching the ceiling affects government securities and could have an impact on other obligations, including Social Security benefit checks, federal payroll checks, unemployment benefits and defense contracts.

KEFLKCTOR

HOiLlflf

education field over the proposal.

The board also ruled that: Teachers must meet minimum standards and show a general understanding in specific areas such as English, social studies, math, science, art and ^ music. Prior to last weeks meeting, it was understood they would have a basic understanding.

- Public schools must become actively involved in evaluating student teachers Previously it was mostly voluntary.

- Teachers must take a tougher National Teachers Association test before they can apply to the state for certification.

- Once they are certified.

they must get a two-year certificate and after that, on-the-job performance is evaluated and they must pass before they can get a permanent teachers certificate.

The board approved giving a break to those teaching out of field now, saying they can have a one-year grace period before they must begin taking college courses to get credit in those fields.

The action makes North Carolina one of 36 states with in-field teaching requirements.

John Dornan, executive secTetary of the North Carolina Association of Educators, said today his group has four objections to the new rules.

He said the new requirement should have been phased in gradually, rather than mandated within a year; that there is no general agreement over how narrow the regulation should be for teaching out of field; that many of the problems were originally caused by school systems scheduling teachers for fields outside of their certification; and that the state is not providing financial assistance for additional education that will be required.

Dornan said some educators did not object to the changes, because there is a desire in the education community that teachers are doing something about education problems.

I think problems in finding certified math and science teachers was the real catalyst. There was a rush to show we were doing something immediately to step up to the problem.... We concede there are problems with people out of field, and people having to go back for more training nvakes eminent sense. Our concern is that people who came in under another set of rules are caught in the transition. They are not only found wanting (in their training), but they have to pay for their retraining.

We are not opposed to the concept of retraining and upgrading, but it should be a cooperative Venture, he said.

90,000 Troops 'Unwelcome'

f'M 7.52-1336

M

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

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

VOLUNTEER NOMINATIONS ASKED

The Pitt County Involvement Council has asked Hotline to appeal for nominations for its volunteer services recognition, held in conjunction with a statewide program with the same purpose.

Categories in which nominations may be made include: individual human services, individual community volunteer leader, administrator-coordinator of volunteers, youth volunteer, senior citizen volunteer, disabled person volunteer, school volunteer, one-on-one volunteer, community volunteer organization, church-religious volunteer group, and business-industry volunteer involvement. The selections will be announced locally and the recipients will be honored by the governor in the fall.

Nomination forms may be obtained by calling Pitt County Community Schools, 752-6106, and should be returned to Alice Keene, 1717 W Fifth St.

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) The Israeli troops which would leave I^banon under the proposed withdrawal agreement are among some 90,000 troops from nearly 20 countries now in Lebanon. Here is how they are arrayed.

-The estimated 25,000 Israelis remain entrenched in the southern third of the country, with their northern frontline stretching from just below Beirut, into the central mountains along the Beirut-Damascus highway up to the town of Sofar, in the eastern hills above the Bekaa, then southeast to Mount Hermon.

-The estimated 35,000 Syrians hold the north, from the seacoast about 22 miles north of Beirut, at the town of Helwe, bulging down to the north side of the Beirut-Damascus road east of Sofar, then generally southeast to the Syrian border.

The estimated 10,000 Palestinian guerrillas, including some regular Palestine Liberation Army units with Syrian officers, can be found throughout Syrian-controlled territory, but mostly in the Bekaa Valley and the northern port of Tripoli.

-About 1,000-1,500 Iranian Revolutionary Guards are stationed in and near Baalbek, the ancient city in the Bekaa, and a small contingent of Libyan advisers are reported to be with PLO units in the southwest part of the Syrian-occupied area.

-The 5,300-man multinational force remains in greater Beirut. The French patrol the center of Beirut, the Italians just to the south of the city limits, and the Americans the international airport south of the Italians, and the British the area next to the Americans.

-The U N. peacekeepers remain near the Israeli border. The force consists of contingents of up to to 700 soldiers each from Senegal, Fiji, the Netherlands, France, Finland, Ireland, Sweden, Italy, Ghana and Norway.

Foreign Troops in Lebanon

1,500 Iranian Ravolutlonary Quarda.

FOREIGN FORCES - Map locates areas occupied by the troops and forces from nearly 20 countries now arrayed in Lebanon. (AP Laserphoto)

By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) -Administration officials succeeded today in getting members of a legislative ' budget committee to change their minds and reinstate money for annual testing in first and second grade But members of the House-Senate Appropriations Committee said they could consider eliminating the tests in grades 1 and 2 before the end of the session. The cutback would save the state an estimated $325,000 in

1983-84 and $327,300 in

1984-85.

The threatened cut brought an angry reaction from Gov. Jim Hunt, who sent his aides to lobby legislators to change their minds. A number of Hunt representatives were present for the meeting this morning.

We cannot afford to take a step backward in education, especially at a time when people agree we need more rigor in the schools and we need to expect more of students, said Gary Pearce, a Hunt spokesman.

Stale School Superintendent Craig Phillips, however, supported the committee action.

The test has not been as productive (in grades 1 and 2) as in 3, 6 and 9, Phillips said. It is now clear that we dont need to carry through. Sen. Don Kincaid, R-Caldwell, chastized the Appropriations Committee ,for changing its mind.

I can't believe that we were right one day and wrong the next, Kincaid said.

The Appropriations Committee today also approved 1 percent reductions in the 1983-85 budgets for community colleges and the University of North Carolina system. The cutbacks would allow administrators to determine where to make reductions.

The Appropriations Committee is looking for ways to cut up to $80 million from the 1983-85 budget proposed by Hunt. They must find the money, because legislative analysts say Hunt overestimated the state revenues by $80 million.

So far, $45.1 million has been cut from the budget.

Since 1977, annual achievement t^sts have been given to students in grades 1,

2,3, 6 and 9, Eleventh grade students also must pass a competency test to graduate

Elimination of the testing program in first and second grade highlights a lengthy argument among educators about the value of the tests in the early grades.Some have complained that the tests are too time consuming for the information which they yield, The (education) subcommittee felt that testing in

(grades) 1 and 2 was not nearly as valuable as testing at all other areas, said Sen. Marvin Ward, D-Forsyth. It is valuabie but other types of testing may be almost as valuable.'

Educators also, have argued about what knd of test to administer -criterion reference, which scores students in various categories, or norm reference, which ranks students against national averages.

The state commission on testing has urged the Legislature to give it flexibility to switch from a criterion reference test in first and second grade to a norm reference test. A bill to do that passed the House in the 1981 session but failed in the Senate.

Meanwhile, the education subcommittee scaled back its recommended cuts in money for Department of Public Instruction administration. Ward said the group overestimated how much money could be cut without hurting departmental operations.

The recommended cutbacks went from $1 million for 1983-85 to $363,099, The recommended cutbacks for the controllers office went from $289,531 to $96,510.

Call Meeting

The City Council has scheduled an emergency call meeting for Friday morning to consider a resolution authorizing the attorneys to file on behalf of the city and Greenville Utilities Commission an intervention in an electric service area dispute between the city of Fayetteville and the electric membership corporation serving that area.

The meeting, called by Mayor Percy Cox, will be held at 10:30 a.m. in the first floor conference room at city hall.

WEATHER

Fair tonight, temperatures in lower 50s. Mostly sunny Friday with hi^ near 80

And We Have

Page 13-How they voted Page 16-Obituaries Page 20 - Beating the birds

Page 21-Area items

Quotable

George Santayana said it: The young man who has not wept is a savage, and the old man who will not laugh is a fool.

Parks Commission Votes No Voc. Center Accord

By JERRY RAYNOR

Reflector Staff Writer

Members of the Greenville Recreation and Parks Commission Wednesday ni^t voted to not enter into a joint agreement with Eastern Carolina Vocational Center for use of the centers indoor Olympic pool. The possibility of a joint agreement has been under study by a commission from both agencies for several weeks.

Mrs. Sydney Womack, one of four committee members studying the feasibility on the part of the Recreation and Parks Department for entering into the proposed joint agreement, reported, The committee feels we cannot

justify a joint venture at this time. It is our recommendation we do not enter into an agreement with ECVC now, and later if funding allows, we can look again into working out something.

Other members of the Recreation and Parks Commission committee are Lib Proctor, Dan Earnhardt and Dr, Carl Wille.

Mrs. Womack noted that ECVC Recreation Director Ross Boyer and assistant city attorney Mac McCarley had been helpful in working with the committee.

The tight recreation budget situation for the department has been cited as the prime motivating f^tor for the decisiop to delay a

joint use agreement.

Dan Eariardt and Becky McDonald were named as a nominating committee to name nominees for commission chairman and vice chairman for the coming year. These will be named at the June meeting, which has been set for June 1, one week earlier than the regular second Wednesday of the month meeting. At that time, the commission wiil hold its annual supper meeting along with a tour of facilities.

Senior citizens who recently attended a meeting in Wilmington and won several top places in the competition wer(^recogniied for

their achievements.

A lecture-slide show on the ongoing joint East Carolina University-Recreation and Parks Department environmental program was presented by Dr. Robert Wendling and George Moye. The slide program, Wendling told the commission, has recently been shown to Gov. Hunts Outdoors Committee where it created lots of excitement about this pilot project. Theres no other place in the state which has a natural facility the size of River Park North, Wendling added. Because of the ecological diversity of the area, it has almost unlimited potential for educational purposesand for community uses.    ^





2-The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C -Thursday, May 12.1983

Teaching Doctors A Mew Bedside Manner

At Wits^ End

By DANIEL Q. HANEY AP Science Writer

BOSTON (AP) - Medical schools are teaching a new approach to the. healing craft. Good doctors art? not arrogant know-it-alls in white coats. They ar sympathetic guides who gently steer their patients toward health.

You sit down together and you sort of negotiate out what it is that the patient really wants, says Dr. Paul Lesser, an advocate of the new medicine.

Mutual participation is what he calls this give-and-take strategy. For many doctors, and for some patients, too, it is an unsettling departure from the traditional examining room encounter, where the doctor tells you what to do, and you do it."

Yet medical school teachers say the new bedside manner is already catching on. Physicians are giving their patients more information, listening better to their

To Att^d Girls State

Girls State will be held June 12-18 at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. American Legion Auxiliary No. 39 will sponsor four girls.

Selected were Cindy Wallace, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Will Wallace, Sheila Craft, daughter of Mrs. Dona Craft, Michelle Connally, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, John T. Connally and Michelle Darden, daughter of Mr. and Mre. Kelly Darden.

Poppy Days will be held May 20-21. Members were reminded to call Sarah Ashton for details.

Carolina Connally, Michelle Connally and Jordan Markowski are new members.

Unit 39 has reached its 1983 membership goal.

Bridal

Policy

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

Wedding write-ups will be printed through the first week with a five by seven picture. During the second week with a wallet size picture and wTite-up giving less description and after the second week, just as an announcement. Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The Daily Reflector one week prior to the date of the wedding. All information should be typed or written neatly.

Rin Tin Tin, a dog star of the silent screen, was found abandoned in a German trench during World War I. An American , officer who was also a dog trainer took him home to California, where the dog enjoyed a long career at Warner Brothers. .

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complaints, offering them choices and compromising with them about treatment.

"It still makes physicians pretty uncomfortable to have to change to a different style df practice when they were trained in the old school, said Dr. Howard Brody, who teaches medical ethics at Michigan State University. But I find most younger physicians and many older ones are comfortable with this notion and open to the idea of discussion with patients.

The change is. in part, a reaction to theNaiinding growth of medical technology and know-how.

Electronic sorcery pumps life into the doomed with mazes of wires and machines and tubes. Doctors specialize in the ills of ever smaller parts of the body.

If theres any criticism of medicine today, its not a lack of technology, says Lesser. Rather, its the lack of the old, humane values.

As physicians become more sensitive to this, he says, the patient as a whole is being viewed, rather than a person with a variety of organ systems, each of which goes to a different specialist.

Lesser, a gastroenterologist at Cambridge Hospital, teaches about the doctor-patient relationship as part of a required course at Harvard Medical School called introduction to clinical medicine. Once it dealt mostly with taking histories and giving physicals. Now students learn about truthfulness, confidentiality and dealing with death.

'yThese sorts of things were never discussed in medical schools before, he said.

At Massachusetts General Hospital, Dr. John Stoeckle videotapes Harvard students interviews with patients, then plays them back.

We look at skills of eliciting information and communicating it, he says. Its sort of a self critique.

Stoeckle also teaches a course, called plain doctoring, in which stu-

Named To State Board

RALEIGH - Jean Darden of Greenville was named to the board of dii*ectors of the N.C. Womens Network during a meeting held here Saturday. Officers were also named.

Faye Skidmore of Charlotte is president. In exjDlaining the networks visions she said, The network seeks to improve the quality of womens lives in the state by providing the individual and organizational subscribes information, referral pd: coordinating services onJ^ues of concern to women./

Network subscribers approved by-laws which set forth an organizational structure which focuses on a subscription base rather than a membership base.

dents are reminded constantly that there is a perspective of the patient that is different from the doctors.

The new medicine didnt happen by itself. Patients demanded it. They asked what was being done to them and why. They wanteddto talk about their choices. Many doctors credit - or blame -the consufner movement.

Patients are taking the view that theyre buying a product or a service, says Dr. Jerry Blaine of the Lahey Clinic and Harvard Medical School. Just like when they buy cars, consumers want to be as fully informed as possible. I think thats 'as much responsible for the change in doctors attitudes as anything else. Doctors are also being sued for failing to tell patients about the possible dangerous side effects of treatment.

The fear of malpractice has led some physicians to be more concerned about getting the consent of the patient and making sure the patient is involved in the decision-making, said Brody.

Getting these ideas across to medical students is not always easy. Their first contact with patients is in big, impersonal teaching hospitals, places that treat the very sickest and most helpless.

In teaching hospitals, patients power to negotiate is least, and the doctor can so easily get away without having to negotiate, notes Dr. Peter B. Heaton of the University of Alberta in Edmonton.

Every day, he says, students and interns watch the work of specialized medical mechanics for whom techi-que is paramount and patients are, at times, secondary.

Sltudents get mesmerized by the wonders of science, and they forget that theyre still working with patients, Heaton said.

For the physician, taking the authoritarian, god-like approach is easier and faster than dickering with patients over care. Sometimes it works best.

"Very often things are happening so fast, the problems are so complex, that its easy to say, We dont have time to explain everything to the patient, because if we did, the patient would be dead,said Blaine.

Sometimes, too, doctors insist on giving their patients too much freedom. Instead of recommending a particular treatment, they simply tick off the patients choices.

Listing options and their statistical benefits may be an appropriate way of explaining something to a computer scientist but not to an 85-year-old woman who has all her life dealt with an authoritarian physician, said Lesser. Although you may believe in mutual participation as an ideal system, you want to tailor it to individual patients.

By Erma Bombeck

Mew Officers Installed

Young people nowadays are resisting marriage because they want guarantees. They want to know that before they say, I do, he will and shell try.

I dont blame em. Marriage is not a commitment to be taken lightly. Ive always felt there are several ways a couple can test themselves to see if they could survive a term as husband and wife.

1. Nurse him through a simple cold.

2. Have him give you directions anywhere.

3. Have a meaningful conversation.

4. See one another with your hair wet.

5. Hang a picture together. These are all stress

situations, but if you really want to test compatibility, you can go for the big one by playing Monopoly with your future spouse.

If I had played Monopoly with my husband just once before we were married, there is no doubt in my mind that today I would be on the arm of Duane Farquardt. If I saw my present husband across a crowded room. Id say, Lets get out of here, Duane, hes the turkey I was telling you about who once charged me $3,020 for landing on Park Place.

Something happens to a man when he sits down to play Monopoly.

His eyes become cold and impersonal, his jaw is set. He coolly surveys the entire board with the intensity of a hostess who has just found something moving in her raisin pudding.

As you throw the dice, he meets your gaze across the board and pronounces sharply, I own the Boardwalk. If you want to

Seminar Date Announced

This years eighth annual Family Living Seminar will be focusing on Computers and Families, Can They Interface? It will be held June 2 at the McKimmon Center, N.C. State University in Raleigh.

Some of the topics to be covered through address and/or concurrent session will be; The New Generation Gap - Computer Literacy, Who Can Be Computer Literate?, Present and Future Uses of Computers by Families, Do Professionals Need Re-Programming for the ComputerAge?

The seminar is designed to take an indepth look at the computer age and its impact on families - now and in the future, said Addie R. Gore, Pitt home economics extension agent.

For a brochure and details and registration form call the Extension Office at 752-2934.

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Slay in the game, youll have to sell me all your utilities. Ill give you $150 for all three.

ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY DOLLARS FOR ALL THREE! Is this the man talking for whom you have borne three children, picked lint off his socks, handwashed his elastic stockings, trimmed his hair over the ears when he couldnt get to the barber, burnt your fingers on his three-minute eggs, kissed goodnight when he had a lip full of Novocaine?

I told him one night There are winners and there are winners, but Lord, I hate a winner who smiles when he wins!

iSo all of . you people out there contemplating marriage (and you all know who you are), sit down at the Monopoly board and play a game. Better to know now that a man will not give you fake funny money when iUs just lying there in a box than to find out after youre married.

The installation of officers and distribution of funds to charities highlighted the welcome Wagon Club luncheon Wednesday. Clemencia Molano is the new president.

Other officers are: Kathy Sprau, first vice president; Barbara Hall, second; vice

president; Joellyn Cohen, recording secretary; June DeAndrea, corresponding secretary; Rita Cain, trea- surer; Mrs. Hall, parliamentarian; and Joan Zajdel, historian.

Committee chairmen include: Mary mst, membership -and reservations; Sara Stephenson, propective membership; Emily Lewis,

The first car to cross the United States took 52 days to travel from San Francisco to New York in 1903.

Ayden News

Gene Tripp is a patient in Pitt memorial Hospital.

Mr. and Mrs. William 0. Hurt are visiting relatives.

Martha G. Jacobson spent last week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Gooding.

Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Britt of Greensboro spent the weekend with Margaret Shelton and Nancy Shelton.

Mary T. Mayo, Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Tripp Jr., Mr and Mrs. Robert Lee Tripp spent the weekend in Virginia Beach, Va.

Walter Stroud is recuperating at home after being a surgical patient in Philadelphia, Pa.

Bill Johnson is a patient in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Harry Dail has returned home from Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Stocks and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Stroud spent several days recently in Florida.

Mae H. Barrow is a patient in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Billy Harper of Hopewell, Va. was a local visitor last week.

Jerry Brill of Raleigh was a local visitor last week.

newsletter and publicity; Lynda Thompson, sunshine.

The installation ceremony was conducted by Jackie Heath and Mae McKee, Welcome Wagon hostesses.

Mrs. Hall, outgoing president, announced the following donations: Heart Fund, $25; Hospice, $200; Pitt Community College Schol. arship, $150; Boys Club; $100; Pediatric Hemotology Clinic, $50; Hearing Im-paired, $75; American Lung Association, $100; baby seats, $50; Special Handicapped Olympics, $100; and Community Ambassador, $50.

Kippers Trip to Spain, a talk by Kipper Hair, Rose High Schools 1982 community ambassador, will be given at the June meeting.

The next board meeting will be held May 25 at 10 a.m. at the home of Clemencia Molano.

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viaita. If she refuses (as she probably will), its your

Family Has Once Removed Question

By Abigail Van Buren

* 1983 by Universal Press Syndicate

DEAR ABBY; Please settle an endless argument we have had going in our family. We agree that the children of our sisters and brothers are our nieces and nephews, and our first cousins are the children of our aunts and uncles. But who ar first cousins once removed?

I say that they are the same as second cousins, but others in the family say I am wrong. If Im wrong, please straighten this out and tell me why.

ALL MIXED UP

DEAR MIXED UP: First cousins once removed are the children of your first cousins. A second cousin is the child of your first cousin once removed.

DEAR ABBY: My best friend, Nora, and 1 moved iivt'o an apartment together, agreeing to go 50-50 on the rent and food. (Were both young women.) When we took this apartment. Nora said nothing about her boyfriend spending nearly every night here in addition to eating breakfast and dinner here. Im talking five out of seven nights a week, Abby. He comes here directly from work, showers, has dinner with us, watches TV, and then he and Nora go to bed.

At the moment, Nora and 1 are not talking, except to argue about the grocery bills. She says he is her guest, but as it turns out, he is our guest, and I dont like it. Also, our landlady has been making some nasty cracks about the man who practically lives with us and I am tired of them.

. I like this apartment and dont want to move. Nora also likes it. We have another seven months to go on our lease. Thanks for any advice you can offer.

THREE IS A CROWD

DEAR THREE: Start talking to Nora. Tell her that when you took ihe apartment together you didnt count on her boyfriend moving in.

Tell her further that its not fair and its not working, and since shes the one who changed the rules, she should either move or limit her boyfriends

DEAR ABBY: Fifteen years ago I married a girl who was pregnant with another mans child. She had a son (Ill call him John) who thinks I am his father. I divorced Johns mother when he was small. I have since remarried and have two sons of my own. We all live in the same town and see John quite often.

I would like to let John know that I am not his real father. I hate living a lie and believe he has the right to know the truth and look for his real father. I want my two sons to inherit my business.

Several people in this small town know the truth, and I think it would be better if John heard it from me than from someone else. I care very much for the boy and dont want to hurt him.

NO TOWN, PLEASE

DEAR NO TOWN: Since John is now 15 and there is a possibility that someone else might tell him the sooner you tell him, the better. You dont mention Johns mother or her feelings. She should have a say in the matter.

I hope you are aware that even though you arent Johns biological father, you are his legal father, and as such you may have the same legal responsibilities to this boy as to your other sons. See a lawyer.

DEAR ABBY: About battered husbands: Scott Fitzgerald said, Psychiatrists say, Big men make docile husbands ... and so do big women.

Getting married? Whether you want a formal church wedding or a simple, do-your-own-thing ceremony, get Abbys new booklet. Send $1 plus a long, self-addressed, stamped (37 cents) envelope to: Abbys Wedding Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

Is Fun

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Thursday, May 12,1983^3

several times with sauce. Syphon off fat. Cup foil around loaf and pour remaining sauce over top. bake 15 minutes more. Let stand 10 minutes before serving. Makes 8 to 10 servings.

SAUCE: Stir together until blended ^4 cup firmly packed dark brown sugar, 2 teaspoons, dry msutard. 4 cup cider vinegar and 2 tablespoons dry sherry.

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4-The Daily Reneclor, GreenvUle, N.C.-Thursday, May 12,1983

Editorials

Calm Amid Rumors

When Russian diplomats in Beirut began shipping their families home this week in what resembled a mass exodus, observers on the scene did some tall speculating.

This much they knew:

Israel agreed to pull out of Lebanon simultaneously with Syria;

Russia was reputed to be supporting an intransigent Syrian policy, earning an intense dislike, distrust and enmity among people of Beirut who have seen their city devastated time and again by fruitless conflicts;

Western diplomats said as many as 2,000 Palestinian guerrillas had slipped back into Lebanon from Syria in the last few weeks, signalling a potential new flare up of fighting.

Ergo, many presumed, the Russian exodus very possibly was carried out as a safety measure should fighting erupt again in Lebanon.

It didnt help, either, when the official Soviet news agency in Moscow said that Israel was preparing for War against Syria, the main Soviet ally in the Middle East.

So those observers on the scene jumped to a similar conclusion: a new outbreak of w'ar was a distinct possibility maybe hours, maybe days, maybe weeks away.

Reports of these apprehensions were quickly passed on to the world.

The Soviet ambassador in Beirut finally responded, saying the families were sent home for summer vacation and the move was wrongly interpreted.

Still, the removal of women and children from, an all too familiar scene of combat is a shade disquieting. That arena of power struggles is truly a powder keg for more troubles than this world wants to antidlpate. Rumors and speculation are as much a part of the scenario as whatever hard facts are available.

If there was ever a cool voice in the midst of a maelstrom, it was that of a State Department official accompanying Secretary of State George Shultz, who urged caution in any assessments. He made more sense than all the speculators on the scene.

Essential Duty

For firemen, any day might hold a new experience.

Greenville fire-rescuemen were called to the Fred Webb Inc. grain elevator early in the afternoon on Monday. There was a fire all right 160 feet up.

Chief Jenness Allen said the over heated bearing which set grease and grain dust afire holds a record as the citys highest fire. .

Such a fire meant quite a climb for the fire-rescuemen, but it comes with the territory. On another day firefighters might face a blaze deep in the center of some large building that covers acres of ground, or climbing to a steep rooftop to reach an attic blaze.

Fire fighting is that kind of business and to say it is important to the area is not enough it is absolutely essential.

Maureen Santini

It's Real Money

James Kilpatrick

Westmoreland Case Is A Sad Tale

WASHI.NGTON (AP) - Yes. Andy Rooney, the president of the United States really does use money.

Rooney, the tongue-in-cheek humorist on the CBS television show "60 .Minutes," contended dryly on Feb. 13 that the reason the federal budget wasn't balanced was because once a president gets into office, he gets out of touch with money"

"Do you think President Reagan takes his money out of his pants pocket every night and puts it on top of his dresser? Or in his dresser drawer, so .Nancy won't pick at if?" asked Rooney, his expression puzzled

"Of course not," Rooney said. A president doesn't carry money, because he never needs any. What's he going to do with if? He can't spend it,"

Well, Reagan has been proving Rooney wrong ever since.

Within 24 hours - it happened to be Valentines Day - the president made an unscheduled stop at a small card shop

The Daily Reflector

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near the White House to purchase Valentines for his wife. Nancy. He bought four cards ihe later gave one to a military aide who didnt have one for his wife) for $5.30. paying with a $10 bill.

During a brief trip to Klamath Falls. Ore., on March 5, the president had just walked down the steps from Air Force One and was heading for his armored limousine when he noticed a group of Girl Scouts behind a police rope line. He got out of the limo, walked over to the troop, and pulled a $5 bill out of his pocket to buy a box of Girl Scout cookies. No change.

And on his trip to Phoenix, Ariz., last Thursday, the presidential motorcade came to an abrupt, unscheduled halt in front of Peacock Flowers. Reagan went in to buy a .Mothers Day bouquet of flowers for his mother-in-law, Edith Davis, with whom he dined that evening.

Reporters weren't allowed in the store, but deputy White House press secretary Larr>' Speakes later said Reagan paid with a $20 bill.

The president also is reliably reported to have cashed a check for $100 in Los Angeles during a recent visit, although there was no word on how he spent it.

And like a lot of men, Reagan occasionally looks to his wife when he needs money. On Easter Sunday, for instance, as the collection basket approached during a service at Santa Ynez Valley Presbyterian Church near their California ranch, Mrs. Reagan took a folded bill from her handbag and gave it to her husband to drop in.

But to be totally fair. Reagan once tried unsuccessfully to use real money in public before Andy Rooneys broadcast. That was during an impromptu stop at an Irish pub in Boston on Jan. 26. Speakes reported that the president offered the bartender $2 for his draught beer, but the bartender said it was on the house.

Rooney had predicted as much.

"I'll bet the president doesnt have a nickel in his pants pocket this very minute, Rooney surmised. "Its not that President Reagans cheap. Its just that no one ever lets a president pav for anything."

Rooney offered some suggestions that, so far as anyone knows, the president hasnt taken him up on:

"Id like to see him have to write $1 trillion on the blackboard 100 times every day. And it wouldnt hurt if he had to go out every morning and buy his own newspaper with cash, either.

NEW YORK -1 have been writing this column for nearly 19 years, and many of the columns have been a joy to write. This one hurts. It has to do with what has become known as the Benjamin Report on a CBS documentary involving Gen. William Westmoreland.

The report makes it clear that in this instnce, CBS News behaved shabbily, indeed indefensibly. Because I was very modestly associated with CBS for 10 years

- nine years on "60 Minutes, one year as a political commentator in 1980 - I vicariously share the pain of Burton Benjamins indictment. The affair tarnishes an image of integrity. It has left a stain.

The story began in the fall of 1980, W'hen producer George Crile prepared a 16-page "Blue Sheet proposing that CBS News do one of its 90-minute "CBS Reports on a long-festering controversy having to do with intelligence reports from Vietnam in 1967. This was the substance of the story

- that top American military and intelligence officers, under the command of General' Westmoreland, deliberately suppressed and altered intelligence, reports. The officers had discovered evidence indicating the existence of a

dramatically larger army than they previously had reported, but they entered into a conspiracy to conceal this discovery from the American public, the Congress and perhaps even the president.

In the Blue Sheet, the word "conspiracy appears 24 times and the word "conspirator" five times. In a full-page ad preceding the broadcast in January 1983, the incident was described a "conspiracy. By definition, a conspiracy is "an illegal, treasonable or treacherous plan to harm another person, group or entity." A conspiracy is a combination of persons banded secretly together and resolved to accomplish an evil or unlawful end.

After his long and painstaking investigation, Benjamin reached a measured and regrettable conclusion: Given the accepted definition of the word, a conspiracy "was not proved.

In the preparation of the program, Crile relied heavily upon his friend Sam Adams, a former CIA analyst who had become "obsessed, by one account, with the story CBS News hired Adams as a consultant for the program and paid him $25,000, but Adams never was identified on the air as a paid consultant. Adams

was interviewed as an authority. His thesis formed the very foundation for the program.

Was the program, as it finally aired, fair and balanced? Benjamins conclusion: The program was imbalanced against General Westmoreland. Nine witnesses appeared in support of the Adams thesis. Two witnesses - General Westmoreland and Lt. Gen. Daniel Graham - were seen in opposition, and Graham had only 21 seconds on the screen.

Was the program prepared according to the ethical guidelines CBS had established"? The answer, plainly, is no. One Witney was George Allen, a former CIA senior officer who had been Adams boss in Vietnam. He was twice interviewed on tape. Because he was a hesitant witness, he was carefully coached so that his answers would be dramatically more effective. Crile kept ^pressing him: "Make it simpler, tJeorge." Allen kept stumbling.

Where am 1 Allen asked. "What do you want me to say, Geor^? Crile responded that Its not what 1 want you to say, but perhaps Allen could come to the defense of his old protege. Were

1

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'^WOOERATOR )

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(MIJT m LIKE OUR (jUEST TWS WEEKILL BE JAMES WfiTT!

tum

Paul T. O'Connor

Politics Grows Confusing

RALEIGH North Carolina Re publicans had themselves a neat two-way race for party chairman until earlier this month. The contest between Dave Flaherty, the current chairman, and Gilbert Boger, a former state senator, had one major issue and several clearly defined lesser issues. Each represented a recognizable camp within the party and the whole race even included some striking ironies.

But then George Little. Moore County GOP chairman ahd former state secretary of natural and economic resources, had to jump into the race less than three weeks before the May 21 election and hes confused all the neat little lines that could be drawn between Boger and Flaherty.

At the heart of the Boger Flaherty race was the question of the Nationai Congressional Club, the ultra-conservative fund-raising organization of Sen. Jesse Helms. Mainline Republicans complain that "The Club has taken over the operation of their party and steered the party onto issues which moderate and liberal Republicans oppose.

The "anti-clubbers point the accusa tory finger at Flaherty. They say he has allowed Tom Ellis, club chairman, and Carter Wrenn. club secretary, to dictate

the operation of the party. And they blast Flaherty for moving party headquarters from downtown Raleigh to the neighborhood of the club offices.

If anyone doubts the clubs control over the party, they say. they need only look at the 19*82 campaign where almost all of the advertising presented for Republican congressional candidates bore the clubs hardball tone. That advertising and the clubs issues, anti-clubbers say, led to the partys sound thrashing at the polls.

Flaherty denies that hes allowed the club to takeover the party. He says the two work as partners. The state party is poor while, the club has a virtual money-making machine known as direct mail fund-raising. The party would be foolish not to work with the club. Flaherty supporters say.

In talking about Boger, Flaherty supporters fret that hell so alienate the club that it will split the party. The club does have a strong following within the party. They also worry about Rogers ability to administer a statewide organization. They say he doesnt have the organizational skills Flaherty has.

A companion to the club issue is the grassroots issue, Boger says a party must organize at the grassroots. By handing the party over to the club, which

wages its campaign over the airwaves, Flaherty has forgotten his most impor tant duty, Boger says. Flahertys side argues that grassroots organization is work for the county chairmen. The party chairman must develop a statewide organization.

The irony in this race is that many of the people supporting Boger this year supported Flaherty two years ago when they saw him as the man whod wrestle the party out of the clubs claws. Another irony is that Boger is seen by many as more conservative than Flaherty. Boger. in the early and mid-70s, aligned himself with the most conservative element, now the clubs supporters, in its battles with the moderate wing of Flahertys old boss, former Gov. Jim Holshouser, *

So here comes Little. He calls for a Little compromise, saying the party needs someone who wont alienate either side on the club issue. He also calls for better grassroots organization and cooperation with the clubs fund-raising apparatus. Ironically, Little is a true Hoshouser moderate who, philosophically, is much further from Boger and Flaherty than they are from each other.

The miracle will be if all this gets straightened out by May 21.

going to keep at this. said Crile. "until we get it right .. until we feel comfortable. Adams also was coached so that his interview, on the air, would have the right flavor.

Benjamin was commissioned by CBS News to undertake his investigation. To the networks credit, Benjamin was given a free hand. He did a superlative job of evenhanded reporting. He interviewed 32 persons, read 20 hours of unedited transcripts, repeatedly screened the program itself and carefully analyzed the charges earlier leveled against the program in TV Guide. His report is a model of fair and balanced coverage. And his report is damning. It is small wonder that CBS News sought to keep it quiet, and divulged it only under court order as a part of the discovery proceedings in Westmorelands libel suit against the network.

The libel case is pending. Ultimately it will be decided under the case law that controls criticism of a public figure I leave that to the courts, but in the quite different court that judges ethical journalism, the Benjamin report provides a verdict against CBS News that is loud and clear: guilty as charged.

Cliff Haas

Backfire

WASHINGTON (AP) - House Demo crats were euphoric after making gains in last falls congressional elections, confidently looking forward to muscling through their own agenda at the expense of the Republican minority Democrats had picked up a net total of 26 seats. House Republican Leader Rob ert H. Michel of Illinois barely won reflection and Speaker Thomas P O'Neill Jr., D-Mass. - having lost two years worth of legislative battles to President Reagan - was portrayed as a man who would not get mad, just even The once-glum Republicans, though, are finding themselves holding their own - no longer winning battles as they did for the past two years, but still having success in pushing Democrats into altering their plans House GOP Whip Trertt Lott, RMiss,, says outnumbered Republicans have been able to "nudge toward a com promise" with Democrats on most issues.

However, Democrats, like Majority Leader Jim Wright of Texas, say they are becoming the victims of "guerrilla warfare on the House floor Lott said that by the beginning of the 98th Congress, Democrats had "become a little arrogant, which tends to backfire.

The only strong signs of Democratic dominance in the House this year have come on several procedural battles at the beginning of the session and in the quick action on a budget resolution that passed on a virtual party-line vote in March.

A $165 billion landmark package to rescue the faltering Social Security system had bipartisan support before the House even began work on it and party differences were not a factor.

The only other significant piece of legislation to pass Congress this year has been a compromise $4.6 billion emergency relief package of public works jobs, and food and shelter for those hardest hit by the recession. That, too. had bipartisan support.

A proposed nuclear freeze resolution that the president opposed had been under consideration since before Easter and was passed last week only after being watered down in the face of dozens of GOP amendments.

Meanwhile, the call by Democratic leaders for a broad package of recession relief legislation has given way to a piecemeal approach that is making only halting progress.

Rowland Evans and Robert Novak

White House Power Weakens Clark

WASHINGTON - Lacking defense in depth and by nature disinclined to go on the attack, national security adviser William Patrick Clark is being weakened for possible kill by aggressive forces in the West Wing of the White House.

The disclosure last week of United Nations Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatricks Dec. 23 resignation letter - which President Reagan declined to accept -shows the strength of the anti-Clark forces one floor on top of Clarks discreet hideaway in the West Wing basement.

Clark had nothing to do with leaking the existence of that letter. Since the office of chief of staff James Baker was the only other source aware of the letter (save Kirkpatrick and Reagan), White House insiders suspect that Bakers men made the letter known elsewhere in the White House (but neither Clark nor Baker told us that the letter existed).

Undermining Kirkpatrick with resignation rumors undermines Clarks most valuable ally in the stru^e over Ronald Reagans national security policy between Reaganite true-believers led by Clark and Reaganite doubters led by West Wing pragmatists.

The doubters are not all that interested in the substance of foreign, defense and arms control policy. What fascinates and motivates them is how the president will appear to the voting public and in foteign capitals in conducting his policy. But Clark and Kirkpatrick insist that policy should be an extension of Reagans own convictions since he was the one elected president, whether it be theevil empire nf the Soviet Union or gim-runn'u from

Cuba to Nicaragua.

Reagan and Clark early this year managed to talk Kirkpatrick out of leaving (she had set June as her deadline). Last week, however, when word seej^ through the White House once again that she was pondering resigning her U.N. post, no hard denials came to us from Turtle Bay.

But for now, Clark has scored a success in keeping his ally Kirkpatrick on the job. Despite that success, his vulnerability to the West Wingers in Bakers office makes

for an unequal contest which a more power-loving person than Clark mi^t seek to rectify through his intimacy with the president. Not having done so, the soft-spoken, self-effacing Clark faces pressures that his allies say have about evened the odds at 50-50 that he will be back on his California ranch after Labor Day.

thats scarcely the beginning. Clarks real weakness stems from from the West Wingers clout with and knowledge of the reporters who cover the White House and

Elisha Douglas

Strength For Today

A man stopped for speeding meekly showed the policeman his license and received his ticket. As the policeman was folding his notebook the driver said, Officer, would you mind telling me where I am? The policeman smiled and said, Would you mind telling me why, if you dont know where you are, you were in such a terrible hurry to get here?

A great many people who are not driving cars at the moment lAight well be asked the same

question. They have been in such a hurry to get on in life that they have not noticed where they have arrived.

Some years ago an old sea captain remarked on a difference between life ashore and at sea. Most automobiles, he said, have speedometers, but few have compasses. Few ships have speedometers, but they all have compasses.

He added, I wish more people were like ships instead of like automobiles.

their bosses in the newsrooms. White House insiders say that Richard Darman, Bakers shrewd chief aide, has become a conduit to one major East Coast newspaper of internal White House secrets comparable to the famed "Deep Throat who spilled sensational Watergate revelations to the Washington Post 10 years ago. Clark is often the victim, but his own staff lacks a single political gut-fighter capable of playing in the same ballpark with Darman.

When the president arrived in Houston April 29, he was greeted with a prominently-displayed article in the Houston Post by Morton Kondracke. Headlined Choosing William Clark Over Jim Baker Could Be Disastrous, the article dredged history to highlight Clarks academic failure as one who flunked out of two law schools and failed a bar exam.

The broodings of Clark operatives that he may leave the White House - by his own choice - will become more morose if Reagans Central American aid programs are gutted in Congress. West Wingers would blame the defeat on Clark, even though, paradoxically. Baker. Darman and White House congressional lobbyist Ken Duberstein are responsible for getting Reagans programs through Congress.

Clark might yet convert from passive defense to an attack on his belittlers, but evidence is sparse indeed that he has decided on such an uncharacteristic course of action.

Copyright 1983 Field Enterprise^ Inc.





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6-The DaUy Renector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Thursday, May 12,1983

Windmill Sold, Regret Sets In

PCC /^CREDITATION VISIT ... The visiting committee of the Southern Association of Colleas and Schools is meeting this week with PiftN^ommunity College faculty staff and students to determine a 10-year reaffirmation of the colleges accreditation. Above, Dr. William E. Fulford Jr.. president of the

college, talks with Dr. James K. Chasteen, president of John C. Calhoun State Community College in Decatur, Ala., and chairman of the SACS comrnittee, and Willard Finch, chairman of the steering committee of the PCC self-study program.

BOONE, N.C. (AP) - It is unlikely a change of heart by some residents will hold up the sale of an e.xperimental windmill overlooking Boone, a government official said Wednesday.

A group of Watauga County residents has decided the experimental, power-generating windmill should stay on its mountaintop. The new move to save the windmill comes one week after it was put up for auction.

'They had plenty of opportunity to take a look at that thing." said Julius Swilley of the federal General Services Administration, which sold the windmill. Tts not too likely that (the sale) will be held up "

He said np one expressed interest in buying the windmill since it stopped operating in 1981. Watauga County will receive one of its two 97'rfoot blades as a momento.

'Paris would never tear down the Eiffel Tower. said Boone pharmacist Joe Miller. And 1 dont think we

should tear ddwn our windmill.

After only 300 hours of sporadic operation during less than four years in existence, the NASA-designed windmill was sold for $51,600 last Thursday to McBess Industries Inc.

The company wants to use the $30 million windmills generator in its hydroelectric plant near its Bessemer City headquarters.

But a group of residents, with the backing of local officials, are serious about keeping the structure as a tourist attraction or working

machine.

An April 25 letter to Sens. Jesse Helms and John East and Rep. Jim Broyhill, signed by the chairman of the county commissioners, the Boone mayor and the Chamber of Commerce president, sought a 180-day delay in the federal governments sale of the machine.

Miller, who said he had commitments for thousands of dollars to buy and maintain the windmill, said most people didnt get serious about saving th& windmill until bids were opened last week.

McBets Industries officials said they would remain neutral.

We wanted the generation material, thats all, said

spokesman Harry Hand, adding that company leadff dont want to get involvt<t in a fight with anybody ovef i

it.

The GSA has 30 days tft. decide whether to accept 1^ J Thursdays bid before send-1 ing it on for final approval. ^

Dixon Strawberries

Black Jack

-Pick Your Own-

Bring Coupon

I I I I I I I I I

I Vncrbo<

I I

I    B4ckJ:k

I Phone 756-7^6 orJ56-8M9

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43

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1

Carolina east mall k^greenville

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- 1

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PRE-SEASON

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France Sees NewMelees

* By HARRY DUNPHY    ''

i I IkSMciated Press Writer J^fARIS (AP) - Riot police Har-gassed hundreds of {udents demonstrating out-fide the Cannes Film stival and arrested 113 in TOris, where students also libelled against the governments proposed educational revisions.

In Cannes, tear gas cfeated a chaotic reception Wednesday ni^t for people informal evening dress who apaved to see a film by Japanese director Nagisa C^ima, and witnesses said m^y fled the acrid fumes aiang with the protesters. However, several guests maide their way through the smlke to the entrance to pr^nt their invitations, the wutessessaid.

Mthorities said a police-mM and reporter were sli^tly injured in the melee, which began when medical students dressed in white smocks managed to invade the festivals exhibition hall " by breaking down a barrier.

The screaming protesters marched through the center of Cannes, making bonfires

Sentenced For Abusing Infant

SPARTA, N.C. (AP) - Crawford Drew Reber, 29, of Glade Valley, was sentenced Wednesday in Allegany County Superior Court to two years in prison on charges of abusing his 3*^-month-old daughter.

Allegany County Sheriffs Deputy Lois Cheek said last May the child, suffering from shaking syndrome, was admitted for 30 days to Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem.

The child is currently in a foster home.

YOU CAN SAVE money by shopping for bargains in the Classified Ads.

out of stacks of old tires, and briefly blocking the Can-nes-Antibes motorway along the Riviera.

Law students in Paris and Lyon built barricades in the streets and set them on fire, causing injuries to passersby and 12 policemen, officials reported.

It was not known how ,many demonstrators were injured, but witnesses saw several people clubbed during police charges, including a news photographer.

Police said 106 of the demonstrators arrested in Paris later were released, and the remaining seven being held for further investigation. Two buses were damaged in the fray that ended about I a.m. today In the southwest city of Toulouse, police questioned 11 students after 20 fires were set at the end of a student demonstration Tuesday night.

Medical students, who have staged protests throughout ie country over the past three months, oppose the Socialist governments plans to introduce a tough new exam in their next-to-the-last year of studies. The students say the exam is unnecessary and part of a plot by the ^v-emment and the medical profession to reduce the number of doctors in France.

Law students are rebelling over similar proposals for legal education.

About 2,300 students of the so-called grandes ecoles demonstrate peacefully in Paris to protest the uncertainty over the educational overhaul. These institutions, created by Napoleon, are at the top of the educational system and supply the civil service with manpower.

Some of the students occupied the governments High Authority for Audiovisual Communication, which regulates broadcasting, to protest the law but left after police arrived, authorities said.

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Carolina east mall ^qreenvilie

Friday The 13th Only U

3'

No Phone Orders ^ No Lay-A-Ways    ^

Shop Early, Some Items In Limited Quantities

HourlySpecials

m.

Shop 10 A.M.To 11A.M. Only

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Shop 12 NoonTo 1 P.M. Only

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Shop 7 P.M. To 8 P.M. Only

Shop 8 P.M. To 9 P.M. Only

Ladies

Danskins

30% OH

Our Stock Of Tights, Leotards & Accessories. Regular To $26.00

Mens Arrow Dress Shirts

$1588

Reg. $21.00 Long Sleeve, Button-Down, Poly/Cotton Solid Colors In White, Blue, Ecru

6Pc. Table & Chair Set

$11300

Reg. To $350.00

Only 4 Sets To Sell

Select Group Of Personal Haberdashery

V3

A Select Group Of Skirts, Pants, Blazers & Shirts

Boys

Lee

Jeans

4-7 Lee Denim Jeans Regulars Slim

Reg. $17.50

...*10*

Girls 7-14 Izod Sportswear

Reg.$15.50-$21.50

25%.,,

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Ladies

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Dresses

*24*

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2 Pc. Knit Dresses In Many Styles And Colors

1 Seiko Watches

Vs 0.

Reg. To $250.00

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Boys

Jogging

Suits

$1588

Reg. $28.00

100% Acrylic In Sizes 8-20.

20 Pc. Dinnerware Set

$g88

Reg. $19.88

Victoria Rose Porcelain Dinnerware Set Only 30 To Sell

Towel

Sale

75%

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A Select Group Of Bath, Hand Towels And Wash Cloths

Vinyl

Tablecloths

$088

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Assorted Styles And Colors

Vidal

Sassoon

Tee

Shirts

$588

Reg.S13.88

Short Sleeve T-Shirts In S, M,L Sizes

Furniture

Sale

$-|288

Reg. $19.95

Select Group Of Bookcases, Etagere And Record Cabinet In A Woodgrain Look

U.N.C. Toy Ram

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.*8

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Mens & Boys Izod Belts

1/2 ,

A Select Group Of Boys & Mens Stretch Belts

MensPony

Athletic

Shoes

Vs

Reg. $46.00

Select From Our Stock At Great Savings t

A. Taylor Belts

25%,,,

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Select From Our Stock Of Belts & Neckties At Great Savings

Leonard

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Holloware

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. 1

Ladies

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Skirts

$1488

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Childrens

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$g88

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Wine

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Vs o

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Boys Ocean Pacific T-Shirts

$g88

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Boys Long Sleeve T-Shirts In Many Colors

Snoopy

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.*8

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Girls

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Girls 4-6X Summer Sundresses Nautical Look

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Reg. $44.99

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Mens

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Reg. To $30.00

Select From Solid & Fancies In Summer Slacks

Boys 4-7 ) Izod 1 Shirts

Izod Poly/Cotton Knit Shirts In Solids & Stripes

Reg. $15.50-$17.50

SQ88

Sale W

^ Ladies ^ j Gloria Vanderbilt Jeans

$2-|88

Reg. $38.00

5 Pocket Jean In Fashion Colors

Ladies Aigner Handbags And Belts

25%

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Mens

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$3988

Reg. $149.00

Snoopy

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Sleeping

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Sale 1 V

Friday, May 13 Lucky Buys Shop 10A.M. To9 P.M. Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)





8 -The Daily Renector. Greenville, N C.-Thursday, May 12,1983

Downtown Pitt Plaza

the Pitt Plaza Store will he open until 9:30 P.M. Friday the 13th for this special event.

Friday

the

13

thi

Misses

T-Tops

with

Free

Monogram

$700

Only I

14 Kt. Gold Add-a-Beads

Reg r*iow

tmm 62' 47*'

4mm .....89' 67^

5mm    1 49    1.07

6mm.    2 27    1.47

7mm    2 49    1.87

14 Kt, Gold Serpentine Bracelet

$599

Reg $15.00

14 Kt. Gold Charms

Snddollar Starfish Your Choice

Shell

$599

Reg. $12-$16

14 Kt. Gold Serpentine Chains

16"

18

20"

24".

'10"

Reg Now

'12.00 16.99 ,45.00 18,99 47 00 24.99 S'! 00 31.99 79.00 48.00

Large Assortment Of

Fashion Earrings

$249 $399

Reg. $4 to $6

(Gold and Silver)

SEIKO and I ulsar Watches

Just Arrived! New Styles!

Entire Stock 20-

331/3

%OFF

KORATRON" COORDINATES

by Koret of California (Misses Sizes)

20

%OFF

Entire Stock

Khaki, white, skipper blue, green sea. cerise

Group Of

Misses Pants

by Counterparts

Now

Assorted styles, fabrics, and colors

Reg. $.32 to $.38

$2499

A.

Ocean Pacific Corduroy Shorts

For Juniors Reg.$20

$1 788

Now J. /

In a rainbow of colors

CALVIN KLEIN and

Denim Jeans

Reg. $44 & $46

Nown9^

Jeans with that famous designer fit! Blue denim only.

Group of

Junior Sundresses

Now

20%

OFF

Assorted styles and colors at excellent early savings!

Junior

T-Shirts

with

Free Monogram

Reg. $6

$099

Now

Better Fashion Footwear

Groups of shoes by Amalfi. Adores, Pappagallo, Red Cross and Selby.

25%

OFF

Sample Sale Of

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Casual dresses in newest styles and fabrics. All size 10.

25%

OFF

Group Of Dress Bags

Reg, $20.00

SI 490

Fashion Straw Bags

Over 200 to select from

Save to

331/3%

Values from $16 to $30

Mens

OIX iAcosn

Short Sleeve Knit Shirts

Reg. to $27    ^

Friday Only S1799

Group Of Mens

Spring Sportcoats

1 y/2 Price

Silk Madras

Glamour Rings

Reg. $15-$60 Your Choice

Choose from many attractive ring styles, with genuine onyx, tigers eye, jade, opal and other precious stones.

Small Leather Goods 20%off

Group Of

Junior Pants

by

Smart Pants

Now

20

%

OFF

-Assorted styles and colors Excellent selection!

ZEM Denim

Baggy Jean 26

Reg, $32 Now

Zcna Baggies are just the style to take you through the day.

Misses

Sundresses

by Malia and others Sizes 6-18

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20%

Entire Stock Of

Half Size Dresses 20 % Off

Sizes 12 1/2 to 26 1/2

Mens Cotton Knit Ties

$y5o

All Colors

Friday Only!

Famous Name

Cotton Briefs

Full cut, good quality Sizes 5-7 In white and nude

Reg. $2.50

3,.,

$599





The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, May 12,1983-9

KORET CITY BLUES'

The best in denim for misses!

20

Now^^ V/ % OFF

Pants, skirts, jackets, and blguses

Groups of Misses Co-Ordinates from

COUNTRY SUBURBANS

Beautiful Spring styles and fabrics 20%

poNter

Nowi

OFF

Misses

Cotton Sweater

Short-sleeve sweater with double U-neck. Excellent colors!

Reg. $22

$16^^

Now Am Vy

Entire Stock Of

Girls Bathing Suits

Misses Skirts

Beautiful colors and styles to keep you cool all summer long. Reg. $25 to $34.

Now

Free

Monogramming i

On GirlsKnit Tops    '

Scalloped Collar

$700

4-6x    /

$750

7-14 I

Colored Denim Jeans

The newest fashion statement Reg. $30 $

Group Of

Misses Blouses by Judy Bond

Reg.$17

Now^lS^^

Large Size Department

Haberdashery

PERSONAL II

20% OFF

In navy, white & kclly

Girls Short Sleeve Tops And Piped Shorts

25 % OFF

Reg. up to $15.00 Available in a variety of colors. 7-14 Preteen.

99

Boot Cut Corduroy jeans In 7*14 And Preteen Sizes

^oOFF

Toddler, 4-6x, 7-14 and Preteen

Group Of

Casual Bags

In Canvas & nylon. Values to $20

$699

itam

Short Sleeve Knit-Tops

4-6x In solid colors Reg. $14.00

7-14. .. In assorted stripes ..... Reg. $18.00

$2p8

$1399

Browsabouts

Canvas Espadrilles Reg. $22.00

$1590

In navy, white, natural & red.

Official Major League Baseball Shirts

Reg. $5.50 and $7.00 Now $4.40 and $5.60

Savings Of

20%

(Sizes 4-7)

Reg. $25

Canvas Ladies .$1090

All Court    ly

Wicker Trays

$299

11x13 Ideal for summer entertaining

Reg. $6.00

Hosiery

20%orr

ipor one day only. Todays Girls. Hanes Alive, Hanes II. Hanes Support, etc.

Mens & Womens

Denim

Jeans

Ramona

Reg.$38.00

$2990

Candies Slide

^ l.eather upper with soft sock lining, Reg. $25 00.

$1090

15^

We have the size

0

In white, camel & navy. Also available in red & black at Pitt Plaza store.

Cosmetic Department

Special Purchase

///m N

Ralph Lauren Travel Ensemble

Yours for only $20.00 with any $10 t)0 Lauren or Tuxedo purchase .





Morning Power Outage RetumOf

Peregrines

WORKMEN REPAIR CABLE ... Greenville Utilitie workers repair a faulty cable on Fifth Street this morning. The cable problem caused

an electrical outage for nearly 30 minutes in the downtown area. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)

A blown fuse on one of the power circuits that feed the citys downtown section resulted in an outage of less than half an hour this morning,. according to Malcolm Green, assistant director of Greenville Utilities Commission.

Green said that sections of what is generally known as the "old downtown area"

oiltas

were affected by the outage of 26 to 27 minutes on one of GUCs older underground power systems.

He said the downtown section is fed from two different power sources and normally, when one circuit goes down, the second circuit acts in a backup capacity. Today, however, GUC crewmen were doing required mainte-

Soy Prison Now Desegregated

RALEIGH. .\.C. (.AP) -Federal officials say they dropped a suit against the state Wednesday because prisoners have been moved out of racially segregated dormitories at old Central Prison.

An agreement accompanying the dismissal motion bars the state-ffii) discrimination, hut appears to have no ect on the prison system.

The U.S. Justice Department had filed a discrimination suit Dec. 29, 1982, claiming the state segregated prisoners in dormitories in the maximum security section of the old prison.

Since the suit was filed, the state has moved all inmates out of the dormitories into sigle-cell facilities at the new prison or to single cells in two other maximum security prisons in the state.

We are immensely pleased that the state has executed its plan to end the racial segregation, Assis^ tant Attorney General William Bradford Reynolds said Wednesday. "We have acted properly to enforce the statute and have now com

pleted our task.

James C. Woodard, state secretary of correction, said Wednesday nothing had changed as a result of the suit and settlement. He said he thought the suit had served no purpose.

"I can,t seo what purpose it might have served, he said Wednesday, "I wondered abut it and I still do. "Whn; the suit was filed, there were many of us who wondered why the government chose to file a suit, when we were within six months of moving into single cells In Central Prison, prison spokesinan Stuart Shadbolt said."'We never could get an answer. Shadbolt acknowledged that most cells at the old prison were racially segregated in the past, but said the segregation was not racially motivated,

"Essentially the segregation was at the request of the inmate population, he said, and it was maintained because of "the realization that to force any other ar-rangment would cause turmoil in the inmate population.

nance work on one of the circuits and it was down at the time a faulty cable caused the fuse to blow.

Green, who said there was apparently no correlation between the fuse problem and the maintenance activity, said GUC noticed that the downtown section was experiencing "part current after the fuse blew and GUC went ahead and shut down thL system.

Generally, portions of the area from Reade Circle and Green Street up to Second Street were affected, he said. Some downtown areas are fed from a different direction on another circuit and experienced no power loss.

Green said some backup capacity is lost when maintenance work is performed / on a circuit but he suggested that the work pays off in the long run.

Etfiphasis Is On 'Buy American'

JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (AP) -An 11-day Buy American festival ii^imed at boosting the fortunes of this depressed industrial city, but even workers who like the idea say its nearly impossible to avoid buying imported goods.

"You dont know what youre buying any more, said Earl Murray, 59, a retired steelworker, at the festivals opening Wednesday. "You have Volkswagen here in Pennsylvania, Datsun in Tennessee and Honda in Ohio.

Alvin Glosser, owner of the citys largest department store, who helped organize the event, said about one-third of his merchandise is made overseas.

^5-\avc4v

Sensuous Crepe de Chine,

newly striped for

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NEW YORK (AP) - After an absence of more than two decades, two pairs of peregrine falcons have set up nests in New Ywk City bridges, state officials say.

The falcons - an endangered ^ies - laid six eggs in nests at the Throgs Neck and Verrazano Narrows Bridge. It is believed the eggs will hatch in several weeks, state Environmental Conservation Commissioner Henry G. WUliams said Tuesday.

It is extremely gratifying to witness the return of this beautiful and fascinating bird to New York, said Williams.

The birds once nested throughout the United States,

with 75 nest sites in New York alone. But the pesticide DDT interfered with the birds reproduction, thinning the shells of their eggs so they would crack before the chicks could hatch;!

DDT was banned in New York in 1970, and state officials believe the residues have diminished, allowing the falcons to make a comeback.

Any disturbance or harassment of the peregrines is punishable by a year in jail

and a 1(20,000 fine, officials said. " 

Three of the four birds seen at the bridges carried bands and apparently were Iwred by the Peregrine Fund, a Condi University program that is devoted to saving the species.

The peregrine falpan, according to official^ is the fastest bird in the world. It dives to catch such prey as wild pigeons and other birds, and has been clocked at 180 to200mph.

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AFORTRESS BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) - The Argentine Communist Party (numbering about 71,000) claims Britain is turning the Falkland Islands into a gigantic NATO fortress and new atomic base for Anglo-North American impe-rialsm.

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Temperatures Plunged; Some Motorists Die In Snowstorms

BURIED BY BLIZZARD - An 18-wheel tractor-trailer rig is buried in the snow Tuesday on Secondary 434 east of Rogers

Pass in Montana, not far from the Continental Divide. Some 12-foot-high drifts were measured in the area. (AP Laserphoto)

By The Associated Press

Temperatures plunged 40 degrees below normal and at least two motorists died in a spring snowstorm that dumpd up to 17 inches of snow in Utah and Wyoming, temporarily stranding scores of truckers, before pushing northeast today.

Up to 17 inches of new snow was reported at Snowbird Ski Resort in the northern Utah mountains, and National Weather Service officials said 5 inches of snow fell at Salt Lake International Airport by late Wednesday.

The 44-ite^ maximum was the chilliest May 11 on , record at the airport, eclipsing a 47-degree mark set in 1967, officials said.

Temperatures skidded to 20 degrees today at Laramie, Wyo. Readings generaliy average about 60 degrees, Steve Kauffman, a Weather Service forecaster in Cheyenne, said Wednesday night.

Lows may (frop to the upper teens in some of the higher elevations of Wyoming by morning, Caroiyn

Kloth, a meteoroiogist with the weather services Severe Storms Forecast Center in Kansas City, Mo, said today. Its a sk>w-DM)ving storm thats dropping snow on the Rockies and rain as far east as northwestern Kansas and theDakotas.

Meanwhile, heavy rains early today in Arkansas caused flash flooding that left portions of several highways under water, authorities said.

Arkansas Route 302 was flooded near Clarendon as was U.S. 49 south of Brinkley, a Monroe County Sheriffs Department spokesman said.

Farther south, searchers recovered the body Wednesday of a 12-year-old camper who died in a flash flood on the Pedernales River near Dripping Springs, Texas, but two other youths, their counselor and another camper were still missing today, authorities said.

Two people died in a storm-related accident Wednesday when a truck plowed into a car and another vehicle on snow-

slicked U.S. 30 near Cokeville in southwestern Wyoming, authorities said.

Lander, Wyo., received up to 17 inches of snow Wednesday betore some melting occurred. Snowplows were called out to escort a convoy of iron ore mine workers from their homes in Lander to jobs 30 miles away in the Wind River Range, officials said.

Snow closed several highways briefly and about 75 truckers sought refuge Wednesday at the Little America, a truck stop 22 miles west of Green River in southwest Wyoming.

Business is real good, said cashier Sue Lemon. We have some truckers stay ovei ?ht with us when it gets ;e this, and some just sit in their trucks and wait out tl weather.

Tli jlorado State Patrol sa>d that nterstate 70 east-bound fr Vail to the top of Vail PiL.. was closed Wednesday night IvMiause of heavy snow, poor visibility and a major traffic tie-up.

A freeze warning and stockmans advisories were

issued early today for western South Dakota and a winter storm alert was posted for the Black Hills area.

In Montana, 2 to 3 inches of new snow fell Wednesday in Biilings, but authorities said all highways were passable after heavy snow earlier in the week.

Wooden Cross Not A Violation

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Raleighs chief zoning inspector says a large wooden cross in a mans front yard apparently does not violate city sign regulations.

Its an individuals expression so far as Im concerned, said Hardy R. Watkins. We dont intend to do anything about it.

Some neighbors were upset by the 6-foot cedar cross standing in a 4-foot mound of dirt in the front yard of Milton E. Hobbs III.

Hobbs, 38, a builder and a Raleigh native, said it wasnt his idea to put up the cross.

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The DaUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, May 12,1983-11

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12-The Dally Renector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, May 12,1983

llliferacy Rafe In NX. Termed 'Severe'

ByJOHNFLESHER    Barabara Ann Hughes, pres- lacking sufficient grasp of census, 45.2 percent of the the North Carolina Dep^- theres little or no en-

Associated Press Writer dent of the North Carolina basic skills to perform in states people 25 and older ment of Public Instruction, couracement of academic

ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -North Carolina has a severe illiteracy problem, officials say, citing figures that show 45.2 percent of the states population 25 and older did not graduate from high school.

I dont think its an exaggeration to say that one-third of North Carolinas population is functionally illiterate, and thats frightening, said

Tip From A Zookeeper

RIDGEFIELD, Conn. (AP) - When it comes to feeding the humans, Gerry Ward has simple advice for zookeepers; put the ice cream stand near the polar bears, not the reptile house.

Ward is a food service and souvenir consultant to New York Citys famous Bronx Zoo, the National Aquarium in Washington and about a dozen other zoological parks.

Through the years, he has develop^ a few tested rules; People do not like to buy snacks near reptiles. But visitors buy lots of ice cream near bears. For success, put the ice cream stand near the polar bears.

Souvenirs featuring zebras, turtles and leopards do not sell, according to Ward. But almost any item bearing a likeness of a lion, penguin or elephant sells well. Sure-fire hits also include rubber snakes and alligators. Polar bear items will sell well only if they include a bear cub.

He advocates realistic, high-quality souvenirs and urges his clients to do away with what he calls junk items. He advises zoo opera-:ors not to feature cartoon caricatures, although the prime market for souvenir sales is children from 2 through 10 years old.

Animals do not wear clothes or smile or talk, and we dont portray them that way, Ward said.

Help Forecast

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Hurricane-prone communities along the Atlantic Coast and the Gulf of Mexico will be able to use computer predictions to help them brace for this summers storms, weather forecasters say.

By knowing the probability that the storm is going to hit, local governments can decide what risks they want to take, said meteorologist Jim Campbell on Wednesday.

Barabara Ann Hughes, president of the North Carolina Literacy Association.

And she adds, I dont think were putting a dent in the illiteracy problem.

Statistics used to measure illiteracy vary widely because theres no universally accepted definition. Also, agencies and groups base their studies on different age groups.

It depends on whom you talk to, said John McIntyre of the state budget office. Everyones got his own idea. And even if you could get a good definition, very few people could collect the data to find out just how many people it applies to.

Althou^ illiteracy traditionally has meant the inability to read and write, theres

a growing functional

emphasis on illiteracy -

lacking sufficient grasp basic skills to perform everyday life.

The North Carolina Literacy Association, comprised of local volunteer groups which tutor people who cant read, considers anyone with less than an eighth-^ade education functionally illiterate.

According to 1980 census figures, 835,620 people 25 or older, or 14.2 percent of the states population of 5,881,766, had an eighth-grade education or less. The highest rates were in Alleghany (25.1 percent of the countys population), Ashe (24.0) and Cherokee (23.3). The lowest were in Onslow (6.2), Cumberland (6.9) and Wake (7.4).

If the comparison is limited to pwple in that age group, the figures are much higher. Accorting to the 1980

census, 45.2 percent of the states people 25 and older hadnt ^aduated from high school. Graduation rates among North Carolina counties ranged from a high of 73.6 (Orange) to a low of 35.8 (Tyrrel).

An official of North Caro-lina Legal Services, which provides the poor with legal aid, says 40 percent of North Carolinians cant read or write. Other agencies have put the figure as high as 52.2 percent and 63 percent -based on conflicting data on the number of people without high school diplomas in 1970.

But some state agencies dont accept the graduation rate as a reliable literacy gauge.

Theres no real definition that we know about. We dont attempt to define it, said Kay Oney, spokeswoman for

NO GOOD FISHERMAN WOULD - dispose of a catch in this manner. The half d^n perch shown here were abandoned in a plastic bag on a North Carolina beach recently. This is not only a waste of good fish, but creates an

unpleasant odor when milage sets in, ad even a personal safety hazard should someone later step on bones once the fish deteriorate. (Reflector Photo by Jerry Raynor)

Final Manual Typewriter

CORTLAND, N.Y. (AP) -The popularity of electric typewriters and computerized word processors doomed Smith Coronas manual typewriter business, which ceased production because of reduced demand, a spokesman said.

The last manual typewriter came off the line Wednesday at 12:30 p;m., said Walter Speer, spokesman for the nations last manufacturer of portable typewriters.

About 300 workers will be idled as a result, Speer said.

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the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction. There have been a couple of national studies ... but our people dont really think they were accurate.

The truth is I dont think weve studied that, said Loretta Martin, president of the North Carolina Association of Educators. Illiteracy means different things to different people.

Ms. Hu^es, an N.C. Department of Human Resources official who heads the literacy association as a volunteer, says it doesnt take a foolproof definition to prove theres a problem. The situation cant be measured accurately because many people are unwilling to admit they cant read or write, she said.

Its equally hard to trace the myriad sources of illiteracy, Ms. Hughes said.

Many people drop out of school to get jobs after faking their way through as many as nine or 10 grades, she said. In many homes.

MAJOR EXERCISES

CASTEAU, Bel^um (AP) - Forciis from six Western alliance countries will take part in a major military exercise in southern Europe May 16-27, NATOs military headquarters announced Wednesday.

theres little or no encouragement of academic achievement.

With my background, I cant imagine coming from a family that puts no emphasis on reading, said Ms. Hughes. Yet thats what our tutors all over the state are finding.

If parents arent education-oriented, its likely the children wont be either. Its only years later that a few of them realize what they missed and seek out adult education classes. But the sad part is that many just give up.

The N.C. Literacy Council has 35 affiliates statewide, sponsored by local churches, community colleges, civic clubs or military groups. Additionally, many of the states high schools' and colleges offer basic skill courses for adults.

Ms. Hughes said the council, formed in 1978, had hundreds of volunteer tutors, but couldnt provide a specific figure.

I dont think were putting a dent in the illiteracy problem, she said. I think its that serious, that widespread. Until people who cant read and write admit it and try to learn, and until we get more help, it wont fade.

Ms. Martin agreed that theres an illiteracy problem but warned against exaggerating it.

Were keeping more people in school than we ever have before, she said. We do need to stress the basics, but we need to have a diversified enough cur-

riculum to help people who go to college aiid those who dont. We cant put every child in the same mold; we have to address individual needs.

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How Tar Heel Senators And Representatives Voted

RoUCall Report Service

- WASHINGTON - Heres how area members of Congress were recorded on ma-; jor roll call votes Apr. 28 ! through May 4.

: ;    HOUSE

FREEZE By vote of 175 for and 247 against, the House rejected a motion to kill the nuclear freeze resolution (HJ Res 13) by sending it-back to the Foreign Affairs Committee.

. This was a clear test of sentiment on the freeze, probably more revealing to ronstituents who track voting records than the later vote by which the House passed the resolution (below).

; Many lawmakers voted to 5end HJ Res 13 to oblivion in : committee, then voted for final passage of the measure.

Members voting yes -vanted to return the freeze .measure to committee and . Hius kill it.

S NORTH CAROLINA Vot-;ing yes: Tim Valentine, D-2, "Charles Whitleyi D-3, James Martin, R-9, James Broyhill, R-10.

Voting no: Walter Jones, D-1, Ike Andrews, D-4,

Stephen Neal, D-5, Charles Britt, D-6, Charles Rose, D-7, W.G. Hefner, D-8, James Clarke, Dll

,Not voting: None.

FINAL The House passed, 278 for and 149. against, and sent to dhe Senate a measure iHJ Res 13) calling on the U.S. and Soviet Union to negotiate a mutual and verifiable freeze in nuclear arsenals, followed by reductions.

Although non-binding on the Administration, the resolution is viewed by its sponsors as a strong expression of American public opinion in favor of curbing the superpowers arms race.

The final vote occurred after nearly 50 houis of debate spread over six House sessions.

Supporters claimed a major victory But opponents said that, by weakening the "pure" freeze with several pro-White House amendments, they too had been victorious.

Supporter Stan Lundine, D-N.Y., called the nuclear freeze movement truly a grassroots effort and .said

Speaking of Your Health...

Lester L Coleman, M.D.

To A void Heartburn...

almost every night before go^ to bed, I suffer from beortbum. It ^ppens if I eat a heavy meal or a light meal. I ^ X-rays and they dont show anything. Do you have qy suggestions? Mr. E.B., Nil.

Pear Mr. B.;

Heartburn is a vague term from a medical point of view. Trom the laymans point of View, it is a burning, distress-tng sensation which interferes wtth rest and sleep,

* Jt is known that heartburn mxurs when the gastric juices acid in the stwhach back up into the esq)hagus. Dr. Donald 0. Castell, a specialist iU gastroenterolo^ and profesor of medicine at the Bowman-Gray School of Jkiedicine in Winston-Salem, N.C., makes the following suggestions for relieving the ^ 'distressing symptoms of ' Ji^bum.

' 1. Stop or cut down on ^ok-idg and especially dwit smoke right after a meal, r ;2. Dont wear clothes that fit .tightly around the waist.

' -3. Avoid foods that may stimulate acid secretion in the stwnach such as coffee and lajcohol.

: -4. Avoid fatty foods and ;K)colates as well as greasy -and spicy foods.

5. Eat smaller, more fre-'^ipent meals.

^ t6. Sleep with the head of jKHir bed raised six inches, jieferably by placing blocks

under the jegs at the head of the bed.

7. Reduce if you are overweight.

8. Dont eat too fast. Tak^ small mouthfuls and chewT thoroughly.

9. Avoid hot and highly seasoned foods, processed meats, and carbonated beverages.

10. Take antacids about a half hour'after eating. Choose one that is specifically recommended by your doctor.

These suggestions are simple and really not a burden.

* t it

Do you think karate is a safe exercise for young boys and girls? Do you think they can hurt each other by these attacking maneuvers? Mrs. N.P.,Kan.

Dear Mrs. P.:

When these excellent disciplines are taught by rehable instructors and when their potential dangers are respected, this sport can be an excellent one.

Those who are highly trained know the damage that can be inflicted by a single blow to the neck, to the chest, to the kidneys, and to the liver and spleen.

Karate as a sport is an exhilarating one. As a method of violence, it is as dangerous as, carrying a loaded gun.

Reliable karate educators constantly emphasize that strict adherence to the rules is absolutely essential for safety.

I applaud those concerned citizens who have forced this country to face the prospect of nuclear war.

Opponent Jack Kemp, R.N.Y., call the resolution a dangerous step because it would perpetuate the current imbalance in strategic and theater forces, it would undercut the critical negotiations underway, and it would be the antithesis of ur true objective, arms reductions. Members voting yes supported the freeze resolution.

NORTH CAROLINA Voting yes. Walter Jones, Ike Andrews, Neal, Britt, Rose, Hefner, James Martin, Broyhill, Clarke.

Voting no: Valentine, Whitley.

Not voting: None.

REDUCE By a vote of 221 for and 203 against, the House adopted an amendment to HJ Res 13 that would void any Soviet-U.S. freeze if, after a "reasonable interval, negotiators failed to agree on reducing arsenals.

The vote was a major breakthrough for conservatives because it soothed [resident Reagans fear that the pure freeze sought by liverals would guarantee Soviet nuclear superiority.

Sponsor Elliott Levitas, D-Ga., said that without his amendment we will be left frozen into incredibly large and dangerous nuclear arsenals, and the world will .be a much less safe place. Opponent Les AuCoin, D-Ore., said: Remember the code words. The code words for reductions mean if you settle only for that, you really are not trying to stop the technological advance of the arms race.

Members voting yes wanted a freeze to hold only . if it leads promptly to reduc-Jjpns.

' NRTIT^f^yNA Voting yes: Walter Jotos, Valentine, WhitleyY Ike Andrews, Hefner, James

Aerosol To Test Lung Damage

Within a few years a radioactive aerosol - a radioactive liquid suspended in air - could be testing the effects of smoking and air pollution on peoples lungs, replacing the more expensive and less available gases now used for these and, other lung tests.

Dr. David A. Weber of the University of Rochester Medical Center is developing such an aerosol.

'An aerosol would be an easier, less expensive method to provide information not readily obtainable from the tests currently in use, says Weber, "Aerosols are not yet used in routine clinical work, and they may advance the state of diagnostic tools considerably.

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'Martin, Broyhill.

Voting no: Neal, Britt, Rose, Clarke.

Not voting: None.

SENATE BUDGET By a vote of 23 for and 75 against, the Senate rejected a conservative-backed fiscal 1984 budget plan that called for severe cuts in domestic spending, a 7.5 percent hike in defense outlays, preserving the third year of President Reagans tax cuts, and virtually no new taxes.

* Although it appealed to many Republicans, the plan was not endorsed by Senate GOP leaders, who were marshalling support for a compromise budget. they drafted in concert with the White House,

The vote occurred during debate on S Con Res 27, the congressional budget blueprint for 1984 and later fiscal years. The Senate Budget Committee document now onthe floor envisions 1984 outlays of $848.8 billion, revenues of $686.7 billion, and a deficit of $162 billion.

Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utha, sponsor of the conservative budget, said that "by avoiding tax increases, this budget removes a huge temptation for Congress to spend more money. He defended the

deep domestic cuts, saying "these federal programs are eating us alive.

Opponent Howar Metzen-baum, D-Ohio, called Hatchs proposal this new U.S. Chamber of Commerce budget. He added that a major flaw is preserving the Administrators supply-side tax cuts that, he said, benefit the wealthy to the detriment of middle- and lower-income individuals.

Senators voting yes favored the conservative budget plan.

Voting from North Carolina were John East, R. voted yes. Jesse Helms, R, voted yes.

REPEAL The Senate rejected, 16 for and 82 against, the budget alternative authored by Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., a declared

C:

Democratic presidential candidate.

Hollings called for virtually freezing most domestic spending at current levels, repealing the third year of President Reagans individual and corporate tax cuts, blocking the Administration plan to index tax rates to inflation, and permitting only a three percent growth in defense spending in fiscal 1984.

Hollings said what we need to do is that one thing that is so evident to everyone in America - regain control and freeze the budget as nearly as possible to the 1983 levels.. .This is not a rafical or revolutionary proposal -it is simple common sense. Opponent Orin Hatch, R-Utah, praised Hollings for "telling the truth about

America's economic problems. But he said that by eliminating tax indexing and repealing the third year of the Administrations tax cuts, Hollings would hike taxes by $31 billion in 1984 and thus retard recovery. Senators voting yes favored the Hollings budget plan.

Voting from North Carolina were' East voted no Helms voted no.

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1 ht' Daiiv Keflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, May 12,1983Border Town Wounded By Egyptian-lsraeli Peace

By MARCUS ELIASON and

DALIA BALIGH Associated Press Writers KAFAH. Israeli-Egyptian Border' AP i - The scar still tiurts, but the people of Kafah are getting used to it. Women even hang their washing on the barbed wire of the border'

The Hgyptian-lsraeli peace treaty is no blessing for the

dusty town of 80,000. A quarter of it belongs to Egypt, the rest to the GazP Strip, occupied by Israel. The border is a 40-yard-wide strip of tarmac, sand and barbed-wire fenpes.

Except for about 50 people with special passes, nobody crosses^ the line. Silence hangs over the naked border strip, punctuated occasionally by shouted con

versations between townspeople on opposite sides of the fences. Pick a day without a wind, residents say, otherwise youll hear nothing.

"Life is not good, sighed Ahmed Shaar, a grocer. Everything has closed down, the Egyptians did not dp a good thing by closing the border. They wanted the land, but is this peace when

they divide us?

Shaars grocery stands on what used to be a main street, and served Israeli settlers from the Yamit area to the southwest, Arabs from the Sinai capital of El Arish and Bedouin nomads. The settlers and travelers are gone and the main street ends at the border, a few yards from Shaars empty shop.

SCARS STILL HURT - Two Arab chUdren guard their mothers wash, hung on a barbed wire fence in the divided city of Rafah. The Egyptian-

lsraeli peace treaty is no blessing for the dusty town of 80,000. (AP Laserphoto)

Miller Slowly Grinding Down

BySTRAT DOUTHAT Associated Press Writer .SFAOND CREEK, W.Va. AP - Like the ancient grisi mill he has tended for the pa.st ,57 years, Aubrey Reed is slowly grinding down.

Things were a lot different, though, when Reed first took over the old three-story mill that teeters above the shallow, bubbling waters of .Second Creek. The year was 1921) and a grist mill was an essential element of this West Virginia farming community.

"That wa^ long before sliced bread, of course, observed the laconic, 78-yearold miller. "The farmers hereabouts would haul their corn and wheat in their horse and ox-drawn wagons, unload, and then load up the stone-ground flour and corn meal for the trip back home. They kept me plenty busy back then. Today, Reeds mill is still active, but each year brings tewer farmers and ever less corn and wheat.

"1 still grind some corn for the people up and down the creek, he said, nodding toward a heap of corn cobs on the floor, "But there aint much wheat grown anymore, these days, I guess, its easier just to go to the store and buy a loaf of bread.

The old man stuck his thumbs in the straps of his

overalls and squinted into the cavernous interior of the mill, where a fine patina of flour and corn meal covered the awkward-looking l9lh century machinery.

"Ive got two water-turned burrs that I use to grind corn and buckwheat, except I havent ground much buckwheat for the past 10 years, he said. "The water is trapped in the mill race and fed beneath the mill where it catches the flutter wheel, and that turns the belt-driven turbines.

Reed estimates that the foot-thick, 60-inch-wide stones have been converting corn to grist for almost 200 years. His huge, steel-rollered flour mill, however, is only about a century old.

"Ive got it hooked up to a gasoline motor now, he ' said, "in case the creek gets tow.

Second Creek, fed by a spring on Peters Mountain some 14 miles away, meanders along the border of Greenbrier and Monroe counties on the southeastern edge of the state. Reed said he can remember when there were seven mills such as his on the creek.

"Theyre all gone now, except me, the old man said. In fact, they tell me that this is the last, old-fashioned water mill in West Virginia and one of the last in the country.

These days, the majority of Reed's customers are tourists.

"Used to be, he said, the farmers would bring their corn and wheat and Id take an eighth and sell it; thats how 1 made my living. For the past 10 years, though. Id say my business has been all cash.

Reed said he never imag

ined that his mill would someday become a tourist attraction.

Shucks, he said, stepping outside into the sunshine of his 79th spring, there wasnt no such thing as a tourist back when I took over this mill. Now, they come from everywhere.

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' CHARTER PINES PSYCHIATRIC HOSPITAL

SPEAK OUT

The State decision is still not final

/1

regarding Charter Pines Hospital being constructed in Greenville, N.C.

If you arc one of the growing numbers of the Pitt County Community in favor of the private psychiatric hospital proposed...

Please Write To:

James Bek, Manager Health Facilities Development

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

or local no. 756*7462

Roughly two-thirds of the stores near the border have closed.

Israeli authorities say the city need not have been divided - that they were willing to give it entirely to Egypt. But Egypt insisted on getting back what it lost in the 1967 war, not an inch mbreortess.

So bulldozers flattened houses and shops to create a security strip. A water pumping station was left intact but divided through the middle, leaving the water on one side and the pump on the other.

The Israelis gave land and financial aid to the 330 families vacated from the strip, and they built themselves spacious new homes in Rafah, with modern utilities and a new school.

But families were divided and farmers cut off from their crops. Business partnerships collapsed. Marriages between people from opposite sides of town were delayed or even canceled because neither Israel

Resents Labor's Early-Endorsing

WASHINGTON (AP) -House Speaker Thomas P. ONeill Jr. says hes uncomfortable with plans by labor leaders to endorse a can- didate for the 1984 Democratic presidential nomination before the partys primary season begins.

The AFL-CIO has tentatively scheduled a meeting of its general board in early December to seek a consensus behind a single Democratic presidential candidate.

ONeill said that while he would not try to stop labors endorsement plans, It causes resentment in the party when you do things like that (endorsing candidates early). ... I think it hurts feelings.

nor Egypt would accept new residents.

The municipalitys ambitious expansion program was frozen. The land earmarked for an industrial park was split by the boiYler,

Rafah, for centuries a hub of travel and trade, became a dead end.

The 700 Palestinian families of Camp Canada found themselves in a peculiar predicament. Refugees who had been moved out of their crowded camps by the Israelis, they built better homes In Camp Canada. But that camp is on the Egyptian side, and the Egyptians demanded that Israel take them back. Israel refused, but now says it will accept them. Meanwhile, the people of Camp Canada are restricted to their quarters and cannot work.

All the Palestinians in Camp Canada want to go over there, but Israel refuses, said Gamal Hamed, a young Palestinian on the Egyptian side, who was engaged in a shouted conversation with his relatives on the Israeli side.

My family is not happy, but at least they are making money. Here I sleep in peace. I am not afraid an Israeli soldier will enter my house at night. But I am going to Iraq to make money. There is no future here, he said.

Israeli soldiers came and pushed away the people Hamed was shouting to.. The residents say that generally the soldiers of both sides discourage cross-border chats. Those with permits to cross can carry messages, but a family reunion requires crossing the border at an official checkpoint, a formality that takes anywhere from one to four hours, and costs approximately J8 from Israel and $4 from Egypt.

Just south of Rafah stands the international border terminal where brightly colored twses carry tourists back

and forth between the two countries that once were enemies. But in Rafah, the border has a dour military tone, softened only by the Egyptian and Israeli flags flapping along the barbed wire.

With a peace treaty in force, the border is designed solely to foil smugglers and migrant laborers. But to most residents, peace means little.

A restaurant owner named Aziz says he thought peace would mean more customers, and he planned to enlarge his premises.

I thought wed do good business. Thats what they promised peace would bring. And now look what happened, he said. Families broken, businesses destroyed.

We have become the tragedy of peace.

OUTRAGEOUSLY ELEGANT SHIRT DRESSINGI

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Sky Blue, in sizes

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Shop Carolina East Mair 10 to 9

Each

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rhc (Anthia.. .in beige, na\y and light blue.

N

W

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6-11

5-11

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M

w

6-11

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'Ridge Law' Pros And Cons Are Raised At Hearing

ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C, (AP) Prohibiting mountaintop development would amount to condemning property for state use without compensating the owners, opponents of proposed ridge laws said in a legislative hearing.

But supporters said Wednesday that regulations are essential to preserve the beauty of North Carolinas mountains and keep them attractive to tourists.

Twenty-six people spoke before the House Water and Air Resources Committee, which is considering House and Senate bills submitted after a 10-story condominium was built atop Little Sugar Mountain in Avery County. Sixteen supported a ridge law while 10 opposed it.

What better way to use the land than constructing a multi-storied building? asked Bruce Brown of Haywood County. When we start defining what a beautiful building is, where will it end?

Brown said the protections afforded mountain residents in the ridge proposals already were law. He said limiting development would be putting a limit on a way of life.

But Rob Johnson, a Boone resident, responded anyone not thinking aesthetics are tied to economic value would learn a hard lesson when tourists go elsewhere.

The Senate bill, sponsored by Sen. R.P. Bo Thomas, D-Henderson, passed 48-0 last month. It would prohibit construction of buildings more than 35 feet tall on ridges more than 2,950 feet above sea level. Counties would be able to exempt themselves within 120 days after the bill takes effect, but only after conducting a public hearing and persuading state officials they shouldnt be included.

The House bill, sponsored by Rep. Margaret Hayden, D-Alleghany, would allow local government to regulate ridges 2,500 feet or more above sea level or 500 feet above the average elevation of the adjacent valley floor. It would permit regulation of building on other ridges if local officials consider it reasonably necessary.

Speakers favoring ridge regulation included mountain residents, government officials and representatives of environmental groups. Opponents were area developers, builders and landowners.

We cant compete with the Piedmont for industry and must utilize our mountains to generate (money), said Jay Ring, president of the Homebuilders Association of Haywood County. Its not fair to restrict our economic potential. Jimmy Phipps, an N.C. State University political science student and Sparta native, criticized the 10-story concrete monster that "destroyed the mountain, which he likened to destroying a member of your family.

Architect Sammy Sams said he was "embarrassed at the lack of sentisitivity of architects who design buildings such as the mountain condo.

In other legislative action;    f

Arrest Records Legislation that would have allowed erasure of arrest records for defendants who arent convicted was killed Wednesday by the state Senate.

The Senate, which had tentatively approved the arrest _^^ord expunction bill, reversed itself on a 26-22 vote after the jr proposals came under attack by Sen. Tony Rand, D-Cumberland. Rand said the bill was weakened by an amendment making expunction mandatory andd depriving judges of discretion to keep some records intact.

We all know that there are different types of (charge) dismissals, said Rand. Sometimes the (defendant) really didnt do it, but other times he just buys out.

Sen. Joe Johnson, D-Wake, said many times charges are dropped or convictions overturned because of minor legal technicalities. Such charges should not be removed from public records, he said.

Sen. Bob Swain, D-Buncombe, said innocent people deserved to have any record of their arrest destroyed. Many people are arrested or charged through human error through no fault of their own, while others are falsely accused, he said.    '    '

Do we want (the defendant) to have a criminal record when he was never found guilty? said Swain. Do we want him to live under a cloud the rest of his life?

Early Release

The Senate approved 25-23 a bill granting some first-time offenders early release from prison if they agree to do community work, despite strong critcism from Sen. Henson Barnes, D-Wayne.

As amended by the Senate Judiciary .1 Committee, the bill would permit early freedom after the criminal has served one-fourth of his sentence. He would remain under close supervision and would have to perform community service judged equivalent to his remaining jail time.

Barnes said the bill would gut the provisions of the 1981 Fair Sentencing Act, which sets presumptive sentences for felonies and requires judges who deviate to explain why in writing.

This is not a good bill, he said.

Swain, however, said it would apply only to inmates considered nondangerous.

Its not a matter of turning criminals loose entirely, said Swain. Its a matter of letting them do work to pay for what they did. Short sentences rehabilitate ... while long sentences destroy what little talents they (criminals) have left.

Prisons

A bill allowing the correction secretary to get the state Parole Commission to release inmates when prison overcrowding becomes a problem was approved by the House Corrections Committee.

The bill notes that there are almost 8,000 inmates in prison who are eligible for parole while the Department of Correction has asked the Legislature for additional money in 1983-85 to handle more inmates.

The proposal is a compromise version of a bill that originally would have required the parole of inmates to keep the prison population below 17,000. The Department of Correction supports the amended bill, which gives it discretion when to release inmates.

Rep. Joe Hackney, D-Orange, the bills sponsor, said inmates affected by the bill would be those eligible for parole anyway.

He said he supports the compromise although he would have preferred making release of inmates mandatory. He noted that since the bill was introduced, the states prison population has gone from 17,450 to 17,000.

Landfills

A bill to regulate hazardous-waste landfills in North Carolina appears headed for the Appropriations Committee after winning approval Wednesday from the House Water and Air Resources (Committee.

Committee Chairman Rep. Robert McAlister, D-Rockingham, said he would consult with House Speaker Liston Ramsey about the bill. Rep. William Clark, D-Cumberland, who introduced the administration-back^ bill, said it would require hiring an environmental chemi* at a cost of about $40,000 a year.

The committee amended the measure to ensure that no landfill permits would be issued before July 1, 1985, and to delete liquid laboratory packs generated by medical researchers from landfill consideration.

It also would require publication of all commercially available alternatives to landfills in case of legal challenges to landfill decisions.

The bill would prohibit several categories of waste from landfill disposal, including ignitables, reactives and corrosives. It would restrict disposal of other wastes when they are in a highly concentrated form.

Health Laws

The Senate Human Resources Committee began considering a bill rewriting North Carolinas public health laws after it emerged from lengthy deliberations by a joint subcommittee.

Sen. Gerry Hancock, D-Durham, who co-chaired the subcommittee, said he knew of no significant objections to' the bill in its present form.

He said the subcommittee heard from members of the press, county commissioners, local health directors, medical researchers, animal dealers and people concerned about the human treatment of animals in their nine meetings.

Controversial provisions in the bill include changes in laws governing distribution of impounded animals, changes in laws governing inspection of migrant worker camps and mandatory statewide vaccination against rabies for cats. Records

Spokesmen for Attorney General Rufus Edmisten and Gov, Jim Hunt squared off in the House State ..Government Committee over a bill to establish a computer criminal history commission.

John Elmore, an Edmisten spokesman, said his office was afraid that the bill would open access to the Police Information Network records.

If we open it to one person, we will have to open it to banks, insurance companies, newspapers and nosy neighbors, Elmore said.

Robert Melott deputy secretary of the Department of Crime Control and Public Safety said he wanted to make sure public records remain public when theyre put on computers.

Hugh Stevens of the N.C. Press Association said, Weve got to develop a mechanism to ensure the public nature of information... is not lost in the technological shuffle.

ESC

The House Employment Security Committee approved a bill affecting who is eligible for unemployment compensation and how unemployment overpayments are repaid to the government.

Under existing law, a worker cannot claim unemployment insurance if he or she was fired because of misconduct, carelessness or negligence.

But committee members said there are varying degrees of misconduct and workers who may deserve reduced benefits are being forced to do without any benefits under the current law.

Rep. A1 Adams, D-Wake, amended the bill to allow Employment Security Commission to adjust benefits to those who exhibited some misconduct or carelessness but not enough to disqualify them from all benefits.

Another section of the bill would allow the state to keep up to half of a workers unemployment benefits until it makes up for previous unemployment overpayments if they do not involve fraud. In the oast, the state has kept all the benefits

until th overpayment was repaid,

PACs

The Senate Rules Committee approved a bill to let state-based organizations shift funds from their federal political action committees to North Carolina PACs.

Sen, Craig Lowing, D-Mecklenburg, said the bill was equested by NCNB Corp. of Charlotte to replace old iaws lat allowed up to six contributions to state political races, hat law was changed in 1973 when federal PACs failed to eport all their contributions.

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No Parole Given Bribe-Taker

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A former Lumberton Housing Authority director convicted of taking bribes and kickbacks has been denied parole by the North Carolina Paroles Commission, a district attorney said Wednesday.

Joe Freeman Britt, a Lumberton prosecutor, said he was notified of the commissions decision Wednesday. But a commission spokesman said he could not confirm the decision until th& former housing director, Gerald Bonner Hill, had been notified.

Hill, who was convicted in 1981 on 19 counts of false pretense, bribery and conspiracy, was sentenced to seven to 10 years in prison. His sentence was commuted in December by Gov. Jim Hunt under an early Christmas release program.

However, because Britt objected to the commutation. Hill was not released.

Britt said Hills next parole^ review will be Oct. 15.

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Buy one single roll at reg. price and get the second single roll for only one dollar.

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Interior/Exterior Acrylic Latex Ciiilk (C850)

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WITH $3.00 KAIL-II BEBATIOOUPOIS

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2, reg. $6.99

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GREENVILLE 303 ARLINGTON BLVD. 756-6108





16-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, May 12,1983

Stock And Market Reports

Hogs

R.MEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was 25 cents to 50 cents lower. Kinston 47.50, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadbourn, Ayden. Pine Level, Laurin-biirg and Benson 47.50, Wilson 47.50, Salisbury 46.00, Howland unreported, Spivevs Corner 46.00. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 43.00, Fayetteville 43 00. Whiteville unreported, Wallace 43,00. Spivey's Corner 43.00. Rowland un-rcported, Durham 42,00.

Poultry

RALEIGH, N.C. lAP) iNCDA) - The North Carolina f o b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 45.00 cents, based on full truck toad lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2'- to 3 pound birds. The market is steady and the live supply is light to moderate for a good demand. Weights desirable. Estimated ^laughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Thursday was 1.808,000, compared to 1,7,')5,000 last Thursday.

NEW YORK (AP) - The slock market gave ground after opening higher today, extending Wednesdays broad retreat.

Nearly four stocks fell in price for every three that rose in the midday tally of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks, down 0.96 points Wednesday, dropped another 5.23 points to 1,214.49 by noon. The blue-chip average had been up 2.51 points in the opening half hour.

Analysts said traders were .sellingstock to ca.sh in on recent record-setting gains. The Dow Jones industrials peaked at 1,232,59 last Friday, while broad indexes of the NYSE, American Stock Exchange and over-the-counter market reached record heights Tuesday.

The NYSEs composite index fell .31 to 94.68. At the American Stock Exchange, the. market value index was off 1.11 at 446.98.

Big Board volume slipped to 39.14 million shares a third of the way throu^ the session from 45.62 million in the same period Wednesday.

Eastman Kodak, which plunged 11'ii points over the previous eight sessions, rose to 74's as the most active issue on the NYSE. A block of 140,000 shares changed hands at 742 a share.

Oil issues, which surged Wednesday, were mixed in active trading. Technology issues continued to slide.

NKW YORK lAl'i Midday slocks

High

:

Low

Last

AMK I orp

29',

29

AbbtLibs

45'4

45'S.

45',

Allis ( halm

I7'v

171

17"s

Alcoa

56

35'*,

35

Am Baker

16

I54

16

Am Brands

54 S.

'53

53

Amer Can

44'4

44'

44',

Am Cyan

46'.

46'

46'.

AniFamily

20',

19'-;

20'

Am .Motors

IU'4

10'

10'

AmSland

33-I,

33

Amer T&T

68\

68'

68',

Beal Food

27\

27'

27';

Beth Steel

23'4

23

23',

Boeing

37'

37',

37',

Boise Cased

/i^4

44'-.

44-;

Borden

/'JX',

66'4

52

53',

Kurlngt Ind CSX Coro

38

66

38',

66

CaroPwLt

22'

22',

22'

Celaiiese

60

59S,

60

Cent Suva

154

IS'si

15",

Champ inl Chrysler

26^

26\

26 s

26'4

26

26

('oeaCola

.54-

54*4

54',

ColR Halm

23';

23',

23',

Com* Fdis

27';

27"

27';

1 'onAgra

27'.

27'

27'-;

Conti Croup

43

42',

42",

DeltaAirl

46'

46'

46'

DowChem

4, :l2"i

,12

:12';

duHont

47'.

47'

47',

Duke Ho*

2;r.

23\

2:i'i

KasliiAirl.

8'

8

8',

Fast Kodak

75

<3'..

73,

KatunCp

40'.

40',

40',

Ksinark s

65'.

' 65' J

65".

Exxon

35

34 s

34"4

Fireslone

22

22';

22",

FlaHowLI

37'

37';

37'

FlaHrogress

20'

20",

20" 1

FordMol

50

49 s

49 s

For Mc'Kess

44'i

44'-.

44-',

Fuqua Ind

474

47"

47-'

CTE Corp

44'4

44';

44'.

CnDynam

52

51",

51',

Oen wee OenlKlec wi Oen Food C,en Mills Clen Motors Gen Tire Genularls GaPaeil Gnodrieh Goodyear Grace Co GINor Nek Greyhound Gulf Oil Htrculesinc Honeywell llospiCp s Ing Rand . IBM

Inti Harv Inl Paper Int Rectif lilt T4T K mart Kai.srAlum KanetySyc KrogerCo laK'kheed laK'WS Corp McDrmInt n .Mead Corp MinnMM Mobil .Moiusanto NCNB Cp Nabi.scoBrd Nat Distill Norflh.Sou n OlinCp Owenslll Penney JC PepsiCo Phelps Dod PhllipMorr PhillpsPet Polaroid ProilGamh s Quaker Oat RC.C

RalstnPur RepubAir Republic Sll Revlon Reynldlnd Rockwellnt RwCrown SIRegtsCp Scott Paper SealdPow SearsRoeb Shaklee Skyline Cp Son} (Yirp Soujhern Co Sp<rry Cp SldOitCal StdOilInd .StdOilOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexKasIn CMC Ind Cn Camp Cn Carbide Cniroyal I S Steel I nocal W achov Cp WalMart s WestPlPep Weslgh FI Weyerhsr WinnDix Woolworth Wrigley Xerox Cp

Obituaries

86'; S.'iG 31",    311;

UN, 14'S, 24'(    24'

33\    33S.

5U 4'4

45-4    4.

Following are selected II market quidations Ashlandprtf Burroughs

Carolina Power 4 Light

Collins 4 Aikman

Connor

Duke

F^aton

Kckerds

Kxxon

F'ieldcresI

Halteras

Hilton

Jefferson

Deere

l,owe's

McDonald's

McGraw ,

Piedmont Piiia Inn P4G

TRW, Inc C'nitedTel Virginia Electric Wachovia

OVER THE COUNTER

Aviation

Branch

Little Mint

Planters Bank

49\ 22 29' 2U 2.1', 4i 33'4 34'; 33'4 I6S, 56'-4 36'4 38N 22h 64'-. 45'4 36'4 12'4 57'j 71'4 22' 15 42

25'-4-26

22-22I4

IS.

16'4-17

THURSDAY

f) till p m - Jaycpes nippt at Rotary Bldf>

G 30 pin F^xchange Club meets

flllOpm BPWClubmeets 7:00 p m. - Greenville Civitan Club meets at Three Steers 7:30 p.m. DAV and Auxiliary meelsat VFWHome    /

7:30 p.m. - Overeaters Anonj)-mous meets at First Presbyterian Church

8:00 p.m - Chapter 1308 of the Women of the Moose

FRIDAY

3:00 p m. - Annual Authors Tea, sponsored by the Greenville Woman's Club, will be held at the Woman's Club 7: 3^.p m. - Red Men meet

Red Cross Sets New Courses

Ruth Taylor of the Pitt County Red Cross announced that several courses will be taught in Greenville this month and early June.

She said the sessions in room 142.at Minges Coliseum include a cardio pulmonary resuscitation course Friday from 6-10 p.m. and Saturday from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m., with a minimum age of 17 and possession of a current Red Cross CPR certificate required; a standard first aid instructor course, lecture method, May 16-19 from 6-10 p.m., valid Red Cross stan-. dard first aid certificates required; a four-hour orientation for instructors course in the standard first aid modular system, 6-10 p.m. on May 25; and a standard first aid modular system instructor course May 31 and June 1-2 from 6-10 p.m.

An advanced lifesaving course will be taught at the Memorial Gym pool on May 17. 19,23,24 and 25 from 6-9 p.m. and May 21-22 from 1-5 p.m., with participants required to successfully complete a preliminary swimming test and be at least 15 years old, ,

For more information, call Mrs, Taylor at 752-4222.

Find No Arson Evidence

TARBORO, N.C. (AP) -Edgecombe County Sheriff Philip H. Ellis said Wednesday his deputies and SB! agents so far have uncovered no evidence of arson in the burning of four churches in the last five months.

Ellis said three of the four churches had predominantly black congregations, which led to suspicions of arson.

Ellis said there has been no racial unrest in the communities where the churches are located and there is no indication of activity by the Ku Klux Klan or other groups.    ,

ADVISORY COUNCIL MEMBERS HONORED ... Mayhue Buck, Jimmy Mobley and Thomas Atkinson, left to right, were among the group of local advisory council members that were honored Wednesday at the

county-wide advisory council dinner at Farmville Central Hi^ ScJ^l. Over 20 council members who will be imating off their local councils were presented certificates of appreciation.

CountyBudget...

(Continued from Pagel)

near Black Jack, and to pave sites at Shelmerdine and at the Port Terminal. It also includes funds to hire four drivers for the hauling trucks.

Davenport said present plans call for a seven-day hauling schedule. He noted that the contractor now hauling the containers operates six days each week.

Margaret Roberts, county finance officer, requested $28,143 for operations of the print shop during the next-fiscal year^ ($20,493 this year). She told commissioners the proposal includes $7,100 for a new paper cutter, which will be used by the print shop and the county school system.

Other requests presented Wednesday included $222,766 for houskeeping service ($223,242 this year), and $234,862 for the county garage (237,192 this year).

The board has indicated that it wants to maintain the same 5 cent per $100 valuation tax rate in effect this year, and n' ne of the r^uests heard in the series of preliminary budget s( iions has included any pay increases for employees.

E -Null Chose Job Over Her Vocation

LANSING, Mich. (AP) -An ex-nun who heads Michigans Department of Social Services says a Vatican ultimatum to quit her order or leave the welfare agency shows the Roman Catholic church does not fully understand the American scene,

"It does raise the whole issue of whether or not a religious cleric can ever serve in political positions, Agnes Mansour said Wednesday after announcing she had left the Sisters of Mercy after 30 years to stay with the state agency.

Ms. Mansour, 52, had been under fire from the church because the agency finances poor womens abortions through the Medicaid program, which last year paid $5.7 million for 19,500 such operations in Michigan.

The Sisters of Mercy upheld her right to hold both positions, but Detroit Archbishop Edmund Szoka eventually was backed by Pope John Paul II in his February order to either renounce her vows or quit the welfare agency.

I dont think there is always full understanding, especially of the American (religious) scene, Ms. Mansour said of the church.

Sister Maureen Mulcrone, a member of the administrative team for the Detroit province of the Sisters of Mercy, agreed at another news conference.

saying the processes of the Catholic church have not kept pace with the times.

All men are making decisions, all women are being acted upon, Sister Mulcrone said of the church hierarchy.

Catholic women throughout the country ... will be alienated from the chiach because of the order that Ms. Mansour resign as a nun or quit the state job, said Francis Kissling, executive director of Catholics for a Free Choice, a national organization based in Washington that supports a womans right to abortion.

MASONIC NOTICE Crown Point Lodge No. 708 AF&AM will hold a stated communication Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Greenville Masonic Temple. All regular Master Masons are invited to attend.^

Edward J. Harper II. Master

Wiley S. Christy, Secretary

Card Of * Thanks

The Vines and Cherry family wishes to thank everyone for their kind deeds, letters, food and flowers, during the death of their loved one Special thanks to the memtrcrs of Cornerstone M.B Church and to the Kitchen Committee

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3 Collisions Wednesday

An estimated $2,800 damage resulted from three traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Wednesday.

Officers reported heaviest damage resulted from a 7:07 p.m. collision at the intersection of Memorial Drive and Third Street involving a truck driven by Lacy Streeter of 1704 W. Third St. and a car operated by Mag-'gie Mercer Carney of Falkland.

Damage from the collision was set at $900 to the Streeter truck and $500 to the car.

Cars driven by Samuel Donnell Perkins of Route 5,

Greenville, and Wilton Hawkins Jr. of 1217 Davenport St. collided about 6:35 p.m. at the intersection of Siith and 14th streets, caus-ing an estlraaW 1600 dam- 3, age to the Perkins car and ij S Armv durins World 1300 damage 10 He Hawkins

Drake

Mr. Roy J. Drake, 79, died Wednesday in Craven County Hospital, New Bern. Graveside services will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. in the Drake Family Cemetery near Vanceboro by the Rev. Danny French and the Rev. Robert Cayton.

A retired farmer and member of Macedonia Free Will Baptist Church, Mr. Drake spent most of his life in Craven County, where he was bom.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Thelma Adams Drake; a daughter, Mrs. Doris Gaskins of Norfolk, Va.; a son, Dorman Drake of Norfolk, Va.; a brother, Bruce Drake of Ernul; two sisters, Mrs. Mildred Ennis of Winterville and Mrs. Christine Harris of Norfolk, Va.; six grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.

The family will receive friends at the Wilkerson Funeral Home in Vanceboro Friday from 7 to9 p.m.

Frizzelle

Mrs. Joyce Blow Frizzelle died this morning in Duke University Medical Center. She was the wife of Bobby Frizzelle of Greenville and the daughter of Mr. Larry and Mrs. Agnes Blow, also of Greeaville. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Flanagan Funeral Home here.

Johnston

Mr. Daniel A. Johnston Sr., 76, of Greenville died Wednesday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Graveside services will be conducted Saturday at 2:30 p.m. in Pinewood Memorial Park by the Rev. Richard R. Gammon.

Mr. Johnston was a native-of Dover and attended the University of North Carolina

$300 damage vehicle.

Mary Worthington Teel of 414 Line Ave. was charged with failing to see her intended movement could be made in safety following investigation of an 8:50 a.m. collision on Memorial Drive, 39 feet south of the OHagen Street intersection.

Police said the Teel car collided with a car driven by Jasper Cain Rose Jr. of Tarboro, causing $100 damage to the Teel car and $400 damage to the Rose vehicle.

War II and had lived in Greenville since 1946. He was a member of the First Presbyterian Church.

Surviving are a son, Dan

OUT OF LINE BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) - The chief editor of Yugoslavias mosNnfluential daily newspaper has been dismissed, apparently because of his liberal editorial views.

A. Johnston Jr. of San Uiego, Calif.s a daughter, Mrs. Linda Gettier of Zebulon, and two grandchildren.

The family will receive friends at the Wilkerson Funeral Home Friday from 7 to 9 p.m. Those wishing to make memorial contributions may consider the First Presbyterian Church Building Fund, the family suggests.

Hargett

Mr. Junius Hargett, 83, of 403 Wyatt St., Greenville, died Saturday in Britthaven Nursing Home in Washington. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. at Joes Branch Free Will Baptist Church near Vanceboro by Dr. Lou R. Barnes. Burial will be in the church cemetery.

Mr. Hargett was bom and reared in Pitt County and lived most of his life in the Calico community.

He is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Ethel Johnson of Washington, D.C.; two foster daughters, Mrs. Beulah Gardner of the home and Mrs. Arue Justice of Austin, Texas; one foster son, David Banks of Brentwood, N.Y.; a sister, Mrs. Nora Pollard of Vanceboro; a brother, William Matthew Barnhill of Ayden; five grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

The family will receive friends Friday from 7:30-8:30 p.m. at Flanagan Funeral Chapel.

Manning

Mrs. Hazel Virginia Manning, 44, died Xuesday. Funeral services will be held Saturday at 2 p.m. at Farmer Funeral (iapel. Burial will follow in the Manning Family Cemetery.

Surviving is her husband, Roy J. Manning of River-dale, Md.; a son, J R. James of Fayetteville; a stepson, Travis Wayne Manning of Vanceboro; a stepdaughter, iMrs. Connie Strickland of Williamston; three brothers, Donald W. James of River-dale, Md., Jesse D. James of Wilson and Leonard W. James of Fayetteville, and five grandchildren.

Family visitation will be held at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Friday.

Smith

AYDEN - Derrick Smith

of Route 1, Box 479, Ayden, of the Ormondsville community, died Tuesday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Memorial services were held Wednesday at Norcott Memorial Chapel. Burial followed in Branchs Cemetery, Winterville.

Surviving are his parents, Mr. Arthur Ray Harris and Mrs. Doris Smith, both of Ayden; a brother, Eric Travon Smith of the home; a sister, Shameika Smith Of the home; his paternal grandmother, Mrs. Doris Boyd Harris of Route 1, Ayden; his maternal grandfather, Mr. Elmer Gregory Dudley of Louisburg; his maternal grandmother, Mrs. Ruby Barrett Smith of the home, and the maternal great-grandparents, Mr. Jessie Lee Barrett and Mrs. Eva Carr Barrett, both of Route 1, Greenville.

' White

Mrs. Gladie L. White, 56, died Monday at Norfolk General Hospital in Norfolk, Va. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 1:30 p.m. at Piney Grove Free Will Baptist Church near Grifton by the Rev. E.L. Gamer. Burial will follow in the church cemetery.

She Ss survived by two daughters, Mrs. Ethelene Woodson and Mrs. Gilda Stiles, both of Portsmouth, Va.; one son, Cleveland Earl White of Portsmouth, Va.; her mother, Mrs. Charity Greene of Goldsboro; six sisters, Ethel Bynum of Newark, N.J., Betsy Harper of Portsmouth, Va., Hattie Edwards of Grifton, Annie L. Connelly of Brooklyn, Felborie Dawson of Bridgeport, Conn., and Lizzie Cannon of Dudley; one brother, James Greene of Goldsboro, and six grandchildren.

The body will be at Mitchells Funeral Home in Winterville Friday from 4-9 p.m. At other times the family will be the home of her mother, 1006 N. John St., Goldsboro.

Card of Thanks

In the recent death of our beloved Henry Ollen Dupree, we received such compassion and such an outpouring of love and understanding, through your prayers, food, cards, cars and your presence. We will cherish these memories forever.

We are humbly and deeply grateful to all who cared.

Dupree and    Garrett    Fainlltea    J

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Sports XHE DAILY REFLECTORClassified

THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 12, 1983

Defense Sparks 76ers P''seii^speoks At conieyTo Second Game Win Gatlin Tops DHC Cage Awards

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Defense was the name of the game as the Philadelphia 76ers took a 2-0 lead over the Milwaukee Bucks in their National Basketball Association Eastern Conference final.

The 76ers won the second in the best-of-seven series 87-81 in what coaches and players said was a clinic in defensive basketball.

The series now heads for games three and four in Milwaukee, where the 76ers won two of three during the regular season. Theyll play Saturday and Sunday.

A fifth game, if necessary, is scheduled here Wednesday night.

The winner advances to the NBA championships against the survivor of the Western Conference series between the Los Angeles Lakers and San Antonio Spurs. That series is tied 1-1.

While defense prevailed Wednesday night, Moses Malone arid Andrew Toney gave the 76ers the offense needed to win. Malone scored 26 and Toney 20.

Malone, who was disappointed after scoring only 14 points and grabbing 12 rebounds in Sundays first game, wasnt excited about his return to form.

I just did the same things tonight that I did in the other game, he said. Only the results were better. 1 got a little more aggressive going to

the hoop. And when they werent pressuring me at the top of the key I made my moves to the hoop.

Neither team can run on each other in this series, but it probably will be different in Milwaukee. They know now their back is to the wall.

Sixers coach Billy Cunningham noted that his team is 6-0 in the playoffs (including a four game sweep of the New York Knicks), but we havent had an easy one yet.

Philadelphia led by II with 9:08 to play at 77-66. The Bucks then went on a 14-3 surge to tie at 80 on a hook by Bob Lanier over Malone with with 3:08 left.

But Maurice Cheeks, who scored 15, hit an 18 foot jumper to send Philadelphia ahead.

Then came what many felt was the big play.

The Bucks came down and Brian Winters lofted a shot. Bobby Jones, who stole an inbound pass Sunday to trigger a 111-109 victory in overtime, blocked the shot.

The ball went to Cheeks who passed to Julius Erving under the basket. Erving, who had just six points, slam dunked for a four-point lead that seemed to take the starch out of the Bucks.

Milwaukee got just one point in the final three minutes.

Milwaukee Coach Don Nelson said he thought Jones got more than the ball on the

block at the end, but he made * a good play, Ill give him that.

We have to play one game at a time and try to win and get back into contention, Nelson said.

Marques Johnson, who scored 30 Sunday, led his team with 25. Sidney Moncrief, held to one field goal Sunday, came back to hit eight and total 21 points.

The Sixers led 20-18 after a period, 43-39 at halftime and 71r61 starting the final period.

By JIMMY DuPREE Reflector Sports Writer

HOLLYWOOD - Youve got to have a plan to know where youre going, Maryland veteran basketball coach Charles Lefty Driesell told the audience at the annual D.H, Conley Awards Banquet Wednesday night.

Driesell was on hand to see Maryland recruit Keith Gatlin of Conley receive recognition as the 1982-83 Vikings most valuable player, outstanding offensive player, free throw champion and leading re

bounder. Gatlin and senior Mitchell Cox were named to the All-Coastal 3-A Conference team after the conclusion of the season.

Cox was cited as the most dedicated member of the squad, while Leon Cox was most outstanding defensive player and Otis Peyton touted as Mr. Hustle.

The girls basketball team went to the State 3-A Tournament finals before bowing to the Enka Sugar Jets, and senior point guard Darlene Cannon was awarded the MVP trophy by coach Joy

James. Senior Irish Barnhill was touted best hustler, while Karen Barrett was the top rebounder, Mechio Komegay received the Clutch Award, and sophomore Lisa Mills was the most improved.

Driesell recalled past Maryland basketball stars and the goals they set.

John Lucas came to me when he first came to play at Maryland and told me his wanted to improve himself by 10 percent every year." he recalled of the former Durham High School star. He came to me after the last

Sports Calendar,

Editor's Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring a^ncies and are subject to change without notice

Today's Sports Baseball Bear Grass at Jamesville E B Ay cock at Rocky Mount (4 p.m.)

Roanoke at Williamston JV (4 p.m.)

Rose at Fike (7:30 p.m.) FlkeatRoseJV I4p.m.)

LitUe League Lions vs. Jaycees First Federal vs. Wellcome Prep Lea^e Shop-Eze vs. Hendrix & Dail Softball Bear Grass at Jamesville E.B. Aycock at Fike (4 p.m.)

Rose at Fike (4 p.m.)

Church League Janis vs. First Pentecostal Black Jack vs. Faith Pentecostal Immanuel vs. Church of God , Arlington Street at First Pre sbyterian St James vs. Peoples First Free Will vs. Grace Mar.-'natha vs. Unity Oakmont vs. Mt. Pleasant City Leauge Whittington vs J.A.'s Co-Rec League

Env insvs Bill's Goodies Western Sizzlin' vs Bond's Tennis Sectionals at Wilson Track

Girls Regionals at Wilson Golf

Ayden-Grifton at Kinston

Among Coniey Winners

Five individuals awarded top honors for their contributions to D.H. Conley athletics are (from left): girls track leading scorer Veronica Thomas,

MVP cheerleader Adrianne Howard, volleyball and girls basketball MVP Darlene Cannon, basketball MVP Keith Gatlin and Matmaids MVP Sheron Green. (Reflector Staff Photo)

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Farmville Central at C.B Aycock (4p.m.)

Southwest Edgecombe at North Pitt JV (4p.m.)

Conley at West Craven Williamston at Roanoke (7:30 pm.)

Little League Kiwanis vs. Optimsts

Exchange vs. Moose Tennis

ECCCAC Tournament at Jacksonville

Softball

Farmville Central at C.B. Aycock (4p.m.)

Conley at West Craven (4 p.m.) Williamston at Roanoke (4 p.m.)

City League Jimmy's66 vs. Pantana Bobs Airborne vs. PTA Liberty vs. Metal Craft Whittington vs. California Concepts

Industrial League East Carolina ll2 vs. Coca-Cola WNCT-TV vs Emp|ire Brushes #2 Wachovia vs. Empire Brushes #1 Coxvs.GUCO

Burroughs-Wellcome #1 vs. CIX Carolina Leaf vs. TRW Church League FaiUi Pentecostal vs. Immanuel Memorial vs. Trinity Track Sectionals at Tarboro

Students Call For Lefty To Quit

game we played in the tournament at the end of that first year and asked me what he could work on over the summer to help him reach his goal.

"The next year 1 thought he would have forgotten, but sure enough after the last loss he came and wanted to know what he should'^ work on. That's what made him only the second guard to be selected as the top draft pick in the .NBA '

Driesell said former Raleigh Broughton and LSI' All-America Pete Maravich set an unusual goal for himself.

"He told me at a basketball camp that he wanted to be a millioilaire." he chided. "1 saw hj|n working out with the behind-the-back passes, around-the-ear, whatever, and 1 asked him why he didn't just make two-handed bounce passes. He told me, 'people won't pay to see that, and I want to be a millionaire.'"

Driesell cuted former Ter-rapin center Tom .Mc.Millan as a unique combination of Rhodes scholar and All-America basketball player.

"Tom was able to do both of those things because he was super-organized, said Driesell, "He had every moment of every day planned out. Even in practice he had a card with everything scheduled out ahead of time. After an hour, he'd be out there sweatin' and he'd have done what it took the rest of them four hours to do - all because he had his goals organized."

The pressures of professional athletics have driven some players to abuse drugs or alcohol, but Driesell believes religion is a crutch many fall back on when statistics or age threaten to draw their careers to a close.

".Moses .Malone (of the Philadelphia 76ers) and Buck Williams (former Maryland player now with the New Jersey Nets) are very religious, he said. You hear about David Thompson with a drug problem and recently that Phil Ford has a problem with alcohol. Even John Lucas admitted earlier that he was adictedto cocaine.

"The problem is they don't have religion; they don't have anything to fall back on. 1 always say, Don't mess with anything that's going to mess up your brain.'

You're not necessarily going to (be successful) because you're bigger or stronger, but because you set goals and work hard to achieve them. If you know you did the best you could do, then you're a success: that    applies to all

aspects of    life, not just

athletics.'

Awards for softball, baseball and boys track will presented after the conclusion of the spring schedule for each sport Other awards presented at the banquet were:

FOOTBALL    coach's award

Gary Adams, James Freeman and William Paramore; best back .Mitchell Cox; best lineman-Stacy .McCarter, Viking" award-Todd Rouse

WRESTLl.NG coach's award-Willie Green, outstanding wrestler-Mike    Long, most im-

proved-Andy Majette. most dedicated- Staicy McCarter

VOLLEY B.LL best spiker Karen Barrett. MVPDarlene Cannon; coach's award-Lori Kandrotas, most improvedLisa Mills

TR.ACK (Girls): best runner Wendy Cherry, best in field events and top scorer-Veronica Thomas

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"Parking in Front"

COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) - A coalition of four University of Maryland student groups, angered by head basketball coach Lefty Driesells alleged harassment of a student, have called for his resignation.

"W'e will no longer tolerate racist and sexist comments. Were here today to assure you,the case is not closed, Alicia Kni^t, of the Womens Center, said during a protest rally held by some 250 students Wednesday. Lefty placed a lousy basketball game above a womans safety-

The rally stemmed from Driesells admission last month that he made three phone calls to a woman who filed a misconduct complaint against team co-captain Herman Veal, attempting to

convince her to drop her charge.

The unidentified woman, who said Driesell threatened her, alleged that Veal tried to force sexual attentions on her last fall. Veal was later declared ineligible to play prior to Marylands final regular season game against Virginia.

Veal, along with teammates Len Bias and Howard White, were among the students who gathered to watch the protesters Wednesday. Several dozen pro-Driesell students chanted, Lefty, Lefty, at times during the demonstration.

The anti-Driesell demonstration was organized by representatives of the Student Government Association, the Progressive Student Alliance, the Food Co-op and the Womens Center.

Lefty Driesell does not deserve to be an ambassador of this school, said Stuart Morris, of the Student Alliance. 1 hope it doesnt boil down to the fact that he brings in $400,000 to the university.

Driesell was reprimanded by the university on April 29 following a monthlong inquiry into the matter, which included interviews with 16 peo

ple. He publicly apologized to the girl following the reprimand.

Chancellor John B. Slaughter said at the time that Driesell, who has been Marylands basketball coach for 14 years, was given instructions for his future conduct. He declined to say what they were.

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18-TheDaUy ReHector, Greenville, N.C -Thursday, May 12,1983Sutcliffe Proving Lasorda Was Wrong

Panthers Ease Past Cougars

PINETOPS - North Pitt High School pushed over four runs in the eighth inning, then held off a rally by Southwest Edgecombe for a 6-4 Eastern Carolina Conference baseball win yesterday.

Tlie Panthers pushed into the lead in the first inning, scoring twice. With one out, Brian Briley singled and Greg Briley also got a hit. Daniel Keel then doubled to score both of them.

Southwest came back with one in the second and another in the sixth to tie it up. .After neither team scored in the seventh, it went to extra innings.

In the top of the eighth, the Panthers got a rally going with two outs. Chris .Ayers, pinchhitting, walked and Jay

Hines got a hit. Brian Briley doubled in both of them, and scored on a double by Greg Briley, who then scored when Daniel Keel reachedon an error.

Southwest tried for a rally, managing two runs before the Panthers finally put out the fire.

Hines and the two Brileys each had two hits to lead North Pitts hitting. Mark Pittman and Eddie Naylor.

.North Pitt is now 11-10 overall and 5-6 in ECC play. The Panthers close out their league schedule on Tuesday, hosting Ayden-Grifton.

North Pitt . . . .200 000 04- 8 1 Southwest .010 001 02-4 8 1

G Briley and Rawls; Drake, .Mills 18) and Varnell

By The Associated Press

Rick Sutcliffe wishes he could pitch once again in Los Angeles - against the Dodgers. Then hed show Tom Lasorda something.

It was Lasorda, the manager of the Dodgers, who told Sutcliffe in 1981 he wasnt a major-league pitcher and traded him to Cleveland.

Well, maybe not a National

League pitcher. But since hes been in the American League, hes been cleaning up.

On Wednesday night, the Indians right-hander, a 14-game winner in 1982, picked up his fifth win of 1983 with his best big-league performance, a dazzling two-hitter for a 2-0 victory over the Kansas City Royals.

For the second consecutive

game, the Royals George Brett was held without a hit. Sutcliffe ended the game with a flourish by fanning the Kansas City slugger, who represented the tying run.

Rangers 3, Yankees 1 Like Sutcliffe, Rick Honeycutt of Texas would just as soon forget some of the past, more specifically 1982, when he was 5-17 with a 5.27

earned-run average. ' The only run against him was unearned. By then, Texas had gotten to Ron Guidry him for two runs in the first inning on Dave Hostetlers RBI-double and Bobby Johnsons sacrifice fly. The Rangers got an RBI-single from Wayne Tolleson in the second inning.

Tigers5,As2 Milt Wilcoxs eight-hitter

Firebirds Kayo Rams By 13-6

SNOW HILL - Greene Central, which was in the forefront of the Eastern Carolina Conference race as little as a week ago, found itself on the outside looking in last night after losing its third straight ECC contest. Southern Nash siddined the Rams, 13-6. in the baseball contest.

Southern took the lead in the second with a run, but Greene Central came back with two in

the bottom of the inning. Brian Hall reached on an error for the Rams, moving all the way to thira on a passed ball. He scored on Kevin Langstons sacrifice fly. Jeff Moore then reached on a two-base error, scoring on Tommy Goffs single.

Southern came back with five in the third, moving into a .6-2 lead, while the Rams scored once in the third to cut it to 6-3.

Then, in the fourth. Southern got what proved to be the winning run. Eddie Bales walked as did Bob May. Kevin Shearin then doubled to drive in Bales for a 7-3 lead.

Southern added two in the sixth and four more in the seventh. Greene Central picked up three more in the sixth.

Durwood Williams led the Southern hitting with three, including two doubles account

ing for four runs batted in. Bales added two hits. Goff had a pair of hits for the Rams.

Greene Central is now 6-5 in the league and 12-7 overall. The Rams play next on Tuesday, hosting SputhWest Edgecombe in the final game of the year.

Southern NashOlS 102 4-13 8 4

GreeneC 021 003 0- 6 3 3

Shearin, Byles (6) and Blackman: Dixon. Chase (2i, Murphy (6), Goff (7) and Hall.

SCOREBOARD

Bowling

Burroughs-Wellcome

High Hopes .-\nns .Angels InicornFour.

The Fritos FT

Pm Wreckers Carolina Cowboys Lolly Pops fclbony i Ivory Strike Force Men's high game. .Art Pinianski. 199. women's high game. Andrea PinianskI, 1%: men's high series. Curtis Ward. .543: women's high .series. JaneToothman. 534

w

71 U

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69':;

58';

67

61

67

66

61

62

6:i

60'-;

65 67'J

59

69

58';

69'.'

.58

7U

Sinclair 3-4. Joe Blick 3-3. S Tom Overstreet 3-4, Ernie Grigsby 2A.

PTA    .054    434    9-29

Pantana Bob's......201 300    0-6

Leading hitters PT - Mike Hogan 4-6. Whit Bradham 5-5: PB -John Vestal 2-3

Boseboll Standings

By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE

Rec Softball

Industrial League

TRW    110    210 3-8

Empire Brush 2    100    000 0-1

Leading hitters    TR    - .Mack

Roebuck 3-4. Van Sealey 3-3. EB -Randy Cox 2-3, Dwight Foster 2-3

Cox    202    031    4-12

Carolina Leaf    213    340    x-13

Leading hitters CA - Craig Cox 3-4. Donald    Cannon    3-5,    David Bell

2-3. Donnie    Rivenbark    2-3,    CL -

Jim Ward    4-4. .Melvin    Toler 3-3

(HRI, Jimmy Gond 2-3, Tommy Jordan 44

WNCTTV    00    012    0- 3

Pitt .Memorial    523    501    x 16

Leading    hitters:    WN    -    Keith

Whitley 2-4. PM - Joey Brickhouse

2-2. Bob George 3 3, Steve Aslmger :i-4

Enforcers    053    72-17

Belvoir    200    03- 5

Leading    hitters:    E    -    C B

Landreth 4-4, John Nichols 3-4. Steve Compton 3 4; B - D Oatfield

3-3, D Roebuck 2-3, W Gonzales 2 3. D Singleton 2-3, L Blount 2-2,

Gradv White    320    212    0-10

Gl'C.........023    020    0-7

Leading hitters GW - Kevin Adams 3-4. Frank Brown 3-4: GU Robert Garrett 3-4, Joel Jones 2-3.

Public Works .221 165 0-17 B W ellcome *2    001 .500 1- 7

Leading hitters: PW Larry Dixon 3-4. David Phillips 3-4.

I nion Carbide 101 120 3-8 Vermont-American 200 230 2-9 Leading hitters L'C - Greg Watkins 2 4, Joe Uffred 2-3-: VA -Stan Johmson 3-4 'HRi. Thomas Clark 2 4

E(T'--1    003 000 1- 4

Fire Fighters 043 160 x-14 Leading hitters EC John Childers 2 4. Bill Byrd 2 3. FF -Jon W est 3-3, Bobby Thompson 3-4

Womens League Players Retreat , MD38    62 - 35

Wachovia....... 100    00 1

Leading hitters PR - .Mel Ham

2-3i2'HR . Dot Moye3 3

Copper Kettle 307 101 5- 17 Prep Shirt    202    100    2- 7

Leading hitters: PS Debra Fain 3-4 Bettv Cherrv 2-3: CK -Smith :i-4

Pitt Memorial 120 023 5-13 PTA    460    120    1-14

la-admg hitters PT - G Mayo .1-4. H Barnhill 3 4. PM M Smith

3-4. R Skinner 3-4

B Wellcome    000    ' 22- 4

GvilleTravel    3d6i7    Ox-26

Leading hitters: GT - S Hofacre

4-5. D Bunting 3-4, BW - VI Smith 2-2, M Moore 2-3

City League Airborne    Oil    030    1-6

.Metal Craft    004    000    3-7

Leading hitters    A    -    Neil

.Mozingo 3-4, Dave Regan 2-4; MC - T Odom 2-4.,D Davenport 2-4

Sunnyside Eggs    001    002    0-3

Ormond's    000    000    i-i

Leading hitters    SE    -    Mike

Weaver 2 3. Joe Gattis 2-3; 0 -Sammy Jarman 2-3

Pair    020    110    6-10

Subway    052    010    0- 8

Leading hitters    PE    -    Eric

EAST DIVISION

W

L Pet

GB

Baltimore

17

12

586

-

Boston

12

,571

h

.Milwaukee

h

O' 15

12

556

1 '

Toronto

15

12

556

1

Cleveland

16

13

.552

1

Detroit

12

14

462

3;

New York

13

16

448

4

WEST DIVISION

California

IB

12

6UU

Texas

16

13

552

I'z

Kansas Cily 13

13

50U

3

tiakland

14

15

483

3'-

Chicago

12

15

444

4'.'

.Minnesota

U

19

387

6('.

Seattle

II

22

333

S'-z

Wednesday 's Games .VlilwiiukeeC .Minnesota 1 DetroitOakland 2 Cleveland 2. Kansas t'il\ 0 .Baltimore I. Seattlel)

California 3. Boston I Texas:). New Vork 1 Toronto J. Chitago I. lU inqings Thursday's Games Dakland Codiroli 3 2- at Detroit Petrv 33)1

Toninto 'Clancy 21' at Cleveland Soren.sen2-4i. 'm

Boston 'Brown 2 2' at Milwaukee Caldwell2:)', n.

I inlv games scheduled

Fhday'sGames Toronto at Clevefand, i n i Chicago at New York, i n'

Boston at Milw aukee. < n i Detroit at Kansas City. i n'

Baltimore at Texas, ni Minnesota at California,' n'

.Sattleat Oakland, In

NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION

W L Pet GB

Philadelphia

16

10

615

-

Montreal

15

11

il,

1

St Louis

13

12

520

2'

Pittsburgh

10

15

400

5'

New York

9

18

333

7'

Chicago 9 19 WEST DIVISION

321

8

Us Angeles

21

8

724

Atlanta

2(1

9

690

I

Cincinnati

15

16

484

7

San Diego

14

16

467

7'

San Francisco

13

16

448

8

Houston

14

19

424

9

Wednesday 's Games

Montreal8. Atlanta.5. II innings Cincinnati 2, Philadelphia 0 New Vork 3. Houston 0 Onlv games scheduled

Thursdays Games Philadelphia Ruthven Mi at Chicago Rainey 2-3'

Los Angeles (Valenzuela 3-2' at San DiegoiIa>narl-2i New York iTorrez l-4i at Pittsburgh 'Candelaria2-31,'ni San Francisco Krukow U2i at Cincinnat 1' Berenyi 3 2j.' n'

-Montreal 'Gullickson 3-3' at St Louis Forsch 1-3', im

Atlanta iPerez 5-tli at Houston Niekrp

13',in'

Friday's Games

Philadelphia at Cnicago New York at Pittsburgh. i n i

San Francisco at Cincinnati.' n i MontrealatSt Louis.ini .

Atlanta at Houston. ni Los Angeles at San Diego, i n i

Leogue Leoders

By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE

BATTING (4.5 at batsi Carew. California, 476, Brett, Kansas City. 412: Thornton. Cleveland, 375, Shelby. Baltimore, 368: McRae. Kansas City. 362

RUNS Castino. Minnesota, 24 Brett. Kansas City, 22. E .Murray Baltiniore 22, 5 are tied with 2U RBI    Brett. Kansas City. 26 Kittle

Chicago, 26,    Ward, Minnesota. 26. Rice,

Boston    25    Thornton. Cleveland, 23

Yount. Milwaukee, 23 HITS Carew, California. 49, Castino. Minnesota. 40. Ford. Baltimore 'JO. S Henderson, Seattle. 39, Yount. Milwaukee, 39 DOUBLES Brett, Kansas Uity. 12, Bernazard. Chicago. 11. Hrbek, .Minnesota,    II    S Henderson, Seattle, lU,

Bush, Minnesota. 9. Ford. Baltimore. 9: Ripken. Baltimore. 9.

TRIPLES G Wilson, Detroit, 4. Evans, Boston. 3. Gnifin. Toronto, 3. Herndon. Detroit, 3: Tabler, Cleveland, 3; Winfield, New York. 3    ,

HOME RUNS DeCinces, California, 9* Brett. Kansas City, 8. Lynn, California. 7 Winfield. New York.    7.    Barfield,

Toronto, 6, Castino, Minnesota 6. Rice, Boston. 6; Upshaw, Toronto, 6, Yount. Milwaukee. 6 STOLEN BASES J Cruz, Seattle. 21: W Wilson, Kansas City.    14.    Garcia.

Toronto, 11: M Davis, Oakland. 10, K Uw, Chicago. 10, Sample. Texas. lo PITCHING 13 decisions' Flanagan. Baltimore. 6-0, l.ooo 2    73    Slalon.

Milwaukee. 4-0. 1 000, 2    08.    Molfitt.

Toronto. 3-0. 1 000, uoo, Petry, Detroit, 3 0, 1 0(10, 2 35, Sutcliffe, Cleveland 5-1. m. 3 74

STRIKEOUTS Stieb, Toronto, 51, Blyleven Cleveland. 43. .Morns. Detroit.

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was his fourth complete game of 1983, nearly half his total of last year. Glenn Wilson hit a two-run homer in the second inning to help him turn back the As and Mike Norris, who had beaten him earlier this month.

Orioles 1, Mariners 0 Gaylord Perry of Seattle struck out four Baltimore batters to raise his career total to 3,474 and allowed only seven hits. But the last two hits, fifth-inning doubles by Dan Ford and Cal Ripken Jr., beat him and enabled unbeaten Mike Flanagan to post his sixth victory with a seven-hitter of his own,

Angels 3, Red Sox 1 Bruce Kison of the Angels and John Tudor of the Red Sox hooked up in a masterful duel - but the long ball over Fenway Parks Green Monster beat the Boston southpaw.

If I had kept the ball in the park, Id have won, Tudor said of Bobby Clarks two-run homer in the second inning and Ellis Valentines solo shot in the seventh, both into the screen atop the left-field fence. Id throw those two pitches again exactly the same. I threw them where I wanted.

Brewers 4, Twins 1 Cecil Coopers home run and Charlie Moores key triple for the Brewers helped Bob McClure halt a personal five-game losing streak, McClure scattered seven hits in handing the Twins their eighth loss in the past nine games.

Coopers homer came with the bases empty in the first inning and Moores triple broke a 1-1 tie in a two-run second.

Blue Jays 3, White Sox 1 Dave Stieb of the Toronto Blue Jays allowed just three

singles by the White Sox en route to his sixth victory and Hosken Powell broke a 10th-inning tie with a sacrifice fly to give the Blue Jays their victory.

Cox, Chicod Take Titles

CHICOD - The A.G. Cox boys and the Chicod girls each won divisional championships yesterday in the Pit-t-Martin-Lenoir Junior High School League.

Coxs boys downed Chicod, 15-2, in baseball, to claim their divisional title. Winning pitcher Bronswell Patrick led the Cox hitting with three, while Ronald Farrow and Ricky Farrow each had two. one of Rickys a three-run homer,

Steve Peele led the Chicod hitting with two.

Cox is now 10-0 on the year, whileChicodisl-9.

In the girls softbaii game, Chicod gained a 10-1 win. Rhonda Jackson, who hurled the win, teamed with Donna Beacham to each get two hits to lead Chicod. No one for Cox had more than one hit.

Chicod finishes the regylar season with a 9-1 record, while Cox is 8-2.

Coxs boys will host Snow Hill, while Chicods girls entertain Frink on Monday for the league championships.

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SAVES Quisenberry Kansas City. 7. Stanley, Boston. 7. (audill, Seattle. 6. Sprllner. Cleveland. 5, Beard. Oakland, 4 Heaton Cleveland, 4, Hickey, Chicago. 4. 0 Jones. Texas. 4 Tobik, Texas. 4

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BATTING (45 at bats' T Kennedy San Diego :169, Hendrick, St Louis.' 360 Flannery. San Diego, 354. Schmidt Philadelphia, 353, Dawson. Montreal :o

RUNS Schmidt, Philadelphia. 27 Garvev San Diego. 26. Murphy. Atlanta. 25. LeMaster. San Francisco, 1. Boniila. San Diego 21, Raines. Montreal 21 S Sax, Los .Angeles, 21 RBI Murphy' Atlanta, 29. T Kennedy San Diego, 28. Hendrick. St Louis. 24.5 are lied with 23 HITS Bonilla. San Diego. 43. T Kennedy, San Diego, 41, Cruz, Houston. 39. Bench. Cincmnafi. 38. Thon. Houston. M

DOUBLES J Ray. Pittsburg, 12 Bench, Cincinnati, 8. Dawson. .Montreal, 8 T Kennedy, San Diego, 8. 7 are tied with 7    r-^..

TRIPLES Moreno. Houston. 5. Dawson, .Montreal. 4 Green. St Louis. 3; Raines, .Montreal. 3. 16 are tied with 2 HOME RCNS Murohy. Atlanta. 9. Guerrero. Los Angeles. 7. Horner. Atlanta, 7, Schmidt. Philadelphia. 7, Brock. Los Angeles 6 Chambliss. Atlanta. 6, Evans. San Francisco 6, Garvey.    San    Diego.    6.    Hendrick

St Louis. 6. KInMan New York, 6 STOLEN BASES Lacy. Pittsburgh. 15. E .Milner, Cincinnati. 13, .Moreno, Houston 12 S Sax. Los Angeles, 10, Thon, Houston, 10 PITCHING (3 decisions ( P Perez, Atlanta    5-0,    1 OOO.    I    42    Behenna.

Atlanta    3 0.    1 000    1 66, Monge.

Philadelphia. 34), l 000. 4 63, Stewart. Us Angeles 34). ! 0(10. I 54, Dravecky. San Diego. 51. 83;), 2 77: Rogers, Montreal. 5 1 83, ) . 2 65 STRIKEOCTS Carlton. Philadelphia, 70. Soto    Cincinnati.    47,    McWilliams.

Pittsburgh. 46. Berenw, Cincinnati. 41. Seaver, New York. 38 S.AVES S Howe, Los Angeles. 6, Hume, Cincinnati, 5. Bedrosian, Atlanta. 4, Forster. Atlanta. 4. Le Smith, Chicago. 4: Lucas. San Diego. 4

Tuesday, May 24 N Y Islanders at Edmonton, necessary

NBAPIoyotfs

By The Associated Press CONFERENCE FINALS I Best of Seven I EASTERN CONFERENCE 1 Philadelphia leads senes 2-01 Sunday. May 8 Philadelphia III. Milwaukee 109. OT Wednesday. May II    ^    lilw:

Philadelphia Boston New Jersey Washington

Chicago Tampa Bay Michigan Birmingham

Us Angeles Arizona Denver Dakland

W    L    T

9    I    0

5    5    0

3    7    U

1    9    0

Central 7    3    0

7    3    0

6    4    0

5    5    0

Pacific 5    5    0

4    6    0

4    6    0

4    6    0

Pet PF PA

900 198    86

500 226 204 .300 164 240 100 123 258

700 252 132 700 194 188 600 201 186 500 165 124

500 163' 188 400 178 241 400 141 173 400 176 161

Tronsactions

Philadelphia 87. Milwaukee 81 y

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^The Associated Press STANLEY CUP FINAL Edmonton vs New York Islanders I New York leads series 1-01 Tuesday, May 10 N Y. Islanders 2, Edmonton 0 Thursday, May 12 N Y Islanders at Edmonton, ni Saturday. May 14 Edmonton at N Y Islanders, (ni Tuesday. May 17 Edmonton at N V Isianders. i n i Thursday, May 19 N Y Islanders at Edmonton, (ni. lecessary

Saturday. May 21

Edmonton at N Y ' '

Saturday. May 14

hia at Milwaukee Sunday. May 15 t MilwauKee Wednesday. May 18

.Milwaukee at Philadelphia, ni. necessarv

Friday, May 20

Philadelphia at .Milwaukee, (ni. i necessary

Sunday, May 22 Milwaukee at Philadelphia. TBA, i necessarv

WESTERN CONFERENCE Los Angeles vs. San Antonio (Series tied 1-11 Sunday, Mays Los Angeles 119, San Antonio 107 Tuesday. May 10 San Antonio 122. Los Angeles 113 Friday. May 13 Los .Angeles at San Antonio, i n i Sunday. May 15 Us Angeles at San Antonio Wednesday, May 18 San Antonio at Los .Angeles.' n i Friday, May 20 Los Angeles at San Antonio, in), il necessan

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San Antonio at Los Angeles, if neces sarv

USFL Stondings

By The Associated Press Atlantic

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Sunday 's Games

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Saturday. May 14

UsAngelesat Birmingham, (m Sunday. May IS Chicago at Philadelphia .Arizona at Tampa Bav

Moiiday. May 16 Dem er at Boston.' n i.

Jersey at .Michigan, n i Washington at (Jakland. (n'

By The Associated Press BASKETBALL National Basketball Association

SEATTLE SCPERSOMCS-Named Les Habegger general manager FOOTBALL National Football League

.ATLANTA FALCONS-Signed Brian Clark, placekicker. to a free agent contract

CLEVELAND BROW NS-Signed Rocky Belk. wide receiver .Mike Me Cleam, guard, Thomas Hopkins, taclQe, and Howard McAdoo. linebacker DALLAS COWBOYS-Traded Jay Saldi. tight end. lo the (Thicago Bears for an undisclosed 1984 draft choice NEW ENGLAND PATR10TS--Announced the retirement of John Hannah^uard SE.ATTXE SEAHAWKS-Signed Garry ' Pearson, running back, to a free agent contract

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Youth Ball Roundup

Little League

Union Carbide 13

Kiwanis...........3

Union Carbide won its third straight contest in the North State Little League yesterday, ripping the Kiwanis, 13-3.

Union Carbide got all it needed in the second inning, scoring five times. Jeff Bennett led off with a single, scoring on a triple by Martin Anderson. Andre Hopkins doubled to score Anderson, then stole third. He scored on Brian Pousts double, and a double by Bill Turcotte brought Post home. Mike Fletcher then singled to score Turcottforthe5-0 lead.

Union Carbide added eight more in the third for a 13-0

advantage. Jonathan Powers had a two-run homer in the frame, while Poust followed him with a solo shot.

The Kiwanis got on the board with two in the bottom of the third and one in the sixth.

Turcotte led the Union Carbide hitting with three, while Bennett and Poust each had two. The Kiwanis were led by Pat Joyner and Jon Chambliss, each with two.

Exchange.........9

Pepsi-Cola.........8

The Exchange gained two runs in the bottom of the sixth inning to pull out a 9-8 Tar Heel Little League victory over Pepsi-Cola yesterday.

' Exchange gained the lead in

Four Survive First Day's Play

WILSON - Two Rose High School doubles teams remained in the competition in the Wilson Sectionals of the state tennis tournament yesterday after three rounds of play

Steve Holloman and Lance Searl, along with Rogers Warner and Bill Messick advanced through play yesterday and must win their first match of the day to advance into next weeks re-gionals, to be held at Wilson Hunt.

Holloman and Searl, seeded first in the doubles, downed Michaux-Kennedy of Goldsboro, 6-0. 6-1, then beat Jones-Elks of Williamson, 6^), 6-0. Jones and Elks had downed Norton-Littlejohn of Plymouth, 7-6,6-3, to make the third round of play.

Warner and Messick defeated Griffin-Williams of Ronoke Rapids, 6-1, 6-7. 6-1 and then downed the fourth seeded team of .Maynor and Brock of Tarboro, 4-6, 6-4, 6-2, to gain further play.

Rockv Mount currentlv

leads the team standings with 24, while Rose and Hunt are tied for second with 18.

Roses Ed Schwidde defeated Chap Porter of Bed-dingfield, 6-3, 6-3, then beat Williamston's Phomus Reddick, 6-0, 6-0. Schwidde was then beaten by by John Gaskins of Roanoke Rapids, 6-2,6-0.

Reddick had beaten Tony Raines of Northern Nash, 2-6, 6-2, 7-,5, before losing to Schwidde.

Clay Jackson of Rosey after a bye in the first round, defeated Kevin Cook of Southern Nash, 6-0, 6-4. He was then beaten by number one seeded Terry Grantz of Rocky Mount, 6-1,6-0.

Greene Centrals Steve Harrison downed Daniel Coefield of Bear Grass, 6-1, 6-4, before losing to Kent Brown of Bertie. 6-3,6-2.

Farmvilles Bassett and Smith defeated Williamstons W illard-Perry. 7-6, 6-3, before losing out.

The tournament winds up today.

Ladybirds Stall Greene's Hopes

STANHOPE - Southern Nash threw a temporary road block in front of Greene Centrals title hopes in the Eastern Carolina Conference soitball race yesterday, gaining a 4-2 victory.

The Lady Rams, who went into the game just a half-game behind league-leading Charles

B. Ay cock, took the lead with a pair of runs in the third. It was to be all they could get.

Southern came back with single runs in the fourth and fifth to tie it up, then scored twice in the sixth to gain the win.

.Melissa Morgan and Cynthia Hall each had two hits to pace Southern Nashs attack, one of .Morgans a solo homer. No one had more than one hit for Greene Central.

The Lady Rams are now 14-6 overall and 7-3 in conference play, with two games remaining. The first of those comes today when they visit

C.B. Aycock in a key contest.

GreeneC 002 000 02 6 3

SouUKm Nash. 000 112 x4 7 3

WP - Cynthia Brown

SW Edgecombe 20

North Pitt.........5

BETHEL - Southwest

Edgecombe rolled to a 20-5 softball victory over North Pitt yesterday, as the Lady Cougars kept their playoff hopes alive.

Southwest, 8-3, is currently in second place in the league, a half-game ahead of Greene Central.

Southwest took the lead in the first with two, but North Pitt came back with three in the second. Southwest then took the lead for good with two more in the third. The Lady Cougars added one in the fourth, two in the fifth and exploded for eight in the sixth, adding five more in the seventh. North Pitt scored single runs in the third and fifth.

P. Mayo and J. Turner each had two hits to lead Southwest, one of Mayos a homer. Theresa Mayo also had a homer.

North Pitt was led by Linda Harrell with three hits, while Magnolia Harrington, Alice Pittman and Phyllis Jones each had two.

North Pitt closes out its schedule on Tuesday, hosting Ayden-Grifton.

SouUi West . 202 128 520 10 3 North Pitt . .(Bl 010 0-5 11 11

WP - P Morgan

the first, scoring twice as Malcolm Wilson hit a homer. Pepsi came back to score three in the second, moving ahead, then adding two in the third for a 5-2 edge. Pepsi then pushed across three more in the'fourthtolead8-2.

The Exchange rallied for four runs in the fourth and one in the fifth as Wilson homered again.

Then, in the sixth, the Exchange got the winning runs. Chris Bland led off with a single and Kevin Sugg walked. Both moved up on a wild pitch and Daryl Moore reached on a fielders choice, scoring Bland to tie it up. A balk then brought over Sugg with the winning run.

Moore, Maurice Battle and W'ilson each had two hits for Exchange, while no one had more than one hit for Pepsi.

S.P. Bombing

Bombers..........7

Hornets...........6

BETHEL - The Bombers pusbed over a run in, the bottom of the sixth to take a 7-6 Southern Pitt Bambino League victory over the Hornets last night.

Johnny Sherrod, who hurled the win, doubled in the sixth to drive in the winning run.

Paul Brown led the Bombers with two hits, one a double, while Mark Davis also had a double,

Derek Ennis and Ernest Harrington each had home runs for the Hornets.

Women In Net Win

Greenvilles women recorded their third Straight East Carolina Tennis Association victory yesterday, downing Wilson, 8-1.

The lone loss came in the number five singles where Wilsons Peggy Jennette managed a victory. Greenville is now 3-0 on the year.

Summary:

Carlie Wille (G) d. Mitzi Corbin,

6-3,6-!.

Frances Cain (G) d. Chris Ricks, 6-4,6-4.

Nancy Powell (G) d Paula Cox, 6-2,6-3.

Sharon Ricks (G) d. Cinny Bunn, 3-6,6-2,6-2.

Peggy Jennette (W) d Mary .Angela Lee, 6-2.6-2 Lia Moore (G) d Connie White, 6-2,6-2.

Cain-Myra Hill (G) d. Corbin-Ricks, 5-7,6-1,6-4.

Powell-Wille (G) d. Bunn-Cox, 6-2,64.

Lee-Sydney Womack (G) d. Jennette-White, 7-5,62.

Loftin Takes Putt Tourney

Jake Loftin fired a 20-under-par 88 to take first place in the Wednesday Night Pro Tournament at Greenville Putt-Putt and Games.

Loftin was five shots off the pace following the first round of the tournament, which saw Allen Elder leading with a 27. But Loftin came back with two rounds of 28s to finish one shot ahead of Elder, who carded an 89.

Third place went to Lavem Mayo with a 93, while Johnny Carrow, who was in second place with a 28 after the first round, finished fourth with a 96.

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Inventive Electrician Winning A War On Pigeons

By PIERO VALSECCHI Associated Press Writer MILAN, Italy (AP) - An Inventive electrician who rigged up low-voltage wiring is winning the years-long battle against pigeons that had been dirtying and damaging this citys 600-year-old Gothic cathedral.

Chemicals, sticky substances and loudspeakers emitting frightening noises either failed to keep away the estimated 5,000 birds or their use was blocked by animal welfare groups.

Officials even tried in vain to reduce the pigeon population by mixing contraceptive pills with food bait Then electrician Ettore Galliani, 48, devised a

network of stainless ste*l wires carrying moderate electric impulses.

There is no doubt that the electric wires have proved the winning move against the pigeons, said engineer Carlo Ferrari da Passano.

Ferrari da Passano heads the Fabbrica del Duomo, which is in charge of preserving and renovating the giant cathedral, or Duomo, in downtown Milan. Galliani is the electrician at the Fabbrica.

"The pigeon droppings were actually destroying statues and spires of the cathedral. We had to develop a successful device at any cost, Ferrari da Passano told The Associated Press. He did not disclose the cost.

He said Galliani placed the wires in an artistic way so they are hardly noticeable by tourists and passersby admiring the cathedrals 135 spires and 3,200 statues.Construction on the Duomo wasstarted in 1386.

A few weeks ago, the anti-pigeon wiring was completed on three-quarters of the Duomo. Work continues on the final quarter.

Galliani says pigeons, like most birds, are reluctant to leave the place where they nested after birth.

They always tend to return to the native place. But they are also very sensitive to any disturbing effect. The network of wires and the electric impulses prevented their nesting and have defi-

Japan Builds F-15 Jet Fighters With U. S. Aid

ByTODDCARREL Associated Press Writer

NAGOYA, Japan (AP") -When American B-29 bombers flew over this industrial city in central Japan in December 1944, Kiyoshi Hashimoto was a 13-year-old student, working after school at a Mitsubishi factor> that produced Zero fighter planes.

"1 remember the first bombing, he said in a recent interview. "It was a very beautiful squadron, flying at a ver>' high altitude. Our fighters could never get to that height.

Today, at 52, Hashimoto still helps Mitsubishi Heavy Industries make fighters. He is the manager of the Komaki South plant, where Japanese .workers now produce F-15 interceptors for the Japan Self-Defense Force under a licensing agreement with McDonnell Douglas Corp.. the U.S. aircraft maker.

In World War II. Mitsubishi factories here turned out 17.500 planes -Zero fighters and bombers -before the city was devastated by American bombs. Now, the combined efforts of several Mitsubishi factories here produce the twin-tailed F-15S at a pace that is anything but frenetic: one a month.

At Komaki South, the final assembly plant, workers build^the planes from the same drawings and specifications used by McDonnell Douglas at St. Louis. Mo. - the only other F-15 plant in the world.

The deal between McDonnell Douglas and Mitsubishi^ Japans largest weapons maker, is one of about 320 arms-related con-

Claim A Need For Credentials

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Voice of America and Radio Free Europe are asking a Senate panel to approve press credentials for their reporters, who they say have trouble gathering information at congressional hearings.

Print and broadcast correspondents said accreditation should be denied to the organizations, which broadcast news aboard, because they are government agencies.

Senate rules require applicants for admission to the press or radi<)-television galleries to declare that they are not employed in any legislative or executive department or independent agency of the government, or oy any forei^ government jr representative thereof.

$500,000 For 'Orphan Drugs

WASHINGTON (AP) -The government is making $500,000 available for research to develop orphan drugs which might be used to treat rare diseases.

Health and Human Services Secretary Margaret Heckler said that the money would be dispersed as 15 to 30 awards of between $20,000 ^$70,000 each.

. tracts between Japanese and U.S. companies for coproduction or licensed-production. a U.S. official said.

A senior official in the Japanese Defense Agencys equipment bureau, who asked not to be named, estimated 80 percent of the aircraft acquired by the Japanese military are made in Japan under license with U.S. firms.

Officials and industry sources from both countries say Mitsubishi, like other Japanese defense contractors, is eager to learn U.S.-style weapons building, but is forced to limit production for political and economic reasons,

Japan officially bans arms exports and keeps its own military spending at less than 1 percent of the gross national product. The constitution, written after World War II, restricts its military forces to a strictly defensive role.

The F-15, desigaed primarily as an air superiority fi^iter, would be used to help defend Japanese territory and sea lanes in time of war.

Although building warplanes is not a major industry in Japan, Hashimoto said the F-15s built by his plant are of very good quality.

The workmanship is good and theyre thorough, agreed McDonnell Douglas representative Ernest M. Zaiser Jr., who has been based in Japan since 1969.

The Japanese government wants 155 F-15s and Hashimoto said his company has contracts to deliver 79 of them by 1987. He said he could easily increase production if orders for more planes came in from the Defense Agency.

At Komaki Souths No. 6 hangar, F-15s at four assembly stations occupy about a fifth of the floor space. On the other side, workers make panels for

anti-submarine P-3C aircraft, part of a licensing deal with the Lockheed Corp. of Burbank, Calif. The rest of the hangar is almost empty.

Another hangar nearby is used for maintenance on the older F-104 fighter-bombers that form a key part of Japans air defense forces.

About half the parts for the F-15S are imported from the United States, and the rest are built by Mitsubishi and other Japanese contractors such as Kawasaki Heavy Industries and Ishikawa-jima-Harima Heavy Industries.

Some components -mostly computers, radar systems and advanced avionics systems - are supplied as black boxes, with the United States un-^ willing to release information about them for security reasons.

The Japanese are always striving to have those (restrictions) lifted so they can make everything they want to make, said Zaiser.

The pattern has been the same since they built the Lockheed F-104 fighter under license in the 1960s, he said, with virtually all technical secrets released after six or seven years and the Japanese making as much of the aircraft as they find economically feasible.

Zaiser said delays in learning about U.S. technology for weapons built into licensed production keep the Japanese behind.

Hashimoto said Mitsubishi wouldnt invest much money in weapons research and development until the Defense Agency commits itself to new projects.

Japan has yet to decide which plane it will choose for its next generation of fighters, but some manufacturers here want a chance to do it on their own.

We believe we can produce a superb fighter, Hashimoto said. I think we should be optimistic for a locally developed plane.

nitely driven them away, he explained.

The^ pigeons, once accustomed to nesting and resting in niches on the cathedrals outer walls, quickly learned to stay clear.

They still flock into the large Duomo Square during the day to get food from tourists who like to be photographed wth birds arpund them and the cathedral in the background.

But other buildings, neighboring the Duomo, have become their shelter for the night.

Galliani, the inventive electrician, already is thinking of offering his new method as a way of chasing the pigeons from other historic downtown sites.

He has begun installing the anti-pigeon device at the nearby San Fedele church.

Palazzo Marino, home of the city council, and La Scala opera house, which are both troubled by pigeon droppings, also are planning to try Gallianis invention, at least in the short term.

Gallianis anti-bird device also was installed recently around the roofs of the luxury Villa dEste hotel, on the shore of Lake Como, to get rid of swallows.

ANTI-PIGEON DEVICE - A network of fine wires carrying moderate electric charges have proved the winning move against pigeons that for

years have been dirtying and damaging Milans 600-year-old cathedral. (AP Laserphoto)

BALANCING ACT - Robert EUis III does a balancing act on his fathers hand as he warms up for a Diaper Derby at a Scottsdale, Ariz. shopping maU. He seems to like the view from the top. (AP Laserphoto) |

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In The Area

La Leche Workshop Planned

La Leche League of Greenville will host a three-district workshop Saturday in the Fellowship Building of Salem United Methodist Church in Simpson.

Leaders, leader applicants and potential leader applicants from the Greenville, Rocky Mount, Wilson, Washington, Kinston, Goldsboro, Raleigh and Fayetteville areas will participate.

Speakers will include Ginny Tarleton, assistant area coordinator of LLL leaders for North Carolina; Mary Hoskin, chairman of the leader applicant program for North Carolina, and Lynne Noel, area professional liaison for North Carolina.

Joy Night Planned Friday

The House of Worship on Stantonsburg Road will hold Joy Night Friday at 7:30 p.m. Evangelist Paulinda Council will speak and the Gospel Fellowship Chorus will render the music.

Junior Wins Scholarship

Kimberly K. Castro of Goldsboro was selected as the first recipient of the Willa and David B. Stevens scholarship in social work and corrections in the East Carolina University School of Allied Health and Social Professions.

Ms. Castro, a junior majoring in social work, is a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity and the National Association of Social Workers.

The $500 a year scholarship was established by Dr. David B. Stevens, ECU attorney and member of the faculty in the department of social work and corrections, and his wife, WUla, of Greenvilie.

Handwriting No Laughing Matter

HearstNews Release

You should have been a doctor! Thats the comment frequently made to a person with illegible handwriting. The remark has become part of rhetorical folklore.

But pwr handwriting by doctors is no laughing matter. All too often lives are endangered when a pharmacist filling out a prescription misreads what a doctor has written.

The May issue of American Druggist reports that over half of the more than 300 pharmacists who responded to the magazines recent survey said that they had made errors in dispensing because of doctors sloppy writing. And they reported that this had happened, on the average, more than three times during their careers.

Almost 52 percent of the pharmacists who answered the questionnaire in the December issue of American Druggist said they had never asked a doctor to write more legibly. But 24 percent said they phoned to verify an unreadable Rx (prescrip-. tion) once a day, on average; almost 14 percent said twice a day.

Pharmacists usually phone the doctors office when they have trouble making sense of the Rx. But according to the survey, 50.5 percent of the physicians were indifferent, 22.4 percent were defensive.

and 14 percent were angry when called.

Only 12.2 percent of the doctors were receptive to the pharmacists pleas and a few - 1 percent - treated the episodes as a joke.

In fairness to physicians, says American Druggist editor Stanley Siegelman, it must be reported that 33.9 percent come to the phone immediately when a pharmacist calls, and that 33.5 percent call back within minutes. But 22 percent habitually return the call hours later, and 3.6 percent ignore it entirely!

Despite pharmacists complaints to physicians about handwriting, the survey disclosed that in most cases, 88 percent, there was no subsequent improvement.

Which elements of the Rx were usually the most difficult to read? The survey found the prescribers signature was singled out, by 78.6 percent, the patients name by 76.8 percent, followed by the name of the medication (68.3 percent) and instructions to the patient (67.9 percent). Dosage was designated by 31.7 percent and numbers by 21.4 percent.

Overwhelmingly, reported American Druggist, by 94 percent, pharmacists favored a campaign to make handwriting an integral part of the curriculum of medical schools.

Students Honored By Honor Society

Several business education students in the East Carolina University School of Technology were recognized for honors recently by ECUs Beta Kappa chapter of Pi Omega Pi honor society.

Awards included the Lena C. Ellis Award to Lloyd Yancey Gardner of Williamston, the sophomore business education major with the highest academic grade point average.

Charge Robbery And Kidnapping

CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. (AP) - Camp Lejeuene authorities charged a 20-year-old civilian Wednesday with kidnapping, robbery and assault after he allegedly held up a post exchange store Tuesday night.

Military officials said they arrested Dale Kenneth Wimple at a Camp Lejeune housing area. He is charged iwith taking about $10,000 from the Berkley Manor Exchange shortly after it closed Tuesday night.

Wimple is also charged with kidnapping store manager William Melvin Douglas and using him as a hostage when military policemen . respoiM^ to a silent alarm.

The Audrey V. Dempsey Scholarship Award of $175 was presented to Doris Rackley Grubbs of Greenville, the junior with the highest academic grade point average in business education.

Beta Kappa Service awards, given for service to the ECU chapter and to business education, were given to Janet Nethercutt of Greenville and Lynn Chap-pelear of Farmville, undergraduate members, and to graduate members Phyllis Griffin of Williamston and Elizabeth Corbin of Greenville.

Featured speaker at the ceremony was J. Donald McGlohon, a former Pi Omega Pi member and former mayor of Greenville. A special guest was Furney James, director of the ECU Office of Career Planning and Placement and a former Pi Omega Pi member.

This years edition of Beta Kappa News, the chapters yearbook, was dedicated to James.

CRDIE-WATCH PEKING (AP) - More than 5,000 workers who patrol Shanghai neighborhoods at night have seized nearly 1,000 criminals in the last four months, a Shanghai newspaper reports.

Edmisfen Committee Is Formed

The Pitt County Citizens Who Want Rufus Edmisten For Governor committee has been formed to promote the candidacy of the state attorney general.

Charles Vincent, a Greenville attorney, has been named chairman of the campaip committee.

Serving with Vincent are Les Garner, W.M. Scales III, Kenneth Haigler, John Bizzell, Mrs. Joyce Hastings, Sam McLawhorn and Rob Poole, a student at East Carolina University who will serve as campus coordinator. Mrs. Hastings is a former president of the Pitt County Democratic Women.

The committee announced that plans are being made for a May ^4 reception at Brook Valley Country Club honoring

Edmisten. The reception, according to the committee, will preceed Edmistens official announcement as a gubernatorial candidate on June 3 on Capitol Square in Raleigh.

Man Charged In Silver Theft

William Samuel Daniels, 30, of 703 W. Fifth St. has been arrested by Greenville police on charges of possession of stolen property after $700 worth of silver taken from 1025 W. Fifth St. in a break-in April 23 was pawned.

Chief Glenn Cannon said the silver, including a tray, teapot, sugar bowl and pitcher, which were recovered, were pawned for $10.

CHARLES VINCENT

ECLf Geographers Present Papers

Six faculty members of the department of geography and planning at East Carolina University, presented papers recently at the national meeting of the Association of American Geographers in Denver.

Those presenting papers were Palmyra M. Leahy, Janet H. Petterson, Philip Shea, R.A. Stephenson, Douglas Wilms and Charles T. Ziehr. Stephenson also chaired three paper sessions of the coastal and marine geography specialty group.

Retirees Hear Bank Representatives

Jerry W. Powell and John Eckerman of Branch Bank and Trust Co. were guest speakers at a meeting of the AtfHrican Association of Retired Persons Tuesday. They spoke about making wills and trust services.

President Polly Dail, Mary Robinette, Mrs. Lee Williams and Mr. and Mrs. George McArthur attended a workshop on Life at East Carolina Universitys Brody Building. It was sponsored by the Mid-East Commission.

Abbott Reunion Set Sunday

Descendants of the late Thomas Jefferson Abbott and Lucindia May Phillips Abbott will hold their fourth family reunion Sunday in the fellowship hall of Hugo Free Will Baptist Church west of Grifton.

Registration wilUtart at 12:30 p.m. followed by a business session and lunch. Those attending are asked by the organizers to bring a picnic lunch.

Simpson Council Meets Monday

The Council of the village of Simpson will hold a regular monthly meeting at Phillipi Baptist Church Educational Building Monday at 8 p.m. The meeting is open to all citizens of Simpson.

Women's Club To Honor Students

Students from two g'rades at Third Street Elementary School who were winners in the Womens Club Creative Writing Contest will be honored Friday at 3 p.m. by the Womens Club of Greenville.

The winners are: first graders - Crystal Dobson, Michael Tice and Ronald Daniels; third graders: Rachel Higdon, George Johnson, Brent Gibson, Jason Sims, Mark Mlkkelseri and Peyton Allam.

Blood mobile Collects 68 Units .

The bloodmobile visit Wednesday at the Greenville public works facility saw 68 units of blood collected and seven persons deferred for various health reasons, reported Ruth Taylor of the Pitt County Red Cross.

Mrs. Taylor said Greenville Utilities Commission and also the citys fire-rescue and police departments had employee groups donating blood.

The next blood drive in the area will be May 19 at Burroughs Wellcome Co for plant employees. The next public visit will be on July 1,

Grimes Speaks To Men Of Church

Bryan Grimes 111 of Greenville was guest speaker Wedne.sday at a meeting of the men of the church at Bell Arthur Christian Church. Grimes, who,recently attended a three-month seminor, discussed church youth ministry.

Dive Club To Meet Monday

The Ocean Atlantic Dive Club will meet Monday at 6:30 p.m. at the Ramada Inn.

The guest speaker will be a representative of the N.C. Marine Resources Center on Bogue Banks who will speak on starting a salt water aquarium. Dinner reservations may be made by calling 758-1444.

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Senate, House Bills Limiting Sessions Approach A Showdown

COMETS COMING - This photo showing Comet IRAS-Araki-Alcock was taken at 9:30 p.m. Wednesday (1230 GMT) by Tadashi Deyama, a Kyodo News Service photographer in Fukuoka, southern Japan. The comet, discovered

earlier this month, attained its nearest approach to earth on Wednesday. The photo was taken through a 400-millimiter telephoto lens. (AP Laserphoto)

The No Jail Comet Drew Little Attention From N.C. Watchers

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) - Maybe its because it doesnt have a visible tail or maybe its because there wasnt enough advance notice, but the comet speeding past Earth this week hasnt exactly thrilled North Carolina astronomers.

I wasnt really impressed, said Ernest Vaupel of the Forsyth Astronomical Society. Theres nothing really to see.

Jhe diffused glow of the comet, visible Wednesday night off the end of the Big Dipper, was a dud compared to the comet Kohoutek, which passed by Earth 10 years ago, or Haileys comet, which passes every 76 years and is due back in 1986. Both of those had visible tails of bright gas and were such spectacular sights that some people predicted the world was about to end.    jk

This weeks comet, IRAS-Araki-Alcock, passed within 3.1 million miles of Earth - the second-closest pass ever made by a comet.

Wednesday night was supposed to be the last the comet would be visible to people using binoculars, but there is a slight chance it will be visible again tonight on the extreme southwest horizon, said Dr. Bruce Rafert of the Department of Physics at .Appalachian State University.

Viewers will have to find it fast, he said. It may become visible after dark, but will disappear beyond the horizon by 9:30p.m.

Rafert said he and two colleagues took pictures of the comet from the schools observatory in Wilkes County, but there was no organized viewing for students, who are taking final exams.

it wasnt Earth-shaking in appearance, but it was a pleasant surprise, he said.

The Morehead Planetarium on the University of North Carolina campus in Chapel Hill organized comet watches on .Monday and Tuesday. Astronomy classes at UNC-Greensboro watched the comet from the schools observatory in Snow ' Camp Tuesday night and were to look at it through binoculars from the campus Wednesday night, said Dr. Stephen Danford.

At any given time, scientists say, about six comets are visible from Earth through high-powered telescopes. Only about two comets a decade are visible to the naked eye, Danford said the comet was the best one hes seen in about six years.

The comet was discovered only two weeks ago by two amateur astronomers, and scientists say the short notice didnt allow^them enough time to coordinate observation of the comet. *

A faint smudge of light will be visible through Saturday, scientists say, but the best view was Tuesday night and before dawn Wednesday. The comet is thought to be about

Arrested 34 Illegal Aliens

PITTSBR, N C. (AP) -Chatham County sheriff's deputies and U.S. immigration officials have arrested 34 illegal aliens Jiving in Chatham and Lee counties, officials said.

The aliens from Mexico and El Salvador, ranging in age from 17 to mid 30s, had

ESTIMATE TOLL

GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) A report issued by the World Health Organization estimates that about half of the world's 4.,5 billion people would be "immediate victims of a full-scale nuclear war.

been working at plants in Chatham County, said Chief Deputy John Whitt of the Chatham County Sheriffs Department.

He said 26 of the aliens were arrested at their homes Tuesday night, while eight others were apprehended Wednesday morning en route to their jobs. ,They were being held in the Chatham County jail under no bond.

Whitt said other aliens are believed to be living in the area.

PICK UP A little extra money by selling used items in the classified section of this newspaper. Call 752-6166.

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40,000 miles across with a nucleus of frozen water, carbon dioxide and methane about a mile in diameter.

Its tail of gas, not visible to the naked eye. stretches more than 300,000 miles behind the comets bright head.

ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A Seriate committees approval of a sweeping leslative reorganization plan that would limit sessions to 100 days has set the stage for a showdown with the House, which earlier approved more moderate reins on the General Assembly,

The Senate State Government Committee approved the bill Wednesday on a split voice vote after Sen. Gerry Hancock, D-Durham, urged the panel to preserve the citizen legislature.

But opponents contended the bill would harm less experienced legislators.

"This is going to concentrate' even more power in the hands of a few select people, said Sen. Rachel Gray, D-Guilford. The new people who are elected in November wont learn much in that short session. Theyll come back in March as green as grass.

"This is supposed to help more ordinary citizens to hold office but the citizens themselves will be disserved, she added.

Under Hancocks bill, a 75-day ceiling would be placed on all legislative sessions. With the support of

a majority of legislators, the session cmild be extended by 25 days.

The plan was proposed by a State Government subcommittee that met for several weeks earlier this session. The Senate unanimously had passed a resolution calling for a study of session lengths, an idea endorsed by Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green.

However, House Speaker Liston Ramsey favored a House bill that would delay the start of the 1985 session by about three weeks. Ramsey has been critical of Greens plan, saying delaying the start is the only feasible method for shortening sessions.

The House bill is also before the Senate State Government Committee.

Under Hancocks bill, there would be a six-day session in January of odd-numbered years during which committees would be assigned, rules adopted and other miscellaneous business handled. The Legislature then would recess until March, when the full session would convene and meet until the end of June.

This session the Legislature convened Jan. 12 and is expected to adjourn sometime in June or July.

Standing committees would be allowed to fork on bills between sessions, a move designed to reduce the need for study committees.

There would be a system of

Breakthrough?

TOKYO (AP) - Three Japanese researchers claim they have developed a method for couples to choose the sex of their baby using artificial insemination with sperm separated according td) chromosomes, the Kyodo news service reports.

A womans egg has only X chromosomes, while sperm ccmtain either X or Y. Sperm with Y chromosomes produce boys and sperm with X chromosomes produce girls. The researchers said they found the X and Y chromosomes have a different electrical char^, which made the separation process possible.

deadlines for matters including the introduction oi local, departmental and public bills and reporting general appropriation bills to the Senate and House floors.

IThe Senate panel adopted an' amendment requiring , that clerks mail legislators all proposed bills, .meeting schedules and other pertinent information. Several lawmakers had worried aloud that they wouldnt be kept abreast of between-session events.

The Greenville Fire-Rescue Department provides emergency medical services to Greenville citizens. For information on services, call 7524137,

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FBI Says Dozens Of Bogus Schools Still Operate

ByEUSSAMcCRARY Aviated Press Writer The agent in charge of the FBI in North Carolina says he was disappointed a phony collge where he bought a de^ gave him only a B in a citminal justice course.

Robert L. Pence, who said he received several degrees froih the bogus colleges, said the schools provided phony transcripts for each degree. He said the FBI confiscated computers that provided instant transcripts.

My transcr^ts showed what courses 1 took, the semester hours and grades, he said. I was disappointed to-see that 1 had only gotten a Bin criminal justice.

Pence said Wednesday the FBI Dipscam investigation of 38 diploma mills had cajused most of them to shut down, but he said dozens of the bogus schools are still operating around the colujtry.

Pence said the phony col-. leges have thrived during the past 10 years due to an increased demand for degrees in the job market. He said agents are still investigating 16 additional schools.

This investigation has turned up so many of these colleges that sell degrees and yet we know there are more out there, Pence said. Were hoping that this investigation and forthcoming indictments will discourage others from getting into the degree business.

The FBI is seeking indictments on mail and wire fraud charges against the operators of the phony schools.

Meanwhile, Pence said the FBI will begin presenting evidence gathered in the probe to grand juries nationwide. He said he didnt know when the grand juries

would take action on the FBI findings.

On Tuesday, the FBI capped a nationwide undercover probe, called Dipscam, of briefcase universities in nine states and Canada. Two of the schools listed^ their addresses in Zurich, Switzerland.

We found that graduates included an NFL player, the head of a cancer clinic and a hi^-ranking government official in Washington, Pence said. He said the schools charged from $1,000 to $5,000 for degrees ranging from undergraduat degrees to doctorates.

Five agents bought a total of 23 degrees, ranging from business degrees to doctorates of psychotherapy, for about $25,000, he said.

Agent Otho A. Ezell Jr. sent $1,595 to American National University in Phoenix, Ariz., and explained he was too backlogged due to a

vacation to do research for a degree, according to an af-fadavit filed in federal court in Phoenix.

The school awarded Ezell a masters degree in business administration and a transcript showing he had taken 10 courses for 30 credits, receiving all Bs, the affadavitsaid.

Pence said purchasers of the phony degrees are not the target of the probe, but he said employers of people with the degrees will be notified. He said the FBI will seek indictments against heads of the schools and in some cases, the colleges staff members.

"It all depends on the degree of involvement in the operation of the schools, he said. Well take each case on an individual basis.

He said the names of phony degree holders also will be turned over the states attorneys general.

RIVER OF FIRE Molten lava streams down the side of Mount Etna, the most active volcano in Europe, Wednesday as an eruption which began March 28 continued. A multinational team of vulcanologists will employ explosives over the next

few days in an attempt to divert the lava flow, which is within three miles of Nicolosi, Sicily, a small town of 4,500. (AP Laserphoto)

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Hog-Sized Problem Grew Out Of Their Small-Sized Pet Pig

CORVALLIS, Ore. (AP) -The Campbells thought they bad a dream come true in Otis - a pint-sized pet who was intelligent, sanitary and affectionate. But as he got older, Otis turned into a real hog.

When Jack and Shari Campbell bought Otis as a piglet two years ago. they were told he would never weigh more than 120 pounds because of selective breeding of his ancestors.

So much for genetic research.

Otis exact weight is unknown, but 300 pounds would be a conservative estimate.

"We thought he would be perfect, said Mrs. Campbell, remembering young Otis. "At 120 pounds, Otis would not have been much larger than a good-sized dog."

"He was going to be a house pig," she said. We thought it would be great to

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let him jump into the car and go to the beach with us.

For the first months Otis lived with the Campbells, they thought they were in hog heaven. Otis was cat-box trained, learned commands quickly and became the darling of the couples two daughters.

Then problems grew as fast as Otis expanding waistline.

"The first time we tried to take him to the beach, we werent even halfway there when Otis got so carsick we had to turn around and come home, Mrs. Campbell said. Its just no fun to have a pig get sick in your car.

After that, Otis was banished to a dog kennel when the CampWls left town.

Otis kind of liked going to the kennel, she said. "Hed swagger through the door like he was the Fonz. He acted like he owned the place. The poor dogs were terrified of him, and he really loved making them yelp

But Otis ballooning figure, perhaps the result of a thyroid condition, eventually put an end to his kennel

visits.

He just got too big for the exercise area, Mrs. Campbell said. His body got too long, and because pigs backs are kind of rigid, he couldnt turn around between the fences.

So Otis found himself confined to the Campbells yard, where he took up a new hobby rooting.

Hell shove his snout down until the dirt comes up to his eyes and just move through a whole field that way, Mrs. Campbell said.

The talent is wonderful for truffle hunting but terrible for lawns. The Campbells had to cover their side yard inconcrete.

Otis size led to additional problems. Mrs. Campbell said her husband became embarrassed at being seen with the animal and stopped taking him for walks. The chore fell to Mrs. Campbell.

We were so tied down, she said Monday. We couldnt go the beach for a day or a weekend. We finally had to say, Hes important, but so are our children.

The Campbells decided against asking for their $250 purchase price back. Im not the type of person to make a real big deal about it, Mrs. Campbell said. Hes really neat. Pigs are so much smarter than a dog. Theyre very human-like, and were attached.

Instead, the family decided to give Otis to someone who would promise not to carve him up for pork chops.

Its hard with a |?ig, Mrs. Campbell said. With a dog, you know no ones going to eat him. With a pig, thats a free dinner.

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BIG OTIS Otis takes a walk with former owner Shan Campbell. When Shari and her husband bought Otis they were told he would never weigh more than 120 pounds. Now Otis weighs 300-pounds-plus. (AP Laserphoto)

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They found a farm family near Corvallis to take Otis. Two weeks ago, they gave him away for good.

'The separation has been a bit painful, Mrs. Campbell admitted.

When he was little, I think he thought I was his mother,she said.

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By SUSAN OKULA Associated Press Writer

NEW LONDON, Conn. (AP) - From reveille at 6 a.m. to lights out at 10 p.m., for the last four years Angela Dennis and Daphne Reese have been marching, running, studying and learning military etiquette and seamanship.

The challenge left the two cadets little time to consider that next week they will be the first black women to graduate from the U.S. Coast Guard Academy.

I did not know we were the first. I never really thou^t about it, said Miss Dennis, from Morrilton, Ark.

Its hard to believe its such a big deal, added Miss Reese, who grew up in Washington, D.C.

Academy officials, however, are quietly pleased with the two women and hope to draw more minority group members in a stepped-up recruiting campaign.

Of 850 Coast Guard cadets, 65 are from minority groups, including 17 blacks.

Misses Reese and Dennis, both 22, seem very self-assured, although neither is certain the Coast Guard will become a lifelong career.

Both women will spend the next two years as ensigns on Coast Guard cutters after their May 18 graduation. The, 210-foot Active, stationed in New Castle, N.H., will be Miss Dennis first assignment, while Miss Reese will

be stationed on the 378-foot GallataninNewYork.

The two are quick to praise the academy, with Miss Reese observing it was harder to get used to a mostly male school than to a mostly white one.

Ive thought about being a woman here more than being a black woman here, said Miss Reese, who graduated from an all-girls Catholic high school in Washington before her parents moved to Columbus, Ga.

Its harder for a woman. I would hope there were no differences but you cant deny it. You have to adapt, she said in a recent interview.

Both agree the physical demands including required running and workouts - were the bi^est challenge at an institution where the attrition rate is an average 50 percent per cadet class.

This place is the real world. We have to fit in. You have to work it out by yourself and do a good job, Miss Dennis said.

One real-world element that was all but missing from their tenure at the academy was racism, they said.

Only once. Miss Reese said, were racial slurs flung at her, by a white male cadet who subsequently was thrown out of the school.

People have been more than careful, said Miss Dennis. People have been very good to me.

Miss Dennis majored in physical sciences and joined the school band and intramural athletic teams. Miss Reese, a management and economics major, sang in the choir and acted in school plays and musicals.

The two say the Coast Guard Academy is not considered as an option by enough black female high school students. The school, the smallest of the four service academies, opened

Rugged Robots In Mules' Role

COLUMBUS. Ok (AP) -Six-legged robots that can see where they are going and carry the payload equivalent of a mule are being developed at Ohio State University here under a grant from the Department of Defense and the National Scidnee Foundation.

With much of the earths surface inaccessible to wheeled or tracked vehicles, these robots could play an important role in opening up hostile environments on earth and possibly in space, says Robert Readman, assistant dean of the College of Engineering at OSU.

its doors to women in 1976, with four blacks among the 109 women now enrolled.

The women are committed to at least five years with the Coast Guard after graduation. Miss Reese said shes happy to have a ready-made job waiting for her in a year when college ^aduates are having trouble finding work.

The academy is a good deal, said Miss Dennis. Its demanding and its hard but there are good benefits. You have a job and you get an education.

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Archie Canceled; Television Grew Up With Show

ByFREDROTHENBERG AP Television Writer ' NEW YORK (AP) - The Dingbat died, Gloria and The Meathead moved out and, after 12 seasons of Archie Bunker, CBS boarded up Archie Bunkers Place. . * But nobody can kill the

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memory of the original All in the Family, which helped usher in reality and the 20th century to 1970s television.

The long-running hit, which starred Carroll OConnor as Archie Bunker, he nations most popular igot, was canceled by CBS on Wednesday. The program finished 24th among 99 prime-time programs for the 1982-83 season.

He was not^, surprised at all by the cancellation, said Jim Mahoney, OConnors publicist. He suspected it would happen months ago. Norman Lear, who created All in the Family but had severed his connections with the revamped Archie Bunkers Place 3/2 years ago, said Wednesday, Its sad to see that period end. All in the Family became Archie Bunkers Place in 1979 after the defections of cast members Sally Struthers, as Gloria, and Rob Reiner, as Mike, and the limited appearances by'Jean Stapleton, as Archies devoted wife, Edith. The restructured vehicle was just another situation comedy; All in the Family was proof that television had grown up.

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Through the unprecedented character of Archie, viewers - whether they ^ked him or not - were confronted by one reality of America, its warts. Archie, a working-class homeowner from the New York City borou^ of Queens, was prejudiced. He was shallow. He was angry. He was not very smart. But nothing stopped his opinions and malapropisms stemming from his own ignorance and closed mind.

As OConnor once said in an interview: Archies dilemma is coping with a world that is changing in front of him ... But he wont get to the root of the problem, because the root of the problem is himself, and he doesnt know it.

Through humor and sensitive story lines, All in the Family was able to poke fun at both the prejudices of Archie and the knee-jerk liberalism of his son-in-law, Mike, whom Archie ridiculed as The Meathead. If there

TV Log

For complots TV programming Information, consult your weakly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Dally Rallactor.

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

THURSDAY 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac 8:00 Magnum P.I 9:00 Special 11:00 News 11:30 LafeAAovie 3:00 Nightwatch FRIDAY 3:00 Nightwatch 5:00 Jim Bakker 6:00 Carolina 8:00 Morning . 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Childs Play 11:00 Price Is 13:00 News

13 30 Youngand 1:30 As the World 3:30 Capitol 3 00 GuildingL. 4:00 Waltons 5:00 Hillbillies 5:30 A Griffith 6:00 News?

6:30 CBS News 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac 8:00 Dukes 9:00 Dallas 10:00 Falcon Crest 11:00 News?

11:30 Play Off 3:00 Nightwatch

WITN-TV-Ch.7

THURSDAY    10:30    Saleolthe

7:00 Jeffersons 11 00 Wheel ot 7:30 Family.Feud II :30 Dream House

8:00 Fame 9:00 GimmeA 9:30 Cheers 10:00 Hill Street 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 13:30 Letterman 1:30 Overnight 3:30 News FRIDAY 5:00 Jimmy 5.

6:00 Almanac 7:00 Today 7:35 News 7:30 Today 8:35 News 8:30 Today 9:00 R. Simmons 9 :30 All in the 10:00 Facts Ot Life

13:00 News 13:30 Search For

I 00 Days ot Our 3:00 Another Wor 3:00 Fantasy 4:00 Whitney the

4 :30 Little House

5 :30 Lie Detector 6:00 News

6:30 News 7:00 Jeffersons 7:30 Family Feud 8 00 Matthew 9:00 Knight R 10:00 Bare Essence

II 00 News 11:30 Tonight 13:30 Comedy

3:00 Overnight 3:00 News

WCTI-TV-Ch.12

THURSDAY 7 :00 Three'S Co.

7 M Alice 8:00 Benson 8:30 Condo 9:00 TooClose 9 X It Takes Two 10:00 30/30 11:00 Actions News II:X NIghtline 1:00 Starsky& 3:00 Mission

9 00 Phil Donahue 10:00 Good Times 10:30 Laverne 11:00 Love Boat 13:00 Family F. 13:30 Ryan's Hope 1:00 All My 3:00 One Life 3:00 G. Hospital 4:00 Carnival 4:30 BJ/LOBO 5:30 People's

FRIDAY 5:00 Bewitched 5:30 J. Swaggart 6:00 AG Day 6 :30 News

7:00 Three'S Co. 7:30 Alice 8 :00 Baby Makes 8:30 At Ease 9:00 Movie

7:00 GoodAAorning 11:00 Action News 6:13 ActionNews    11:30    NIghtline

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7:35 ActionNews    1:00    An Evening

8:35 Action News _ 3:00    Early Edition

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

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FRIDAY

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13:00 Ways ot me 13:30 Tip Top Ten 13:30 Word Shop 13:45 Electric Co. LIS' Feather 1:45 GIvesnd 3:00 Tuned In 3:15 Soup to Nuts 3:30 Advocates 3:00 Over Easy 3:30 Great Chefs 4:00 Sesame St. S;00 Mr. Rogers 5:30 Povwerhouse 6:00 Or. Who 6:30 Sherlock 7:00 Report

9:00 Sesame Street 7:30 Stateline 10:00 Jobs    8:00    Washington

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9:00 AAarlo Lanza 10:00 Special 11:00 A. Hitchcock 11:30 AAorecambe 13:00 SIgnOft

was any real winner in these loud family squabbles, it was the simple honesty and common sense of Edith, whom Archie called Dingbat.

When All in the Family arrived in January 1971, the top-rated sitcoms were

Heres Lucy, Mayberry R.F.D. and My Three Sons. All in the Family definitely broke that sitcom mold, and by next season had become the top-rated show in television.

The first All in the Family broadcast was prefaced

Deleted Tapes Shown Jurors

ByYARDENAARAR Associated Press Writer

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jurors in a $30 million slander suit that alleges Dan Ramer was smearing a Los Angeles doctor viewed 60 Minutes outtakes showing Rather chasing a passerby through a parking lot because he thought the man was a hospital administrator.

He just walks up to a guy and starts smearing me. Thats not journalism, thats a threat, Dr. Carl Galloway said after the deleted videotape portions of the television news program were shown Wednesday in Superior Court.

Galloways suit claims that a December 1979 segment of the program falsely implied he took part in schemes to defraud insurance companies by submitting phony medical claims for nonexistent accidents.

The tape was among portions of the 60 Minutes report that were not shown in the final broadcast. Galloways attorney, Bruce Friedman, obtained them from CBS under court order.

The tape showed Rather conducting an interview outside a Los Angeles clinic where Galloway once worked when a man started photographing the newsman. Rather apparently assumed the man was the clinics administrator and began pursuing him across the parking lot.,

Wheres Dr. Galloway? Wheres Dr. Galloway? Rather kept saying during the pursuit. How long have you been into this scam? Taking pictures isnt going to take you off the hook

'Chorus Line'To Become Movie

HOLLYWOOD (UPD-A Chorus Line, a long-time Broadway hit that, has succeeded for years aik a road show attraction, will finally become a movie under the aegis of Embassy Pictures and Pollygram Pictures.

Cy Feuer and Ernest Martin, who have coproduced such other Broadway hits as Guys and Dolls and Can Can, will produce the musical for the screen.

A Chorus Line won ninje Tony Awards in 1976, including best musical and best score, and a Pulitzer Prize for drama. The hit show continues to play on Broadway, making it one of the three longest running musicals in Broadway history, behind Fiddler on the Roof and Grease.

on this one. Rather said.

my friend,

What hook? the man replied.

The tape, which lasted only about two minutes, ended with Rather saying: Adios. See you on television. What is your name?

The man turned out to be a passerby, Galloways attorney said, contending the film showed that Rather jumped to conclusions and was more concerned with a dramatic story than the truth.

The clinic where the tape was shot had issued a medical report about patient Rosa Bravo, 25, with what was represented as Galloways signature. Miss Bravo, who obtained the report, said she had received only 1'/^ minutes treatment in four visits. Her bill, however, was for $891 and 19 visits.

Galloway has claimed the signature was forged and that he had left the clinic more than a month before the bill was issued.

Friedman also contends 60 Minutes distorts and misrepresents the truth through its tape editing and by staging interviews. The attorney also showed videotapes Wednesday of Rather interviewing Miss Bravo and essentially asking her the same questions twice.

by this announcement: The program you are about to see ... seeks to throw a humorous spotlight on our frailties, prejudices and concerns. By making them a source of laughter we hope to show in a mature fashion - just how absurd they are.

Archie made derogatory references to any race, religion or creed that wasnt his own. But, more important than the ethnic and racial slurs, which got laughs, was that All in the Family raised significant issues previously closeted from network audiences, like prejudice, abortion, birth control and homosexuality.

The program opened doors to other serious sitcoms, including the spinoff Maude- starring Bea Arthur, who broke more TV ground by having an abortion. Another spinoff was The Jeffersons, still a hit show on CBS.

Lear bought the rights to the British sitcom about a bigot called Till Death Do Us Part. ABC, which commissioned Lear to do a pilot, was unhappy with the concept, even after a second pilot. When ABC let its option lapse, CBS quickly picked it up.

ROCK SWAP BRYSON CITY-The first Rock Swap of the season will be held Saturday and Sunday at The Gorgarama Park in Nantahala Gorge, located between Bryson City and Andrews. This is the 21st year for rock swaps.

Tom Jones Fri. May 6 Sat. May 7 9:00 PM Until. Jazz Loft Beef Barn

Lear said his most meaningful All in the Family was a two-parter. "In the first episode, Edith lost faith in God, and in the next episode she regained it. It took better than two years before we wrote that well enough to stage it.

c'.:;

Ayden Highw*y 756-3033 Adm J3.5o Last Dayl-Call For Shoyvtimes Dark Crystal(PG)

Starts Fri.

"Fast Times At RidgemonI High' (R) lM3ITHM:i:4aaal4al:V','4ai.4Efl^W

lafaM ADULTS $3.00 TIL &30..'igilii) --

10,5:10,7:10,9:10    1:20,3:30.5:30,7,30.9:20    !    ,.,,53

1:10,3:

ROCKY

SYLVESTER STALLONE

,_ (PGJ_

DR. DETROIT

DAN AYKROYD(81

3:00,5.00,7:00,9:00

FORCED ENTRY

TANYA ROBERTS (R)

DAN AYKROYDis

*1 ENDSTHUR! '-

GANDHI^^ ADEMY

Magnum trapped between black market and U.S. NavyI op

THE 1983

SPECTACULAR GLAMOUR AND ENTERTAINMENT!

HOSTS:

BOBBARKERand JOAN VAN ARK

("Knots Landing: Special guest stars:

LARRY GATUN

and the GATUN

BROTHERS BAND

A CBS SPECIAL PRESENTATION

GREAT MOMENT$ ON CB$

NNCTTV    GREENVILLE

COUNT ON MNCT-TViiNEWS TONIGHT AT ELEVEN





26Tfte uauy KeueLior, uiwwuj:,    mu    saay, May u, nu

NOTICE OF TAX LIEN SALE FOR TOWN OF SIMPSON

Under and by virtue of the power vested in me by the laws of the State of North Carolina, particularly Chapter 310 of the Public Laws of 1939, as amended and pursuant to an order of the Pitt County Board of Commissioners. I will offer for sale and will sell at public auction for cash to the highest bidder at the Courthouse door in Greenville at 12 oclock noon on Monday, the 6th day of June, 1983, liens upon the real estate described below for the nonpayment of taxes owing the year 1982. The names of the owner or of fh person who listed the real estate for taxes, the real estate which is sut^ect to the lien, and amount of the lien being set out below. Reference is made to the records in the Office of the Tax Supervisor for more particular description of said real estate, and notice is hereby given that the amount of the liens set out below are subject to the addition of penalties as provided by law, and the cost of sale.    ThisSthdayof    May, 1983

W.R. Smith

Pitt County Tax Collector

Andrews, Jesse Lee

1 res.. 1 lot.................

. .67.18

Boyd, Hyman Earl

1 res , 1 lot.................

. 187 84

Brendia. Vernor M.

1 lot........................

. . .17.3'l

Brewlngton, Maggie life est

Hot....................

. 70.22

Brown. David Earl

1 res.. 1 lot.................

. .94 66

Clark, Walter Lee Sr.

1 lot.......................

...57.63

Clemons, Helen

1 res.. 1 lot.................

.14.26

Daniels, Mary Joyce

1 lot........................

. 106.55

Dixon, Mark V.

1 lot.........................

.22.61

Dixon, William 4

1 lot........................

3.36

Floyd, Henry Leon

1 lot.........................

42.58

Floyd, Pauline 4 Henry Tucker

1 lot....................... ...

.42.03

Grimes, James Earl

1 lot........................

.12.43

Hardee, (Jueenie

1 res , 1 lot..................

.31.70

Hardee, Ruth Mae lite est

) lot. 1 acre..................

. 89.09

Hardy. Fonnie4 Eddie

1 res . 1 lot.................

.85.76

Hardy, Helen

1 lot.......................

.21.36

Hardy, Jasper Lee

1 lot.....................

. .4 91

Hardy, William Earl

1 res . 1 lot..............

38 45

Howard, Oleon Marie

1 res . Hot..................

.83.31

J J Mobile Homes

1 lot..........................

.11.20

Johnson, Stephen H. 4

1 lot.......................

38.26

Little, Jeremiah Sr.

1 res . 1 lot..............

104.50

Moore, Clarence Milton 4

1 lot ...................

. . 10 80

Moore, Herttord Lee 4

1 res 1 lot..............

. 121 99

Moore, James

1 lot.....................

20.88

Moore, James Flijah etal

1 res , 1 lot

146.28

Moore. James Jr 4 Cassie Lee

1 res.. Hot................

...115.94

Moore, Jarvis (heirs)

2 lots......................

.. 27.50

Moore, Willie James 4

1 lot.....................

. . 89 92

Moye, Edward Earl 4

1 lot ....... ..............

15.22

Moye, Willie Earl 4

1 res , 1 lot '.........

331.05

Nelson, Hoover Lee

1 res . 1 lot.......

55 92

Nelson, Lou S

1 lot......................

46.51

Parker, James David

1 lot......................

150.10

Powell. Alexander Daniel 4

1 lot......

. 25.51

Pugh, Floyd 4 Rose

1 res . 2 lots..............

155.72

Reese, William Earl, Henry, 4

2 lots.......................

. .25 44

Rodgers. Peters 4 Dora

1 lot.......................

.32.02

Smith. Della House

1 res 1 lot.................

.37.21

Smith. Estella

1 res . 1 lot................

. 45 94

Smith. Reathia

1 res 1 lot..............

.96.59

Smith, Samuel Jr 4

1 res . 1 lot.................

. 59.06

Sutton, Grace Reidnell

2 lots.....................

. . 14 40*

Taft. Willie (heirs)

1 lot......................

80.67

TeMair, Clarence

1 res . 1 lot..........

. . . 73.05

Teltair, Willie Clarence 4

1 lot........................

. 11 41

Thompson, Galloway Conv Mart.

1 lot.........................

. 179.43

Thompson, Myrtle Gatlin

1 res . 3 lot..................

86 83

Unknown

4 lots...................

43 45

Walker, Sidney 4 Mary

1 lot ......

. 10.18

Whitfield, Beulah Jeffries

1 lot.......................

. .8.92

May 5, 12, 19,26, 1983

Artis. James Percy & Pattie

2 lots.........................13V.59

Atkins, Mary Bess

2 lots.......................371.81

Atkinson, Albert Ray

3 lots..........................80.97

Atkinson, Albert Ray 8,

1 res . 2 lots..................193.43

Atkinson. Claude

1 res , 3 lots..................102.68

Atkinson, Claude Mrs.

1 res , 3 acres................101.30

Atkinson, Malissa T.

2 lots......................... 250.31

Atkinson. Mary Elizabeth

1 res., 1 lot....................76.82

Atkinson, Mary Harris

1 res.. 3 acres.................37 54

Austin, Harry &

I res., 1 lot...................156.18

Austin. Isaac John 8,

1 res., 1 lot...................141.38

Autry, Cathy Manning

1 res., 1 lot...................221.04

Avent, Henry L

I lot...........................41.91

Averette, Ernest Cleveland 111327.30 Avery, Floyd Holton

1 res., 1 lot...................185.79

Avery, Gladys McPherson

1 res., 1    lot...................128.67

Baggett, Oneal &

1 res , 3    lots..................680.79

Bailey, James Herbert, Jr.

1 res., 1    lot...................169.61

Baker, Augustus &

1 res., 1    lot...................149.67

A WEDDING CAKE - The worlds largest wedding cake measures approximately 37 feet high, or exactly 11 meters and 40 centimeters. It was being served today at the wedding of 62-year-old Danish travel agency owner Simon Spies and his 20-year-old secretary Janni Brodersen. On top, the confectioner is finishing the cake, while at bottom the official representative of the Guinness Book of Records is checking the size of the cake. (AP Laserphoto)

Baker. Cora Elizabeth Smith

1 res.. Hot.................

106.31

1 lot........................

114.64

Brown. David F. 4

Baker, David D 4

3 acres.....................

...69.93

1 res.. Hot.................

...95.65

Brown. Delois Floyd

Baker. Dorsey Edward

1 res.. Hot.................

.195.70

1 res., 2 lots. 46 acres.......

.417.30

Brown. Donald Wayne 4

Baker. Eddie Elijoh

1 res., 1 lot.................

166.30

1 res., 1 lot.................

.. 166.50

Brown. Donnie Ray

Baker, Joseph L. 4

1 lot .....................

...2.43

1 res., 1 lot.................

..182.88

Brown. Ehis

'Baker, Junior Wayne

1 res., 1 lot.................

.125.84

1 res., 1 lot.................

..123.04

Brown, Fornie (heirs)

Baker, Oscar Lee

1 lot........................

...28.27

2 lots........................

.. 47.73

Brown. Geraldine

Baker, Robert Linwood

1 res., Hot.................

134.57

1 acre.......................

. 183.75

Brown, Harry M. Etal

Baker. Robert Linwood 4 Nina

1 lot........................

...84,14

1 lot.........................

82.51

Brown, James Louis 4

Baker. Robert Lynwood

1 res., 1 lot.................

213.59

1 lot.........................

. 124.20

Brown, John Arthur 4

Baker. Robert Lynwood 4

1 lot........................

...88.18

Hot.................'........

.201.58

Brown, Lawrence 4

Baleme, Larry Dean 4

1 res., 1 lot.................

..175.14

3 acres......................

. 162.64

Brown, Lee 4

Baldwin, Linda Fay

3 lots........................

...33.64

1 res . 1 lot................ 28 26 Bal.

Brown. Meanon Lee 4 Brenda

Ballard, Helen

1 res., 1 lot................10.80 Bal.

1 lot.........................

..17.35

Brown. Mercedes

Barfield, AlphasineChejryl

1 res., 1 lot..................

167,37

2 lots..................;.....

..26,74

Brown, Owen Wilson 4

Barnes. Johnny Robert

1 lot.........................

. 276.75

1 res , Hot...................

. 172.50

Brown, Pearlie*

Barnes. Juanita Braswell

1 lot.........................

. 122.24

1 res., 1 lot..................

.206.49

Brown, Peggy Horton

Barnes, AAarion Lee 4 Edith

1 res., 1 lot..................

.. 26.46

1 lot..........................

.. 35.64

Brown, Rosa Mae

Barnes, Sallie Life Estate

1 res.. Hot..................

. 165.75

I acre.......................

.r22.68

Brown, Wesley E. 4

Barnes. Willie Edward

8 acres......................

250.93

1 res., 2 lots.................

305.55

Brown, Willie James 4 Lena

Barnhill, Alfred (heirs)

1 res., 2 lots.................

.53.82

1 lot. ..................

. . 11.99

Bryan, Olin Lawrence 4

Barnhill. Andrew 4

1 res., 1 lot..................

. 286.76

1 res.. Hot..................

. . 83.04

Bryan, Robert Lee

Barnhill, Hinton D (heirs)

1 lot.........................

.63.60

4 lots........................

.. 33.26

Bryant, Fannie Mae

Barnhill, James Noward 4

1 res.. Hot..................

.58.26

2 lots.........................

.. 45.68

Bryant, Mary

Barnhill. Lonnie (heirs)

1 res., 1 lot..................

.90.68

1 res.. Hot...............

122.55

Bryant, Oscar Clayton

Barnhill, Robert Earl

1 res.. Hot..................

.83.73

1 res . 1 lot...................

186.45

Buchanan, Stuart L. 4

Barr, Jake

1 lot.........................

.522.22

1 res.. Ho*...................

. 45.48

Buck. Allen McKennly

Barrett, Annie Lee

1 res . 2 lots.................

.374.85

2 lots.........................

.20.79 1

Buck, Ervin 4 G.P. Haddock

Barrett, Bernard*

33 acres.....................

.208.66

1 lot..........................

. 22.52 i

Buck. Jo Ann Sutton 4

Barrett, Elsie P.

1 res.. Hot..................

.243.25

1 res 1 lot....................

131.80 1

Bock, Kenneth Ray

Barrett, Floyd 4

13 acres.....................

. 534.55

1 res., 2 lots..................

191.89 1

Buck, Vera Adell

Barrett, Jessie Lee

1

1 res.. Hot..................

. 180.96

Brewingmn, Raymond 8,

Ires., llo*...................139.17

Bright, Ralph 8, -

1 res, 38 acres...............645.56

Briley, Charles E. &

1 lot...........................16.20

Briley, Elbert8.

1 lot............................3    40

Briley, James Kirk

1 res., 2 acres.................62.34

Briley, Johnnie Mae

1 lot............................5.83

Briley, Joseph Oelandar

6acres.........................1.14

Briley, Kathryn Elaine

1 res., 1 lot...................186.63

Briley, Marianna 8,

1 res , 5 lots..................123.42

Briley, Melissa (heirs)

1 acre..........................7.61

Briley. Willie Elbert

1 res., 1 lot...................420.84

Brock. Mary Frances life est.

1 res., 1 lot...................139.74

Brock, Osiana

1 res., 1 lot..........'..........77.33

Brody. J.S.

/acres.......................291.12

Brooks, Cecelia P

1 lot..........................274.26

Brooks, Dale Dennis

1 lot..........................124.98

Brown & Drewery Co.

2 lots..........................25.95

Brown, Anthony 8,

1 res., 2 lots..................261.18

Brown, David Earl

1 res., 1 lot..................

Barrett, John F (heirs)

I lot.........................

Barrett, Joseph

I res., 1 lot...............

Barrett, Matthew &

I res., 1 lot..................

Barrett, Simon

1 res., 4 lots..................

Barrett, Sinnie T.

1 res., 1 aer.................

Barrett, William Etta

1 lot..........................

Barrett, Windsor 8, Nellie

1 res., 1 lot.................

Bartlett, Mary Forbes (heirs) 3 lots

174.06

NOTICE OF TAX LIEN SALE

Under and by virtue of the power vested in me by the laws of the State of North Carolina, particularly Chapter 310 of the .k    '"ended    and    pursuant    to    an    order    of

the Pitt County Board of Commissioners, I will offer for safe and will sell at public auction for cash to the highest bidder at the Courthouse door in Greenville at 12 oclock noon on

hL fk''J k    I    jns upon the real estate

'0"Py'"ent of axes owing the year *^""^ '' -verson who listed the real estate for taxes, the realstate which is subject to the Hen a^ amount of the lien being set ou! below. Reference is made to the records in the Office of the Tax Supervisor for more particular description of said real estate, and notice is hereby given that the amount of the liens set out below are subject to the addition of penalties as provided by law, arKf the cost of sale.

This 5lh day of May, 1983

W.R.Snith

Pftt Couity Tax Collector

Adams. S Parke.

'acre. .............IO.40

Adams, Annie Jenkins Knlgtit

'res, I lot    ......49

Adams, Floyd Michael &

5 acres    14 20

Adams. Jackie Wayn'

1 res , . lut    f.30 Adams, Kelly k jna

Ires, Hot.    5444

Adams, Marvin Earl 2lo(    21;

Au, , Ve'

2 lots ,...    .    130    34

Adams, Wiiiia.vi Manning 8.

''or................. .18.90

Ahad. Mohammed A

I lot.......... 295.52

Albei line, George E. Jr. i

1 res., 1 lot............. 188    87

Alford, Frederick R. i

'!'* ''0*    .196,19

Allen, Arthur

' 'es , 1 lot    79.92    Bal

Allen, Donald Ray

^'ofs     ,.15.86

Allen, Mary i

I res., 1 lot ,    54    5,

Allen, Robert A Jr &

' ces , I lot    172    28

Allen, ThelonlaOlandus I res., 1 (

I

Alleyne, Samuel William 8,

' lot.........................102    47

Allied Chemical Co............12.47

American Legion Post........28.86

Anderson, Ada

1 acre.......................14,85

Ancerson, Joe Jr

Ot     22    68

Anderson, Simon 8.

acos    264.22

/ nderso, iC'illie Issac

Ires , I .     100.00

Andrews. Edward &

"ot..................20 52

Andrews, Jesse Lee

1 res., I lot....................75.58

Andrews, Lester 8

'res.. Hot.............. 132.59    Bal.

Andrews, Mack Arthur

1 res., 1 lot...............140.17

Andrews, Mitchell Lane

'.'ot.........  57    70

Andrews, W.C. (heirs)

' lot.......................20.49

Arlington Self Storage 7 acres    2,094.82

Armistead, Milton Ariititus &

1 res , 1 lot.................(22.09

Arthur, LeslieOrmie

1 res,, 22 acres.............. 9    05

Artis, Arie Vines

'res, ' lot .................171 53

Arils, Isaac Amos (heirs)

3 lots........................ 275.01

Basnight, Thomas Gray Jr. (heirs)

1 res, 1 lot...................248.99

Bass, Carolyn Meadows

1 lot..................... .37.07

Batchelor, Dock DBA.........50.23

Battle, Charlie L. &

1 res., 1 lot...................165.02

Batts, Johnnie Brown 234.68

Batts, Johnny Brown &

1 res., 2 acres................341,76

Beacham, David &

I res., 1 lot...................189.54

Beacham, RIchard Archable

1 res., 1 lot...................184.04

Beachum, William E

2 lots.........................350.78

Beacon Piano Company Inc.

1 acre ....................995.17

Beddard, Myrtle Jones

1 res.. 1 lot...................92.05

Beddard. Woodrow Wilson

I res.,, 1 lot...................80.82

Bell, Charles Linburgh Sr.

I res , 2 lots.............:.    160.46

Bell, Mary L, House

1 acre.........................24.95

Bell. Millard F.

1 res , 1 lot..................181.81

Bell, Ulysses Grant Jr. &

I lot...........................72.90

Bell, Ulysses Grant Jr. &

1 res., 9 lots..................968.52

Bell, Walter Dennis &

1 res., 1 lot...................132.83

Bell. William Lindsey &

1 res., I lot..................165.59

Belue. Ralph Daniel

1 lot..........................101.03

Benneth Charles M i Wf. Ann

1 res.. 1 lot...................230.42

Bennett, Mary Lee Vines

1 res,, 1 lot....................82.12

Benton, Elsie Harrington

I res., 1 lot..................181.29    '

Benton, Walter Green Jr.

1 lot...........................19    77

Berry, Nancy Worsley

91 acres............... 19.96

Bess, Carrie Umphrey I

3 lots.................P!......40.22

Best, Leroy & Carrie

I res., 3 lots..................183.38

Best, Mathew Jr.

1 res . 1 lot...................104.37

Best, Ruby Jean

I lot............................1.13

Bethea, Eugene

1 res , 1 lot...................172.91

Blackwell, Ella

I lot..........................50.22

Blackwell. George Hughes &

1 res., 1 lot...................190.48

Blackwell. Josephine Wilson &

Hot...........................21.55

Blount, Cora Cobbs

1 res., 1 lot...................161.10

Blount, Daniel Lee

1 res , 1 lot...................120.21

Blount. Lester Benjamin &

1 res., I    lot....................60.86

Blount, Willie Jr.

'lot...........................48.48

Blow, Alton Ray &

' res., 1 lot...................170.47

Blow, Larry & Agnes H.

' res , 1 lot............ 81.56

BoardOf Trans On Unlcorp

1 lot...........................59.40

Bob Barbour, Inc.

'lot........................6,278.31

Bond, Jane Scott

1 res., 1 lot...................202.80

Bonner. Glenn Miller &

'lot...........................20. W

Boseman, Elsie Williams

'lot......................33.72 Bal.

Bostic, Alfredo. Jr.&

1 res., 1 lot...................142.76

Bowen, Jack Hunter &

76 acres.......................550.75

Bowen. Sidney &

1 lot............... 32.40

Boyd. Charlie Ray

' res., 1 lot..................167.46

Boyd. Donald WIntord

1 res , 1 lot..................112.97

Boyd, Ellas &

1 res , 1 lot       ..............180.05

Boyd, Hyman Earl

1 res., 1 lot...................211.32

Boyd, James Jr. &

1 res,, 1 lot...................183.67

Boykin, Mathew Thomas

' lot..........................228.99

Boys Club Ot Pitt Co Inc.

W acres.......................92.66

Bradley, Franklin L &

1 res., 1 lot....................94.92

Bradshaw, Harvey Deaklns

16 acres......................683.69

Brame, Peggy O. &

' res , 1 lot...................191.50

Branch, Carlton Ray &

1 lot.........................141.80

Branch. Earl 81 Wife

2 lots...........................2.56

Branch, John A, (heirs)

I res, 29 acres................562.99

Branch, Kirby P. 8,

28 acres......................37.51

Branch, Kirby Putnel &

32 acres.......................69.12

Branch, Kirby Putnel

1 res., II acres...............220.43

Braxton, Betty Smith

lacre..............  24.41

Braxton. Elbert Lee Jr.

Hot.....................

Buck, William M.&

1 res.. Hot...................172.39

Buckman. Thomas F.

89 acres...................... 724.33

Bullock. George Richard &

Ires., 1 lot...................213.19

Bullock. Jasper Ray 8,

1 lot..........................158.36

Bullock, Larry Ronald

1 lot...........................60.70

Bulluck. Robert Wendell

8 acres........................26.14

Bunch, Joel T. & Wf.

2 lots..............,...........92.19

Bonn, Jeanette

1 res., 1    lot...................180.95

Bunn, Robert Jr, &

1 res., 1    lot...................179.22

Bush, Bertha Stephenson

1 res., 1 lot....................52.98

Butler, Nannie Gray

Hot............ ..............28 03

Butler. William A.

1 lot...........................73.49

Bynum, Rutus Sr. &

2 lots..........................19.93

C/O Tax Supervisor

1 lot............................6.18

Cahoon. Frances Jones

1 lot..........................291.17

Caldwell, Iris B.

1 res., 1 lot...................358.01

Campbell, Rosa Maxine H.

1 lot............................5.82

Candlewick Inn Inc.

1 lot........................... 47 52

Cannon, Fannie Mae

1 res . 1 lot................... 334.72

Cannon, Helen Bryant

I lot.......................... 138 70

Cannon. James Willis Jr. &

1 res . 1 lot...................205.11

Cannon, Ruby,Streeter

1 res.. Hot...................159.09

Cannon, William Durwood Sr. &

Ires, 2 lots..................299.43

Cape Fear Mobile Hm. Inc. &

Braxtofk Jesse

1 lot........................

Braxton. Jesse Lm

1 acre......................

Braxton, Truemlller Hines

Hot........................

Bray. Earl Neal 8.

1 res., 1 lot.................

Brendia, Vernor M

Hot........................

Brewlngton, Carrie

1 res., Hot.................

Brewlngton, Maggie life est.

1 lot..........................303 66

Carawan. Ethel Andrews

1 res.,    1 lot...................104.64

Carmon. Alfred & Essie

1 res., 1 acre.................108.68

Carmon, Bobby Earl &

1 res.,    1 lot...................172.90

Carmon, Bobby Gene 8,

1 res., 1    lot....................85.01

Carmon, Clarence Wilbert (heirs)

1 res., 1    lot...................240.09

Carmon, Elias 1118.

1 res., 1    lot...................178.91

Carmon, Hilda Gray

1 res., 1    lot....................79.88

Carmon, Leamon

1 res., 1 lot....................46.74

Carmon. Malton Earl

1 res.. 1 lot...................120.79

Carmon. AAorris H. & Mary Q.

2 lots..........................80.91

Carmon, Robert Lee

1 res., 1 acre.................204.92

Carmon, Robert Lee

1 lot...........................12.10

Carmon, Willie Mae

I lot...........................68.73

Carmon, Yvonne

1 res., 1 lot ............175.79

Carmon. Zeno (heirs)

1 res.. 2 lots..................125.36

Carney, Betty Pearl

1 lot...........................98.77

Carney, Clifton E. &

1 lot...........................44.96

Carney, Florence

1 lot...........................14.15

Carney, James Lee

1 lot...........................22.09

Carney, Julius R.

1 res..    Hot...................238.40

Carney. Raymond Leon

1 lot...........................96.05

Carney, Willie Mae

1 lot........  ,,13.84

Carney, Zebedee 81 Willie

1 res.,    1 lot...................230,91

Carolina AAodel Hm. Corp

1 lot...........................86.78

Carr, Blount (heirs)

1 lot................... 16.20

Carr, Martha Mrs. (heirs)

Sacres........................40.50

Carr. McDonald 81 Wf.

1 res.,    2 lots..................575.58

Carr, Pauline Fleming (heirs)

1 lot..........  11.83

Carr, William (3eorge & Betty

1 lot............................2.32

Carroll, James Ernest

1 lot...........................19.60

Carroll, James Jr. 8i

1 lot...........................83.40

Carter, Hubert L. 4

1 lot..........................250.07

Carter, Tommy

lacre................ 81.33

Casper, Robert Alston &

1 lot...........................14.18

Casfelloe, Thomas E 8,

121 acres.....................431.24

Catapano, Hattie Christine P.

"acres.......................23.60

Cates, Carlton Thomas

6 lots..........................36.77

Caton, Harley Trovis

1 res., 2 lots..................124.64

Causey, John

1 lot..........................109.57

Causey, John L. Sr.

Hot..........................197.26

Causey, John L. 8,

1 lot...........................11.54

Causey. John L. DBA

3 lots.........................564 44

Causey, John L. Sr.

4 lots, 1 acre................2,81

Causey, John Lewis Sr. 8,

33 lots, 14 acres.............3,4(

Chamberlain, Melvin &

1 res., 1 lot....................;

Chance, John Henry 4

1 res., 1 lot...................1)

Chance, Junious Boston

1 res., 1 lot............  14

Chancey, Dora (heirs)

Hot...........................j

Chancey. Lucille C. 4

1 res., 1 lot....................i

Chapin, Hiram Thompson Jr. 4

1 res., 5 acres..................

Chapman, Claude (heirs)

Hot  ......................

Chapman, Johnny Lee 4

1 res.. Hot...................II

Charles Paint Company

Hot............... ...     5

Chauncey. Harold Bryant 4

1 lot, 10 acres.................17

Cherry, Billy Curtis 4

1 res.. Hot...................IS

Cherry, Charles Rogers 4 lots..........................1

Cherry, Eleanor B.,

1 lot...........................89.10

Cherry, Guilford (heirs)

8 acres........................93.80

Cherry, Jack Alton

1 res, 8 acres.................238.57

Cherry. Margaret Whitehurst

27 acres.......................64.39

Cherry, Oscar

1 res., 1 lot...:.................9.33

Cherry, Thomas C.

1 res., 1 lot....................33.39

Cherry, William Stanley Jr.

1 lot, 1 acre..,................800.57

Clark-Snowden Properties

1 lot..........................414.34

Clark, Francis Skinner 4

1 res , 6 acres................233.74

Clark. Gladys H.

1 res., 1 lot...................137.45

Clark, James D.

3 lots..........................20.08

Clark, Johnnie A 4 Wf. Sherry

71 acres......................406.57

Clark, Julius Jasper

1 res., 1 lot...................154.31

Clark. Katie Buck

lacre.........................66.85

Clark, Louvenia Harrison

1 lot............................8.37

Clark, Melvin Hardy 4

1 res., 1 lot...................147.98

Clark, Michael Gordon

Hof..........................103.11

Clark, Robert Lloyd 4

1 res., 1 lot...................277.74

Clark, Rufus Lee

1 res., 3 lots..................126.80

Clark, Sandra Mobley

1 lot...........................17.64

Clark, Shadle Lee

Ires, 2 acres.............. .157,90

Clark, Shirley Lou Glenn

1 res., 1 lot...................227.97

Clark, Walter Lee Sr.

1 lot...........................64.83

Clark, William H.

1 lot..........................221.45

Clemmons, Blanche Freeman

1 lot.............  11.88

Clemons, Alvin 4

1 res.. Hot...................130.22

Clemons. Annie Barr

1 lot...........................94.07

Clemons, Floyd Lee

1 res., 2 lots..................138.96

Clemons, Helen

1 res., 1 lot....................16.04

Clemons, Roy Jr.

1 res., 1 lot...................200.69

Clemons, William Augusta

1 res., 4 lots  ............70.11

Clemons, William Augustus

1 lot...........................11 88

Clemons, William Augustus 4

1 res.. Hot....................21.71

Clifton, Harold D, 4

I lot..........................233.01

Clifton, Ruth H.

1 res., 2    lots..................819.51

Cobb, Charles David Sr.

2 lots.........................364.17

Cobb, Nathan Redmond Jr.

1 lot...........................20.47

Cobb. William Jeffrey

1 lot..........................173.10

Coggins, Lesley E. Jr. 4

1 res., 1    lot...................151.76

Coggins, Lester 4 R.H.

6 acres........................14.26

Cole. Bobby James

1 res.........................113.72

Cole, Sidney

1 res., 1    lot...................226.99

College View CleanersLaundry

' lot..........................382.24

Commercial Printing Co.

2 lots.........................338.04

Commonwealth Mortgage Co.

1 lot, 3 acres...................97.52

Congleton. Steven Ray 4

1 res., 1 acre.................152.10

Conway. John Allen Jr. 4

3,lots.........................478.28

Conway, Mark A. 4

1 res., 1 lot....................37,56

Cooper. Dennis Ray

I lot..........................176.96

Cooper, Emma

1 res., 2 lots..................112.61

Cooper, Ernest 4 Wf. Amanda

Daniels, James Edward

Hot.........................

Daniels, James Jr. 4

Hof.......................

Daniels, Jesse Calvin (heirs)

2 lots.........................14.43

Daniels, Joe '

1 res, 4 lots..................217.33

Daniels, John Henry

Hof..........................112.52

Daniels, John W.

Hot...................

Daniels, Johnnie L. 4

1 res., Hot............

Daniels, Johnnie Ray 4

1 res., Hot............

Daniels. Lendel 4

1 res., Llot...................119.79

Daniels. Linwood Ray

1 res.. Hot...................198.47

Daniels, Mary Joyce

1 lot......... ...........

Daniels, Odell

1 res., 1 lot..................

Daniels. Roy Lee4 Ruebener

I res., 1 lot..................

Daniels, Roy Lee 4 Wf Annie

1 res., 1 lot..................

Daniels, Spencer

1 lot.....................

Daniels. Warren Gatlin 4

1 res., 1 lot..............

Daniels, Will (heirs)

2 acres..................

Daniels, Wlllle Howard 4

1 res., 1 lot..............

Dansey, W.E. Jr.

10 acres................

Darden, Henry Lee 1 res., 6 acres

.54.05 . 17.82

...8.32

.170.81

.178.75

.119.87 .182.78

.132.73 ..63.08

. 190.97 . 182.45

...4.75

.111.24

.475.20

.61.64 Bal.

1 res., 1 lot...................166.21

Cooper, James Earl

' lot..........................157.25

Cooper. Jasper Jr. 4

1 res., 1 lot.........'..........172.87

Corbett. Caesar Jr. 4

1 res., 1 lot...................180.92

Corbett, John L.

3 acres........................20.55

Corbett, John L.

1 lot...........................59.40

Corbett, Simon

2 acres........................32.67

Corey, Henry D. 4

' res.,    1    lot................... 178 78

Corey, Herbert S. 4 Joann

2 lots.........................688.55

Corey, Herbert S.

1 res.,    1    lot...................210.17

Corey, Jesse Ray 4

1 res.,    1    lot...................179.20

Corey, Liddle E. (heirs)

1 res.,    1    lot...................179.31

Corey, William Henry

I lot.............V,............55.12

Cottlngham, Wilmer Edward 4

1 lot................ 59    24

CoHon, William Earl 4

1 lot...........................72.79

Council, Roberta Barns

1 res.,    1    lot ................39.29

Coward, Fred Lee 4

1 res.,    2    lots...................84.11

Coward, James Earl 4

1 res . 1 lot...................250    35

Coward, Leon

1 res., 1 lot....................81.86

Coward, Linwood

1 res., 1 lot...................349.45

Coward, Robert Earl

1 res, 3 lots...................207.47

Coward, Vickie Ann

1 res., 1 lot...................213.68

Coward, Wlllle Clennel 4

1 res., 1 lot...................186.93

Cox, Barbara

1 lot...........................27.00

Cox, Barbara Jean

1 res.. 1 lot...................126.01

Cox, Barbara Jean

1 res., 1 lot....................49.90

Cox, Edward Allen 4

' res.. 1 lot...................333 54

Cox, Ernest Lee

I res., 1 lot................... 143 80

Cox, Fred 4 Peggy Jean

1 res., 1 lot....................69.58

Cox, J. M.

1 acre..........................8.91

Cox, James E.

1 lot...........................20.71

Cox, Jeanette Gilley

Ires, 2 lots...................16.9:

Cox, Jeannette G. Agency Inc.

' lot...........................37.3t

Cox, Joe life est.

1 res., 1    lot, 3 acres............97.8(

Cox, John Henry

1 res., 1    lot...................163.71

Cox, John Lewis 4

1 res., 1    lot...................118.5C

Cox. Lester Jr.

' res., 1    lot...................177.34

Cox, Luther Jr. 4 Minnie R

1 res., 1    lot...................175.96

Cox, Luterh Junior

' lot..................J........31.65

Cox. Mae Belle T.

1 res., 1    lot........... 172.61

Cox, Mamie Lee Grimes (heirs)

1 res.. Hot....................87.91

Cox, Martha

2 acres........................73.47

Cox, Marvin Lee 4

1 res., 2 lots..................141.60

Cox, Nellie Sermon (heirs)

1 res., 1 lot......... 92.12

Cox, William McKlnnley

1 res., 1 lot...................183.73

Craddock, DavidMallon4

' lot..........................105.73

Craft, Dalton

2 lots..........................59A3

Craft, Major Hazzard Etals

51 acres......................537.04

Craft. Minnie Mills

1 res., 1 acre..................39.43

Crandall, Alex (heirs)

'lot...........................16.20

Crandall, Dudley 4

' lot...........................14J5

Crandall, James Lewis

1 res.,    1    lot...................194.80

Crandall. Jimmy Lae4

1 res.,    Hot...................163.89

Crandall, Julius

' lot...........................13.23

Crandall, Albert Jr. 4

1 res.,    1    lot...................177.67

Crandol, James Bernard

1 res.,    1    lot...................114.37

Crandol, Reble Wjison

1 acre...........J..............9.18

Crandol. William Joshua 4

' res.. Hot...................205.85

Crawford, AAary Sutton

1 res., 1 lot...................162.70

Crawford, William H. 4

I res.. Hot...................246.58

Credle, Arnell 4

1 res., 2 lots...................99.55

Creech, C. Harold 4

' lot...........................47.52

Creech, Curtis Harold 4

1 res., 1 lot...................MS.21

Culllfer, J. Paul DBA

3acres.......................162.76

Culllfer, Joseph Paul 4

1 res., 1 lot....................315A8

Cyrus, William Thomas

1 res., 1 lot...................166.78

Gaggs, Jamesetta

Hot...........................87.26

Dali, Dennis Ray 4

1 lot...........................34.59

Oail, Harold Lee

1 res., 1 lot...................500.91

Oall, Ralph E.

' lot........................ .112.70

Daniel Drywall 4 Paint, Inc.

' lot..........................390.88

Oanief, Frederick E. 4 Gayle

1 res.. Hot...................580.34

Daniels, Ashley (heirs)

Hot...........................10.10

Daniels, Carolina

' lot...........................37.82

Daniels, Clifton Albert 4

1 res., 1 lot....................79.65

Daniels, Clinton 1 res., 1 lot

Darden. Kelly Lee

1 lot..........................108.00

Darden, Pattie L

2 lots..........................14.25

Darden, Sadie

1 res.. Hot...................138.68

Darr, Sheila J.

1 res., 1 lot...................202.05

Daughtry, Alton G.

1 lot...........................39.15

Davenport, Billy Earl

1 res.. Hot....................57,92

Davenport, G.A. 4

1 lot...........................19.60

Davenport, Walter Ray 4

1 lot..........................116.18

Davenport, Walter Ray

I lot.......................... 327 29

Davis, Darryl Brantley 4

Hot..........................122.78

Davis, Eli|ah4 Esther D.

12 acres.......................14.26

Davis, James Ambler 4

1 lot...........................17 82

Davis, Richard J. 4

I res.. Hot...................180.19

Davis, Rudolph 4 Mandy

1 res.. 1 lot...................153.48

Dawson. Johnnie Mae

1 res., 1 lot....................73.28

Dickens, Charles M. 4

2 lots...........  16.74

Dickens, Jermore

1 lot...........................7.72

Dickens. Jerome 4

1 lot..........................246.86

Dickerson, James Perry

1 res., 1 lot...................198.64

Dickerson, Sellers Crisp

1 res., 1 lot...................199.27

Dickerson. Timothy Allen 4

1 res.. Hot...................288.68

Dixon, Annul 4 Novella

1 res.. Hot...................124.68

Dixon. David 4 Mildred

50 acres Z...............354.71

Dixon, Dirk S. 4

2 lots.........................274.32

Dixon, Hannah (heirs)

98 acres......................503.99

Dixon, Henry L. 4

1 res., 1 lot...................179.11

Dixon, Jimmy Ray 4

1 res., 1 lot...................159.52

Dixon, Joyce Gray

1 res., 1 lot...................103.84

Dixon, Kirby Stanley

1 res., 1 lot...................294.54

Dixon, Larry Jr.

1 res.. Hot.............. 327.47

Dixon, Leslie Thomas

15 acres.......................57.92

Dixon. Leslie Thomas

3 acres........^................2.43

Dixon, Leslie Thomas

6 acres.......................263.74

Dixon. Leslie Thomas

1 res., 2 lots. 15 acres.........744.87

Dixon, Leslie Thomas

1 lot...........................93.80

Dixon, Leslie Thomas 4

1 lot..........................159.41

Dixon, Lloyd Scott 4

Hot...........................24.95

Dixon, Lloyd Scott Jr.

1 res., 1 lot, 3 acres...........975.85

Dixon, Mark V.

1 lot...........................25.43

Dixon, Roy W. And Joyce F.

31 Lots.......................177.62

Dixon. Tony Earl 4

1 lot...........................58.35

Dixon. William 4

I lot............................3    78

Dixon, Willie (heirs)

1 lot............. 33

Donaldson. James B. 4

1 lot...........................17.82

Donaldson, James Bradley

1 res,, 1 lot...................212.93

Donaldson, John (heirs)

1 lot...........................51.84

Dona Idson, WilllamVann4    '

1 res., 1 lot...................180.73

Dozier, Casper Edwards 4

1 res.. Hot...................453.74

Drake, Burtis Gene 4

1 res . 2 lots..................219 96

Drewery, Oollle Shine 4

1 res.. Hot...........  86.83

Dudley, Alma A (heirs)

4acres.................. 2.70

Dudley, Charlie

1 lot...........................27.00

Dukes, Annie Mae

20 acres......................538.64

Dunn, Ernest Beasiey 4

1 lot.......................... 152 50

Dupree, Connie Mack 4

1 res., 1 lot....................96.13

Dupree, Eva

1 lot..........................115.71

Eakes, Edward Lee Jr. 4

1 res , 1 lot................... 156 41

Eakes, James H 4

1 res., 1 lot...................194.62

Eakes, William Robert

1 lot..................'........120.76

Easterling, (Sene DavJs

1 res.,    1 lot..................541.28

Eastwood, James Elbert

1 res.,    2 acres ...!............198.76

Eastwood, Joseph F.

1 res.,    1 lot...................160.9C

Eaton, Anna (heirs)

1 res.,    2 lots......... 124.35

Ebron, BillieT. 4

1 lot...........................86.67

Ebron, Herman L. 4

1 res.,    1 lot...................199.98

Ebron, Howard Earl 4

2acres.......................175.11

Ebron, James Henry 4

1 res.,    2 lots..................228.31

Ebron, Johnny

1 lot...........................14.36

Ebron, Lillie Bea

T lot..........................14.73

Ebron, Lucy (heirs)

2 lots..........................37.42

Ebron, Margie P.

1 res., 1 lot...................177.16

Ebron, AAartha (heirs)

1 lot...........................10.57

Ebron, AAary Emma

1 res., 1 lot................79.16    Bal.

Ebron, AAary AAoore E tal

1 lot...........................50.37

Edmondson, J. J.

Hot...........  35.64

Edwards, Danny Russel

1 acre........................110.94

Edwards, Ella Grimes

1 res..    Hot....................96.10

Edwards, EllaAAaeP. 4 Virginia

1 lot............................1.42

Edwards. Ernest Cardwell 4

1 lot...........................86.16

Edwards, Eula Mae 4 Peggy

1 res..    Hot....................73.40

Edwards. George 4

1 res., 1 lot.................s.    135.77

Edwards, Henry 4 Wf. Alma

1 res.,    1 lot...................124.96

Edwards, Israel H. 4

1 res,    3 acres................259.60

Edwards, James Frank 4

1 res.,    1 lot...................139.22

Edwards, Jimmy Arnold 4

I res.,    1 lot...................236 09

.540.59

Ennette, Herman (heirs)

1 lot  ....................54.00

Ennis, William Thomas

1 res.. Hot...................106.95

Ervin, Sybil P

2 lots...........................1.93

Evans, Caroline (heirs)

1 res., 1 lot....................16.46

Evans, H B (heirs)

1 lot...........................24.95

Evans, Herman

1 res., 1 acre.................182.67

Evans, James Willie

1 lot...........................50.31

Evans. The Co. Of G'ville Inc.

1 res.. Hot....................27.00

Evans, William Arthur Jr. 4

1 res.. Hot...................189.18

Everett. James Jr.

1 res., 1 lot...................158.13

Everett, Julia N.

1 lot...........................19.76

Everett, Julia Nell Whitehurst

165 acres.................... 789.91

EvereH, Julia Nell Whitehurst

2 lots..........................94.23

E verette, Joseph Robert 4

1 res., 1 lot...................178.91

Farmer, Ernest Jr. 4

1 res.. 1 lot........ 176.48

Farmer. James Harvey 4

1 res., 1 lot...................111.46

Farmer, Joe Nathan 4

1 res., Hot...................113.71

Fields, Claude 4

1 lot...........................24.33

Fields. Mary (heirs)

1 lot............................5.17

Filmore, William Augusta

1 res.,    1 lot...................152.89

Fischer, Rosemary Ganzert

1 lot...........................81 38

Flake, Lurae Worthington 4

1 res.,    2 acres................285.14

Flanagan, Charles Roy

1 lot...........................21.31

Flanagan. Charlotte

1 lot...........................10.15

Flanagan, Charlotte Elizabeth

1 lot...........................10.34

Flanagan. Jerry

1 lot...........................27.45

Fleming, Curtis Edward 4

1 lot..........................137.08

Fleming, Elisha

1 res.,    14 acres...............148.53

Fleming, J. Russell 4

1 res.,    1 lot...................441.23

Fleming, Willie Garland

1 res.,    1 acre ...........152.43

Flowers. Phillip K 1 acre

. 70.57 r

. 47.28

.............309.88

Oanlals, Edgar Lee 4 Mary Lee

1 re*., 1    lot....................98.53

Daniels, Emma Mae

' res., 1    lot....................33.89

Daniels, Iris Jean Patrick

' lot...........................40.57

Daniels, James Curtis 4 1 res..(l    lot...................153.60

Edwards, Kyle.

Edwards, Laura Williams

Ires., Hot...................355.99

Edwards. Linwood

I res., 88 acres...............705.43

Edwards, Louis Albert

1 res . 2 lots..................161.29

Edwards, Louis Levi 4

1 res., 1 lot...................307 A4

Edwards, Pauline

Hot..........................155.74

Edwards, Robert Floyd 4

1 res., 1 lot...................135.99

Edwards, Rudell Mills

3 acres........................28.09

Edwards, S. M. Jr.

7acres........................26.02

Edwards, Shirley Jeon 4

1 res., 1 lot...................159.07

Edwards, Thomas Lee

1 res.. Hot...................178.46

Edwards, Velorls Jean

1 lot..........................197.59

Edwards, Vernon Scott

2 acres.......................112.43

Edwards, Wilbert 4 AAaHIa

I res., 2 lots..................153.03

Edwards, William 4

1 res., 3 lots..................133.87

Edwards, William T.

Hot  ..................145.28

Edwards, William Thomas

Ires., 1 lot  ..... 182.80

Edwards, William Thomas 4

Hot.............................31 AO

Elbert, William Earl

1 res., 1 lot...................196.68

Elks, Alvin Leroy 4 wf Tessle

89 acres..............  383.94

Elks, Casper H. 4

37 acres......................287.03

Elks, Casper Ham

1 res., 1 lot...................143.24

Elks, Donna Dixon

I res., 1 lot  .............194.93

Elks, Fredrick Allan 4

1 lot  .........  60.32

Ellison, AAack (heirs)

10 acres  ......  ^.23.76

Floyd, Pauline 4 Henry Tucker

1 lot. ....................

Forbes. C. Herber (heirs)

8 acres........................65    34

Forbes, Lennie 4

1 res., 1 lot................... 182    40

Forbes, Sam Jr 4 Helen

1 res.. Hot....................81.24

Forehand, Ernest Roy 4

1 res., 1 lot...................224.50

Foreman, Ben Jr. 4

1 res..    1 lot...................172.98

Forrest, James Harold 4

1 res.,    1 lot....................27.97

Forrest, James Harold 4

1 res..    Hot...................222.03

Foskey, Henry Thomas 4

1 res..    4 acres................140.99

Fox, Ann L. Atkinson

1 res.. Hot...............  .    201.51

Franey, Timothy James

1 res .    1 lot....................60.60

Franks, Eva

1 res.. Hot..........1.........42.81

Freeman, Marion Augusta

1 res.,    4 lots..................105.38

Freeman, Mary

1 lot............ 11.77

Friend, William E. 4

1 res., 1 lot ............366.20

Furman. John Harlie Jr. 4

1 lot............ 17.82

Gallman, James E Jr 4

1 res., I lot...................194.39

Garcia, Smokey

1 lot...........................19.60

Gardner. Elizabeth Harris4

1 lot............................5.23

Gardner. Henry Lee 4 Hazel

1 res , Sacres.................78.73

Gardner. Jesse Clarence

1 res , 1 lot...................186 26

Garner, Geneva Ann S.

1 res., 13 acres...............271.67

Garrett. Cornelius4 Mary

1 res., 1 lot     119.89

Garrett. Denison D.4

1 res., 3 lots}..................217 50

Garrett, Dekison Daver Jr 4

1 lot r.................95.09

Gaskins. Charles H 4

1 lot, 37 acres.................973.08

Gaskins, Charles Harper

1 res., 1 lot...................328.21

Gatlin, Jamesetal

84 acres......................119.42

Gatlin. James H. 4 wf Geneva T

1 res , 1 lot...................127.15

Gatlin, Josephine 4

5 acres........................44.55

Gatlin, Nora Hawkins

1 res., 1 lot.............. 224.74

Gatlin, Wilton Lee 4

Ires. 4 lots........... 29

Gay, David Clinton

1 res.. Hot............. ,2.86

Gay, Robert (heirs)    ,

1 res., 1 lot...................162.36

Gentile. Carol Lee

2 lots......................... 174    26

Gerrnan, Lynnon Novella

1 lot............................4    75

Gerry, Douglas Steven 4

1 lot..........................240.38

GhorashI, Hamid Moayed 4

1 res . 2 lots..................527    90

Gilbert. Charles F. 4

152 acres...................... 74    74

Gilbert, Robert Jackson 4 Joan

1 lot.

Glllikin, JuneW.

1 lot...............

Glast. James L

1 res., 1 lot.........

Glisson. Paul G. 4

1 lot........................

Glisson, Richard F

I lot........................

Glisson. Richard Fernando

1 res., 1 lot :................

Glisson. Richard Fernando4

25 acres.............

Goddard. William Jr.

1 res., 1 lot.............   186.29    Bal.

Godette, Joseph Leroy 4

1 res.. Hot...............

Godley, Mae Etta P

1 lot .....................

-Godwin, James Patrick 4

1 lot.......... ...........

Goff, Jimmy Lee 4

1 res., I lot...............

GoleHe. Noah 1 lot

.128.85

 28.57

94.60 Bal

.. 16.20 109 46

322.13 .171.18

.116.26 . 180.33

.84.59

170.97

. 14.85

Gordon. Horace 4 Cherry, Barne

.51.01

,.71.96

..56.49

..21.44 .197.40

.160.77 .165.19

.13.50

.81.22

... 178.64 .... 50.33

.301.30

.. .68.31

. 233.95 .198.09

..42.01

.34.98

.. 52.29 .34.8)

..819.54

2 acres.

Gorham, (Seorge Washington

1 res., 1 lot..................

Grady, Either Carr 4 etals

2 lots........................

Grady, Rayniond 4 Esther

1 lot..........................

Graham, Tanya L.

1 res.. Hot..................

Graham, Willie Elbert Jr 4

1 res., 1 lot..................

Grant, Reuben Craig 4

1 res.. Hot..................

Gray, Lillian (heirs)

1 lot.........................

Gray, Zeno Jr. (heirs)

1 res.. Hot..................

Green, Curtis Earl 8

1 res., 1 lot..........

Green, Hattie (heirs)

1 res., 2 lots................

Green, Linwood 4 Lina

1 res., 4 lots................

Green, AAorris Junior 4 wf

1 lot.....................

Green, Richard 4

1 res., 2 lots................

Green, Robert L.

1 res., 1 lot.................

Green, Roosevelt 4

1 res., 1 lot.................

Greene, Allle B.

1 res., 1 lot .............

Greene, Donald Lindsey

1 lot........................

Greene, Peggy Brown

1 lot........................

Greene, William Frank etal

1 res., 1 lot...................174.10

Greenville Church Of God

I lot, 4 acres..,  .........

Greenville Health 4

6 lots.......................1,059.50

Grier, John Davidson 4

1 res., 5 lots..........  703.94

Griffin, J.C. 4

1 lot...........................11J)4

Griggs, Douglas 4 wf Camille J

1 res., Hof.....................42A9

Griggs, Lillie Belle life est

1 res., 1 lot  ................18J1

Grimes, Annie Ruth

1 res., Hot.............

Grimes, Ellsworth, Jr.

lres.,llot.............

Grimes, Gladys

1 res., 1 lot..............

Grimes, James Earl

1 lot.....................

Grimes, Jessie Lee .

1 res., 1 lot..............

Grimes, Katie life estate

1 res.. Hot..............

Grimes, Lee Ernest 4

1 res., 2 lots.............

Grimes, Lee Ernest 4

1 lot.....................

Grimes, AAary

3 acres..................

Grirhas, Oscar Jr. 4

1 res., 1 lot..............

Grimes, Robert (heirs)

2 lots....................

Grimes, William O

1 res.. Hot..............

Gross, Allegra Grimes

1 lot.....................

Guinn, Ernest B Jr

1 lot.....................

Gurganus, Deborah P.

I res,, 1 lot..............

Gurganus, Robert A. 4

1 re*., 1 lot..............

Gutierrez, Mario Oscar

2 lots....................

Gutierrez, AAarlo Oscar I res.,lot..............

.198.39

.154.33

.,66.83 .. 13.99

.. 79.69 !. 55.58

,194.90 . 33.40

10A9 . 186.57

..21.44

.173.24

..,.142.98

. 88A9

. 183.37

. 197.68 . 332.04

Haddock, Frank James

1 lot..........................105.99

Haddock, Jesse David

1 lot  .....................9.18

Haddock, Jlrhmie Dalton

1 res., 1 lot ...........270.73

Haddock. Jimmy Charles 4

1 res., 1 lot....................49.13-    ,

Haddock, Maybetle Haddock    ''    ,

1 res., 155 acres..............755.3'l

Haddock, Ricky 4

I lot ;....................17.82

Haddock, Woodrow 4

9 acres...................

Hagan, Charles Hubert

1 lot......................

Hagan, Charles Hubert Jr

1 res.. 1 lot...............

Hagan. Michael

Hagan

1 lot..

568.08 20.20 487 *5

. 245.9^

268 li

Hamill, William N. 4

1 res., 1 lot..................

Hammond, David S. 4

1 res., 2 lots.................

Hammond, Harvey Lee

1 res,, 1 lot..................

Hammond, Laforrest Evnas

Hot.........................

Hannah. Henry 4

4 acres......................

Hannah. Jasper Ray 4

1 res., 2 lots.................

Hannah, Ray............

Hansley. Jesse James 4

1 res., 1 lot..............

Hardee. Charlie (heirs)

96 acres  ..............70.64

Hardee, Claude Robert    ..;

1 res . 1 lot...................330.78    ^

Hardee. Claude Robert 157.0    1

Hardee. Dennis Wayne 4 Barbara

1 res , 1 acre..........

Hardee, Earl Webster

1 res.. Hot............

Hardee. Harry A. 4 14 acres......................216.22

. 124.88

. 70.50 '

.. 13,0t,

. 123.6:

...94.21 ...11.17 ,

.. 180.45 ,

. 404.0f .335.44

Haddock, Burn Ice Everett*

llot........................

Haddock, David Taimadg*

1 res., 1 lot.................

iddock, Donnie Dean____

.380.05

.113J8

.300.18

..88.31

Hardee, Henry Earl

1 res., 1 lot...............

...210.17 1

Hardee, Josephine

1 acre....................

.....32.83 i

Hardee, Queenie

1 res., 1 lot...............

.....35.66 ?

Hardee, Ruth Mae life estate

1 lot. 1 acre..............

53.35 Bal

Hardee. Tony Alan......

100.2)

Harding, Clara

1 res.. Hot...............

.123.28

Hardison, Lena Bell

1 lot, 2 acres..............

.....91.53 '

Hardison, William 4 Lena Bell

1 res., 1 lot...............

.... 149.68 ,

Hardy, Fonnie4 Eddie

1 res., 1 lot...............

.....96 30 ^

Hardy, Helen

1 lot......................

.....24.03

Hardy. Jasper Lee

' lot................ 5.52

Hardy, John David

'acre.........................26    03

Hardy, AAary Jane

1 res., 1 lot............. 71.55    '

HaKdy, Norman Lee

1 res., 1 lot................... 154,47.

Hardy, Sudie Mae    

1 res., 1 lot................... 162.98    '.

Hardy, William Earl

1 res.. Hot....................43.25

Hardy, Willie J

1 res, 1 lot....................42.59

Hardy, Willi* J. Jr.

' tes., 1 lot...................159J8^    ,

Hardy, Willi* Jr. 4

2 lots..........................20.80

Harp. Elester

1 res., 1 lot...................141.87.

Harper. Annie S.

' lot...........................91 74

Harper, Emma Southerland

1 res., 1 lot...................139.99    I

Harper, Louis Linde

Ires., Hot....................65.72    .

Harper, Louis Linde 4

2 lots.........................194.51

Harrell, Jerry Wayne

1 res., 1 lot................... 278.02

Harrell, Wanda Leonard

1 res., 1 lot...................206.81

Harrington. Bobby Cole 4

2'acres.......................33.64    '

Harrington. Frank Charles

2 lots, 1 acre...................92.94

Harrington. Frank Charles Jr    .

1 lot...................  143.35    -

Harris, Addle Smith (heirs)

9 acres........................70 69

Harris, Alton Thomas

Ires, Hot.    205 5*'    

Harris, Brenda Farmer

"ot.................... 26.78

Harris, Carl Edward

Ires , Hot...................214.97

Harris. Carl Edward

' lot...........................14.85

Harris, Charles Earl    ,

' lot...........................41 35 .

Harris, Clinton A 4

I res ,    58 acres...............930.72    

Harris, Delores Faye    ,.

1 res..    Hot .............64.05

Harris, Eveline Murphy

1 res.,    1 lot...................216.02

Harris, J. W. '    ,

1 lot..........................108.41

Harris, Janie Garris    ^    ,

1 res.; 1 lot...................186.64

Harris, Jarvis Edgar 4

Ires.    8 lots............  564.32

Harris, John E.    '

1 res.. Hot...................190.53    ,

Harris, John Louis 4-

2 lots .......... 19.06

Harris, John Louis 4

I res., I lot...................326.90

Harris. Julius C. 4

I res    ,    1    lot ................208    11    ,

Harris, Lymon Earl    ,

1 res., 1 lot...................141.10

Harris. Milton Ray

1 res.,    1    lot....................41    41    .

Harris. Ralph Milton 4

3 lots..........................95 16

Harris, Ray

I lot...........................21    38    '

Harris. Ronald Leon life est.

1 res., 1 lot...................152.65

Harris. Thelma Smith

1 lot............................5    17

Harris. Thomas Earl

1 res.. 1 lot.................

Harris, Wilber Floyd.......

Harris, Wilber Floyd

51 acres....................

Hartmann, Robert M 4

1 res., 1 lot.................

Hathaway, Joseph Edward

1 res . 1 lot.................

Hawkins. James Leo

4 lots.......................

Hawkins, James Leo

1 lot........................

Hawkins. James Leo 4

Hot........................

Hawkins, Norman

1 res.. Hot.................

Hawkins, Sidney R 4 Clara B

1 res., 1 lot.................

Hayes. Annie Mae

3 acres.....................

Hayes, Annie Mae

1 lot.........................

Hazeltoa Jeffrey H.

1 lot  ...................

Hazelton, Jeffrey Howard

19 acres.....................

Hazelton, Jeffrey Howard 4

1 res.. Hot ..............

Heath, Edward Earl 4

1 lot.........................

Heath, Emma G.

1 res.. Hot..................

Heath, Peggy E.

1 res., 1 lot..............

Helmich, (xertrude A.

I lot.....................

Hemby, Carrie (heirs)

1 res., 1 lot..............

Hemby, K Arthur

I lot......................

Hemby, Luke Columbus

I res., 1 lot..............

Hemby, Robert

I lot.................

Hemby, Willis (heirs)

1 res.. Hot  .............

Herring. Charles Force 4 AAamIe

' 'of............................69J)0,

Higdon. James Bryon

1 res., 1 lot...................260.05

Higgins, Janrves Leslie

Higgins. KalhrynBalienger

1 res., 1 lot ........ 193 91

HIghsmlth, Roosevelt

2 lots..........................X.51''

HIghsmlth, Roosevelt 4    '

2 lots..........................52 55*

HIghsmlth, Roosevelt 4 wf

3 lots.......................

Hlght, Joseph Randal 4

1 res., 1 lot.................

HIgnita Builders

1 lot......................

HIM, Dorothy Williams

1 res., 1 lot ........

HIM, Gertrude L. Ilf*est.

1 lot..................

Hill. Ic*rle*n4

I lot...........................69.12.V

Hill, Sarah Fay* T. 4

1 res., 1 lot................

HInos. Bobby 4

1 res., 1 lot.........

Hines. Izel 4 Doris Forbes

1 res., 1 lot...................116.85

Hines. Jeffrey Allen

1 res.. Hot....................93.O*

Hines. Olivia (heirs)    _

9 acres...........  65.ft2

Hines, Robert 4

.117.44

142.02

. 258.23

.351.52

445.96

.828.45,

.97.20^

. 136.52"

.48.98,

287.00;*

.21.14

.14.85,

.. 56.05 . 11f4.45 .372.60 .112.61 .184.46, ..200.86,,

... 48.59,

. . .94.77, , ....6.36

.. 133.SS

... 58.81 ' 23.92

.35.64

.136,57r . 189.0U

.22.57

.78.50

...239J4,. V

.178.01,,

to C

188.11... 4

.299.80,

1 re*., 2 lots Hines, Ronald Frlizell

1 res., 1 lot........

Hoggard, Robert A

1 re*.. Hot...................216.51 -    

Holland, Glenda W.

Ire*., llot...................221.75    ,

Holley, Anderson 4    '

Ires., Hot.....................69.54    ,

Holliday, Thelma A,

2 lot*..........................86.0    '-    ;

Hollis, John Henry 4 Wlllle M    .    ,

IresuHot...................130.74,%

Hollis, Martha C.    .    ,

1 rasu Lacre.................299.71,.'r

Holt, Beverly D.    '

"of...........................57.19.r

Hooker, Edward Earl 4 Dorothy    

Ire*., llot...................185.14 .

Hooker, Jess* C 4 E lla E

lra*.,aiots..................180.87-

Hooks, Ada Barrett    ^    ,

Iras., 7 lots..................248 83 '

Hopkins, Albert Ray 4    ...

1 res., 1 lot, 2 acres...........154.93,

Hopkins, ElisabethTVtklnson

1 re*,. Hot...................145 04,

Hopkins, James Milton    ,

Ire*., Hot....................64.U,

.(CoDtinuedoD page 271    *





(Continued from page 26)

Hopkins, Nelson Thomas

1 lot.:........................

Hopkins. Walter N

Sacres.......................

Horne, David E 8, Mary Alma

24.79

.334.16

.157.19

. 254.10

.180.27

.86.92

. 205.05

.118.32 .. 53.91 .12.42

.163.78

. 280.87

.161.31

.156.39

191.94

.. 60.03

187.20

93.35

222 48

.139 83

.908.94

.9.95

.126.31

.100.81 Products Co ..........346.55

286 25

..........267.14

..........741.31

186.21

1 res., 1 lot Horne, John 8,

1 res., 1 lot...............

Horne, Wilbert 8.

1 res., 1 lot .............

Horton, Stalvey Milton 8,

1 res., 1 lot...............

House. Cassie Mae Adams

2 lots.....................

House, George Lee, Jr.

1 res., 1 lot...............

House, Norman

1 res., 1 lot...............

House, Norman..............

Housing Services Corporation Howard. BillieOlin&

1 res., 1 lot:.................

Howard, Bobby Gene

1 res., 2 lots.................

Howard. Charles Jr

1 lot.........................

Howard, James

1 res., 1 lot..................

Howard, Jimmy Lee&

1 res., 1 lot..................

Howard. Lenora Moore

1 res.. 1 lot..................

Howard. Lester Jr

1 res.. 1 lot..................

Howard, Oleon Marie

1 res., 1 lot..................

Howard, Walter &

1 res., 1 acre................

Howell, Seaton Ward

1 res., 1 lot..................

Hudson, Linwood Fred Sr.

1 res , 34 acres..............

Hughes, Ronald Alton &

1 res., 1 lot..................

Huneycutt, Florence Meggs

1 lot.........................

Hunt, William Earl 8. Lena W

1 res., 1 lot..................

Hurst Concrete

Inc ..................

Hurst, Billy A.

59 acres..............

Hurst, Billy Allen

1 lot..................

Hurst, Billy Allen 8.

1 res., 1 lot...........

Hyman, Joe Freeman

I res., 2 lots..........

Ipock, William HJr

1 lot..........................268    22

Irvin, Bobby Ladon

1 lot.......................

Ivey, Marvin F. &

1 acre.....................

Ivey. Marvin Franklin &

12 acres...................

J J Mobile Homes

1 lot  .....................

Jackson, Bobby R 8,

1 res., I lot................

Jackson. Elmer Wayne

1 res.. 1 lot................

Jackson. John R.

1 lot.......................

Jackson. John R.

5 acres....................

Jackson. John R.

1 lot.......................

Jackson. Mildred Haddock

1 lot.......................

James. Alston Sway

1 res., 1 lot................

James, Delha Ross

1 res., 1 lot................

James, George Benjamin

1 res., 1 lot................

James, Novella Powell

1 res., 1 lot................

James, Thomas Curtis 8,

1 res., 1 lot..............

James, Tony Marlow 8,

1 lot..........................

James. Van Calvin

1 res., 1 lot...................

James. Van Calvin Bulldozier Jefferson, Johnny Boy A

1 res., 1 lot...................

Jenkins, Frizzell A

1 lot..........................

Jenkins, Hugh AAorris

2 lots.....................

Jenkins, Johnnie

1 res., 3 lots..............

Jenkins, Joyce Marvalene

1 res., 1 lot...............

Jennette, Walter G. A

1 res., 5 acres............

Johnson. Annie Mae G. A

1 res . Hot..............;    .    .    .119.32

Johnson, Annie R A Jessie (heir)

1 res., 1 lot....................47.03

Johnson. Betty Craft

1 res., 2 lots..................117.00

Johnson, H. S. Jr.

1 lot.......................  .    .    .24.95

Johnson, Jesse A (heir)

1 lot.......................... 10.75

Johnson, Lelia E.

I lot...........................15.39

Johnson, Sterling

1 res., 1 lot.....................15.15

Johnson. Wanda Carol Phillips

1 res., 1 lot...................236.01

Jones, Audrey J A Hus Beverly

. 23.98

.136 68 408.73

69.88

12.60

. 185.24 . 139.90

152 28 .89.10

.21.60 . 235.22

. 166.95 ... 3.60

. . 223.43 .2.56 Bal

81.66 Bal.   16.20

114.96

.6.24

.53.66

.21.60

. 124,09 222.05

83.65

.82.10

2 lots

Jones, Cedric Foster

1 res., 1 lot...........

Jones, David W. A

1 res., 1 lot...........

Jones, Harold E. A

1 lot..................

Jones, Hugh S (heirs)

6 acres...............

Jones, Louise A

2 lots................

Jones, Mary F.

3 lots................

Jones, Noah Jr.

1 res., 16 acres Jones, Nora (heirs)

56 acres.............

Jones, Paul Gibson A

1 res., 2 lots.........

Jones, Randy A

1 res., 1 lot.................

Jones, Samuel

1 res., 1 lot.................

Jones, W R . Sr . A

1 res., 1 lot.................

Jones, Willie Lester A Mavis

1 res., 1 lot.................

Jordan, Amos Henry III A

1 lot........................

Jordan, Caroll Jr A

2 acres....................

Jordan, Caroll Watson

1 res., 1 lot, 3acres.........

Jordan, Caroll Watson Jr

1 lot........................

Jordan, Eugene (heirs)

I7acres..............'

Jordan, Sam Gregory A

1 res., 1 lot.................

Joyner, Isaac Jr

1 res., 1 lot...................196.84

Joyner, Jacqueline

1 lot.........................

Joyner, James B. A

1 lot.........................

Joyner, Linda Delaine

1 res., 1 lot..................

Joyner, Llndburgh

1 res., 1 lot .............

Joyner, Lindburgh A Martha

1 lot.........................

Joyner, Lindburgh A Martha

1 lot.........................

Joyner, Mary Ella

1 res., 1 lot..................

Keaton, David Thomas A

15 acres.....................

Keel, Jimmy C. A

3 acres......................

Keeter, Milton Bruce A

2 lots........................

Kelly, ElizabethM.

1 res., 1 lot..................

Kennedy, PhylW.A

1 res., 1 lot.................

Kennedy, Samuel A Mary

1 res., 1 lot.................

Kerwin, Jelje A

1 res., 1 lot.................

Keyes, Donnie R. A

1 res., 1 lot.................

King, Calvin McKinley A

1 res., 2 acres..............

King, Ida Bell

1 res., 1 lot.................

King, Jimmy Bryant A

1 res., 1 lot............

King, Nellie Victoria A

1 res., 1 lot................

King, Warren (heirs)

1 res., 1 lot...............

King, Windsor (heirs)

1 acre....................

Kirkland, William Smith

1 lot ;..............

Kite, Flora Azalee 1 lot......................

Kite, FloydG.Awt.SueN,

1 res., 1 lot...............

Kite, Robert Lee

2 acres...................

Knight, Edward S. A

1 res., 2 lots..............

Knight, Henry Jr

1 lot......................

Knight, O. D. A

1 res., 1 lot...............

Knott, Carl Thomas A

2 lots.....................

Knox. Darrell Knox, Mary Elizabeth

1 res., 1 lot...............

Knox, Naaman 1 res., 93 acres Knox, Pauline Yeates

1 res., 1 lot...............

Knox, Troy (heirs)

1 res., 1 lot...............

Lancaster, Garland M. Jr.

ires.. Hot............. ...2)8.39

Lancaster, Garland Mayhugh A

1 res.. Hot...................400.63

Lang, David Earl

1 res.. Hot     .....160.69

Lang, Wlllle Ray A Sarah

ires., 2 lots..................'*

Langley, Addle Moore

1 res.. Hot....................l>    '<

Langley. Alonia

ires.. Hot...........  188.08

Langley, Carl Walker etal

3 lots.................... .178.24

Langley, Dennis Warrwi Sr. *

1 res.. Hot  .........174.35

Langley, Ernestine Carr A

1 res.. Hot...................142.87

Langley, James O. A

Hot...........................

Langley, John H. (heirs)    ___

Hot...-6......... 48.74

.103.57

.206.02

.39.53

.39.74

.4.32 29 11

.522.09 . 470.45

.. 379.07 .31.52

.239.72 .107 30

.82.18

.40.99

.81.45

.522.44

.1)3.13

.158.74

.263.64

. 35.37 .28.51

.173.75

.169.68

.19.87

.423.28

.181.84

.54.18

.38.61

.58.16

.273.70 . 195.04

.147.79 .121.41

. 187.76 .. 78.99

106.44

202.41

Langley, John (heirs)

I lot..........................

Langley, Rosena (heirs)

1 res.. Ho)...................

Langiey, S. E. (heirs)

1 lot..........................

Langley, Teanor Icybell

60 acres......................

Langley, Tener Belle

1 lot..........................

Lassiter, Gloria Nobles

1 res., 1 lot .........

Lassiter, RonaldA. Jr. A

1 res., 28 acres...............

Lassiter, Ronald Allen

1 res., 54 acres...............

Lassiter, Ronald Allen Jr

1 acre........................

Latham, Judith C

2 lots.........................

Laughinghouse, Edward Earl

1 lot..........................

Laughinghouse, Emanuel

1 res., 1 lot...................

Lea, Joyce

1 lot..........................

Ledbetter, Gorman Walter Jr

2 lots.........................

Ledbetter, Russell Hilton

.68.63

85.48

.8.10

30.30

.80.33

.1,337.23

11.53

.21.71

.61 13

..14.85

152.20

.171.17

172.74

,20.79

.168.10

.51.19 . 10.69

.117.56

...20.79

.96.41 Bal. .. 3.22

1 acre.....................

Lee, Dolores Reese (heirs)

Hot...........................18.71

Lee, James, W. A

3 lots..........................28.13

Lee, Johnnie (heirs)

1 lot...........................46.82

Leggett, John Charles A

1 res., 1 lot...................199.04

Leverton, W. B. A wf. SallieC

10 acres....................2,740 50

Lewis, Elizabeth Eltreeta (heir)

1 lot..........................149.33

Lewis, J. B. Jr.

1 acre......................

Lite Homes Inc.

2 lots.......................

Lincoln, Catherleen Coward

1 res., 1 lot.........

Little Mint, Inc.

1 lot....................

Little, Andrew

1 lot....................

Little, Billie

1 res , 3 acres..........

Little, Billie A wf Lottie

1 lot....................

Little, Carrold S A

1 lot....................

Little, Dave Jr.........

Little, Dave Jr. A

1 res., 1 lot.............

Little, Debra N.

1 res.. Hot.............

Little, Elizabeth

1 lot....................

Little, Ernest

2 lots...................

Little, Ernest A

5 lots...................

Little, Hattie

1 lot....................

Little, Jeremiah Sr.

1 res., 1 lot.............

Little, Linwood Earl

Hof....................

Little, Lydia

1 res., 1 lot.............

Little, Mayo Andrew A

1 res., 1 lot...................

Little, Orlanda A Geraldine H

1 res.. Hot ............191.80

Little, Tommie L Builders, Inc

13 lots......................2,289.81

Little, Tommie L.

2 lots......................... 185    98

Little, Tommie L. A

1 lot..........................882    41

Little, Tommie L. Builders Inc

2 res ,4 lots..................786    29

Little, Tommie L. Builders Inc

I lot.......................;. 292.25

Little, Tommie L. Builders Inc

1 lot..........................424.49

Littleton, Thomas T.

1 res , 1 lot....................181    94

Lloyd, Ada Evans

1 lot............................9.18

Lloyd, Bobby Kay

Hot..........................260.24

Lloyd, R Harvey

1 res.,    13 acres...............430.61

Lloyd, Reuet H A Virginia

1 lot..........................254.82

Lockamy, Linwood James A

I res .    6 lots...................47.57

Locke, Dorothy M

1 res ,    1 lot...................199.75

Long, Essex (heirs)

1 lot. . . ......................1T    4

Long, Joseph J. Ill A

I lot..........................416.97

Loyd, Ada Ruth

1 res.,    1 lot....................82.13

Lupton. Leon Parker

Hot............................1.77

Lynch, Ara

1 res.,    1 lot................. .201.42

Lynch, Arthur

1 res., 3 acres................123.34

Lynch, Elbert Mrs. (heirs)

1 res., 2 acres.................84.79

Lynch, Lee Arthur

1 res., 1 lot...................154.82

Lynch, Paul David

1 lot...........................52.16

Lyons, Charles A., Jr. A

Hot...........................98    95

MAW Builders Pitt Co Inc

2 acres    20.79

Mackey, Donna W.    .

Ires., 1 lot...................217.27

Archibald Carter M.D.

............ 76.38

AAaiden, Rooney G. A

1 res., 2 acres................148.12

Malvaso, AAarjorie Kluck

1 res . 1 lot...................191    70

Manning, Edward J. A

1 res., 1 To)...................180.50

Manning, Gail

1 acre.........................35.96

AAanning, Grady Glenn

1 res., 1 Tot...................307.97

Manning, Julian A. A

1 res , 1 Tot...................169.50

Manning, Lois Hales

Ires , Hot...................153.80

Manning, Robert Earl

Ires., 19 acres................151.12

Manning, Thomas Lester

lres.,2lots...................225.51

Manning, Warlene

lres.,3ots..................170.68

A6anning, Willie L A Oneta

1 res., 1 Tot...................134.82

AAarlovre, Vester Henry

1 res , 1 lot................... 105 72

Martin, George C III

1 acre........................424.24

Martin, GeorgeC. Ill

Hot..........................181.94

Martin, William Edward Sr.

1 res . Hot...................183.74

Mason, S A Margaret Paramore

14 acres.......................34.21

Massenburg, David T.

1 res., 1 lot...................190.99

Master Well And Builders, Inc

Miller, C.J Agent

1 lot . ....................

...17 82

Miller, C.J. Agt.

20.85

1 lot........................

Miller, Carl Langley A

...53.50

1 lot........................

Miller, Shirley Wynne

.. 198.83

1 res., 1 lot.................

Mills, Blanche W.

... 22.57

1 lot........................

Mills, Claude William

..103 57

2 lots.......................

Mills, Danny Wayne

.,. 22.87

1 lot........................

Mills, Franklin Dan

1 res.. Hot..............

202.25

Mills, Loo Miller (heirs)

...63.09

12 acres....................

Mills, Lula Haddock

1 acre......................

...46.31

Mills, Phillip Ray

.231.78

1 res., 3 acres..............

Milis, Ray Cleveland A

.136.78

1 res., 1 lot.................

Mills, William Ray

1 lot........................

. . 22.57

Mitchell, Barrie A

1 res., 1 lot.................

.171.20

Mitchell, William Henry

1 res., 1 lot.................

.314.45

Mitchell, William Henry A

13 lots....................

.586.28

Mitchell, William Jr A

1 res.. Hot.................

. . 142.42

Mobley, Charlie Jr A

. 142.80

1 res., 1 lot.................

Mobley, C lassie

1 res., 1 lot.................

166.94

Mobley, Richard Allen A

.112.29

1 res., 1 lot.................

Monk, Charlie Jefferson

1 res., 1 lot.................

. 169.22

Monk, Hattie

1 lot........................

90.72

Monk, Morris A

1 res., 1 lot.................

..193.49

Moore, Alice Gibbs etal

1 res., 1 lot.................

.. 149.28

Moore, Amelia

1 lot........................

...7.94

Moore, Andrew (heirs)

1 lot........................

., . 4.18

Moore, Annie Lee

1 res., 1 lot.................

172.32

Moore, Annie Pearl Tyson

1 lot........................

... 22.09

Moore, Annie Ree

1 res., 3 lots, 1 acre.........

.111.63

Moore, Armistead Taylor

1 lot........................

.181.34

Moore, Barry A. A wt Diane L.

3 acres.....................

.892.43

Moore, Clarence Milton A

1 lot........................

...12.15

AAoore, Colllce Clyde A

.114.91

1 acre......................

Moore, Edwin G. II

5 lots.......................

.....7.83

Moore, Elijah

1 res., 1 lot................

.,,.73.85

Moore, Farney Matthew Jr. A

1 res., 1 lot................

...120.51

Moore, Herbert Lee

1 res., 1 lot................

.164.80

Moore, Hertford Lee A

1 res.. Hot................

...137.24

Moore, James

1 lot.......................

... 23.49

Moore, James Jr

1 res., 1 lot.................

.. . 199.50

Moore, James Jr A Cassie Lee

1 res., 1 lot................

.130.44

Moore, Jarvis (heirs)

2 lots......................

... 30.94

Moore, Jerry F. A

1 res., 1 lot................

... 233.41

AAoore, John Archer A

1 res., 1 lot................

. ..149.27

Moore, John Gregory

5 lots......................

... . 24.30

AAoore, Josephus

1 res., 1 lot................

...141.22

AAoore, Kenneth W. A

1 res., 2 lots...............

,,.162.55

AAoore, Louellen A

Hot.......................

...18.31

Moore, P. M. (heirs)

1 acre.....................

... 255.42

Moore, Sarah (heirs)

1 lot.......................

..,. 22.84

AAoore, Susie Bell

1 res., 2 lots...............

...71.06

Moore, Ulysses

,..215.40

1 res., 45 acres............

AAoore, William

1 res., 1 lot................

.....7.94

AAoore, Willie James A

.... 73.60

Mooring, Linwood Sr.

1 res., 1 lot................

...180.47

Magee, 1 lot. .

1 lot

Mathews, Dallas..........

Matthews, Albert L A wf

Hot......................

Maxwell, AAarion Wilbur A

1 lot......................

May, Dennis R. A

Ho)......................

May, Ernest Jr.

1 res., 1 lot...............

May, S. Reynolds

1 res.. Hot...............

Maye, Elijah

1 res.. Hot...............

AAaye, Oscar

1 res., 46 acres...........

Maye, Oscar Jr.

1 res., Hot...............

Maye, Willie Roy

. 194.48 .11.88

.174.97

.61.70

.51.06

.. 2.47 .43.77

.. 14.85 .327.91

.111.08

.183.08

99.08 . 140.70

.635.26 .. 77.76

... 4.01 . 745.87

.24.35

..59.68

Maye.

1 lot...........................36.35

Mayo, Jesse

Ires., Hot............ 3.60

Mayo, R. Guy

Hot...........................38.07

Mayo, Rubin Guy Jr A Jeanette

Hot...........................27.27

McArthur, Charlie

1 res., 26 acres...............201.74

McCarter, James Lee A Cornelia

ires.. Hot...................204.71

McCray, Charles R. A

1 res., 1 lot...................175.63

McDaniel, Henry Jr A Frances

1 res.. Hot...................435.48

McDermott, Patrick A

1 res., 1 lot...................163.30

McDonald, Virginia Smith

1 lot...........................22.57

McIntyre, Emma A James

2 lots..........................20.41

McKinney. Richard Albert A

ires.. Hot...................298.38

McLaughlin, John Raymond Jr. A

ires.. Hot...................351.67

McLawhorn, Bobby Ray A

1 res., 1 lot...................246.39

McLawhorn, Carroll Cox

1 res., 2 acres................139.04

AAcLawhorn, Edward E DBA

Hot...........................72.13

McLawhorn, Edward Earl ... 236.80 McLawhorn, Edward Earl A

1 res.. Hot...................233.34

AAcLawhorn, G. V. A E. J

5 lots..........................68.15

McLawhorn, Jerry Linwood

ires., 1 lot...................264.92

McLawhorn, R F A LudleE (heirs)

Hot...........................31.00

McLawhorn. R. F. A Sons

'3 lots....................*....437.18

McLawhorn, Robert Frances

38 acres....................1,734.10

McAAahan. Paul

Sacres.......................590.58

McAAahan, Paul

10 acres......................663.24

McMahon, James A A wf

2 acres........................98.01

McMahon, James Ashbrooke

Hot..........................215.7)

McAAahon. Paul David

1 lot..........................342.04

AAcMlllion. Russell Luther A

1 lot..........................124.41

McPherson. Douglas E Iwood A

1 res., 1 lot...................345.84

Me Roy, Oracle Hardy

4 acres........................89.42

AAeeks, Joshua

1 lot...........................17.82

Melvin, AngelaC. etal

2 lots.........................270.00

Mercer, Blihop Henry

2 lots.........................323.4

Mercer, Robert Lee

1 res., 1 lot....................59.18

Miles, Henderson A

1 lot..........................778.2

Miller A Louis Construction Co

Slots ...................19.84

Miller, A. L.

2 lots. ....................150.52

AAooring, Swanola

1 res . 2 lots...................93.08

Morgan. Fred Edward Jr.

res., 1 lot...................169.98

Morgan. James Perry

lot .........................189.59

Morgan, James Ray A

1 res.. Hot...................    .249.07

Morris, James Prescott Iteest

17 acres......................257.31

AAorris, Jerry Toby A

res., 1 lot...................128.45

AAorris, Rosa (heirs)

acres........................26.73

AAorrison, AAarie Porter

res., 1 lot................... 107 03

Mouning, Luther J

. lots.........................138.28

Moye, Clarence Hardy II

57 acres. ..........

Moye, Edward Earl A

lot.....................

^ye, Elma Lee

Moye. ary H.

res., 1 lot..............

Moye, Minnie Lee

res., 1 lot..............

Moye, Rosa Teel

lot.....................

AAoye, Willie Earl A

1 res., 1 lot...............

Mullen, William E. Jr. etal

39 acres.....................

Mullins, Thomas E. A

res.. 1 lot..................

Murchison, Joe R. A

res., 1 lot..................

Murphy. Frank Jr. A

res., 1 lot..................

Murphy, James Earl

res., 1 lot.................

Murphy. John Henry (heirs)

lot............ .........

Myers, George

1 res., 1 lot.................

National Realty Co.

: lots.......................

NCNB Trustee For

lot........................

NCNB Trustee For

tot........................

Neil Realty Co.

. res., 9 lots................

Neil Realty Company, Inc.

res., 1 lot.................

Nelson. Audrey

res., 1 lot.................

Nelson, Bertha AAae Mills

res., 1 lot.................

Nelson, Hoover Lee res., 1 lot

Paramore. Sterl Dixon A

1 iot..........................242.23

Parker. James David

1 lot..........................148.84

Parker, James Jr A Ernestine

1 res.,    2 lots..................144.05

Parker, Larry D. A

lacre.........................22.22

Parker, Lewis C. A

I res .    1 iot...................213.33

Parker, Marie

1 res.,    1 lot....................45.24

Parker, Richard Cornell Sr

1 res., 1 lot....................85.94

Patrick, Charlie D.

1 lot...........................86.72

Patrick, Enisher B. A

1 res., 1 lot................:.. 204.49

Patrick, Georgiana Lawson

Ires... lots...................46,12

Patrick, Jesse Ray A

2 acres........................29.70

Patrick, Johnnie (heirs)

1 lot..........................105.26

Patrick, Thomas James A

1 res.. Hot...................132.10

Payne, Thomas J. A

2 lots......................... 142 08

Payton Farms A Co.

114 acres.....................476.43

Payton Farms A Company, Inc.

.140.26

.185.44

.39.31

.131.08

.173.08

. 22.95 .. 13.50

.1,182.72 ... 20.57

342.68 .. 64.93

.22.68 . 13.50

. 196.98 .271.50

.151.65

116.44

.60.44

. . 72.88 .251.94

. 139.28 . .91.20

.32.51

167.88

,13.50 . 189.82

169.37

.173.86 Bal.

.500 14

.17.12

.71.82

.192.89

.116.64

.117.94

.87.60 Bal.

.239.21

.171.83

209.90

. 192.64

.173.72

38.31

.107.12

.15.56

.16.21

.141.3F

. 187.40

.. 24.30

.173.21

. 337.42

.62.90 Nelson, Joe Nathan

1 res., 4 lots...................35.16

Nelson, Linwood A Virginia

res.,1 lot...................157.46

Nelson, Lou S.

Hot...........................52.33

Nelson, William Clifton A

1 res.,    1 lot...................334,90

New Birth Holy Church

Hot..........  15.80

Newsome, Gladys P.

lot..........................15.02

Newton, Vance

1 res., 1 lot...............    38-34

Newton, Wlltlam

1 res.,    1 lot....................83.27

Nichols, Frank Timothy A

1 res., 1 lot...............139.21    Bal.

Nichols, Guy Joab

1 res., 2 lots..................249.95

Nichols, Guy Joab A

1 lot............................*-8

Nichols, Luther G.

ires.. Hot...................197 11

Nichols, Robert Earl A

1 res., 1 lot...................237.99

Nicholson, Lillla AAarie P.

ires, 2 lots..................118.*8

Nicholson, Wesley R. A

1 res., 1 lot..........  175.06

Nicholson, Willie A

Ires., 4 acres................152.19

NictKrison, Willie David A

1 res.. Hot...................164.82

Nobles, Leah B. A

Hot..........................113.41

Nobles, Leah Bryant

1 res., 4 lots..................657.99

Nobles, Rita Franclne

1 lot..........................136.46

Nobles, Wlllle Hower A Irene

1 res., 1 lot...................193.05

No^le, Wesley G. Jr. A    ^    ^

Norfleet, Frances

1 lot...........................12.58

Norfleet, Roscoe A

1 lot............................*00

Norfleet, Roscoe C A 1 res., 3 lots ..

1 lot, 12 acres Payton, Azell

1 res., 1 lot.................

Payton, Azelle

2 lots.......................

Payton, Brenda A Linda A

1 acre......................

Payton, Daisy Gray

1 res., 1 lot.................

Payton, David (heirs)

1 acre......................

Payton, James A

I lot.......................

Payton, John David

1 res., 113 acres............

Payton, John David

1 lot........................

Payton, John David life est.

93 acres....................

Payton, John Henry (heirs)

1 res., I lot................

Payton, AAarvIn Earl

1 lot........................

Peaden, Emmett A

1 acre......................

Pelas, Helen Louise

1 res., 1 lot ,........

Pender, Charles Araunah A

1 res., 1 lot.................

Perkins, James Harvey

1 res., 1 lot................

Perkins, Julius R. A

1 res., 1 iot................

Perkins, Thelma Baker

1 lot.......................

Person, Redmon J. (heirs)

18 acres.......................93.22

Person, William Henry

1 lot.........................

Peters, Donald A

1 res.. Hot..................

Peterson, Icelene Harper

1 res., 1 lot............ .....

Peterson, AAac A Ethel AAarie

I res., 1 lot..................

Phillips, Clarence

1 lot.........................

Phillips, Earl Clinton A

1 res., 1 lot .................

Phillips, James Henry A

I lot.........................

Phillips, Robert Earl

1 res.. Hot.................

Phillips, Will

1 res., 2 lots.................

Phillips, Zack A

1 res., 1 lot..........

Pickett, Joseph M. A

1 res., 1 lot...................210.07

Pierce, Robert Glenn A

1 res.,1 lot...................351.61

Pippins, Arthur A

Ires, 2 lots..................203 96

Pitt Property AAanagement, Inc.

Hot..........................216.74

Pitt, Johnny Lee A

1 res., 1 lot...................414.09

Pitt, Rosa Belle

1 res.. Hot..................

Pittman, Bobby Wlllat Jr. A

1 lot.........................

Pittman, Johnny A. A

1 lot.........................

Pittman, AAary Blow

3 lots........................

Pollard, Amos Lee A

1 res., 1 lot..................

Pollard, Ryan Stanley

5 acres......................

Pollard, Ryan Stanley Iteest

41 acres.....................

Pope, Edward Crowell

476 acres        .........

Pope, Edward Crowell

1 res., 1 lot   ...........

Porter, Edwin

1 iot........................

Porter, Ida Lou

1 res., 1 lot.................

Powell, Alexander Daniel A

Hot ....................

Powell, George H A

1 res , 2 lots...............

Powell, George H. A

2 lots......................

Powell, Lela C

3 lots......................

Powers, Charles Tyrone A

1 res., 2 acres..............2.90    Bal

Powers, Hughle Carfton A

1 res , 5 acres............

Prayer, John A

1 lot......................

Prayer, John Isaac

1 res.. Hot...............

Prayer, William Thomas

1 res., V lot...............

Preferred PropOt G'vllle Inc

3 lots, 33 acres..............1,381.15

Preferred Properties Of

6 lots....................351    82 Bal

Price, Jesse R A wt Cora L

Hot...........................23.76

Price, S. K. Dba

Hot..........................158.00

Price, Sam K. A

2 lots.........................520.91

Price, Sam K. Price Samuel K A

. 113.14 .157.45

.. 49.60 .29.84

. 148.46

. . 6.15

. 244.95 3,007.34

.333.42 . 174.96

.176.02 28 70

.410 98 . 123 20

.84.47

.426.15

.26.19

.263.68 .. 199.89

1 lot

Price, Sam Kerley A

1 res., 1 lot...............

Price, Sam Kevin

1 lot................. .    ..

Price, Sylvia

1 res., 2 acres............

Price, Wilton Earl

I lot..................-...

Pridgen, William Eldred

II acres..................

Pritchard, Thomas Grey

1 res., 1 lot..............

Property Group, Ltd,

.49.55

.309.47

.90.72

Norris, Evelyn Phillips (heirs)

1 lot...................

Northskte Lumber Co.

Hot...........................10.1

O'Neal. Olivia

1 lot............................5-18

O'Neal, Robert Lee

Hot..........................*25.85

O'Neal. Robert Lee A

1 res., 5 lots..................785.92

O'Neal. Robert Lee A

1 res., 1 acre.................349.44

Oakes, ThomasCllfton A Inez

1 res., 1 lot...................258.32

Oakley. Arthur C. Jr. A

1 res., 1 lot...................177.23

Oakley. AAargle S. A

1 res., 1 lot...................192.47

Oakley, Michael..............*    30

Oneal, Bobby Ray A

1 res., 1 lot...................114.67

Oneal, Bobby Ray A Barbara

1 lot...........................22.92

Oneal, Robert A Glenn F

1 res., 1 lot....................*2.31

Ormond. James Arthur

1 res., 1 lot...................123.28

Osborne, Larry H

2 lots, 3 acres ............2,018.30

Outterbrldge, Mary Chase

ires.. Hot....................*-22

Owens, James R A

1 res., 1 lot...................15*36

Pace, Peter

1 lot................. 15.62

Page, Edward Russell A

1 lot...........1.........

Paige, William Ernest

,1 lot ........................105.00

.170.07

.915.84

Reese, William Earl, Henry, A

Rogers, Daniel William A

Stanley. Thomas Daniel A

2 acres.......................

40 81

1 res . 1 lot...................

298.61

Rogers, James Thomas A wf

Staton. Annie Hollis

1 res., 1 lot...................

198.14

1 res., 1 lot...................

178.41

Rogers, William A. A

Staton, Clarence A

1 res., 1 lot.........-A........

201 37

1 lot..........................

110.76

Rogerson, Luther Ray

Staton, Isaac

1 res , 1 lot...................

127.06

1 lot..........................

5.82

Rosen, A. A. etals 10,551 38

Staton,Issac Lee

Ross, Julius L. (heirs)

1 lot..........................

.44.01

83 acres

570.51

Staton Issac Lee A

Ross, Marina

1 res., 1 acre.................

155 10

1 res., 1 lot...................

47.77

Staton, Oscar A Wt. Ida

Rountree, AAarvin

1 lot..........................

100.01

1 lot..........................

154.56

Staton, Robert Earl Jr.

Rouse, John Blount Jr A wt

1 lot..........................

170.86

1 lot..........................

104.38

Staton, Ruth AAarie

Rouse, Kenneth

1 res., 1 lot...................

97.72

1 lot..........................

184.94

Staton, Samson D. A

Russ, Carroll H.

1 res., 1 lot...................

181 21

1 res., 1 lot...................

193.13

Stephenson, Jacqueline Elaine

Russco Inc.

1 lot..........................

25 06

1 lot..........................

253.37

Stephenson, Ruth D.

Salley, Gloria L. Brown A

1 res., 1 lot...................

46.76

1 res.. Hot...................

66 26

Stevenson, David A Mary

Sanderson, David Lee

1 lot..........................

.27 00

1 lot..........................

.,51.16

Stevenson. David E. Jr. A

Sanford, Mattie Mae B. Ite est

1

1 lot..........................

179.59

151 acres....................

822.26

Stevenson, Wesley R. A

Sarvey, Jeffrey P. A

1 lot..........................

136.50

1 res., 1 lot..................

259 42

Stocks, Chester

Satterfield, G. Howard, Ford

1 lot..........................

98 66

6 acres......................

.27.27

Stocks. Elizabeth Ann

Savage, Eugene Jeffrey A

1 res., 3 acres................

128.40

1 res., 1 lot..................

.330.98

Stocks, Romeo A Geneva

Sawyer, Kenneth Glen

1 res., 1 lot...................

66 86

1 lot.........................

115.93

Stocks, William Van Jr. A

Sawyer, William Jarvis

1 res , 1 lot...................

278 45

4 lots........................

31 50

Stokes, Grace

Scott, Carlton Ray A

1 lot, 20 acres.................

210 60

1 res., 1 lot..................

226.06

Stokes. J B. Jr. A Louise

Scott, Peggy Boyd

1 res., 88 acres..............1,256.54

1 res., 1 lot..................

.98.55

Stokes, John Henry life est.

Seagle, Angela P.

1 res.. 1 lot............'......

125 66

1 lot.........................

.178.44

Stox, Edward Coleman A Monna S

Sec'v Ot Housing A Urban Dev.

1 res., 1 lot..........)........

Streeter, Ervin Warrfen A

. 158 67

1 res., 1 lot..................

. 141.03

Setters, Stanley Owen Jr. A

1 res.. 1 lot..................

. 172.17

1 res., 1 lot.................

.183 17

Streeter, Kelly Ray

Shackelford, William Edward A

1 lot ............,..........

.27 00

1 res., 1 lot..................

188.07

Streeter, LacyC.A

Shackleford, James Ottls A

1 lot.........................

57.56

1 res.. Hot..................

.260 39

Streeter, Rhebla Coward

Shamrock RIty Co. Pitt Cty Inc

1 res . 2 lots.................

169.30

2 res., 3 lots.................

321.08

Streeter, Robert E. Lacy C. A

Sharpe, Barbara Best

2 lots........................

172.26

1 res , 2 lots.................

.210.74

Streeter, Ruby Lee

Shaw, Jon Ward

2 lots........................

.15.12

1 res., 1 lot..................

. 575.01

Streeter, William Thomas A

Sheffield, Wilbur Lee

1 res., 1 lot..................

.201.77

1 res., 1 lot..................

228 63

Strickland, Charles Ray A

Shepard, Thelma Long

1 res , 1 lot..................

146 99

1 res., 1 lot..................

65.57

Strickland. Eugene G. A Odell

Shepard, William Earl A

7 acres......................

.231.75

1 res., 1 lot..................

.172.73

Strickland, James Willis

Sheppard, Richard Sr A

1 res , 1 lot..................

183.05

1 res., 1 lot..................

98 06

Strickland. Joseph Edward

Sherman, Cleveland A

1 lot.........................

10.80

1 res., 1 lot..................

. 138.11

Strong. Bennie Edward A

Sherman, AAary B. Jernlgan

1 res.. 1 lot..................

. 172.40

2 lots........................

.. 23.00

Stroud. Janice Crandell A

Sherrod, Annie Wilkins

1 lot.........................

108.23

1 res.. Hot..................

35.21

Stroupe, Harold David A

Sherrod, Clifton A

1 lot.........................

88 21

2 lots........................

.27.47

Sugg, Melvin R.

Sherrod, Clifton R A

2 lots........................

.374.64

1 res., 1 lot ..................

202.42

Sugg, Melvin Ray A

Sherrod, GeneCarrell A

1 lot.........................

212.30

1 res., 1 lot..................

.163.44

Sugg, Melvin Ray A

Sherrod, John M.

20 acres.....................

44.55

Ires, 2 lots...........210.74

Sherrod, Johnny C. A 1 res., 1 lot.................^49.62

Sugg, AAelvin Ray A

1 lot.........................

Sugg. AAelvin Ray A

,12.89

Sherrod, Roxie life estate

73 acres.....................

. 162.64

1 res.. Hot..................

. 4.82

Sugg, Thomas A Cellsflne R.

Shields, Bob Steele

1 res., 1 lot..................

. 179.51

1 lot.........................

. . 27.54

Sugg. Virginia R.

Shinn, Stuart MacDonald A

1 res.. Hot................

220 56

1 res.. Hot.................

254.53

Suggs, Edward Lawrence

Short, Fred (heirs)

1 res.. Hot..................

. 168.47

1 lot........................

. 24.95

Suggs, Sidney A

130.52

Simmons, Lee Leroy

1 res., 1 lot.................

1 res., 1 lot.................

.117.19

Suggs. Tessle Lee

Simpkins, Jimmy Ray A Lillian

1 res.. Hot..................

. . 169.90

1 res., 1 lot ...........

303.53

Sumerlin. Jasper Lee A

Simpson, Calvin Lee

3 acres......................

... 23.98

1 lot........................

17.82

Summers, Jerry L

Singleton, Wilbur Thomas

1 res , Hot.................

.. 190.94

1 lot........................

. 145.02

Sumrell.C.R AMable

Skinner. Garland A

3 lots.......................

.176 09

1 res., 1 lot.................

188.02

Sumrell, C R

Sloan, Jerry L. A

1 lot........................

. . 145.48

1 lot........................

. 32,47

Sumrell. C R A

Smallwood, Thurman Lee A

1 lot........................

. 10.80

1 res., 1 lot.................

,.159.92

Sumrell, Clarence Reginal A

Smith, Banks Hamilton A

1 res , 3 lots................

. .854 09

1 res.. 1 lot.................

480.22

Sutton. Charles F. Mrs.

Smith, Burnice Richard A

1 res., 47 acres.............

.374.68

1 res.. Hot.................

. 175.57

Sutton, Charles Fountain Jr.

Smith, Charlie Van

Sacres.................

46 82

1 iot........................

. 18.36

Sutton, Emmie B. lifeest.

Smith, (ieborah Moore

1 res., 1 lot.................

. , 70.02

1 iot....... ................

10.10

Sutton, Faye Mizell

The Daiiy Kefiector, lireenvUle, N .C.-Thursday, May 12,1983-27

Tripp, F Roosevelt A .

Ires., I iot............  233    77

Tripp, Jarvis Edward A

1 res . 2 lots...............

Tripp, Jasper Leroy Inc.

1 lot.......................

Tripp, John Stanley A

1 res , 3 acres i......

Tripp, Mickey Ray A (,

1 res , 1 lot.................

Tripp, Raymond J.

1 res., 1 lot.................

Tripp, Ricky Lane Tucker, Charles Eugene

1 lot........................

Tucker, John Allen K.    -

27 acres....................

Tucker, Sam Sr.

1 res , 2 lots................

Turnage, GarnleMae

35 acres....................

Turner, Eva Blackburn

2 lots.......................

Tyson, Arthur L A

1 res , 1 lot.................

Tyson, Betsy G.

I res., 1 lot.................

Tyson, Charles M. A

1 res , 1 lot................

Tyson, George Wesley Jr. A

1 res., 1 acre..............

Tyson, Isabella Harris

1 lot.......................

Tyson, J.W. A Doris A

1 res., 1 lot.......... .....

Tyson, James Walter

2 lots......................

Tyson, Jessie James

1 res , 1 lot................

Tyson, Joanna McClinton

1 res., 1 lot.......

Tyson, Joel Van A

1 res., 1 lot.......

Tyson, John H. A Wt Joann H

1 res., I lot..................

Tyson, Louis Harper A

I res . 1 lot..................

Tyson, Roland (heirs)

1 res., 1 lot..................

Tyson, Tom (heirs)

1 res . 2 lots.................

Tyson, Willie Lee

1 lot.........................

Underwood, Eliza

1 lot.........................

United States Ot America

1 lot.........................

United States Ot America, The

140.32

144 57 61 89

182 66 173 80

1 lot.

Unknown

2 lots..................  13    07

Unknown

3 lots .......................34    99

Unknown

1 lot...........................13    90

Unknown

1 lot...........................25    66

Unknown Owner

3 lots, 101 acres............... 168    81

Unknown Owner

1 lot............................3    62

Valentine, Geraldine Moore

1 res.. 2 lots.................131.34

Valentine, Zachary Bernard

I lot........................7    54    Bal

Vanditord. Major Lee A E lla M

1 lot...........................31 36

Vanditord, Willis Henry Jr.

1 lot...........................38.88

Vannortwick, NathanielO III A

2 lots.

Provite, Nathaniel etals

2 lots..........................11.B8

Pruett. Abraham Lincoln

1 res., 1 lot...................190.20

Pruette, David Rowland A

ires . Hot...................211.15

Pruitt, Appieleen Allen Mrs

49 acres......................275.29

Pruvis, Eneth

Hot............................5.82

Pugh, Floyd A Rose

1 res., 2 lots..................175.20

Purser, Caroline Gayle A

Hot..........................248.72

Purvis, Bernice Blount

3 lots..........................53.51

Purvis, Velma A

2 lots..........................1**2

Purvis, Walter Clayton

2 lots.........................157.74

Purvis. Willie (heirs)

1 res.. Hot...................104.41

Quail Ridge Community Assoc.

lacre.........................92.07

Ragin, Thomas A

1 res.. Hot....................93.71

Ramsey. Grace D

lacre.........................58.81

Rand. J Lee

5 acres.......................568.51

Randolph, Jesse Maryland

1 res., 1 lot....................17.57

Randolph, Kenneth

Hot................. 11.88

Randolph, Kenneth A

1 res , 2 lots..................529.04

Randolph, Willie Gordon A

1 res., 1 lot....................28.37

Redden. Donald W. A

1 res.. Hot.....................5.52

Redmond. Willie

Hot...........................12.82

Reese. Sam A Annie 1 res., 1 lot...................169.11

.. 28.62

.173.53 ..37.42

.268.06

.643.52

..108.70 .216.97

.559.41

.321.83

2 lots.

Reid, Charles W. A LlllleM.

1 res.. Hot.................

Reid, Lillie A

3 acres.....................

Rice Const. A Dev. Co.

Hot........................

Rice Construction Co.

Hot........................

Rice Construction Co. Inc.

Hot........................

Rice, JamesG.

1 lot........................

Rice, JamesG.

2 lots.......................

Rice, James G. A

1 lot........................

Richardson, Anna Tyson

1 res., 2 lots...............i*.*i    BaI-

Richardson, Madalene Teel

Hot...........................*S-5*

Rickard. S. D. A

I lot...........................10*0

Riverhills Inc.

II lots, 33 acres.............1,688.08

Riverhills. Inc.

Hot..........................234.68

Riverhills. Inc.

20 acres......................269.1

Riverhills. Inc.

12 acres......................3*8.40

Roach, Jarvis A wt Sadie

1 res., 1 lot...................186.33

Roach, AAayfoell

1 res., 1 lot...................154.48

Roach, William Henry

1 lot...........................18-2*

Roberson, Johnny C. A

Hot..........................218,06

Rodgers, John Thomas Sr A Ruth

Ires, 2 lots..................159.92

Rodgers. Peters A Dora

liST:....... 36.02

Roebuck, Mary Annis Perkins

Hot...........

Roebuck, Richard Arllen

1 res., 1 lot...............

Ro^s, Chester

Rogers, Chester A

Roger

1 lot..

.17.06

.39.15

.64<80

Smith, Denise A. A

1 res., 1 lot...............107.18    Bal.

Smith, Ed Warren A Clydie Mae

1 res., 2lots...............   71.75

Smith, Eddie L,

1 lot...........................*4    43

Smith, Emanuei

1 res., 2    iots..................138    94

Smith, EmmaO.

1 res , 1 lot................    .    .    259.74

Smith, EStella

1 res., 1 lot....................51.48

Smith, Grace H.

1 res., 1 lot.......... 374.43

Smith, Guy V. Jr.

1 res.. 1 lot...................117.41

Smith. Jack A

1 res , 1    lot....................82    03

Smith, James Cotten

1 res., 7 acres................148.41

Smith, Jessie (heirs)

1 lot............................1    36

Smith, Johnnie A

1 res ,    1    lot...................117    33

Smith, Katherine Wilks

1 res., 1 lot.....................4.31

Smith, Kealsy Mae

1 lot...........................15.39

Smith, Leroy Jr A

1 res..    1    lot...................196    69

Smith, Lillian T. A Roxanna

I lot.........................5    82

Smith, Lillie M.

1 res., 1 lot...................114.93

Smith, Louise Crandol

1 res., 1 acre.................123.07

Smith, AAargaret H

5 acres.......................127.06

Smith, A6argie A

Hot............................9    18

Smith. Margie Louise

lacre.........................H.82

Smith, Mark K. A Catherine D

1 lot...........................1Z.47

Smith, Milton

1 res., 1 lot....................61.88

Smith. Nathan G , Jr. A

31 acres........ .............154.66

Smith, Nathan Green Jr

1 lot............................9-64

Smith. Nina Belle

1 res., 1 lot................... 126 73

Smith, Normanda G. Ite est.

1 res.. Hot....................64.26

Smith, Olivia Earl Williams A

lacre.........................*6 39

Smith, Perlene (heirs) A

1 res.. Hot....................9* 52

Smith, Reathia

1 r^., 1 lot...................108.46

Srhith, Robert Lee

68 acres......................985.07

Smith, Robert Lee

Hot..........................136 03

Smith, Robert Lee

3 lots, 13 acres..............1,172.01

Smith, Robert Lee A

3 lots.........................344.43

Smith, Ronald W A

1 res.. 1 lot...................202 56

Smith, Ruth Hardy

1 res., 1 lot....................58.60

Smith. Samuel Jr. A

1 res.. 1 lot   .............. .66.45

Smith, Seymore

5 acres.......................103.95

Smith, William Alton A

1 res., 1 lot...................115.98

Smith, William Thomas

2 acres........................34.45

Smith, Wlllle B. ID*estate

2 acres........................25.60

Sneed, Joseph Robert

1 res., 1 lot  ............114.16

Sneed. Patricia Ann

Hot...........................38 56

Snook, Harry R A wt Margaret A

1 res., 1 lot.......... 295.81

Southerland. Charles Donald A

6acres........................68.15

Southslde Realty A Ins

1 res., 1 lot...................264.87

Spain, Donnie Earl

itot ..................

Spain. Earl A Margaret

195 acres..................1.329.21

Spain, Jesse

lies..........................13.18

Spain, Minnie O'Neal A

1 res., Hot...................156.40

Sparkman. Jo* Frank

ues., 1 lot....................96.97

.....

Sjjelght, Powell Tucker

38 acres........................1.03

Spell, Julia Ann

1 res., 1 lot...................202.25

Spell, Mary SIdberry Smith

1 res., 1 lot...................176.3

Spell, P.W. (heirs)

2lotS.............. 29.52

Speller. Charlie H. A

1 res., 1 lot...................108.55

Spencer, Billy Gipson

1 res., 2 lots. 1 acre...........364.83

Spencer, Billy Gipson A

126 acres.....................753.00

Sjsencer. Daisy Mae

1 res., 1 lot...................180.21

Spencer, Felton A W). Shirley B.

1 res., 1 lot....................20 14

Spencer, Janie Autry

1 res, 1 lot, 86 acres..........868.01

Stafford, Dora Dawson

1 res., 1 lot....................98 09

Stafford, Helen Taylor lit est.

1 lot...........................10.42

Stallings. Lloyd A. A

ires.. Hot...................193.03

Stallworth. Wlllle A

1 res., 1 lot...................105.40

Stanclll. Clara (heirs)

5 acres........................44.55

Stanclll, Dorothy (heirs)

1 lot..........................275.48

Stanclll. Jo Ann Green

ires.. Hot....................65.86

Stanclll. Susie May*

1 res., 1 lot...................179.99

Stanclll, Walter J.

Hot...........................22.57

Stanclll, William A Barbara

1 lot..........................209.51

Stanclll. William Jennings

Hot..........................121.52

Stanclll, Wilton J.

Ires., 47 acres...............294.58

11.23

.. 16.20 140.78

...10.64 . 1,048.15

. 150.45 249 79

.47.71 135 20

.4.80 . 137 47

. 138.02 . 171.49

. 115.48 . 100.43

. 229.43 807.00

1 lot.

Sutton. Grace Reidnell

2 lots...................

Sutton, Joseph K.

1 lot....................

Sutton, Katherine Jean

1 lot....................

SuttoprLllllan Martin A

I lot. 262 acres..........

Sutton, Lillian Martin life est.

49 acres.....................

Sutton, Margaret H.

I res., 1 lot..................

Sutton, Mary Braswell

1 res., 1 lot...................130.06

Sutton, Noah A Wt. Susie

1 lot......................

Sutton, Rebecca Williams

1 lot......................

Sutton, Walter Jr.

3 acres...................

Swain, Ralph Lee A

5 acres...................

Swinson, Jimmie Lee A

I lot .....................

Sannson. Sammie A Wf. Reve

I res., I lot...............

T F J . Inc.

1 lot......................

Tadlock, J W

1 res., 1 lot...............

Taft, Herman McKinley A

1 res.. 2 acres .......

Tatt, Isaac

5 acres...................

Tatt, Julia

2 lots.....................41.22 Bal

Tatt, Milton E. A Queenie

1 res . 2 lots..................229    30

Tatt, Willie (heirs)

1 lot...........................90.76

Tate, John David

1 res . Hot...................220    47

Taunton, Harold D. A Dolores C.

1 res., 1 lot...................357.06

Taylor, Alvin Ray

1 lot...........................70    31

Taylor, Billy

II lot............................* 41

Taylor, Connie G. A

acres........................35.44

Taylor, James A

lots..........................26.14

Taylor, James D. Jr. A

2 lots ....................24.89

Taylor, James David Jr.

1 lot..........................247.42

Taylor, Jerry B. Jr. A

res., 1 lot...................138.54

Ty lor, John Henry T ay lor Jr.

res., 1 lot...................242.40

Taylor. Leonard A

res., 1 lot....................94.15

Taylor, (Jtis Bruce A

1 res . 1 lot...................237.30

Taylor, Sam Jr.

1 res.. Hot....................96.10

Taylor. William Earl A

1 res., 1 lot...................187.27

Taylor, Zebedee

res., 2 lots..................216.66

Tedder. Billy S A Joyce

res , 2 lots..................499.80

Teel, Calvin Douglas A

1 res., 1 lot...................160.32

Teel, Elias (heirs)

8 acres........................64.15

Teel. Holllo

1 res., 2 lots..................185.87

Teel. Jessie A Jesse Bell

res.. Hot....................12.63

TeeI.AAoses

1 lot...........................14 85

Teel, Moses A Wife

ires.. Hot...................241.68

Teel. Moses Jr.

lot...........................75.93

Teel, Robert A

1 res.. 1 lot....................*8.94

Teel. William Harvey A

1 lot..........................120.78

Teeter, Vernon C A

1 lot...........................20.61

Telfair. Clarence

1 res., 1 lot....................82.18

Telfair, Joann S.

1 res.. Hot....................83.25

Telfair, Leroy A

1 lot..............  82.43

Telfair, Wlllle Clarence A

1 lot...........................12.83

TeHerton, David

1 res.. 1    lot....................81.9*

TeMerton, Diane Gayle

1 res., 1 lot...................243.50

Tetterton, Hilton L.

1 res., 1 lot...................409.23

Tew, Woodrow Turlington A

1 res., 3 lots..................100.98

Thigpen, Hannah

1 res., 3 acres....................*S

Thomas, Jesse Jr. A

1 res.. Hot...................180,09

Thomas, Wlllle Mack

1 res., 2    lots...................*3 21

Thompson, Galloway Conv. Mart.

Hot..........................201.86

Thompson. Jesse James

Hot...........................96.01

Thompson, Joseph

1 res., 1 lot....................93 50

Thompson, Mrytle Gatlin

1 res.. 3 lots...................97.68

Thompson. Samuel Jr,

1 res.. 1 lot....................34.38

Thompson, Stephen AAark

ires.........................241.56

Thornton, AAary Larkins

2 res.. 4 acres................309.88

Tillery, Lonnie Irvin Sr.

1 res., 1 lot...................220.50

Timmons A Associates

Hot...........................*48.57

TIngen, James L.

1 r^, 1 lot...................1*1-80

TIngen, James L

1 acres.......................*2.18

TIngen, William L. A Mildred

lr*r, lacre.................351.97

Toler, Donald Loyd

1 res., 1 lot, 5* acres..........406.74

Toler, Kenneth Wayne Jr.

ires.. Hot...................209.84

Tolson. William Hambleton, III

15 lots, 48 acres...............999.24

Tripp, Bennie Joseph A

1 res., 1 lot...................244.35

Tripp, Douglas Earl..........246.70

1 lot

Veltri, Nicholas*

1 lot..................

Venters, Carl Spencer 1 res , 1 lot, 222 acres Venters, Jasper Earl 1 res., 1 lot, 3 acres

Venters, L M................

Vernelson, Joseph D. A

1 res . 23 acres...............

Vernon. John Edward Jr.

1 res., 1 lot...................

Vick, Kay J.

1 res.. 1 lot...................

Vincent, James Dalton A

1 res., 1 lot...................

Vincent. Marian Dunn life est.

1 res.. 1 lot...................

Vines, Elnora

3 lots.........................

Vines, Freddie E

1 iot..........................

Vines, Jimmie Ray

1 res., 1 lot...................

Vines, Louis A

1 res., 1 lot..................

Vines, Margaret B A

1 lot.........................

Vines, Mary Ruth A Charlene

1 res , 2 lots.................

Vines, Thomas F. A

1 res., 1 lot..................

Vines. William James A-

1 res., 1 lot   ................

VIrginia-Carolina Corp

7 acres......................

Vyas, Ambrish H. A 1 lot

.3.68

3.44 Bal 2 13

White, Jesse L life estate

1 res . 1 lot .............. 156    47

White, Letha

1 res..........................30    24

White, Louis Earl A

1 res . 1 lot.............. 165.13

White, Magalene Ayers

1 res., 1 lot....................85.85

White. Thomas Martin Jr. A

1 res . I lot.................. 278.87

White, Velton

Ires    *2 57

White, Vivian McLawhorn

1 res . 1 iot................... 152 89

Whitehurst, Athelene B

41 acres.....................212.54

Whitehurst, Athelene B

475 acres........  1,612.77

Whitehurst, Athelene B. lifeest

56 lots......................532 44

Whitehurst, Athlene Bullock

2 lots......................... 247.37

Whitehurst, Ed Alton Sr

252 acres...................1,688.63

Whitehurst, Ed Alton Jr. A

1 res., I lot..................270 47

Whitehurst, Gladys Chapman

1 res., 1    lot..................130 17

Whitehurst, Grady Lee

1 res . 1    acre................212 54

Whitehurst, Harvey Gray

1 res . 3    acres................ 152 77.

Whitehurst, Judson Tyson

1 res., 1    lot, 1 acre...........243 75

Whitehurst, Linda B

1 res., 1 lot...................214.12

Whitehurst, Lomer Hayes

1 res., 4 lots.................2,474.38

Whitehurst, Lomer Hayes A

2 lots.....................49    77 Bal

Whitehurst. Marshall Paul A

1 lot..........................191 49

Whitehurst, Mary Hemby

1 res.,    1 lot..................51 17

Whitehurst, Paul W A 1 res , 1 lot    253.51

Whitehurst, William Cadet Jr.

1 res, 7 lots...................790.13

Whitehurst, William Curtis A

I lot...........................40.42

Whitehurst, Zeno Jr.

I res.,    1 lot....................90 24

Whites Insulation Inc.

1 lot.........................232.43

Whitfield. Betty James

Hot...........................11 II

Whitfield, Beulah Jeffries

1 lot...........................10 04

Whitfield. Lucille Dali

1 res., 1    lot...................207.18

Whitley, James Waylon A

1 res.. Hot...................145.41

Wicker, Wallace W Jr A

1 res., 1    lot, 3 acres...........209 70

Wier. Jackie B.

1 res . 1    lot...................213 47

Wiggins, Edna Fdye

4 acres.........................1*1

Wiggins, Gwendolyn R.

1 lot...........................1620

Wiggins, Nathan Lee

1 lot ..........................83.74

Wiggins, Silas Primrose Mrs

1 res., 282 acres.............1,271.60

Wilder, Robert Douglas A

1 res.,    I    lot....................191.22

Wilkes, Bernard A

1 lot.......................... 190 52

Wilkes, Marion Gorham

1 res.. 1 lot............... 95.34

Wilkes. Marvin Eugene A

1 lot......................... 170 97

Wilkins, Elijah Ray

1 res., 1 lot................. 156,67

Wilkins. Velma Ree

1 res.. 1 lot.............. 187.21

Wilks, Johnny R A

1 res., 1 lot....................25.96

Wilks, Redmond Jr. A

1 res .    1    lot.................. 147 95

Williams, Albert

1 res., 1 lot...................199.78

Williams, Ashley Jr.

lacre...............  **25

Williams, Barbara Barghen

1 lot............................9.40

Williams, Barbara Stokes

1 lot...........................22.57

Williams, Bessie (heirs)

1 lot...........................18.12

Williams, C.E. A Bettie R.

1 lot..........................178.94

Williams, Charles Edward A Bet

.. 385.02

,43.90

Wachovia Bank A Trust Co. N A..

.185.65

1 lot, 2 acres Wadford, Robert Earl A

1 res., 4 lots............

Waggoner. William A. A

1 res., 1 lot.............

Walker. Sidney A Mary

1 lot....................

Wall, Sarah

14 acres......................129.38

Wallace, Joseph

1 res., 1 lot..............

Wallace. Louis McDowell

9 acres..................

Wallace, Willie Jr. A 1 res , 8 lots, 83 acres

Wallace. Willie Jr.......

Waller,.Garland (heirs)

1 res., 1 lot...............

Waller, Patricia

1 res., 1 lot..............

Waller, Tony Jr. (heirs)

1 res., 1 lot..............

Waller. Tony Sr. (heirs)

1 lot

.256.65

.348.90

. 11.45

. 158.05 .94.60

958 31 91.49

52.17 Bal.

. 185.44 85.76

1 res., 2 lots.......

Williams, Charlie

1 lot.........................

Williams. Charlie Jr. A

1 res., 1 lot.................

Williams. Clarence

I lot.........................

Williams. Curtis Earl A

1 res., 1 lot.................

Williams, Curtis Jr. A

1 lot........................

Williams, Donnie Lee

1 res.. Hot.................

Williams, Etfie

1 res., 2 lots................

Williams, Herbert C. A.

1 res., 1 lot.................

Williams, Howard R.

6 lots. 17 acres..............

Williams, James Jr. A

1 res., 1 lot.................

Williams, Jesse Wallace Jr.

2 lots.....

Williams, Jimmy Cole A

1 res , 1 lot...................178.80

Williams, John A

1 lot.....................

Williams. Johnnie

4 acres..................

Williams, Larry Darnell

1 res., 1 lot..............

Williams. Leroy 1 res., 1 lot

.3.19

Walston, Annie Dickens (heirs)

. 154.44

. 13.50 .99.25

. 198.59 .41.58

200.85

.13.50

299,33

362.51

.111.11

.218.81

.594.74

.121.90

1 res., 1 lot.............

Ward, Charlie Ray

1 acre..................

Ward, Clarence Jasper

I res , 1 lot.............

Ward, Daniel Ray A

I res., 1 lot.............

Ward. James A

1 lot, 1 acre.............

Ward, Mathew L. A

I res , 1 lot.............

Ward, Willie Arthur

1 lot....................

Warren Daisy C. Mrs. life est.

58 acres...................

Warren. Daisy Cox life est.

1 res., 54 acres............

Warren, Daisy Cox Mrs. lifeest.

1 res., 54acres...............699.60

Warren, Daisy, C. Mrs. lifeest.

44 acres.................. 524.75

Warren, David Lee Sr. A

4 acres....................

Warren, Donald Richard ..

Warren, Donald Richard A

71 acres...................

Warren, Harry Skinner

31 acres...................

Warren. Harry Skinner

1 res.. 1 lot...................183.06

Warren. Jack S. A

4 lots, 21 acres................259.74

Warren, Jack S. Jr. A

1 lot..........................4*9    03

Warren, Jack Shelton

1 res.. 4 lots, 1010 acres 4,996 33

1*farren, Jack Shelton Estate

1 res., 2 lots, 197 acres 2,814.83

Warren, John Earl A

1 res, 2 lots ...      ...117.06

Warren, Kenneth Paul Etal

3 acres........................34.29

Warren, Leroy

1 res . 2 acres.................75.81

Warren, Rosemary Taylor

1 res., 1 lot...................305    13

Washington, Ellas A

1 res., 2 lots...................94.21

Waters, Charles L. A

1 res.. Hot...................140.20

Waters, Darwin DBA

6 lots.........................298.07

Weaver. Alexander A

8acres........................41.34

Weaver, Alexander A Verna

1 res., 1 lot...................142.44

Weaver, Alfonza

1 res., 1 lot...................154.47

Weaver. John D. A

1 res., 1 lot..................210.33

Weaver, Robert Lee A

Hot...........................17 82

Webb, Mattie L (heirs)

1 res., 2 lots..................103.45

Webb, Ray Allen A

1 acre.........................94.76

Weil, David

1 lot..........................757    30

Weil. David A

Hot.............  28.09

Weil, David A

1 lot........................1.226    19

Wells, Katherine Ann

1 res.. Hot...................182.48

Wells, Mamie Ruth m,

1 res., 1 lot...........213.94

West Haven Property Inc.

2lots, 2acr*s............121.23    Bal.

West,C B III A

Hot...........................82    08

West,C B III

2 lots.........................315.31

West, Sara Moore

1 lot..........................232.25

West, William Michael

1 res., 1 lot............. 150.00

Westbrook, Charles L. A

1 res., 1 lot...................410.70

Whichard Group. The

31 acres......................3*9-47

Whichard, Haywood E.

Hot............................9.33

Whitaker. Arthur Lee

1 res., 1 acre.................150.40

Whitaker, Charles D

2 lots..........................*1-77

Whitaker, John E.

1 res., 1 acre...................2.84

Whitaker, Jospeh Garland A

1 res., 2 lots..................134.77

Whitaker. Joseph Garland A Wf.

2 lots..........................57.29

Whitaker. LornellA

1 res.. 1 acre.............. -    -1*5-19

Whitaker. Mary

37 acres......................236.56

White. Betsy T.

ires., 7 acres...............1,0*8.84

White, BradI* Jr,

1 res., 1 lot...................172.81

White, Charles Vernon    154.74

White, Earl Travis A

1 res., 1 lot...................138.79

White, Frank Lee A

1 res., 1 lot...................122.27

White, James William A 1 res.. 1 lot...................1*7 11

.94 07 28.89

.20.25

.179.74

...9.45

.188.09

.31 31 .150.71

165.24 .. 95.45

.51.35

.1.78

.14.26

.188.83

Williams, Lossie Council (hlers)

.24.06

.58.20

.85 48

. 10.69

.119.57 266.42

.214.01

.152.66

. 107,49

1 res.. 1 lot

Williams, Louise Wooten

1 lot......................

Williams, Lucy Blount

6 acres...................

Williams, Nancy Danieis

1 res., 3 iots..............

Wiiliams, Paul James

1 res., 27 acres...........

Williams, Raymond W A Roby

2 lots..........................22.79

Williams, Richard (heirs)

1 lot...........................12.72

Williams. Ruth D

Hot.......................1,507.43

Williams, Stephenson George A

1 res., 3 lots..................408.92

Williams. Thomas Eugene A

1 res., 1 lot..................

Williams. Warren C. A

1 res., 1 lot..................

Williams. Wright C. A 1 res.. 2 lots

Williamson, Charles Archer A

26 acres.......................*8.41

Willis, Johnnie Jr. A Wt Viney

1 res., 1 lot..................106.56

Wills, Michael H. A

1 res., 1 lot...................216.91

Wilson, Bobby Clayton A

Hot...........................43.12

Wilson, Ervin

1 acre.........................24.95

Wilson, Harry E.

ires. Hot...............378.32 Bal.

Wilson, Hughle L. A

1 lot...........................34.28

Wilson, Larry Clifton A

1 res., 1 lot...................173.08

Wilson, Laura Foreman

1 res., 3 lots..................103.72

Wilson, Shirley Loyd A

1 lot, 1 acre....................36.29

Wilson, Victor T. A

1 res., 1 lot...................155.89

Wilson. W H DR

4 lots.........................193.87

Windham. David Ray A

1 res.,    4 acres................142.07

Winstead. Elizabeth Briley

1 res.,    1    lot...................213.51

Wintervllle Rest Home, Inc.

1 lot..........................719 84

Woodard, David D. A

1 res., 1 lot...........

Woolard, Joyce Jean Stickland

1 res.. 1 lot..................

Woolard, AAarshall

1 lot.......................

Woolard, William Steve A

1 lot........................

Wooten, Clifton A Margaret

1 res., 1 lot.................

Wooten, Delores Hardy

1 lot......... ..............

Wooten, Howard

1 lot........................

Wooten. James Daniel A

1 res., 1 lot.................

Wooten, Jennie L.

1 res., 1 lot.................

Wooten, Joe (heirs)

1 lot........................

Wooten, Maggie (heirs)

1 lot........................

Wooten, Robert Earl A

1 lot........................

Wooten, Robert Lee

1 res., 2 lots................

Worsley, Ben Jr. A Rachel

1 res., 1 lot.................

Worthington, Dalton W Jr.

1 lot  ....................

Worthington. Dalton Woodrow Jr.

2 lots..........................53    35

Worthington. Louis Allen Sr.

1 res . 2 acres    ......

Worthington, Nina Hough

1 res., Hot.................

Worthington, Nina Stockin

3 lots.......................

Worthington, Pattle Ebron

1 res., 1 lot.................

Worthington, William Phillip

1 res., 1 lot..................

Wright, Aubrey Glldon Jr A

1 res.. 1 lot..................

Wright, Herbert Wood A

1 lot.........................

Wright, Ledonia Smith (heirs)

2 lots......................

Wyche, James Thomas

1 res., 1 lot ;...............

Wyne, Bertha Byrd 1 res., 1 lot, 2acres

Wynne, H.C.ACIaytonO

1 acre.....................

Wynne, Lila James (heirs)

1 lot.......................

Yarrell, Eddie Gen* A

3 lots......................

Yarrell, Walter Franklin

3 lots......................

Yarrell, William Ray

2 lots.........................

Yarrell. William Ray A

3 lots.........................

Younger, Eula Mae Edwards

1 res., 1 lot................

Zavatsky, Elizabeth Smith 1 res.. 1 lot...............

May 5, 12, 19, 24, 1983

. 170.92 90.34

.17.82

.136.05

.126.83 .50.59

. 22.52 . 158.51

.221.40 . , 7.37

.4.53

13.50

. 103.57 205.55

11.56

.167.23 .212.36

.280.01

.78.14

. 377.00 . 198.19

.14.85

16.64

.119.68

,234.75

24.95

35.64

.31.19

111.32

.91.85

28.35

.218.24

124.25





Crossword By Eugene Sheffer

ACROSS ISoft drink 5 Chemists (dace 8 Leave out

12 Way out

13 Actress Lupino

14 Wind in-' dicator

40 Othello's 2 Beasts ensign    of burden

41 Wasp weapons 3 Garment 45 Fossil fuel

47 Pose

49 Completed

50 Goad

51 Fury

52 Coup d-

53 Judge

IS Impression 54 Sailor It Pro 55 Stitches

17 Sea bird DOWN

18 Lure 1 Give in 20 Microbe 22 Cleopatras

love

28 Domesticated

29 Secreted

30 Baltic, e.g.

31 Periods

32 Noise

33 Genuine

34 Broadcast

35 Comic Brooks

36 Singer Midler

37 Koalas and

kangaroos

6 Fuss 7Good buy

8 Candid

9 Furry monkey

10 Tavern

Avg. solution time: 26 min.

11 Golf aid 19 Boor 21 Football fuzz    player

4 Occasionally 23 Mexican

5 Permanent    dish prisoner 24 Orderly

_ saaH^aiaiBi^ OBQ mmk

25 Harvard rival

26 Sports group

27SiUssong

28The-of

Figaro

32 Bank action

33 Dwells

35 Coffee holder

36 Diner sandwich

38 Witching town

39 Fall bloom

42 Reminder

43 Chew on

44 Collections

45 Cows chaw

146 Mine yield 48 Author

Answer to yesterdays puzzle. Levin

26

45

27

50

46

28

22

40

38

35

32

47

54

23

29

48

20

39

10 11

49

24

43

26

44

CRYPTOQUn*    5-12

AYX MNJXVJVFXJ CEFXJR RYTJA

MKRX NR MECTKR.

Yesterdays Cryptoquip - CARPET STORE SCENE: WAIi^ TO-WALL PATRONS.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: M equals F.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

IW3 King Ftatures Syndicate. Inc

FORECAST FOR FRIDAY, MAY 13,1983

from the Carroll Rightar Inatltuta

GENERAL TENDENCIES: Unexpected and dramatic changes occur where either those you have known for some time or more recent friends are concerned. Tread the straight and narrow path.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Be punctual for social events this evening. Engage in favorite hobby. Make the modem more a part of your daily living.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) There are changes for the better ahead in your business affairs. The evening is pleasant if spent at home.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Establish fine relations with new contact. Impress those who are influential and can be of help to you.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Don't pressure friends trying to gain a personal aim. Express yourself creatively. Express happiness.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Emphasize your business capabilities for added rewards. In the evening, concentrate on personal activities.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Anything you have in mind of a novel nature should be taken care of early. Be more efficient at work.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Do something thoughtful for your partner. Be sure to pay pressing bills. Discuss the future with your partner.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Today is the day for signing contracts and closing deals. Your partner ex[)ects much of you. Take needed health treatments.

SAGI'ITARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Stay on your toes today because a great number of associates will look to you for decisions. Be alert and wise.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Stop procrastinating. Terminate that relationship with one who is greedy. A coworker needs your assistance.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Gad about town and have fun. Your spouses attitude may be different but accept it willingly. Be wise.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Take care of correspondence. Go over written material for possible errors. Entertain at home tonight.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will want to branch out with novel ideas and inventions which could bring him, or her quite a fortune. Be sure you give as fine an education as [>ossible. Stress religious and ethical training and encourage sports.

"The Stars impel, they do not com(>el." What you make of your life is largely up to you!

1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

A Wage Freeze At Local Levels

WASHINGTON (AP) - A wage freeze aimed at thawing the economy is being worked on at local levels throughout the nation by labor and general construction contractors, according to a report compiled here.

With 2,300 construction contracts up for ne^tiations in 1983, construction con

tractors, see this as a necessity, said Richard S. Pepper, president of Associated General Contractors of America.

Labor union leaders and management negotiators are currently discussing wage freezes and work-rules changes to spur on productivity in 1983, he added.

The Small Presses

The New York Book Fair opens this weekend, bringing together representatives from more than 300 "small presses to show and sell their publications. These small presses publish poetry, fiction, books of regional interest, specialty items, and other works that do not necessarily have the mass-market appeal of books by commercial publishers. Often, small press books are works of art in their own right. Many are beautifully illustrated or hand-printed on handmade paper in limited editions. In the U.S., the small press has a tradition that dates back to Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Paine. Today there are some 2,854 active small press and little magazine publishers all over the country.

DO YOU KNOWWho invented the printing press?

WEDNESDAYS ANSWER-Laika, a Soviet dog, was the first animal to be launched into space In 1957.

5-12-83    '    VEC. Inc. 1983

GOREN BRIDGE

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

1963 Tribune Company Syndlcat*. Inc.

DONT TIP OFF YOUR HAND

Neither vulnerable. East deals.

NORTH

A432 <:>KQJ9 OKQJ32

Void WEST EAST

Q1098

<;7108    '7 7642

0 8765    0 9

875    AQJ10432

SOUTH

KJ65 7 A53 OA104

K96 The bidding:

East South West North 3 Dhle 5    6

Dhle 6 Dhle Pass Pms Pass

Opening lead: Eight of .

From the very first hand. Trump Coup Tommy knew that it was going to be his day. As you may recall. Tommy was a player who was known for the fact that, most of the time, he bjd and played rather poorly. Except, that is. when he encountered a bad trump break. Then the bumbler was replaced by the assured master, and he performed miracles in the play of the cards.

On the first hand. East elected to preempt. That did not faze Tommy, who stepped in with a takeout double on a hand that had poor support for most suits. West upped the preempt and North cannot be blamed for thinking that his side mjght have a grand slam. The worst bid in the auction was West's double. for its effect on Tommy

PSYCWATIIC HRP Si!

COMIC RELIEF - College of WUliam and Mary sophomore Chip Roberson mans a booth for those college students who need a little comic relief from exams week. Students who got their idea from the Peanuts comic strip use all sorts of tricks to get people to laugh - iocluding word association and ink Mot tests. (AP Laserphoto)

PEANUTS

OKAY, IF YOU FIND ANY 5I6N OF THE SUNKEN VESSEL AT THE BOTTOM OF MY UIATER PISH, SI6NAL ME BY PULLINS ON THIS ROPE

B C

' A SAV^P IS A PEMNiY    

NUBBIN

.[HiZSS TriE r.R.9: RAf

ojTAgarr it.

was like a phone booth on Clark Kent.

West led a club, and when dummy appeared Tommy knew that West's double had to be predicated on at least four trumps. So Tommy had to engineer an end play, and to accomplish that he had to find out Wests distribution in the red suits - on the auction West almost surely held three clubs.

Tommy ruffed the opening lead in dummy and cashed the ace of spades. He was delighted when East produced a trump. He crossed to the ace of hearts and ruffed a club, then came back the ace of diamonds and ruffed another club. He now led a low diamond to his ten.

Had East followed to this trick, West would have been marked with at least three hearts. But when East showed out, the rest was easy. Tommy re-entered dummy with a diamond and led a fourth round of the suit for a heart discard. He cashed the king of hearts and then simply led another heart, ruffing low in his hand. West, down to nothing but trumps, was forced to overruff, and then had to lead away from his Q-10 of trumps into Tommys K-J tenace. Six spades doubled and made.

11 YEARS LATE

HALIFAX, Nova Scotia (AP) - An Indian who spent, 11 of his 29 years in jail for murder has been acquitted of the crime by the appeals division of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia.

BEETLE BAILEY

PHANTOM

JU$T A A 9\POF CHAMR46N6... TO CLEAR MJR PRETTY HEAP.

AM I DREAMING

CAN THIS ee 2 y

90 R7RMAL,D)ANA

palmer-wmlker

MY FRIENDS

FRANK & ERNEST

He? P5NT Five MlNUTfe?

ON THi SPEEN. tOoK/ tlgf HE? fiOiNtf fb/i

. . .

"' ThAwes 5-/2.

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

WHILE IM

mmKv^oE OUGHT TO SEE THE SIGHTS >

SHOE

I AGREE .'FIRST WE'RE GOING D06^ 70 GREENWICH . VILLAGE TO eE THE AFARTMEf^ BUILDING WHERE mW HOliS? UUED...

THEM WE'LL DROP ^ THE OFFICES OF nAAKVEL COMICS..

AND FINAUP WEU GET SOME FUXaJERS AND GO UYi^THEM ONTHESPOfiUHERE KING KONG DIED!

aiwmwimmy

AMTICN lPT?

1

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wusmimwcmi

1tieeWWI0KEEf5IN& KLim&frmnA





CLASSIFIED

INDEX

MISCELLANEOUS

P'fsoncils In MfiTiorirtm CrWdOf Th/inks Sprc lal NoIkps Trrivel 6- Tours Auloinotivo C hvJd C,irt

Diiy Nursery He.-illh C.ire i rTiploynienl F or Sole Insirut tion I ost And P ourid I oons And V.oriqaqes l^usun'Ss ServK es OppOf lunily F'rolessjon.d Keol P stole Approis.ds

00? OOJ OOS 00.' oov 010 0-10 04 1 04 OSO 060 080 08? 085 091 093 9S 100

fols

WANTED

Hr.p Wonted Work Wonted Wonted

kKirnni.te Wonted Wonted To Buy W.tnted To Lease Wonted ro Pient

RENT/LEASE

Apnr tfTients P or Rent FAiiJiness Rentals C .unpers P or Rent C oddofnuiiuins tor Rent F <iCriis F or Lease MoOSf'S F or Rent I oC*> F or Rent Mett Fiondise Rentals Mobile Homes P'or Reid tttse SptK* P or Rent Rr<;ort Proper ty For Rent Roiins P or Rent

PUBLIC NOTICES

SALE

?LelOS tor Sole Fmc yi les tor S.ile Boa'- tor Sole ( vonpers tor Soir*

( v< I*--, tor SoU*

T r u. K S t(H Sale P.-I-.

Ar,f.(|w.-s

Hijiiiliiiq Supphev F .'I'l Wood "ool F ar 91 P quiprnnt 70 aqi' Yard Sales H. avy E quipment ttousetiold (roods trr.t,raneo I .estuc k

t'tl.ineous Mnt>i le Hornes lor Salt Mof')ilt Horne Insufan< Vaeocai Instrunw fits Spor tif'iq Goods -C nrnrnerc :al Property ( ondorniniums tor Sal F ro ns or Salt- Fio-.ses lor Sal.-In ,. strn nt F'f oper I y ,ed F or Sal.'

L no F u- Sal.-R.- .)f f F ' op,

Sal.

I 1 0?9 OJ 03? 034 03* I

0 39 i

I

046 06 F 06?

063

064

065

06/ I

068 i

   069    I

071 07?

/4

O.'S

076

077.

0 78 10?

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

Rates

752-6166

3 Line Minimum 1-3 Days 45* per line per day 4-6 Days 42'per line per day 7 Or Mbre

Days 40* per line per day

Classified Display

'2 75 Per Col Inch Contract Rates Available

DEADLINES Classified Lineage Deadlines

Monday    Friday    4pm

Tuesday Monday 3pm Wednesday Tuesday 3pm Thursday Wednesday 3 p n\ Friday    Thursday    3pm

Sunday    Friday noon

Classified Display Deadlines

Monday    Friday noon

Tuesday    Friday    4pm

Wednesday Monday4pm Thursday Tuesday4pm Friday Wednesday 2pm Sunday Wednesday 5pm

ERRORS

Errors must be reported immediately The Daily Reflector cannot make alowance for errors after 1st day of publicafion

THE DAILY REFLECTOR reserves the right to edit or reject any advertisement spbmitted

PUBLIC

NOTICES

Under and by virtue of the power of tale contained In a certain deed of trust executed by Jim Bob Allen and wife, Jean B. Allen, recorded in BoK R4. Page 423, PIft County Reflisfry, the undertlgned Substitute Trustee. . having foreclosed and ottered for sale the lands hereinater described, and whereas within ten (10) days an upset bid was filed with the Clerk of Superior Court and an

Order directing the undersigned to resale said land upon an opening bid ot FORTYTHREE THOUSAND

ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS ($43,100.00), the undersigned Will otter for sale at public auction to the highest bidder tor cash at Pitt County Courthouse door in the City of Greenville, North Carolina, at 12:00 Noon on the 24th day of May,

1983, that certain tract or parcel ot land lying and belm In Farmvllle Township, Pitt County. North

Carolina, and more particularly described as tollows:

BEGINNING at an iron located on

the southern right of way line Of SR 1200, said ironoelng the northwesf corner of Lot No. 4 of the Marvin V

Hca-ton property recorded In Map Book 21, page IlM of the Pitt County Registry; thence from the point of

eglslry.

eglhning thus determined S. 23 deg 45 mln. t. 200 leel along the line of Lot No. 4 above mentioned to an iron, cornering; thence S. 44 deg. IS mln. W. loio feet to an iron, cornering; thence N. 23 deg. 45 mln. W. 200 feet to the southern right of wav line* of SR 1200, (prnerinq.

thence N 64 deg li mm. t, 100 feet to the point of beginning Saidproperty is to be sold for cash subject to ad valorem property taxes, assessments, and to any other prior encumbrances of record, if any.

Pursuant to North Carolina General Statutes, Section 45 21.10(b), and the terms of the deed of trust, any successful bidder may tje required to deposit with the Substitute Trustee immediately upon conclusion of the sale a cash deposit of ten percent (10%) of the bid up to and including ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS (jf.OOO 00) plus five percent (5%) of any excess over ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS ($1,000.00) Any successful bidder shall be required to tender the full balance purchase price so bid in cash or certified check at the time the Substitute Trustee lenders to him a deed for the property or attempts to tender sucn deed, and should said successful bidder fail to pay the full balance purchase price sb bid at that time, he shall remain liable on his bid as provided for in the North Carolina General Statutes, Section 45 21.30(d) and (3)

This sale will tie held open ten (10) days for upset bids as required by law. .

This 3rd day of May, 1983 James A Hodges, Jr ,

Substitute Trustee 106 South McLewean Street P O Drawer 3169 Kinston, NC 28501 Tel (919) 527 8131 May 12, 19, 1983

NOTICE OF RESALE OF LANDS BY COMMISSIONERS

Pursuant to and by virtue of the authority of fhe Order of fhe Honorable Sandra Gaskins, Clerk of Superior Courf of Pift Counfy, entered May 3,    1983, in that

proceeding entitled 'Robert Lee Smith, et als vs Phillip L Goodson, Jr , et als", being Pitt County Clerk of Superior Court File No 83 SP 62. the undersigned will, on Friday, May 20, 1983, .at 12:00 Noon at the Pift Coiinty Courthouse Door in Greenville, North Carolina, offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash, upon an opening bid of $63.050 00, but subject to confirmation by the Court, the following described tract ot land

TRACT NO 3 Beginning at an iron slake located in a ditch, a corner, common with Lot No. 9 and Lot No to of the Warren Tucker Division and the lands of the Heirs ot J.R Moye, and running from said Beginning Point thence South 84 55 East a distance ot 582 52 feet to a concrete monument, an agreed corner, running thence South 3 40 West a distance of 104.86 feet to a concrete monument, another agreed corner, running thence South 89 17 East along and with an agreed line a distance ot 174.06 feet to an iron stake, a corner, running thence South 30 30 East a distance ot 472'tO feet to an iron stake, another corner, running thence South 83 19 East a distance of lOO feet to an iron stake, a corner, running thence South 18 18 West a distance of 113 06 feel along and with a chain link fence to an iron stake, continuing South 17 11 West a distance of 72 25 feet and South 3 49 West a distance of 20 54 feet to an iron stake, a corner, running thence South 3 49 West a distance ot 218 46 feet and thence South 14 I East a distance of 115 15 leel to to an iron stake, a corner, running thence South 16 47 West a distance of 147 02 feet to an iron stake in the line of Lot No 9 of the Warren Tucker Division, a corner, running thence along and with the line of Lot No. 9 and Lot No 10 ot the Warren Tucker Division, North 38 50 West a distance of 1597 teet to the Point ot Beginning, and containing 117 acres, more or less, according to survey made by A S Johnson, Jr in December, 1976 The highest bidder will be reciuired to deposit ten per cent (10%) of the tirsJ $1,000 (H) thereof, plus five per ceht (5%) of any excedd above $1,000.00, as evidence of good faith pending confirmation of the sale by the Court. The

Eroperty will be sold subiect to 1983 ity ot Greenville and Pitt County ad valorem taxes, the possession to be delivered December 1. 1983 This the 3rd day of May, 1983 David A Leech, Commissioner Fred T Mattox, Commissioner May.l2, 19, 1983

INVITATION FORbiDS The Housing Authority ot the City of Greenville. N C is accepting' bids for Multi Peril Insurance for elderly housing, University Towers, 500 East 3rd Street Bids will be accepted until 10 00 AM on June l4, 1983 Any interested bidder contact the Authority at 1103 Broad Street, Greenville, N C 27835 1426 (919) 7523118,

Housing Authority of the City ot Greenville, N C May 12, 1983

NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY The undersigned having qualilied as Executrix of the estate of Addie E Smith, deceased this Is to notify all persons, firms, and corporations having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned or its attorneys. Williamson, Herrin, Stokes & Heffeltinger, on or before November 12, 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.

This the 10 day of May. 1983 Nettie Marie Yohn ,

Executrix of the Estate ot Addie E Smith. Deceased 1410 Phillips Ave >'. -O New Bern, NC 28560 3 Mickey A Herrin Williamson. Herrin. Stokes & Heffeltinger Attorneys at Law P .O. Box 552 Greenville, NC 27834 May 12, 19, 26, June 2, 1983

~~ntceto (Creditors

NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY Having qualified as Executrix of the Estate of Hattie J. Rogerson, late of Pift County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned Executor within six (6) months from the date ot the first publication of this notice or same will be pleaded in bar ot their recovery All persons indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.

This the 10th day of May, 1983 Norman E Rogerson 106 N. Summit Street Greenville, North Carolina 27834 OWENS, ROUSE 8. NELSON Attorneys at Law P.O Box 302

Greenville, North Carolina 27834

(919) 758 4276

May 12, 19, 26, June 2, 1983

^ NOTICE "

Having qualified as Executrix ot the estate of Dorothy Rebecca Carawan late of Pitt County. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before Novemtjer 14, 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 lOth day ot May, 1983 Frances C Edwards P.O. Box 171

Simpson, North Carolina 27879 E xecutrix of the estate of Dorothy Rebecca Carawan, deceased

May 12, 19,26. June 2, 1983

NOTICE OF INTENT TOADOPT

ORDINANCE Notice is hereby given that the Board o( Commissioners ot the Town of Bethel will hold a public hearing on Tuesday, May 24. 1983, at 7 30 P.M , in the Town Hall to consider:

(1) Whether there exists in the Town of Bethel or within Its extra territorial jurisdiction as established in Section 12.51 ot the Code of the Town of Bethel dwellings that are unfit for human habitation, or structures which are health or satetv; hazards because of the conditions of the character described in G.s. 160A 441, and,

(2) Whether the Town of Bethel should adopt proposed ordinances which would confer upon the Town of Bethel the power to repair, close, or demolish any dwellings that are unfit for human habitation and/or abandoned structures that are health or safety hazards because of the conditions described in G.S. 160A 441, and also adopt proposed ordinances and amendments to Chapter e (Building Regulations) of the Code of the Town of Bethel lor the exercise and enforcement of the aforesaid powers and for the exercice and enforcement ot the

grovlslons of G.S I60A 426 through >.S I60A 434 relating lo the condemnation, repair, and demolition of unsafe buildings as provided by law.

All Interested citizens ot the Town of Bethel are urged lo attend the meetings at which time they will be given an opportunity to be heard upon the matters being considered Copies of the aforesaid proposed ordinances and amendments are on file with the Town Clerk In the Town Hall, Bethel. North Carolina, and all citizens ot Bethel are invited to review said ordinances and amendments during regular business hours As a result of comments made at such hearing, the Board of Commissioners ol the Town ot Bethel may make changes in the proposed ordinances and amendments without lurther notice or hearing before considering adoption of said ordinances and admendments and/or modifications of the same.

This the 3rd day of May, 1983.' Martha Mewborn, Town Clerk May 12, 19, 1983

1

sa

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

WE PAY CASH for diamonds. Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, 407 Evans Mall, Downtown Greenville.

010

AUTOMOTIVE

on

Autos For Sale

BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car, call 756 1877, Grant Buick We will pay top dollar x

NEEDACAR?

Rent a-used car and save! CALL RENT A WRECK 752 2277

SELL YOR CAR the National Aulofinders Way! Authorized Dealer m Pitt County Hastings Ford Call 758 0114

013

Buick

REGAL 1982. 2 door. Low mileage, fully equipped Call Rex Smith

Chevrolet, Avden, 746 3141._

1980 SKYLARK LIMITED 2 door, lolly equipped. Excellent condition $4000 7^ 9520

014

Cadillac

CADILLAC, 1970 4 door hard top, Sedan Devihe One owner, $595 756 8999

CLASSIC

1963 CADILLAC coupe May be driven or kept as a show car $10,000 Negotiable 752 0349_______

015

Chevrolet

CAPRICE 1982. 4 door, lilt wheel, cruise, power door locks, AM FM stereo, extra clean Call Rex Smith

Chevrolet Avden. 746 3141._

CASH FOR your car Barwick Auto

S^es 756 7765___

CELEBRITY 1982. 4 door, low mileage, extra clean Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141, MALIBU 1982. 4 door. 14.000 miles, like new Call Rex Smith Chevrolet.

Aydej>j_746_3141 ___

1950,    2 door and 1953.    4 door

Chevrolet cars. Call 825 5781    ,__

1973 CHEVROLET Impala, 4 door, good running condition $795 753

2381 or 747 5383_____

1983 CHEVETTE, 2 door automatic air, AM FM, 4500 miles, candy apple red. $400 and take over payments Call 756 9874_

016

Chrysler

1973 CHRYSLER. Newport 4 door mechanically perfect. First $500. Call 756 9874

017

DtxJge

1978 DODGE COLT Excellent con dilion, good gas mileage $2600 756 9273 alter6p m    _

01

Ford

COUNTRY SQUIRE WAGON 1982 Ford Executive Car. Fully equipped. Light blue. Call Leo Venters Motors, Ayden, 746 6171,

PINTO RUNABOUT, 1974. good condition. 4 speed, air, reliable. $ 1150. Call Richard, 355 2362

TAKE UP PAYMENTS, no down payment. 1982 Escort. Excellent condition. 756 7755 days or 756 3792 nights_

1967 PLYMOUTH Valiant. Good dependable transportation. $300 756 2265.

1974 MUSTANG II 6 cylinder, 4 speed with air, power steering and brakes Low mileage. 758 4736 1974 PINTO S ta t ion wagon . Automatic 56,000 miles Excellent

condition $1195 756 0108_

1976 FORD STATIONWAGON Torino. Good condition. $1,000. Selling for health reasons. 757 3710. 1976 MUSTANG Air, automatic, good condition. $1400 Call 753 2245.

1976 PINTO AM/FM radio, 4 speed transmission, extra clean, $1250. 756 1103 after 5._

1976 THUNDERBIRO Many extras. Good condition. 355 6215

1977 PINTO Loaded. 49,000 miles. $1750. 756 0988after 6p.m.

1981 ESCORT GL WAGO, silver, 26,000 miles, automatic, air. cruise. AM/FM stereo. 756 4137 after 4 30.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

019

Lincoln

1974 LINCOLN Continental, 4 door You must see to appreciate at this price, $1650. Call 75A0492._

021

Oldsmobile

1965, 98 A classic all original. 52,000 actual miles, power windows and seats Have to see to appreciate $2250. 758 0094

1 977 CUTLASS SUPREME Brougham Volure interior, power steering, power brakes, air, tilt, cruise, tape, power windows, power door locks. Excellent condition. 756 8987 alter 5.

1981 CUTLASS SUPREME

Brougham, loaded, spotless. V 8 diesel, 2 door, low mileage. 756 7588 after 5 p m._____

022

Plymouth

1973 PLYMOUTH SCAMP 2 door, automatic, radio, heater Good condition $700 negotiable. Call 756 7453a(ter6p m

1978 PLYMOUTH FURY 440 Loaded, very clean $1335 Call 756 3958.

023

Pontiac

REDUCED, 1980 PHOENIX 4

speed, air, stereo radio, wire

wheels, low miles. $4075 756 5621 _

1980 PONTIAC SUNBIRD, 4 cylinder, 4 speed, air, tilt wheel and more $2950. 752 6490 after 5 p m

036

Cycles For Sale

HONDA, 1973, CB350F, 4 cylinder, good condition Call 746 3367

WANT TO BUY expansion cham bers tor 1972 Kawasaki H2, 756 7580

1977 TRIUMPH 750 SPIDER

Excellent condition 3,000 miles $1200. Call 752 9455 after 9 30 p m ; 756 2692after6p m

1980 CM400 HONDA Excellent condition Call 756 9938 anytime

339

Trucks For Sale

1971 FORD BRONCO Radial tires, AM/FM cassette, air shocks. 6 cylinder 80 model engine. Extra nice $3500 746 2222 after 5.

1979 JEEP CJ5 Renegade White with V8 and hedders Excellent condition Call 758 7200, ask (or Matt

1982 JEEP WAGONEER, Limited, low mileage All options. $14,000 975 2012 756 0439 after 6pm.

040

:<Ihil(iCare

INFANTS up to 6 years kept in my home. Call 752 4903 MOTHER and former teacher's aid will babysit in my home Monday through Friday Located in Shady

Knoll. 752 3290__

WANTED: Someone to keep and 8 and 6 month children in my home between 7 and 5, Monday thru Friday References required 752 7615 between 5 and 9 p m.__

024

Foreign

1971 VOLKSWAGEN Dune Buggy $800 firm 746 4174

1972 VOLKSWAGON BUG Ver 524 5710a({^r 7p m

good shape. Asking $1950

7ery

Call

1974 AUDI too LS I owner, 44,000 original miles, power steering, power brakes, air Will consider trade. Excellent condition 756 9032

1975 VOLKSWAGEN Super Beetle convertible. 4 speed, sound body and mechanics Very clean An

appreciating classic 756 7572_

1979 DATSUN 210. Air, excellent condition $3195 Call after 5, 523 9J8T__

1979 MAZDA RX7 LIMITED, sun root, air, AM/FM cassette, $6,800 758 4300 or 355 2370 after 6.____

1980 BMW 528. dark blue with camel interior, automatic, sunroof, AM/FM cassette, power doors and

windows 355 2245 or 355 6422 ____

1982 HONDA CIVIC 4 door Metaiic brown, 5 speed, AM/FM cassette, 4 speaker stereo Call 746 87^     ,

1982 SCIROCCO GL, dark grey metallic 7,000 miles, AM FM cassette, air, power windowis cruise Under warranty until Dec

1983 After 5, call 756 3384

032

Boats For Sale

15' CLOSED BOW ski boat, 135 horsepower Evinrude, power tilt and trim trailer, carpet, new seats, tape deck Best offer over $3,000

before May 14 756 2334._______

16' Glaspar. 55 Johnson, plus

extras $1,000 Call 752 4597_________

16' JOHNSON Tri hull. 125 horse power inboard/outboard 746 3906

alter 6pm____________

IB' NET BOAT, good condition, new paint, excellent shrimp, crab,

oyster or gig boat $475. 758 6612 _

1972 GLASTRON 16' with 65 horse power Evinrude and trailer $1595

355 2970_____

1981 HOBIE CAT for sale Call

756 6834 ______

26' TROJAN 1977 Fly bridge, head, galley, and DF radio Call 946 6127 28' CARVER Twin screw Bridge, head, galley, sleeps 6, Call 756 1386 75 HORSEPOWER Evinrude out board engine. 1976 two props Call 756 5797 after 5:30

04

PETS

AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER pups. All shots, dewormed. $100. C^ll

Jerry, 752 8019___

AKC GOLDEN Retriever pups for sale. All shots Good hunting stock $100 Call 746 4686 after 6

pu^gie

males, born March 15    ____

756 8803 nights and wekends,

752 5093 weekdays __

AKC MINIATURE Longhaired Dachshund II week old male, red

and black 355 6476, Greenville__

BLACK AND RUST Dobermans, 2 females, I male, 7 weeks old Call 355 2227 days, 756 7628 nights

FOR SALE:    York Schnauzer

beautiful puppies Grooming (or all breeds. Call Bullock's, 758 2681. GOLDEN RETRIEVER puppies, AKC registered Have both parents,

753 3074 days. 753 2270 nights LABRADOR RETRIEVERS AKC puppies Field trail and gun dog stock Wormed, shots, and de wclaws removed I 242 6529 or

1 242 4830____

MALE DOBERMAN PINCHER 11 months old, tail cut, $100 Owner

vinq town 758 7904 anytime SIBERIAN HUSKIES, registered, 4 red with blue eyes, 6 weeks old. wormed $150. 752 5333

051

Help Wanted

034 Campers For Sale

AUTOMOTIVE SALES career Excellent starting salary and benefits Good working conditions. Sales experience preferred East Carolina Lincoln Mercury GMC, 756 42____________

BODY SHOP TECHNICIAN

needed Must be experienced i^ply to Buck Sutton, Hastings Ford, 758 0114__________________

BULLDOZER operator At least 3 years experience Call 825 9911, COMMISSIONED SALES person for local area Will train Average $18,000 up Must have car Call for

appointment. 752 3557__

CONSTRUCTION SUPERIN TENDENT wanted Only qualified superintendents need apply. Send resume to Carl Mills Wimco. PO Box 121. Washington, NC 27889 DENTAL HYGIENIST wanted part tim 2 or 3 days a week in Washington, NC Send resume to Dental Hygienist, PO Box 1967, Greenville. NC 27834

WHY STORE THINGS you never use? Sell them (or cash with a Classified Ad.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

The DaiJy Reflector, GreenvilJe, N.C.-Thursday, May 12,1963-29 TO PLACE YOUR Classified Ad. I

just call 752 6166 and let a fnendlv I pi    rMQDi a v

Ad Visor help you word your Ad I    ^LAbblUfcU UibHLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FOR LEASE 2500 Square Feet

PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE ON ARLINGTON

BOULEVARD

756-8111

AUCTION

FARMLAND

Friday, May 13,1983 12:00 Noon

LOCATION: Take Highway 33 west tfom Chocowinily, N.C . go approximetely 1 mile 10 Ruril Paved Roed 1157, turn letl. Sale will be v, mile on right

I

Tract No. 1 55 Acres Total (approx.).46 cleared, 10 woods, 1983 Tobacco Base 2.93 acres, 7,055 pounds

Tract No. 2 0.9 Acres with 5 room house and 75 x 40' metal building.

TERMS: 10% Down Day Of Sale. Balance Upon Delivery Of Deed.

SALE SUBJECT TO COURT APPROVAL

Trustee: Richard M. Sterns, Kinston, N.C. 523-2293 Sale Conducted by

COUNTRY BOYS AUCTION AND REALTY CO. P. 0. Box 12 35 Washington, NOrth Carolina

Phone, 946 607    State    License    No.    765

IDOUC CURKINS Greenville, N. C. 758-1875

RALPH RESPESS Waihington N, C.

SOT RESPO.VSIBLE FOR ACCIDESfs

9<6-878'

JARMAN

AUTO SALES

1982 Pontiac Bonneville, 4

door, loaded $8350

1981 Toyota Corolla Liftback.

2 door, automatic, air condition $5650

1981 Pontiac LeMans, 4 dqor. 6 cylinder, automatic, power steering and brakes. AM-FM. $5750

1980 Chevrolet Caprice Classic. 4 door. $5650

1979 Malibu Station Wagon, air, automatic. $3650.

1979 Datsun B-210, 2 door. 4 speed. $3350

1979 Pontiac Grand LeMans, 2

door landau. $4450

1978 Toyota Corolla Wagon, 5

speed, air condition. $3950

1978 Olds Cutlass Supreme, 2

door hardtop. S4350

1977 Datsun 810 Wagon, air

condition, 4 speed. $3150

1977 Buick Regal, 2 door landau, loaded. $3350

1975 Pontiac Astre, air

condition. 4 speed. $650

1975 Chevrolet Monza, 2 door ^sports coupe $1450

12 Months, 12,000 Miles Warranty Available FInincIng AvNUbl* With Approvwl Crxlit Hwy 3 North 752-5237 Business

Grant Jarman ....... 756-9542

Edgar Denton 756-2921

Donald Garris 758-0929

m VALUE PRICED USED CARS

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and ^ortsman tops 250 units in stock. O'Briants,

Raleigh, N C 834 2774._

TRUCK COVERS Sea Hawk, Cobra All colors and sizes Camptown R V's. Ayden 746 3530 TRUCK COVER, tinted, rollout windows, like new, $195 8' box.

752 0017, Brownie Motor Sales__

1972 JAYCO pop up camper $500.

Call 825 5781 _

1974 9,2' CAB oyer camper for pickup truck Sink, stove, ice box. I and bathroom Good condition :

$1000. 758 9443 after 5__|

1978 DODGE TRANS VAN Fully electric, air conditioned, central heat, gas range, electric refrigera tor, kitchen sink, table and studio couch makes into a king size bed Excellent condition, 746 3542

DOMESTIC HELP WANTED: (or a

new Maid Service Must be neat and have good references Call 758 6066

lor an interview _

EXPERIENCED UPHOLSTEROR needed Must be able to cut materi al and sew Call days 758 3276, nights 758 0041    __

EXPERIENCED PERSON tor

layout and tapeup of very high density printed circuit boards, part time or nights at home. Must provide references Apply to Layout, PO Box 1967. Greenville.

NC 27834    ____

EXPERIENCED AUTO salesperson Brownie Motor Sales, 752 0117

1979 31' COACHMAN Travel Trail er Excellent condition Fully equipped. Including air. 10' refrig erator, and awning Call 527 6102. 1983 COLEMAN popup trailer. Sleeps 6, stove, sink Never used, $2500. 757 Il30after5p.m_

framing crews WANTED

Report lob sites. Highway II and 102, Avden, NC_

HELP WANTED for home im provement work Call 752 6116. INTERNATIONAL COMPANY seeking 6 ladies to demonstrate non surgical face lift. Career manage

ment, we train. 946 1494._

KEYBOARD PLAYEfi for local country southern rock back Usually booked every weekend. Call

usually Billy afti

er6. 752 4103

036

Cycles For Sale

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

1980 YAMAHA 850 SPECIAL New seat, cissy bar, crash bar, new rear tire, cruise control, low mileage $1500 or best otter 758 7585. keep

catling!__

1982,V850GL Suzuki 2300 miles^ PefecX condition $2500. Call 756

1643. \__

1982 YMMAHA Seca 750, cafe tar ing, li/ggage rack, crash bars, less than 900 miles. $2,700 negotiable. Call 756 8792after 4p.m.

1983 HONDA XL 250, new, 600 miles. High powered on qff road bike with extras $1350 or $400 down and take up payments Call or come by 2808 Edwards St. 758 4666.

1983 HONDA 750 SHADOW, plus 2 new helments and new rain gear. Must sell! $2500.946 8183    ____

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NO DOWN PAYMENT!

Discover the joys of Engage-A-Car, the common-sense alternative to BUYING a new car.

Its the modern way to drive any new car, van or truck your heart desires foreign or domestic. With Engage-A-Car, you can laugh at inflation because NO DOWN PAYMENT is necessary and your MONTHLY PAYMENTS are lower! You owe it to yourself to get all the exciting details now.

Mid-Eastern Brokers

Pitt PlMa    757-3540

Shopping Center

Bethels Finest Used Cars

1982 Chevrolet Cavalier 4 door, green, 4 speed, air condition, like new.

1982 Chevrolet Camaro Z-28 Like new, 16,000 miles, gray, air, V-8, automatic.

1981 Chevrolet Caprice 4 door, white.

1980 Chevrolet Chevette 4 speed, air condition, white. Priced to go.

1980 Chevrolet Monza Blue, automatic, air condition, sharp.

1980 Buick Century Silver, loaded with eciuipment.

1980 Ford Mustang 6 cylinder, automatic, silver

1979 Chevrolet Malibu 4 door, automatic transmission, air condition, red and white.

1978 Chevrolet Monza Black, 4 speed, air condition.

1977 Chevrolet Caprice 4 door, V-8, automatic transmission, 53,000 actual miles, like new.

1975 Olds Delta 88 Convertible

1975 Chevrolet Caprice Classic

59,000 miles, clean, loaded.

TRUCKS

1982 Chevrolet S-10 Pickup - Like new, priced to go.

1980 Datsun King Cab Orange, 4 speed

1980 Chevrolet LUV Pickup - 4 X 4,

blue, like new.

1978 Chevrolet C-10 Diesel Like new, automatic, power steering

1974 Datsun Truck Orange

We Are In Great Need Of Used Cars Now

We Are Offering Highest Trade-In Allowances Ever!

WYNNES CHEVROLET

Ramon Latham    Comer,    On    The    Square

Joe Rawls    Bethel,    N.C.

Phone 825-4321

J.T. Burrus Doug House

GM QUALITY SBMCE PARTS

GEHElUa 1IC)TC3IIS nuns nVlSION

1981 Audi 4000 5 Plus 5...................REDUCED

1981 Volkswagen Diesel Truck...............^6495.00

1981 Volkswagen Rabbit Diesel..............^5995.00

1980 Volkswagen Rabbit....................^3995.00

1980 Dodge D-50 Truck......................^4495.00

1979 Pontiac Sunbird ........ AUTOMATIC

1979 Volkswagen Dasher Diesel Wagon ^4495.00

1979 Chevrolet Impala Wagon...............^5195.00

1978 Plymouth Horizon.................. ^3495.00

1978 Volkswagen Rabbit Diesel..............^3495.00

1978 Chevrolet Chevette  ...............^2495.00

1978 Buick Electra Limited..................^3995.00

1977 Buick Skylark  ......  SPECIAL

1976 Volkswagen Rabbit  ...... ^2195.00

1974 Cadillac Sedan De Vllle.................M695.00

loe Pechles Volkswagen, Inc.

Greenville BlvO.    /5b-1135

Serving Greenville To The Coast For i8 Years

FREE SERVICE CLINIC

Saturday, May 14th 8 A.M. Until

Have Your Car Tested On The Latest Test Equipment On The Market. Over 150 Different Tests Performed On Your Car With You Getting A Copy Of The Test Results.

Free Refreshments

Call Robert Starling, Service Manager For Appointment

Brown-Wood, Inc.

Dickinson Ave.

752-7111





W- The Daily Keiiecwr, ureenvuie,     ______ ,, u, ii>o

USEDBM^ MHT1HIBKS

HTWiemi

eKTM

l/

EXCELLENT SELECTION NOW IN STOCK

1983 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Fully Equipped

1983 Chevrolet Camaro Z28

1982 Chevrolet Pickup Diesel

1982 Datsun Pickup King Cab

1982 Cadillac Coupe De Ville Fully equipped

1982 Chevrolet Chevette 4 door

1982 Toyota Clica 2 door

1982 Toyota Pickup 4 wheel drive

1982 Olds Cutlass Wagon Fully equipped

1981 Chevrolet Citation 4 door, air condition

1981 Olds Cutlass 2 door, full power

1981 Chevrolet Silverado Pickup air condition

1981 Chevrolet Chevette 2 door. 4 speed

1981 Chevrolet Chevette Automatic, air condition

1981 Dodge Pickup

1981 Chevrolet Caprice Full power

1981 Mazda Pickup

1981 Toyota Pickup

1981 Chevrolet Caprice 4 door, air condition

1981 Honda Accord 4 door

1981 Chevrolet Caprice 4 door, fully equipped

1981 CMC Pickup

1981 Ford Escort Wagon

1980 Chevrolet Pickup Air condition

1980 Toyota Wagon 4 door

1980 Buick Regal Limited Full power

1980 Buick Riviera Full power

1980 Datsun King Cab Oickup Air condition

1980 Pontiac Sunbird 2 door

1980 Olds Toronado Full power, moon roof

1980 Pontiac Sunbird 2 door

1980 Chevrolet Corvette Full power

1980 Lincoln Town Car Full power

1980 Chevrolet Camaro

1980 Olds Cutlass 2 door

1980 Chevrolet Monza Coupe 2 door"

1980 Chevrolet LUV Pickup 4 wheel drive

1980 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

1979 Chevrolet Malibu Wagon

1979 Ford Fairmont Futura 2 door

1979 Cadillac Sedan De Ville 4 door, full power

1979 Chevrolet Pickup

1979 Chevrolet El Camino

1979 Chevrolet Malibu Wagon

1979 Chevrolet Pickup

1979 Chevrolet Van 20 Series 1978 Chevrolet Truck 1 Ton 1918 Datsun 2802 2 plus 2 1978 Chevrolet Malibu 2 door 1973 Ford LTD Wagon 1978 Chevrolet LUV Pickup 1978 Ford Pinto Wagon 1978 Chevrolet Pickup *

1978 Toyota Wagon 4 door 1978 Chevrolet Monte Carlo 1978 Ford Mustang 1978 Ford Pickup 1978 Chevrolet Pickup 1977 Ford Truck 2 Ton 1977 Ford Pickup 1977 Ford Granada 2 door 1977 Mercury Marquis-4 door 1976 Triumph TR7 2 door 1976 Dodge Pickup 1975 Ford Granada 2 door 1975 Chevrolet Impala 4 door 1975 Olds Cutlass 4 door 1973 Mercury Capri 2 door 1973 GMC Pickup

Voyager Protection

Available On Many 01 These Units

GREENVILL

GENERAL MOTORS PARTS DIVISION

051

Help Wanted

leoml secretary

Experienced, salary negotiable. Send resume to Secretary, PO Box 5091, Greenville, NC_

legal secretary No expert ence required Send resume to

Legal Secret_arj^^ PO Box 1967,

Greenville, NC 271

LICENSED PHYSICAL THERAPIST

A part time physical therapy posi tion is presently available in expanding, private ICF MR tacility serving multi handicapped MR children. Competitive salary, excellent benefits and pleasant tworking environment. It interested please call or write Jan Harper, Corporate Personnel Director, Howell's Centers Inc., PO Box 607, La Grange, NC 78551,919 778 3067.

RN'S, LPN'S and OR Technicians

Pungo District Hospital needs you

nti '        '

Contact . Barbara McDonald Director ot Nursing, (919) 943 2111 local company needs sales I oriented person, preferably in I Farmville and Snow Hill area due I to expansion Full fringe benefits,

I starting salary $300 per week.

week. Send resmelo PO Box 26, Farmville. NC 27628_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

BILL

ASKEW

MOTORS

3010 S. Memorial Drive

756-9102

1982 Lincoln Continental

4 door, emerald green. 1981 Yamaha Exciter 250

3.000 miles.

1981 AMC Jeep Renegade

6 cylinder, 20,000 miles. 1981 Olds Cutlass LS 4 door, maroon

1981 Ford Ranger Pickup

Blue and white

1981 Cadillac Coupe De Ville Light green 1980 Dodge Mirada Dove gray.

1980 Subaru Wagon

1980 Ford Thunderbird

Brown.

1979 Cadillac Coupe De Ville Red.

1979 Chevrolet Chevette

4 door, beige

1979 Chevrolet Chevette

4 door, silver

1979 Ford Pinto Wagon

Bronze

1979 Buick Regal 2 door, maroon

1979 Plymouth Fire Arrow

Automatic

1979 Pontiac Grand Prix

Blue, loaded

1978 Datsun 280-Z - 4 speed, air condition.

1978 Pontiac Grand Prix

Blue.

1978 Toyota Corolla

SR-5 Liftback Air condition, brown.

1978 Jeep CJ-5

1978 Datsun 280-Z - 2 plus

2, gold.

1978 Ford Thunderbird

Town Landau, peach.

1978 Honda Civic Wagon

White

1978 Ford Mustang 4

speed, peach 1978 Plymouth Volare Wagon 6 cylinder, silver.

1978 Chevrolet Monte

Carlo Gold

1977 Pontiac Grand Prix

Silver

1977 Chrysler Cordoba

Silver

1977 Mercury Comet 4

door, blue

1977 Chevrolet Nova 4

door, silver

1977 Ford Pinto - White, blue trim

1977 Ford Maverick 4

door, 6 cylinder

1977 Toyota Clica GT 5

speed, maroon

1 977 Olds Cutlass

Supreme While, T-tops

1977 Ford Pinto Wagon -

White

1977 Chevrolet Nova 2 door, burgundy 1977 Toyota Corolla 2 door, automatic, brown. 1977 Plymouth Volare Premier Wagon Maroon 1976 Ford Ranger XLT Pickup 4 wheel drive,

59.000 miles, immaculate. 1976 Chevrolet Monte Carlo White, 56,000 miles.

1976 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Blue.

1976 Dodge Dart 1976 Ford Elite-Blue 1976 Ford Courier Pickup

White

1976 Chevrolet Malibu 4

door, blue

1976 Ford Maverick

Yellow

1975 Chevrolet Monte

Carlo Beige

1975 Buick Century Luxus

White

1975 AMC Pacer White 1975 Buick Skylark 2 door, 54,000 miles.

1974 Pontiac LeMans 4 door, 39,000 miles.

1974 Chevrolet Vega Maroon

1974 Pontiac Grand AM 1973 Ford Pinto Wagon 1969 Ford Mustang Mach I 1967 Mercury Cougar

r

Plus Many Others

051

Help Wanted

RETIRED COUPLE to'manage income producing property. Expe rience in bookkeeping and meeting public necessary. Living quarters provided. Send qualifications to Retired. PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27836._ _

RESIDENT COUNSELOR position Background in human services preferred. Payment in kind (room,

utilities, telephone provided in exchange tor hours worked) Con

tact Mary Smith, 758 4357 for interview^_

LPN'S NEEDED part time to work 3 11 or 11 7. Competitive salaries. Shift differentials 3 11 and 117. Interested persons contact L Morgan, RN, 758 7100.    ___

MAINTENANCE PERSON needed

knowledgeable in all areas of gen eral maintenance, which includes heating, air conditioning, and

plumbing. Salary plus an apart ment. AXust be able to live on the

, Send description of quali ications and work experience to Maintenance, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834._

property,

lications

MANAGER FOR CONVENIENT

store and gas combination. $20,000

with commission. Apply at Dodges Store, 3209 South Memorial Drive,

Greenville

MATURE PERSON to care tor my child in my home. Own trans

051

Help Wanted

ROOM AT

THE TOP

Due to the promotions in this area.

minded persons in the local brand ot a large corporation. It sel^ted,

^ou will receive complete training. We provide good company benefits, major medical, protil sharing, de

ntal care and retirement plan. Starting pay will $260 5350 de

pending on your ability. All promo tions are based on merit, not seniority.

We are particularly interested in those with leadership ability who are looking for a career opportuni ty

CALL 758-3401 11:00 to6:00 MONDAY-THURSDAY  Barry Kirby

051

Help Wanted

PHYSICAL THERAPIST opening in a progressive private practice with wide variety of patients. Work available in Rocky Mount and Wilson areasi Contact Matthews

Physical Therapy Service Incorporated at (919) 443

...... .    6757    between 8:30

and 5 or send resume to 2639 Sunset Avenue, Rocky Mount. NC 27801.

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE

Licehsed tree surgeons. Trimming, cutting and removal. Free estimates. JP Stancll, 752 6331.

ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK

Carpentry, masonry and roofing. 35 years experience m building. Call James Harrington after 6 pm. 758 7765.    ___

BASIC programming service for small business computers. Random and sequential data files, formated printing, etc. 756-5204, ask tor Mark

portation preferred. 8:30 to 6:00, Monday Wednesday Possibly full time later. 752 6)39

MULTILINE CLAIMSAMAN

needed for Greenville NC area. Large company opening new office. Should have minimum of 5 years experience. Good benefits, com pany car. Excellent opportunity Call (404 ) 325 2480._

NEEDMONEYFORA SUMMER VACATION

Sell Avon and start'saving! Work in your own neighborhood, earn up to 50%! Call 752-7006.__.

PART TIME bookkeeper/typist needed. Send resume to Otfice

Manager, PO Box 116. Greenville, NC

PART TIME REAL ESTATE

enced and willing to assist in managerial duties qn the weekends

Salary and commissions for your fide...... -    

confidential interview. Call Ann Bass, 756 6666

PART TIME anatomy and physiol "nglish,

ogy, mathematics, .Eng . psychology, and Spanish instructors tor the summer quarters June 8 July 14 and/or Julyi 17 August 24. 18 hours, graduate level work in discipline required. Contact Dr. Frank B Gaines. Dean of College Transfer, Coastal Carolina Com

munity College. 444 Western :k!    .....

Boulevard. Jacksonville, NC 28540, 919 455 1221. An equal opportunity employer.___

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SPECIAL Executive Desks

60'x30" beautiful walnut linish. Ideal lor home orollice

Reg. Price $259.00

Special Price $17001

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 s. Evans St. 752-2175

SALES MONEY MEN WOMEN (26 years or older)

Help enuretic children, unlimited leads - travel work hard and make $25,000 to $40,000 a year com mission. Call 800 826 4875 , or 800 826 4826._____

SR

TYPISTS!

55 Words Per Minute WE NEEDYOUl MANPOWER TEMPORARY Services offers you:

' Unique Fringe Benefits 'Top Pay

Flexible Schedule

Call us for an appointment 'e Are Not a Fee ^en<

MANPOWER

TEMPORARY

SERVICES

118 Reade Street 757-3300

SUPERVISORS

Wish to train sharp homemaker, to interview, hire and supervise to demonstrators, part time July December. Excellent in home

commissioned income. Background no, business or parfy helpful. (Sill collect 1 919 232 2935

for Maxine.

WANTED part time Microcomputer Software Instructors. Teaching experience preferred. Send resume to: Instructor, PO Box 1682. Greenville, NC 27835.

WANTED: a non smoking live in housekeeper to care for elderly woman. Salary plus room and board Health certificate and refer enees required. Call 756 9658 or 756 1222.    _ _

WOULD YOU LIKE to live in a luxurious home, drive a new car in 90 days? Free details. Write Jonesco, PO Box 918, Winterville, NC 28590

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING

C.L. Lupton, Co.

752 f)l If.

NOW AVAILABLE

Finely appointed 2 year old

OFFICE BUILDING

for rent. Near downtown. Reception area, lO-t^o^ices, 1,000 square foot auditorium (or 6 offices), 6^^quare foot conference room, kitchen, 4 baths plus^many extras.

Call 752-5048 Anytime

CALL RAY ANGE Mobile Home Repair, 752 ) 503 or 752 6471 Now is the time to seal and repair roofs.

conditioners. We do all types of Mobile Home Repairs.

CALL SEARS ROEBUCK 8. Co. for

free estimates on siding, guttering, mobile home roofover, insulation, interior and exterior painting and roof vents. Call 756 9700, exL 232. Monday Saturday 10a.m 9p.m.

CARPETCLEANING

2 Rooms & Hallway Special

Truck mounted steam cleaning for deeper, longer lasting clean H 8, H Clean Care    756-9076

"The Carpet Doctor"

CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after hard winters use Eliminate

creosote and musW odors. Wood stove specialist. Tar Road En

terprises 756 9123 day, 756 1007 jhl

night.

COMPLETE YARD SERVICE

Lawnmowing, trimming shrubs, etc. Call 752 7341._

DARLEEN'S DOMESTICS Tired, need more time? Let someone else do your housecleaning. Call 752 3758;___

FOR TREE REMOVAL, Call Tony Brown's Lawn and Tree Service. 756 6735.

FURNITURE STRIPPING

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

HOMES PAINTED interior and ex ferior. Graduate student with expe rience in painting    We give

excellent work with substantial savings over professional prices. 756 8948 anytime. _

IF IT'S IN A YARD, we'll do ill Call Tony Brown's Lawn and Tree Service. 756 6735_

LAWN MAINTENANCE Any type

Call 756 9938 anytime_

LAWNMOWER REPAIRS We will pick up and deliver All work guaranteed. Call 757 3353 after 4 p.m., weekends anytime

065 Farm Equipment

ATTENTION GARDNERSI Single

row^^iush seeder vyith row marker

W    VIIII I    iiiaincr

$47.95 unassembled. 24" high wheel push plow with 3 attachments $39 95 unassembled. Hand crank seed sowers perfect for lawn seed or fertilizer $25 95 Other gardening supplies in stock. Agri Supply, Greenville. NC 752 3999_

JOHN DEERE 850, 4 cylinder diesel Only 61 hours. Just like new. Call for appointment, 756 7382 days. 757 0723 nights._

067 Garage-Yard Sale

BIG YARD-SALE Saturday. May '        C<    '

14th, Elm Street Recreation Center 8 a.m. 2 p.m

FURNITURE, COLLECTABLES, antiques, glassware, gas and electric range, clothing. 1972 Cadillac Sedan Deville, 1976 Dodge

Pickup, Friday, May 13. 7 a m. to 7 501 East 11th Street

p.m.

GARAGE SALE, 1200 Oakhurst Circle Furniture, 10 speed bike, mini bike, and many items, Satur day and Sunday.

GARAGE SALE 535 Crestline Boulevard, Saturday, May 14, 8 to noon Furniture, clothes, miscella neous    _

GREAT YARD SALE! Bed, clothes toys, household items, books. Sat

urday, Mav 14, 8 a m. noon, 2704

PI, ..........

Shawnee Place off Millbrook be tween Memorial and Hooker

INDOORS/OUTDOORS Every thing must go to the bare walls.

Low prices. Saturday. May 14. 8 a m: to 4 pm. 1603 East Third

Street at the end of Maple Street.

LUCKY 13 GARAGE SALE All new shoes! Values up to $60, for only $13 103 South Harding Street Starts at 9

074

Miscellaneous

ELEGANT *400 wedding gown, size 8, SlOO Call 752 5872

FACTORY 2nds NOW available direct from manufacturer. Hand

woven rope hammocks, $19 95 to itfei

$53 Hatferas Hammocks, 1104 Clark Street, Greenville

FOR SALE: Kenmore washer. $50. Elvis things Call 752 7283 or 758 2073

FOR THE BEGINNER Several good previously owned sewing machines Some Singers, some Free Arm, that are looking for a new home. Prices start $39,95. Greenville Sewing Center, your authorized Singer Dealer, Pitt Plaza. 756 0747.___

SOMEONE IS looking tor your unus ed power mower Why not advertise it with a low cost Classified Ad?

FREEZER, HpTPOINT

Excellent condition. Like new 752 3619

GEORGIA RED sweet potato sprouts $25 tor 1,000. Call 752 3015 days. 756 7159 nights__

GRADUATION IDEA? Moffitt'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% off Barkers Refrigeration, 2227 Memorial Drive, 756 6417._____

ITEMS FOR SALE. Jenn air oven. Kitchenette unit with stove, refrig erator, sink and oven, gas powered generator 110/220, gas powered pump, 3 horsepower, 50 foot of Rose, spotnails. 8D and 16D 756 7755, Monday Friday, 9 5

a.m. Friday and Saturday Hill * Ma ~

Dale. Old Main Trotters. Nurse Mates No phone calls.

RAYNOR FORBES AND CLARK

Flea Market open Saturdays 7 til 1 across trom Moose Lodoe. 756 4090

SATURDAY, May 14 Three fami lies 8 a m until 2 p.m No early sales! Men, this is a "tool's para dise!" Also, black and white TV, Electrolux vacuum cleaner and much more. Back yard at 219 Belvedere Drive. _

STRAWBERRY DESSERTS, hamboimers. and hot dog yard sale Holy Trinity United /Wethodist Church. Red Banks Road May 14. 10 to 2p.m.

YARD SALE 1402 North Pitt Street (Meadowbrook) Saturday, May U 8 until

YARD SALE Clothing, glass fireplace screen, lots ot new women's shoes. Rain or shine 402 Westhaven Road, across trom Sears 7 30 to 12.

YARD SALE, Saturday, 8 until, Grimesland, Lancelot Circle, 3 to 4 families Clothes tor entire family,* household items, bed, exercise equipment, etc.  i_

072

Livestock

LAWNMOWING Other yard work. Low prices. Call 757 0317 or 752 4680, ask tor Sam Junior._

PAINT PROS

We specialize in use of Beniamin Moore paints Residential or commercial. Inferior 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    _

PARKIN CONTRACTING

ADDITIONS    REMODELING

REPAIR WORK ^INSURED Ca<>#56-4296 Evenings

We Need Two

very qualified

INDUSTRIAL SEWING MACHINE OPERATORS

Now!

Prefer experience with serging machines. Must be capable of putting together a complete garment. For appointment call

756-1044 Between4& 5 PM

SANDING and finishing floors Small carpenter jobs, counter tops Jack Baker Floor Service 756 2868 anytime, it no answer call back

COX STABLES has available stalls

for boarding horses Large green pasture. Reasonable rales. Riding

JOIN MOFFITT'S MAGNAVOX video tape club -Greenville's first and largest 2803 Evans Street Extension, 756 8444_____

LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available. 756 4742 after 6 p.m., Jim Hudson

MOVING SALE Must sell living room and bedroom urniture, lawn equipment, kitchen, etc Call 752 2755.    _

OFF WHITE corduroy couch and '56<

chair Like new $220 756 6468

ROSE BUSHES

' ARE

20% Off ' HAPPIPOTGERBERAS BEGONIAS lAAPATIENS TOMATOES & PEPPERS

Many Other Bedding Plants ANDGARDEN SUPPLIES Open Sunday l 30 to 5 PM

Kitfrell's Greenhouses

2531 DICKINSON AVENUE EXT CALL 756 7373 _

SHAMPOO FOR FALL! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company

SMIJH CORONA electric typewrit

er $200 Call Kitty at 756

area Winterville 756 2234.

SOLID OAK American Drew bedroom suit, queen size. $650 7 piece solid oak den suit, Herculon. $600 Call 756 5859_

HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman Stables, 752 5237.

SUNBEAM VACUUM CLEANER,

$30 Flat top guitar, $70 Weight bdnch, $15.757 3036 alter 5_

10 YEAR OLD Sorrell Gelding tor sale to good home Used primarily for trail riding Eastern or Western 15 2 hands $650 752 6250

TOPSOIL, mortar sand, till sand and gravel Davenport Hauling. 756 5247    _

I TOSHIBA COPIER, $750 Call 758 5246 from 9 to 5__

074 Miscellaneous

I TRS-80 MODEL I Level II, 16K ! Exatron stringy floppy data

AIR CONDITIONER Sears 4,000 BTU with variable fan speed and

APPLE //e Starter Systems Brand new, $1695. Also Apple accessories 15%dlscount Call >57 3820_

ASSUME PAYMENTS of $39 95 on a 6 piece Western li.ving room suit Sofa, chair, rocker, and 3 tables. Furniture World, 757 0451 We take trade ins _ _

BEDDING&WATERBEDS

storage Cassette piayer, monitor Many programs. Back issues and

continuing subscriptions to C LOAD and 80 US 752 2730.

UPRIGHT ADMIRAL FREEZER 9

<ears old Excellent condition, $225 5619

yeai

758

USED 25" color console TV, $50. Call 825 5781

WEDDING GOWN AND VEIL Size 10 $200 negotiable Call after 4 p.m 757 1337

10x10 WOODEN DECK $200 757 3964

SIGN PAINTING Truck lettering as low as $59 95 Call Steve Atkins for all your sign needs. 756 9117

060

FOR SALE

061

Antiques

AZ DOLL SHOW AND SALE

Saturday, May 14, 11 a.m. 7 p m. Sunday May 15, 15 p.m Redman's

Hall, 503 East 3rd Street, Washington, NC Admission $1.00 adults, 504 children. _

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES ot firewood for sale. J P Stancll, 752 6331.

up to \2 and more on bedding and waterbeds. Factory Mattress & Waterbed Outlet (Next to Pitt Plaza), 355 2626._

BRODYS HAS 6n AB Dick Copier

for sale. Very good condition. $250.

Call Janet, 756 3140.

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and installation 919 763 9734_

19 " COLOR TV, new, $245 2 toldout sleeper chairs, $50 each Berkline recliner. new, $155 756 5380_

4.10.50 X IS Firestone All Terrain tires on 8" white spoke rims. Excellent condition. Call 758 6519 after 7 p.m_

5 PIECE Early American bedroom suit $1300 firm. Call 756 5497 after 6

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoil and stone Also driveway work_

5 PIECE SET of den furniture, $250 2 couches. $35 each 756 0108.

CARPET, CARPET, CARPET!

Assorted sizes and colors. 9x12's, 9x15's, 12x12's. 12x15's Priced to move. Financing available. Furniture World 2808 East lOth Street, 757 0451 _

6 FOOT ocean Pacific surf board with tin and ankle strap. New Never used. $375. Call 758-2979

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

CENTIPEDE SOD 758 2704, 752 4994    _ _

065 Farm Equipment

COFFEE MACHINE, $50 Call 756 2121.

ALIS CHAMLER TRACTOR B

model, one row, good condition. 756 0975

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CONGRATULATIONS GRADU ATE I What better way to start out life with a new Singer Prices start as low as $149 95 for your basic machine and a ditfereni model to suit every need. Greenville Sewing Center, your authorized Singer Dealer, Pitt Plaza 756 0747_

BEAUTIFUL USED home 65' 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. $147 per month See Thomas Mobile Homes, 752 6068    _

I CRAFTED SERVICES

Quality lurnlture Reflnlthing and repilrs. Superior caning lor all lypa chairs, iargor saioction ol custom pictura framing, survay atakasany iangth, all typas ol palala, hand-craftad ropa hammocks, salaclad (ramad raproductlons.    ^

Eastern Carolina Vocational Center

Industrial Park, Hwy. 13 7S8-41U    tA.M.-4;30P.M.

Qreanvllla, N.C.

PUT EXTRA CASH in your pocket today Sell your "don'tneeds ' with an inexpensive Classified Ad.

ELECTRIC TROLLING MOTOR, Bass Tracker with battery, $115. Set of 4 15" chrome wheels, tits Ford truck. $95. Fuel tank. 260 gallons with stand and hoses. 1 year old. $90 355 2899 after 6___

FOR EXPERT TV repair, bring set to Four Way TV in Hookerton. (We sell new RCAsets). 747 242.

FOR SALE: yellow collards and

I    ^.uiiaiua    aiiu

cabbage plants. Marion Mae Mills, 756 3279 or 355 2792

FOR SALE: Model trains, HO gage Call 756 5012 after 5.

Budget Minded

2 ForS38

Quality; Guaranteed Recaps

A78X13

Whitewall

G78X1s2 fo,^44Rea . Tread White H78X1s2 lor ^45^Reg. Tread White L78X15 2 for ^46^Reg. Tread White

COUPON

OIL CHANGE LUBEAND FILTER

MO

Major Brand Multigrade Oil Up To sots.

T

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

COUPON

AIR CONDITION SERVICE

Includes Freon & Labor

21

88

WOODFVEARI

ITIRE ^ CENTERI

Open Saturdays Til 5 P.M.

West End Shopping Center Phone 756-9371 Open 8:00-6:00 Mon.-Frl. Sat. 8:00 to 5:00

729 Dickinson Avenue Phone 752-4417 Open 6:00-6:00 Mon.-Frl. Sat. 8:00 to 5:00

Msr

FOR SALE: baby crib with mat tress, $30. Baby craddle with mat tress, bumper pads, and 1 sheet, $25. Valet with shoe shine seat. $15. Student knee hole desk, $15: Antique chair with gold upholstery, $30 Barrel! back chair with blue floral

upholstery, $20 1's cases of coffee mugs. $15. Inner ring for twin bftd, $15. Cotten mattress

mattress

tor twinL%ed,. $10 All in good condition Call 756 3209.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CONCERNED ABOUT RADIATION LEAKAGE

from your

MICROWAVE OVEN

Call 355-2712 M-F HAVE IT TESTED

BRAND NEW 1983 top ot the line double wide 3 bedrooms. 2 full

baths, many extras including

..........St

masonite siding, shingle roof, frost free refrigerator, garden tub, cathedral ceiling and much, much more Regular price, $21,995 Limited Time Only

$16,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot

financing Delivery and set up included Hours, 8 AM to8 p^m. CROSSLAND HOMES

(formerly Mobile Home Brokers) 630 West Greenville Boulevard 756-0191

DOUBLEWIDE, 3 bedrooms, 2

baths, all appliances. Central air lecT B

Underpinned Barn attached Set up on.1 acre of land 946 8 436

MARLETTE, 8 X 40. 2 bedrooms, I bath, ideal for fisherman, hunter or

student. Payments under $55 per month. Call 756 9874 Country

Squire Mobile Homes 264 Bvoass.

MOBILE HOME FOR SALE 12x60. Call 758 4234

SUPER CLEAN 12x45 Conner 2 bedrooms, front kitchen $109,85 per month Thomas Mobile Homes, 752 6068    

THOMAS MOBILE HOMES

Across From Greenville Airport Would like to invite you to see this month's specials;

1983 Redman Doublewide

24 X 54, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. For Only

*17,995 1983 Redman Doublewide 24 X 64. Microwave, dishwasher, fireplace, stereo and paddle fan. For Only

$26,995

Call 752-6068

10x56. 3 bedroom frailer, partially furnished with washer and dryer* and new stove.' Also 2 rooms attached to trailer I2'6 " wide by 20' long $3.250 Call 752 6803.__

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SERVICi WRITER

Send Resume To: Service Writer P.O. Box 1967 Greenville, N. C. 27835

Salesman Of The Month

4 i

Clyn Barber

Waverly Phelps, President of Phelps Chevrolet is pleased to announce that Clyn Barber is the winner ot the Salesman ot-The Month Award. Clyn won this for his outstanding sales performance during the month of April.

PHELPS CHEVROLET

West End CirctS

756-215(K

T





075 Mobile Homes For Sale

nxo OAKWOOD 2 bedrooms, )

anees. All rooms closed off. Call 75A S372

14x70 3 BEDROOMS, 2 bafhs. S500 equity and assume payments of SIVMO. 757 3964._

19M, 10x40, 3 bedrooms, IV2 baths, furnished, S2500. Call after 6, 752-4841.

1973 FAIRWAY, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, appliances, unfurnished, $6,000 negotiable. 758 4929 after 5:30

1974, 12x65, on Pamlico River. Set UP on water front lot. Call 752 7931. 1974 RITZ CRAFT 12x65    $500

down. Call 757 0633.     

1979 CONNOR 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, new furniture, excellent condition. 90 day warranty Payments under $150. Call 756 9874 Country Squire Mobile Homes 264 Bypass._

1980 KNOX 14x40 Fully furnished, air condition, steps under pinning. Like new. Call Greg. 757 7227 days, 747 2052 nights.___

1982 NEW 14 X 70, 2 bedrooms, IVj baths, large rooms Payments un der $190 Call 756 9874. Country Squire Mobile Homes 264 Bypass.

1982 14x70 TOWN AND COUNTRY

2 bedrooms, 2 baths with garden tub. Call 756 4376 after 6 30 p.m

1983 REDMOND New Moon mobile home. Set up In park in country with pool 2 bedrooms, I' j baths, cathredal ceilings, wooden steps, garden tub Pay equity and assume loan. 7S8 61.34 after 4 or 746 3174 anytime_

109 Houses For Sale

BY OWNER 3 bedroom. 2 bath, fireplace, 2500 square feet, riice yard. In Farmville.

115

Lots For Sale

after 5 p.m., 753 3030

$59,500. Call

BY OWNER 1718 square toot, brick ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, close to schools, shopping, den with fireplace and wocxistove, living room, dining room, eat in kitchen, extra room, 12 X 14, perfect for shop or game room. Large lot. Assume TlVj% VA loan. $7500 equity. Call after 5pm. 752-6448.

BY OWNER IN Club Pines. 534 Crestline Blvd. 2 story brick Williamsburg, 34 bedrooms, 2V2 baths. Great room with fireplace, large spacious kitchen. Double carport with storage. Fence. All electric. Assumable 9'/}% VA loan. Call 756 8953 for appointment. No realtors please. _

BY OWNER 3 bedroom house, fenced In yard, woodstove. Lots of extras.746 3141

COUNTRY LIVING can be yours. Over 1400 square feet modular home on brick foundation. Vj acre lot, heat pump. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, all appliances remain. Only $43.900. Call Davis Realty. 752 3000, 756 2904, 756 1997.    _ _

NEAR CAROLINA EAST MALL 3

or 4 bedrooms, IV3 baths, large

kitchen. 2 car garage or workshop. Only $42,500. Speight Realty, 756 3220, night 758 7741.

Only $42,500.

076 Mobile Home Insurance

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752 2754

077 Musical Instruments

BALDWIN SPINET PIANO, pecan finish. 4 years old. $600 Call 752 1025 after 4 p.m_

GUITAR AMP - Music man 210 HD 130 Excellent condition. 758 1326 after 5._ _

KIMBALL CONSOLE piano New pecan or walnut finish. $1,599 with bench, delivery and 10 year war ranty Piano & Organ Distributors, Greenville. 355 6002

NEAR FAIRGOUNDS 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, brick. Mint condition. $41,500. Speight Realty. 756 3220,

nioht 758 7741_

NEW HOME in established neighborhood. Cedar siding, 3 betfrooms, IVj baths. Low 50's. Pay up to 4 points plus cibsing. The Evans Co., 752 2814. Faye Bowen, 756 5258. Winnie Evans. 752 4224. NEW LISTING Under construction in Horseshoe Acres. Buy now and pick out all colors. Traditional 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, den with fireplace. 60's. Call Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500. Nights, Rod

Tuowell, 753 4302._

PRIVACY OF THE COUNTRY In town! 3 large bedrooms, 2 baths, large den with fireplace, kitchen with breakfast area, large screened porch, carport, fenced backyard, central air, wooded lot. Ideal loca tion near Pitt Plaza and University. $60'sl756 3627or 756 5314._

LOTS FOR SALE on Old River Road. Call 752 7561

NEWLY DEVELOPED wooded lots now available lor building In Tucker Estates. Call The Evans Co., 752 2814. Faye Bowen, 756 5258

Winnie Evans. 752 4224._

ORCHARD HILLS 3 lots. FHA/VA approved. 1000 square feet house minimum. 752-6715after 5p.m. READY TO BUILD a home tor you on lots In a variety of established areas. Call.The Evans Co., 752 2814. Faye Bowen, 756 5258. Winnie Evans. 752 4224.

2 ACRES, well and septic tank. $13.000. 757 3964._

117 Resort Property For Sale

PAMLICO BEACH

Here is your vacation cottage! Three bedrooms, bath, living room, dining area and sunporch with some furnishings. $51,500.

BAYSIDE SHORES Here is your vacation home and not far from Greenville Three bedrooms, in baths, living room, dining area, garage, deck. Heat pump, central air. pier. $68.000.

Duffus Realty, Inc.

756-5395

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. CafI 758-4413 between 8 and 5.

NEED STORAGE? W have any size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Self Storage. Open Mon     '756    9953.

r.w.

day Friday 9 5. Call

121 Apartments For Rent

SPEAKERS Infinity Pos H's. $100. 758 1326 alter 5

UPRIGHT PIANO tor sale, $150 757 0510alter 6p m

085 Loans And Mortgages

2ND MORTGAGES by phone commercial loans mortgages bought Call free 1 800 845 3929.

,093

OPPORTUNITY

LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris & Co., Inc. Financial & Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N C 757 0001, nights 753 4015.    _

TO BUY OR SELL a business. Appraisals. Financing. Contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATES, Licensed Brokers, 401 W First Street. 752 3575.__

095

PROFESSIONAL

BRYAN'S PLASTER REPAIR and drywall. Call 757 0678 or 756 2689. After 6 355 6952._

CHIMNEYSWEEP Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Call day or night, 753-3503, Farmville. GUTTERS CLEANED and re paired. 752 1080.

. 104 Condominiums For Sale

CONDOMINIUM Excellent loan assumption. Private lot and loca tion in one of Greenville's most popular areas Steve Evans & Associates, 355 2727 or 758 3338,

NEW TOWNHOMES tor sale. Oakmont Drive. 2 and 3 bedroom units available. J R Yorke Con structionCo.. Inc., 355 2286.

THE TALK OF THE TOWN

Is Open House Week at Brookhill Townhomes. See our affordable 2 and 3 bedroom townhomes! Call Jane Warren at 758 6050 or 758 7029 or Wil Reid at 758 6050 or 756 0446 tor more details.

MOORE & SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050

2 BEDROOMS, I' 2 bath townhouse Great neighborhood. Lease with option to buy $32,300. Speight Realty, 756 3220, night 758 7741.

106

Farms For Sale

58 ACRE FARM Good road Iron tage on SR 1753 and SR 1110. 51 acres cleared, 6,209 pounds tobacco allotment, pond and 2 bedroom house. St. Johns Community. Call tor more details. Call Moseley Marcus Realty at 746 2166 for full details._

109

Houses For Sale

ASSUMABLE FHA 235,    3

bedrooms, I'/j baths. 10x14 workshop, 204 Burrlngton Road,

Sinoletree. $47,000. 355 2647._

BETHEL Farmers Home loan assumption. 3 bedrooms, IVj baths, large fenced in yard. Payments could be less than $125 per month. Speight Realty, 756 3220, night 758 /741,_;

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

RED'OAK, Cul De Sac, 4 bedroom, 2' 2 baths, living room, dining room, eat in kitchen, sunken den with fireplace insert, garage, $67,500. 8% assumable loan 756 5371 after 4 p.m. except weekends.

STARTER HOME 3 bedrooms, I bath, living room, fenced in backyard. 10% financing available with small down payment. Steve Evans 8. Associates, 355 2727 or 758 3338.__

STARTING NEW HOME in Cherry Oaks. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, great room. High 60's. Paying up to 4 points plus closing costs. Buy now pick out your own colors, wallpaper, carpet, etc. The Evans Co., 752 2814. Faye Bowen, 756 5258.

Winnie Evans, 752 4224._

TOWNHOUSE SALE

Village East

Conveniently located near downtown and the University, Library, Recreation Center and the Jaycees Park at Cedar Court.

Two bedrooms, IV2 baths, all brick construction with outside storage .building. 104<i% Financing.$41,900

Shown By Appointment Only. Call W G Blount & Associates

756-3000

WINTERVILLE Corner lot, new roof, new paint, 2 bedroom house Central location. Excellent rental history. $18,000. Call owner after 5, 756 4980

1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop, large great room with 8' pool table and fireplace. Newly carpeted with dishwasher, cable TV, 7Vears old. Located 3 miles from Greenville. Priced in the $50's. 758-0144 or 752 7663

2 BEDROOMS, living room, dining room, 2 full baths, den and kitchen. Call after 6, 757 1489.

Ill    I nvestment Property

BY OWNER Investment Property. Two story, very large home re modeled into two apartments, halt a block from ECU Excellent condition. Over 700 per month income. Mid 70's. Call 757 6715 or 756-0788.

NEW TOWNHOMES tor sale Oakmont Drive. 2 and 3 bedroom units available. J R Yorke Con StructionCo., Inc , 355-2286.

113

Land For Sale

FOR SALE 4.2 acres land with 331 toot black top road frontz 1. $11,500. 758 3433 between 8 and 3.

3 ACRES OF LAND All road frontage Small 3 room house on It. 758 4611 or 752 4017anytime._

115

Lots For Sale

ACRE LOT Wooded North of Gritton. $5200. Call 756 1857.

'/2 ACRE TO 5 ACRES, over 100 lots to choose from. Locations on Highway 43 south. Chicod Creek, Grifton area. Highway 33 south. Call 757 0277. alter 5 p.m. 756 2682.

BETHEL HIGHWAY, 4 acres. 200 toot frontage, $13,900. Stokes, 3 acres, $11,900. Belvoir Highway, mobile home lots, $5900. Speight Realty, 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 8. Southerland Realtors, 756 3500.

COUNTRY LOTS on Eastern Pines water system and in Winterville School District. Approved tor houses and mobile homes. Call the Evans Company, 752-2814. Winnie Evans, 752 4224 or Faye Bowen, 756 525t_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

deposit. Duttus Realty, Inc., 756

APARTMENTS FOR RENT: Stan cill Drive 2 bedrooms, 1 bath duplex $250 00 per month. Bryton Hills 2 bedrooms, 1 bath $235 00 per month. Verdant St. 2 bedrooms. 1 Vj bath duplex townhouse $290.00 per month. All require 1 year's lease and security 'posit. Du"

0811._

AVAILABLE MAY 1. New 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. Drapes, wall to wall carpet, central heat and air. outside storage. Grifton area. Office hours 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Monday through Friday, 10 a m. to 2 p.m. Saturday. Sunday by appointment only Phone 524-4239 or 524 4821.

AZALEAGARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.

All energy efficient designed.

Queen size beds and studio couches.

Washers and dryers optional

Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.

All apartments on ground floor with porches.

Frost-tree refrigerators.

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    _

BRAND NEW DUPLEX townhouse 2 bedrooms, IV3 baths. 1 mile from med school and hospital. Available May 15. Deposit and lease. $300. 825 4931.__

CARPETED 2 BEDROOM

apartment with patio, near ECU Energy saving heat pump. Appli anees include dishwasher, water, and sewer furnished. $250. 752 0163.

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with I'j baths. Also I bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers.

compactors, patio, tree cable TV, washer dryer hook-ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, duo

house and POOL. 752 1557

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one. two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appliances, central heat and air condi tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming'pools.

Ottice 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS

All utilities Cable TV 30 day leases Furnished

Witii or Without maid service Weekly or monthly rates Starting $250 month and up

756-5555 The Heritage Inn

EFFICIi-NCY 1 bedroom, maid service. $70 week. Call 756 5555, Heritage inn Motel.

ENERGY EFFICIENT, 2 bedroom townhouse in wooded area. All hook UPS. $300. 756 6295.    _

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, din washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adiacent to Greenville Country Club. 756-6869

IN WINTERVILLE 3 bedroom apartment. Appliances turnished. No children, no pets. Deposit and lease. $195 month 756 5007.

JOHNSTON STREET APART MENTS 1 bedroom unfurnished

apartments available Immediate Viz

-        ly

p.m., Monday Friday

'ater and appliances turnished. No pets. Call Jud^y^ at 756 6336 before 5

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Biaia FACTORY B EXECUTIVE DEMOS

These Cars Are Executive Demonstrators Purchased From Ford Motor Company And We Are Able To Pass Tremendous Savings On To You

1983 Mercury Lynx 3 Dobr

1982 Mercury Grand Marquis 4 Door

1982 Mercury Grand Marquis Brougham 4 Door

1982 Ford Country Squire Wagon

1982 Lincoln Continental

1982 Mercury Lynx GS 5 Door

1982 Mercury Lynx L 3 Door

1982 Mercury Lynx L Wagon

1982 Mercury Lynx RS

These Units Come With 12 Months, 12,000 MHe Warranty All Of These Cars Are Fully Equipped,

Have Low Mileage, And Are Excellent Buys!

Save Thousands!!

Your Ford Motor Company/Lincoln*Mercury Factory Car Headquarters

EAST

CAROLINA

UNCOLN-MERCURY-GMC

Wt End Circle    GreenflUe,    N.C.

trucks

756-4267

121    Apartment For Rent

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, re frigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center 'and schools. Located lusfott lOth Street.

Call 752 3519

LARGE NICE 2 bedroom duplex. Shenandoah Subdivision. $295. 756 5389._

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    )-5    Sunday

Merry Lane Oft Arlington Blvd. 756-5067

NEW TASTEFULLY decorated townhouse. 2 bedrooms, IV2 baths, washer/dryer hook ups, heat pump. Efficient. $310 per month. 752 2040

or 756 8904__

NEW 2 BEDROOM duplex apart ment with appli washer/dryer hookups, central heat and air.

756 182)

anees, carpet. No pets.

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

ments. 1212 Redbanks Road. 8lsh 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 apartment Near campus No pets. $215 a month. 756 3923

RENT FURNITURE: Living, din ing, bedroom complete. $79.00 per month. Option to ouy. U REN CO, 756 3862.    _

RIDGE PLACE, 2 bedroom townhouse, $275 month. Call 756 8436.

SINGLE APARTMENT $140 rent, $.140 deposit. Call 758 9758 evenings.

SMALL EFFICIENCY apartment Student or professional person 756 8785

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Office hours 10 a.m. to 5 p m. Monddy through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-

SUB LEASE apartment. Available now! 752 9070._

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1. 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, club house, playground. Near

Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex."

1401 Willow Street Ottice Corner Elm & Willow

752-4225

TOWNHOUSE, 2 bedrooms, I'z baths, over 1,000 square feet, quiet residential neighborhood. No pets. Couples preferred. $320 per month. Call 756-7314. Alter 5, 756 4980. _

TWO BEDROOM apartments available. No pets. Call Smith Insurance & Realty, 752 2754.

TWO NICE spacious apartments in quiet neighborhood near college. 5 room duplex includes washer and dryer hook ups $260. 2 bedroom apartment includes water and sew aoe. $250. 756 5991. _

VILLAGE EAST

2 bedroom, 1'/y bath townhouses. Available now. $295/month.

9 to 5 Monday Friday

756-7711

WEDGEWOODARMS

NOW AVAILABLE

2 bedroom, IV3 bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hooxups, pool, tennis court.

__756-0987

Help fight inflation by buying and selling Through the Classiliecf ads. Call 752 6166

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

C.L. Lupton Co.

7 hi Ih

121 Apartment For Rent

ONE BEDROOM, turnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact, J T or Tommy Williams. 756 7815__

1 AND 2 BEDR(X3M apartments Available immediately 752 3311

1 BEDRODM APARTMENT Heat and hot water furnished 201 North Woodlawn, $215. 756 0545 or 758 0635

1 BEDRCXJM, almost new. 1400 Hooker Road, $195.    756 3611 or

756 3936.

2 BEDROOM apartment Central air, carpeted, appliances. 804 Willow Street, Apartment 4. $250 758 3311

2 BEDROOM apartment. Central air, can>eted. appliances. $250 a month Bryton Hills. 758 3311._

2 BEDROOM with appliances and air No pets or children. $250 plus deposit. Cal I 752 3750 3 to 6 o. m.

2 BEDROOM near ECU. utilities. Appliances. $300 a month. Deposit. No pets. Available June 1. 758 0491 or 756 7809 before 9 p.m.

2 BEDROOM duplex. Energy efficient. Washer/dryer connections. Excellent location $275. Call 757 0001, 753 4015.

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX Available June 1. Located on First Street near ECU 757 3734 or 752 9110.

2 BEDROOM, furnished. Near ECU No pets or children. 756 0173.

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX, stove, re frigerator, central heat and air, deposit, lease, no pets. 756 6834 atfer 3p m._

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX 2 story, UOO square feet on large wooded lot with creek in the back, E 300 energy efficient, brick fireplace wiln woodstove, mansard roof, cedar cabinets, 7 closets. $325. Call 756 1447 after 6.    _

3 BEDRCXDM DUPLEX on Meade Street near ECU Central air. ran^e^j-etrigerator, hook ups, $270.

3 SPACIOUS APARTMENTS in

Avden. 746 4978    _

122

Business Renfals

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.__

FOR SALE OR LEASE Building in downtown Greenville Over 5,000 square feet. Call Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500. Nights Rod Tuowell, 753 4302.     

WAREHOUSE AND ottice space tor lease. 20,000 square feet available. Will subdivide. 756 5097or 756 9315.

2,000 SQUARE FOOT ottice or retail in Ayden. New interior. Bookkeeping vault. $350.756 7196.

2100 SQUARE FEET of retail space for lease in small strip shopping center. Contact Aldridge & Southerland Realty, 756 3500, nights Don Southerland 756 5260.

125 Condominiums For Rent

UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM 2

bedroom, II3 bath, carpeted, major appliances furnished. No pets. 827321 atter5p.m_

If you're not using your exercise equipment, sell it this fall in these columns. Call 752 6166.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAYme uauy iteiiector, ureenvme, N.C.-Thursday, May 12.1983-31

127

Houses For Rent

AVAILABLE JUNE 1. 4 bedrooms, 1 block from Pitt Plaza, Oakmont 756 1243.

FOUR BEDROOM, 2 story older home, 2 baths, 2 kitchens, large back yard. $150 per month Call 756 9874    _

OUTSIDE CITY LIMITS on Mum ford Road, 3 bedroom house, air, $175 per month. 752 7323after 6.

SUPER NICE 3 bedroom. 2 bath, close to university. $375 month 756 7417_ _

THREE BEDROOM home in quiet family neighborhood. 3 blocks from University. 110 South Harding Street. 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 l. Call 726 7415._

3 BEDROOM HOUSE, 2 baths, living room, family room, double carport. Near Carolina East Mall. $40(). Call 758 6200 or 756 5217

3 BEDROOMS, carpeted, stove and refrigerator. Approximately 3 miles from city limits. $210 a month. Call 756 1906__

129

Lots For Rent

SPRING VALLEY ESTATES Haddock's Crossroads. First month free. $40 and $45. 756 7196.    _

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

FOR RENT OR SALE 1973 Bowen. 52x12. 2 bedroom trailer. Call 756 7067.

SPECIAL RATES on turnished 2 bedroom mobile homes. $135 and up No pets, no children. 758 4541 or 756 9491.

TWO BEDROOM, turnished children. No pets. 758 6679.

No

12x60,2 bedrooms. Excellent condi tion Fully turnished. No pets, 756 1235.

2 BEDR(X>M Mobile Home tor rent Call 756 4687.

2 BEDROOMS, all electric, 6 miles out on New Bern Highway No pets 756 0975.

2 BEDROOM, furnished, washer, air, good location. No pets, no children. Call 758 4857.

2/3 BEDROOMS $135 or $175 Lease, deposit. No pets Good loca tion. 752 3286, nights 825 5391 _

WHEN SOMEONE IS ready to buy, they turn to the Classified Ads Place your Ad today for quick results

135 Office Space For Renf

DOWNTOWN, just oft mall. Singles and multiples. Convenient to courthouse. Call 756 0041 or 756 3466.

FOR RENT 2500 square feef. Suitable for office space or com mercial 604 Arlington Boulevard 756 8111

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS

C.L. Lupton, Co.

752 6116

Looking For An Impressive Driving Machine? Look No Longer

^750 Cash Rebate Or

9.8% APR Financing

Joe Cullipher Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodgc Peugeot

GRANT MAZDA

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

w

135 Office Space For Renf

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact JT or Tommy Williams. 756 7815.

138

Rooms For Rent

137 Resort Property For Renf

NAGS HEAD Remodeled large cottaqe, 5 bedroom, 2 baths, ideal tor 2 families Located on the Beach Road, mile post 11 Rent Satur day Saturday, month of June, by week or month, iSOO per week, $1800 month 975 2748 after 7 p m

138 Rooms Foii'Rent

LARGE ROOM for rent $25 week Renf payable every two weeks or once a month. Hot and cold water. Light cooking. 758 7904 anytime.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOM hOR RENT share 3 bedroom furnished home near col lege Businessman or serious stu dent preferred 752 6888 days; 752 7564 nights

142 Roommate Wanted

FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED

to share 2 bedroom house Working person preferred Call 752 0875 after 5 pm__

FEMALE ROOAAMATE to share house. $140 month includes utilities Call Janet 757 7342; 758 4467 after 5

144

Wanted To Buy

WANT TO BUY outside rabbit cage 752 8288 after 5 30

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Tired Of Housework?

RENT-A-MAID*

Por lU Littlu As $20 Pur Wuk

For More Information Call Us At

758-6066

Hours: 8-5 Office Loccrted At:

113 W. 3rd St., No. 6

Division Of Eakes Enterprises

Personal Property Sale Friday, May 13, 1983

Beginning at 10:00 A.M.

THE UNDERSIGNED R. Grimes Lewis, Administrator of the Estate of Bobby Sherwood Lewis, will, at Lewis Store, at the junction of U.S. 264 and U.S. 264A, four miles west of Farmville, N. C., offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder or bidders for cash all of the following described property;

1 One IOV2 ft. King disc harrow

One two-row Holland transplanter

   One Hardee 6 foot bush hog or rotary cutter

, *    One 4B 16-in. JD breaking plow (trip beam)

One 8x14 Craft trailer with goose net:k, tandem wheels'

One box loading trailer

One 1979 Jeep SW

One two-row Powell Automatic primer with

two lower leaf defoliators two flex bar defoliators two cutter head assemblies

   One set of four Powell tobacco trailers (good condition)

   One set of four Powell tobacco trailers (good condition)

One Powell tobacco trailer (not In good condition)

Three Powell (9 box) bulk tobacco barns

Othenmiscellaneous tangible personal property.

All Itwm llitod will km at location of mIo cm doccribod obovo oicopt tho throo Powoll bulk barm which oro locot. od on tho lobby Lowls form (formorly Alan Porkor form) on Stoto Rood 1241 two mlloc woat of Its |unctlon with Stoto Rood 1245, which junction Is obout midway batwoon Savon Pinos and Kings Cross Roods.

All solos will bo conflrmod Immodiotoly ond pur^hoso prico paid upon conclusion of tho solo.

Ownor of lobby Lowls land will bo prosont to outhorlw romovol of bulk boms to purchosor.

In csno of roln doloy, solo will bo pootponod ono wook, somo tlmo and placo.

for furthor Informotlon, coll tho undorsignod Ad> mlnlstrator.

R. ORIMIS UWIS, Administrator

Bobby Sherwood Lewis Estate Rt. 2, Box 193, Walstonburg, N. C, 27888-753-3063 Lewis, Lewis & Burl!

Attorneys

P.O. Box 4-Farmville, N.C. 27828

The Real

Estate Corner

Lexington Square Townhomes

Phase II

Near The Greenville Athletic Club

Open House 1-4 P.M.

Sunday, May 15th

2 And 3 Bedroom Units Ottered

J.R. Yorke Construction Co., Inc.

355-2286

OPEN HOUSE

SUNMy, MAY 15 and MAY Z2 2:00 to 5:00 PM CLUB PINES

547 Crestline Blvd. Greenville. NC

TWO-STORY CEDAR-SIDED CONTEMPORARY Healed Interior- 1856 sq.ft.

Double Garage - 500 sq. ft.

Decks-    200    sq.ft.

Wood-parquet floor - large entry closet GREAT ROOM WITH DINING AREA Carpeted, cathedral ceiling, large brick fireplace with glass doors KITCHEN

Eating area, dishwasher, disposal BATHS-21/!

BEDROOMS-3

Master Suite - 1st floor 2 bedrooms - 2nd floor STUDY/PLAYROOM WALK-IN, FLOORED AHIC STORAGE HEAT PUMP

THERMOSTATICALLY CONTROLLED VENTILATION FAN -A1 TIC LARGE WOODED LOT - Many American Holly Trees LOW$90s

Shown at other times by appointment.

Call Carmen or Greg Goodmon

756-9332    v





Hormonal Imbalance'In Lottery Debate Resumes Today

Anorexia Said Indicated

By DANIEL Q. HANEY AP Science Writer BOSTON (AP) - A newly discovered hormonal imbalance in people who deliberately starve themselves may help doctors understand the causes of the ruinous dieting obsession called anorexia nervosa.

The victims frequently are bright and talented young women who grow dangerously thin because of an irrational desire to lose weight. The cause of their disorder is unknown, and doctors are unsure whether it is strictly a behavioral disorder - the result of their upbringing - or whether it may be influenced by some underlying biological abnormality.

Although the evidence is still far from conclusive, a study published in today)& issue of the New England Journal of Medicine provides clues that these people have a hormonal irregularity that could touch off their bizarre behavior.

In a study on 16 anorexic women, doctors from the National Institute of Mental Health and the University of Chicago School of Medicine found abnormalities in their secretion of vasopressin, a hormone that regulates the bodys water balance.

Ordinarily, when people eat salt, their brains secrete extra vasopressin. This instructs their kidneys to retain water.

But this regulatory system is broken in anorexic women. The amount of vasopressin in their blood fluctuates, but it does not rise .smoothly as salt levels increase.

Dr Philip W. Gold, who directed the study, said he believes that the erratic hormonal

response could be a crucial biological change that turns an ordinary diet into a dangerous obsession.

But whether this actually is the case still is not clear, Gold said, because no one knows how vasopressin affects behavior.

He speculated, however, that victims of the disorder begin by having normal diets. But when their weight loss reaches a certain point, it touches off changes in vasopressin secretions.

It may be that these women are motivated by perfectionism to lose weight, he said in an interview. But when they get below some critical weight, that triggers off some biological change, maybe like the one Ive reported.

Gold measured the amount of vasopressin in the womens spinal fluid, and found that relative to their blood levels, it was higher than normal.

The hormone has been shown to influence learning in lab animals. Gold theorizes that in anorexic women, it may alter their thinking as well as their appetite regulation.

Gold speculated that when these women reach a low weight, vasopressin, from its moderately low level, shoots up in the brain and makes them pathologically obsessive. It could be that a percentage of the population has a biological tendency to respond to some weight loss with this kind of alteration.

Gold said that most and probably all anorexic women have this abnormal secretion of vasopressin. After the women regained their weight, the secretions returned to normal in most, although some still had disruptions in this hormone at least two years later.

Twins Chosen Ugliest At Knoxville's Pageant

UGLIEST OF THE UGLY - Murl (left) and his twin, Earl, Householder play a duet on their instruments during talent competition in

the Knoxville Ugly Pageant, brothers won first place in contest. (AP Laserphoto)

The

the

ByTOMEBLEN Associated Press Writer KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - A pair of 48-year-old twins named Murl and Earl won top ugly honors in a contest spoof of the Miss USA Pageant. which crowns its own reigning beauty here tonight.

The Knoxville Ugly Club conducted its ugly pageant Wednesday night, raising more than $8.000 for a childrens home and the city recreation fund.

About .500 spectators in a

downtown theater suffered through the two-hour show in which a dozen self-professed uglies modeled swimsuits and business suits and displayed their putative talents.

Four judges, who openly solicited bribes, awarded first prize to Murl and Earl Householder of Knoxville.

1 knew we would win because we are double ugly, said Murl, the oldest of the pair by three minutes. Well never live this down.

In talent competition, the

winning duo pantomimed a country ballad while strumming guitars made from toilet seats.

One female contestant made ugly faces, and a man sang a song after stuffing cotton in his ears. Im going to sing for you, but Im not going to suffer for it, contestant David Emory told the audience.

At intermission, a local entertainer sang her own composition; Just Because Youre Ugly Doesnt Mean God Doesnt Love You.

CONTROVERSIAL STATUE - Utica (Mich.) High School track coach Frank Morrow holds his controversial "Ho Tai" statue Some parents in the Utica Community School District are upset because students dance around it before track meets, chanting "Ho Tai lives", and patting and sometimes kissing its belly for luck. Morrow found the statue in a ceramics store about 14 years ago and thought it would be a good symbol for the track team to rally around. (AP U;46erphoto)

Knoxville Recreation Director Maynard Glenn and two other city officials organized the pageant as a joke after the New York-based Miss Universe Inc. announced plans to move its nationally televised Miss USA pageant from Biloxi, Miss., to Knoxville.

Glenn said his pageant was all in fun, and wasnt meant to detract from the Miss USA show.

But Miss Universe President Harold Glasser didnt think the ugly contest was very funny. He called it "silly and pointless and said it was taking away from the good publicity his company was trying to bring Knoxville.

After Glenn told a Knoxville newspaper what he thought of Glassers criticism. Mayor R^ndy Tyree silenced the recreation .director. Were not getting involved in a spitting contest with guests. the mayor said.

CBS will televise the Miss ^USA pageant live from Knoxvilles Civic Auditorium to the United States and 30 foreign counttries.

Fifty-one young women are competing for the Miss USA crown, which includes $150,000 in ca.sh and prizes and a chance to complete in the Miss Universe pageant in Sj^LouisonJulyll.

By F. ALAN BOYCE Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Supporters of a referendum to start a statewide lottery scurried for votes today in hopes of reversing an unexpected 21-20 setback Wednesday that would postpone the issue until the 1984 general election.

I really thought the amendment was going to fail, said Sen. Dennis Winner, D-Buncombe, who said he was uncertain how he would vote on the bill itself if the Nov. 8, 1983 referendum date were not reinstated.

One hopes that you can certainly reverse it, he said. 1 think that it (the amendment) will change peoples votes (on the bill). Ive had people tell me they couldnt vote for the bill unless the referendum was in 1984, said Sen. Richard Barnes, D-Forsyth, who introduced the lottery bill. But Ive also had people tell me they wouldnt consider it unless it was this year. I just dont know how it will balance out.

In 45 minutes of debate Wednesday, Barnes criticized the view that a vote in the 1984 general election would draw more people.

People turn out in the general election that are concerned about the candidates, he said.

Barnes said that in 1976, when 1.6 million North Carolinians voted in the presidential election, only 693,000 voted on a constitutional amendment.    ,

Those issues were overshadowed by the candidates running in that race, he said.

Sen. Ollie Harris, D-Cleveland, who suggested moving the date back, said it would let people vote on the issue at a time when they want to vote.

1 dont particularly want a lottery then, but if were going to have it, lets have it when the most people are going to vote.

The Senate Rules Committee approved the same amendment by Harris last

month, but Winner moved the referendum up with an amendment in the Senate Judiciary II Committee last week.

Those favoring the earlier date pointed to the estimated $100 million the s(ate could lose by acting a yea'riater. Others worried that the 1984 date could alter the results of important political races, including the expected clash between Gov. Jim Hunt and

Exhaust Loss

Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., for HelmsSenate seat.

"If this referendum Is put on a general election, the people who might come out just to vote for this at any time will distort the results of the general election, Winner said. We want the people who want to vote (to vote on the lottery).

Winner said the lottery was gaining support, even in his district, where three of four counties are so conservative they dont even sell beer.

Sen. Craig Lawing, D-Mecklenburg, president pro tem of the Senate, also backed an earlier date.

Theres no question we need the money, he said. If were going to have a lottery, we need the miyiey now

Others opposed the lottery at any time.

I cannot in good conscience vote for the bill in any form, said Sen. George Marion, D-Surry. We ought to have the nerve, if we need to, to raise the (sales) taxes by 1 cent.

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) - Auto exhaust at ground level has caused $3.1 billion damage annually to food crops in the United States, the United Nations Environmental Program said Wednesday.

It said auto emissions create dangerous levels of ozone when exposed to sunlight. Ozone screens out excessive ultraviolet rays in the upper atmosphere, but is a pungent and miidly poisonous substance at ground level, the agency said.

The report claimed peanut production dropped by 50 percent, winter wheat by 30 percent and soybeans by 45 percent when ozone measured about .05 to .07 parts per million at ground level. Corn proved most resistant with a drop of only 10 percent, it said.

The agency called the findings a totally new area of threat to mankinds food supplies.

The U.N. agency based in Nairobi, issued the findings by the U.S. Crop Loss Assessment Institute to delegates attending a meeting of the governing council in Nairobi.

Tour Burlington Weaving Plant

SHOP-EZE

West End Shopping Center Phone 756-0960

ERWIN, N.C. (AP)-Gov. Jim Hunt and state legislators Wednesday toured Burlington Industrys new $55 million weaving plant, a part of a denim manufacturing operation.

Hunt said construction of the new plant and remodeling of the existing facitlity indicated North Carolinas textile industry was doing well in modernizing its facilities, becoming more efficient and keeping textile jobs in the state.

Friday Luncheon Speeial

Fish

S049

SpMial Sarved With 2 Frash VagataMas & Rollt.

Victim Said A Poor Swimmer

BELMONT,N.C. (AP) -A 15-year-old Belmont youth, who apparently drowned while swimming in the Catawba River Wednesday' night, could not swim very well, companions said.

Belmont police said Terry Petty had been swimming

with two friends near the Southern Railway trestle on the Gaston-Mecklenburg county line.

Rescue units arrived on the scene about 5:30 p.m. and recovered the body about 7 p.m.

9

Every day in

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

GRAND OPENING

Free

Pepsi and Mt. Dew Fountain Drinks! Saturday, May 14 10 A.M.-While They Last!

THE FUEL

DOC

Free

Maola Ice Cream Sandwich! First 100 Gas Customers. Friday, Saturday And Sunday.

Corner 5th And Memorial Meet WRQRs Henry Hinton During A Remote Broadcast From The Fuel Doc Saturday, 10 A.M. To 12 Noon

Use Any Major Oil Company Credit Card At The Fuel Doc Now Through June 30,1983

HURRY-PRICES GOOD THIS FRIDAY-SATURDAY-SUNDAY, MAY 13-14-15 ONLY!

Embers

Charcoal

10 Lb. Bag

$ J40

Reg. S2.40

Lighter Fluid

67

Pepsi And Mt. Dew

iSVSiSi Carton of    16    Oz.

8-16 Oz. Bottles

$1 49

Only Plus Deposit

19

Only Each Plus Deposit

Pt.'

Reg. $1.13

Super Special Char-Broil & Cheez

Burger

From Stewart

Only

59

Reg. 99'

Nutty Buddy Ice Cream Cone

24

Ea.

Lays Chips

1/2 Lb.

Choose From Regular, Sour Cream & Onion. Bar-B-Q & Cheese.

Dollv Madison

Cinnamon Buns

79

Reg. 99

Flick Your Bic!

2J1""

Budweiser

12 Pack 12 Ounce Cans

S599

Only

Reg. $6.29

^    Sta-Sof-Fro'

Hair Spray

I $269

_jl    Reg. $3.55

Special!

Sugar

5 Lb. Bag

$169

   Reg.    $2.21

Umit One Per Customer

Get The Red Out!

Visinel

Visine

5 0i.

99

Reg. $2.79

Black Label

12 Ounce Bottles 6 Pack

$ J95

Only

Reg. $2.39

Cheese Snacks

By Keystone

21

00

Reg. 59'Ea.

Pepsi

Cola

2 Liter

89^

Plus Mt. Dew. SunkUt, Dt. Pepsi, Pepsi Free A Sugar Free Pepsi Frte. No Return Bottle.

Generic

Cigarettes

King & Super Packs

45

Pack

Hi-Dri Towels

59'

Reg. 80'

Quarter-Pounder

Char-Broil

Burger

By Stewh

Only

99

Reg. $1.39

Maola

Ice Cream

1/2 Gal.

All Ha^s

$1 89

Toms

Pork Skins $1 09

JL Reg. $1.39 Regular & Barbecue Flavor

Dainty Maid Old Fashion

Bread

1.5 Lb.

69

Reg. 93'

-AH Items Subject To Sell OutNo Rain ChecksHurry In For These Great Savings!-


Title
Daily Reflector, May 12, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - 30448
Date
May 12, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
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NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
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