Daily Reflector, June 1, 1983


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INSIDE TODAYTOO SUCCESSFUL

Massachusetts'^has reduced its highway fatalities but is also worried its tough DUI laws could backfire. The jails are filling up at a rapid 'rate. (Page 8)

INSIDE TODAYTHE LEGISLATURE

A revision of the North Carolina annexation Taw was adopted Tuesday by the state Senate (a 44-3 vote), and^^has been sent to the house for-further consideration. (Page 10)

SPORTS TODAY

76ERS SWEEP

The Philadelphia 76ers Won the NBA championship in four' straight games over Los Angeles. (Page 17)

102ND YEAR NO. 112

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION

GREENVILLE, N.C. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 1, 1983

1 12 PAGES-'8 SECTIONS PRICE 25 CENTSWaste Wafer Plant Bids Awarded Here

V.    By    TOM BAINES, ^    ^    

Reflector Staff Writer

A low bid package totaling some $9.2 million for Greenvilles new waste-water treatment plant, a project that -has been on the drawing board since 1973, was awarded Tuesday by the Greenville Utilities Commission.

GUC Director Charles Horne told the board in.a noon call meeting that the total figure for the new facility will be about $10.8 million when items such as equipment costs, contingencies and technical services required during construction are calculated.*

Horne said that, while local funding participation in the project could fluctuate from a given figure, it is anticipated 'that Greenvilles share will amount to approximately $1 million.

According to Horne, a federal commitment of $7.86 million has been received from the Environmental Protection Agency to help fund plant construction and the state Division

of" Environmental Managpnient has earmarked Some $1.3 million for the project.

Funding is projected on a formula that calls for 75 percent federal participation and 12.5 percent each from state and local sources.

Home pointed out that part of the project qualified for an additional 5 percent in federal funding^as a result of innovative and alternative features that were incorporated in the design of the complex. The 5 percent amounted to an' extra $547,000 in federal money that reduced the projected state and local shares by that amount or roughly $273,000 each, he said.

The GUC official told the board that work on the new plant, which is expected to take about two years, should be under way by the first of August following final review by EPA and DEM.

Prior to approving the low bids, Carl Harrod of Olsen & Associates, which designed the project, briefly discussed the

kr

various contracts that will be awardl. Christopher Construction Co. of Columbus. Ohio, submitted the low bid for the general contract work totaling $7.469.420. Harris said Christopher has been building municipal plants in the state for four to five years and is currently involved in a project in Cary.

Other contracts awarded that are directly associated with work at the plant site included: plumbing. Kipco Piping Co of Kinston, $69,069; heating and air conditioning Southern Piping Co. of Wilson, $59,800; and electrical, Watson Electrical Construction Co., Greenville office, $387,439, including analternate provision for two sludge Janks at the site.    -

In addition, low bids were awarded for equipment upgrading at the two existing pumping stations here, to R E Hayes of Dunn, $104,370, Edwards Electric of Wilson will handle the electrical work associated with the pumping station upgrading at a contract figure of $31,5:13

The jpptract for force mhis^ithaLwill provide the delivery system from the citys sewer4etwiork/to the? plant was awarded to Dickerson Utility Co. of Monroe for $912,817    *

The low bid for pumping equipment was submitted by the Worthington Division of McGraw-Edison Corp., Taneytown, M.d., for $168,:0, bringing the overall package for the plant and related work to $9,202,778 .

The new plant, with a capacity for handling 10 5 million gallons of wa.ste water a day, wili be built on a .5fl-acre tract located north of the Tar RiVer and east of the Eastern Bypass adjacent to County,Road 1,534 Gr.C'owns about 200 acres in that area north of the river Harris said the treatment plant repre.sents a "remarkable project"'and in securing the necessary funding, a lot of cities were wondering "how you (GUC) were able to do It "

Bidding on the project was active, Horne said earlier this month, and low contract offers came in below the $10 4 million that planners had estimated    

Another Bout Of Flooding

One More Wall Of Mud, Water

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -A wall of mud and water crashed through sandbagged banks along a suburban creek, forcing hundreds of people to stay in shelters today after another bout of flooding in Utah, authorities said.

Damage from the overflowing Stone Creek in Bountiful, a suburb just north of Salt Lake City, still was being assessed today. But no serious injuries were

WEATHER

Fair tonight with low in mid-50s. Mostly sunny Tliursday with high in upper 70s.

Looking Ahead

Partly sunny Friday and most of Saturday with chance of showers late Saturday into Sunday. High in mid-TOs Friday and Saturday and mostly 70s Sunday. U>w for period will be in 60s.

Inside Reading

Page 13-Area items PagelG-OWtuaries Page 22-Casino cheats Page 33-Summer jobs Page 35-How they voted

reported from the flooding late Tuesday, except for a man who suffered a broken leg.

Dave Florence, local American Red Cross disaster director, said he knew of 600 people who were in shelters, although some were being told they could return home today.

^ Meanwhile, about 400 resi-< dents of Farmington, 15 miles north of Salt Lake City, were staying with friends and relatives as officials watch on a massive mudslide that smashed a dozen homes and damaged 30 others Monday and Tuesday.

Two hundred people were evacuated Tuesday from a trailer court along Big Cottonwood Creek in Salt Lake County, but no flooding was imminent and many had moved hack, said Terry - Baker; county flood operations coordinator.

Govr Scott Matheson on Tuesday declared four more counties disaster areas -"Salt Lake, Willard, Weber * and Davis - in the wake of record flooding and mudslides that have forced the evacuation of thousands.

Appearing this morning on the NBC Today show, Matheson said that although it was too early to attach a' dollar value to flood and mudslide damage across the state, the scale of the devastation was unprecedented.

Its the worst weve ever had. ... a total disaster, Matheson said. It looks as though well experience another two to three weeks (of flooding)_,before its over.

A flash flood watch was in effect early today as showers and thundershowers moved through northern Utah, but cooling temperatures were

expected to reduc stream flows by as much as 30 percent.

The flow out of Mountain Dell Reservoir east of Salt

Lake City was reported less than the flow coming in for the first time in days.

In neighboring Nevada, (Please turn to Page 5)

Braswell Says His Wife Shot Him, He Shot Her

BySTUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer Former Pitt County Deputy Sheriff Billy Braswell told a Superior Court jury this morning that he shot his wife, Lillie, after she had shot him in the chest following an argument.

Braswell took the stand in his own defense after, the state rested its case this morning. Braswell is being tried on murder charges in connection with the Sept. 27,

J982, death of his wife.

In an opening statement to the jury, attorney Milton Williamson said the defense would attempt to show that Braswell did not kill his wife in a premeditated State, that he loved his ^wife, that Braswell is innocent of any crime, and that she shot him. According to Braswell, he was on his way to Greenville on Sept. 27, 1982, when he saw his wife traveling

toward Farmville on the Stantonsbiirg Road. He said he turned around and followed her down the Chinquapin Road and they stopped at the U.S. 264A intersection.

After they stopped, Braswell said,- Mrs. Braswell got,into his car and they talked for 10 or 15 minutes ... about the problems we had had. Saying he became more or less angry, (Please turn to Page 5)

REFLECTOR

HOTLine

w

752-1336

Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell your proem or your sound-off or majl it to Hotline, The DaUy Reflector, Box 1967, GreenvUle, N.C. 27834.

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

JOB-SEEKERS SUPPORT GROUP? ^

The Mental Health Association in Pitt County; which has recently conducted a series of workshops on unemployment and its related stresses, has asked Hotline to appal to those interested in developing a support group for job-seekers to contact its office. The MHA would not take the full responsibiility for establishing the group, but would have interest in providing^ support services, including obtaining guidance from someone experienced in establishing such a group in another city. Call the MHA offce, 752-74^. Leave your name if recorder is on.

CHEESE AND BUTTER SEEKERS ... formed a massive line this morning as the countys giveaway pro-' gram got under way. The current

distribution program is expected to last about 10 days. (Reflector Photo By Tommy Forrest)

Receive Cheese, Butter

^ oAfj^y turucfoR

Braswell Listens To Testimony

More than 2,000 applications had been processed by 10 a.m. today as a line for persons seeking to be given cheese and butter snaked ; throu^ the County Office/ Building cafeteria, out thef door and all the way to the adjacent Health Department, observers said.

The government surplus cheese and butter giveaway program began this morning and will continue until all the dairy products are gone, probably about 10 days.

Administration has been transferred from the Pitt County Department of Social

Services to the Pitt County Extension Agency

Persons eligible are those over 60. persons certified as ^di.sabled and Food Stamp and Aid to Families with

Dependent Children '^'recipi ents, extension off jce worker Jo-Ann Clemons said

Winterville Aldermen Receive Reduced Budget

A 1983^ budget totaling $1,610.800 $129,160 less than last years budget - has been presented to the Winterville Town Board of Aldermen for conslderatkm.

. According to Town Clerk Elwood Nobles, the decrease is due to reduced capitol outlay spending for 1983-84. The proposed budget also includes no increases in tax, water and sewer rates and no garbage charge, be said. The town tax rate for the coming year will remain at 40 cents per $100.

Items in the bwlget Include aMw truck for the electric departmnt. a used police car, 115,000 to correct infiltration

from sewer lines and $20,000 toward storage space at a maintenance building.

The budget also upgrades the towns police force by one officer, making it a five-man police department in addition,'$77,000 is earmarked for street improvements (paving and jurb and gutter) and a cost of living adjustment for town personnel is included. Nobles said.

The tax income is figured on a $33.5 million tax evluation.' said Nobles, up 1^.000 from last year. >

The budget includes the following anticipated Items: debt service, $27,795; $30,000 in revenue sharing, sewer income $107,000; electric $r,220,195; water income $95,000; $115,000" from taxes (old and new); $75,000 from interest on investments; $35,000 from Powell Bill funds and $55,000 from county sales tax

A public hearing will be held to discuss the proposed budget June 17 at 8 p.m. at the town hall, said Nobles On June 30 the Board of Aldermen will meet to consider the final budget.





2-The Dally Reflector. Greenville, N C -Wednesday, June 1.1983

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Summer Vacations Can Uiier Adventure And Education

*    W      r-wino    u/ith    Polrino

By FREDERICK M. WINSHIP ^ UPl Senior Editor

NEW YORK lUPl), r-Summer vacations can be an adventure for the young at heart and hardy of body who

Bridal

Policy

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

Wedding write-ups will be printed through the first week with a five by seven picture. During the second week with a wallet size picture and write-up giving less

description and after the second week. Just as an announcement. Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The Daily Reflector one week prior to the date of the wedding. All information should be typed or written neatly.

Breathing Fabric Is Available

would rather learn the skills of seamanship, archaeology, anthropology or environmental conservation than take a pleasure cruise or go on a photographic grand tour of Europe.

.Mote Americans are enjoying mentally and physically challenging vacations organized by a variety of academic, scientific and travel organizations A bank president, an auto mechanic and a jazz pianist spend weeks exploring how stickleback fish fossils help explain evolution A grandmother helps reassem-b 1 e shards of thousand year-old pottery. An aerospace scientist lies in the weeds in Nepal studying the habits of monkeys.

' These are only a few of the more than 1,000 venturesome volunteers from all walks of life who will participate in some 80 projects supported by Earthwatch of Belmont. Mass, one of the leading non-profit organizations whose members, for a fee of only $20 a year, sponsor field research of many kinds. Earthwatch offers lcholars field grants and teams* of member volunteers who share the cost of projects and expeditions, ranging from $69. to $1,980 plus the cost of reaching the staging area"

At the low end of the cost range is a study of Miocene fossil records in ('alifornia.s Mojave Desert, to learn how climatic changes affected evolution, with Los Angeles as a .staging area The most expensive venture is re search into the conservation k of SIX speciees of cranes m the Zha Lung marsh of

northeast China, with Peking as a staging area.

Other Earthwatch projects introduce members to the ring-tailed lemurs of Madagascar, the rich paleoanthropological sites of western Africa, the birds of Australia, Surinam and Panama, the terrapins of the Florida Keys. Romanias caves, the mammals of Borneo, the Peruvian jungle, and the greening slopes of Mount St Helens,

For the would-be sailor of tall ships. Windjammer Barefoot Cruises of Miami Beach, Fla,, offers cruises aboard seven luxur^ailing yachts. Passengers assist the professional crew and become proficient in the skills of seamanship, with plenty of time for exploration ashore, skindiving and fish-ing.

Windjammers biggest lure is a nine-month trip aroiind the world aboard the 179-foot Yankee Trader, which operates out of Freeport, Bahamas. The trip has been made by a retired geologist^ and his wife, state and federal employes, and a doctor and nurse team. It attracts an older group with ages ranging from 31 to 73 -probably because the cheapest accommodation is $1,1,000.'

The Cousteau Society of Norfolk, Va., offers expeditions from San Juan, Puerto Kico. to the Project Ocean Search site near Mosquito Island, a remote Caribbean islet, for a $2,050 share of the expenses. Each expedition is limited to 35 people and is

focused on the biology of fish and marine invertebrates and generakmarine ecology.

Another rich and varied program for amateurs is the two-to four-week University of California Research Expeditions Programs, which fall into the $490 to $1,425 range, excluding airfare. These include study and analysis of the Israeili kibbutzim, a survey of the prehistoric nuraghi towers of Sardinia, excavation of classic Maya administrative centers in Guatemala, and a study of the decline of the Metalmark butterflies in the Antioch dunes of California.

Many universities offer summer field schools, often for academic credits.

Ball sute College, Muncie, Ind., sponsors archaeological digs at Miami Indian sites; California Polytechnic SUte University, San Luis Obispo, sponsors digs at a 17th century Colonial site; and Southern Utah State College, Cedar City, runs an excavation school at an Anasazi Indian site in southwestern Utah.

The Center for American Archaeology at Northwestern University, Evanston, 111., maintains three permanent archaeological research I locations that welcome public participation at Kampsville and Elgin, 111., and Cortez, Colo. These focus on early Indian cultures, a growing area of interest among American youth. The center offers field schools for students from grades 7 through *12 and for college students, at about $250 a week.

1

A synthetic fabric that "breathes like cotton and stretch silk are among the new fabrics being developed in the textile industry, says Dr. Harriett Tutterow, extension clothing specialist-in-charge. North Carolina State University.

A new'^ process has reportedly given nylon the absorbancy of cotton. The process, called Intera, is used after the nylon fibers have been knitted or woven into a fabric. The fabric is available in knit shirts, blouses, active sportswear, swiimwear, leotards, underwear, hosiery and towels.

The Japanese have developed a technique for crimping raw silk. The-raw silk then has stretch, increased bulk, can take a crease and is more resistant to abrasion It also repels- water Reasearchers hope it will prove machine washable.

Spice Of Life

Where w o u i d chili.spaghetti or pumpkin pie be without spices and A herbs? It's the oils in the original plant material which are responsible for the seasonings which can raise plain cooking to culinary art. says Dr. Nadine Tope, extension specialisl-in-charge, foods and nutrition. North Carolina State University.

Too much exposure to the air, dampness, heat and light can destroy the flavor and odor of herbs and spices, the extension specialist points out.

To protect your spices, but themin small quantities Remember that spices in tin or glass containers keep their flavor longer than those in cardboard ones. Whatever the container, keep spices tightly covered and ^-away from any sources of heat. Whole spices will generally keep their quality longer than ground ones. Spices may be ground at home as needed.

Strong Personality

HEAVY COMPETITOR - Jan Todd, a 31-year-old blue-eyed blonde, is a record-.setling power lifter who has sometimes been billed the worlds strongest woman" She is pictured in her office at Auburn University

Change Sons Name Legally

By Abigail Van Buren

1963 by Univenal Prat* SyndicM*

DEAR ABBY: 'Diis is probably the stupidest hang up youve ever heard about. We have a son, 13 nnonths old. -When he was bom, we debated between two names, Daniel and Patrick. We decided on Daniel because my brother, whom I loye dearly, is named Patrick and I didnt like Big Pat and Little Pat.

So the problem? As Daniel grew older, he became the image of my brother Patrick, and now I regret not naming him Patrick. It is driving me crazy.

My husband says at this stage of the game we cant change the kids name. Why cant we?

KICKING MYSELF IN BOSTON

DEAR KICKING: You can if you want to. If you want to change his name legally, you should consult a lawyer. Otherwise, you can just start calling the kid Patrick.

DEAR ABBY: I need a lawyer and I need one fast. How do I find one who wont charge me an arm and a leg?

TEMPUSFUGIT

DEAR TEMPUS: First ask your friends and associates for their recommendations.

For helpful, deUiled information about a lawyers credentials, consult the Martindale-Hubbell Law Directory. Its the Whos Who of lawyers and can be found at your public library.

Dont be shy about shopping for a lawyer. For routine legal work such as drawing up a will, closing- a real estate deal or checking a lease or contract, a low-cost legal clinic may suit your needs, but for trusts, tax work, divorce or trial cases, consult a lawyer who specializes in that field.

Find out in advance how much you will be charged. Some lawyers expect a retainer fee paid in advance, others charge by the hour, and in personal injury suits, a lawyer may take the case for a percentage of your recovery.

The local bar association referral service may be able to help you, but it only lists lawyers - it doesnt evaluate them.

DEAR ABBY: My problem is my husband. He has become obsessed with sex. Hes started tobring home every girlie magazine he can find. He also buys books that show pictures of all the different positions to make love.

When we were married 10 years ago, he was a normal, decent man. Then about a year ago he started to get sex crazy. Thank God 1 cant have any children.

Last Sunday he insisted on making love to me four times. By nightfall I was physically and mentally abused. The next morning he woke me up at 4 a.m. wanting sex again. I told him I just couldnt - I was still exhausted from Sunday. He got rough and tried to force me against my will, so I jumped out of bed and ran to the guest room and locked the door. He screamed at me, pounded on the door and called me a frigid b -! ,I thought he was going to break the door down. He finally gave up, and I stayed

in that room until after he left for work.

Abby, 1 want out of this marriage. I am afraid to stay with this sex maniac. We just moved here and 1 dont know anybody. Please help me.

DESPERATE IN DENVER

DEAR DESPERATE: Call Gateway or Safe-house. Each provides temporary shelter for battered women. In the meantime you should absolutely not live with him. His sudden preoccupation with sex and his abusive behavior could be symptoms of a metal disorder. Run for your life! But first leave a note telling him that you refuse to live with him unless he is examined by a psychiatrist and treated for whatever caused the sudden change in his behavior.    ,.

Women in other areas with similar problems should call their rape-crisis hotline for emergency help.

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

SONNY AND BESSIE LANCASTER

Couple Honored On 25th Anniversary

Sonny and Bessie Lancaster celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary Friday. They were honored at a surprise'party held at their home given by their son, Tim Lancaster, Ruth Radford, Dean and Karen James.

Mrs. Lancaster was remembered with a with silk corsage of white roses and

Duplicate

Winners

Mrs. Sibyl Basart and Dave Proctor were first place winners in the Saturday afternoon game played at Planters Bari. Their per-.<fenr^ was 593|)ercent.

Others placir^ were Mrs. W.R. Harris qhd Mrs. J.M. Horton, second; tied for third were Mrs. Fred Sorensen and Mrs. Bertha Jones with Mr. and Mrs. Everett Pittman; Mrs. Andrew Patterson and Dr. Charles Duffy, fifth.

The afternoon game played earlier in the week included Mrs. M.H. Bynum and Mrs. Eli Bloom and Mrs. Beulah Eagles and Emma B. Warren, with .533 percent, North-South first place wim ners. Tied for third were Mrs. Lacy Harrell and Mrs. J.W.H. Roberts with Mrs. J.M. Horton and George Martin.

East-West: Mrs. George

Name Tags

Made By

Coastal Uniferm

Pitt Plaza. Greenville

sweet peas tied with white and silver ribbons.

The refreshment table was covered with a white cloth trimmed in lace with white spiral candles. Cake was served by Ms. James and Ms. Radford.

A memento book was presented to the couple and was signed by each guests.

Martin and Lee Hastings, first with .535 percent; Mrs. Clifton Toler and Mrs. B.B. Tayloe, second; Mrs. W.R. Harris and Dave Proctor, third.

Morning game winners included: Mrs. John McConney and Mrs. Everett Pittman, first; Mrs. Eloise Gabbert and Mrs. Beverly Maxon, second; Bertha Jones and Sibyl Basart, third.

Birth,

James

Bom to Mr. and Mrs. John Robert James, 223 Woodstock Drive, a son, Kirk Anderson, on May 23,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

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Custom Draperies Top Treatments

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Mini-Blinds Vertical Blinds

Woven Woods Upholstery Fabric Oriental Rugs Carpet & Vinyl -Wallpaper -Country Curtains

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Ri 3 Bo '76-C Greenville. N C Don A Lois Btaxton Phone 756 2876

Monday Ihru Friday 10 A M <o 4 P M Saturday bv Appointment

where she is involved with the National Strength Research Center. She once held the world record for lifting a total of 1,230 pounds in three separate lifts.! AP Laserphoto)

Jonas Salk announced in 1953 a new vaccine to immunize humans against polio.

DATE CHANGED The wedding date of Janet A'hristine Harris and Jerry Wade Jones was shown incorrectly from supplied information in the Sunday edition. The correct date is Aug. 31.

Sale. Save 25% to 50%...

...on a big salaction of mwis, womont and chiMrant atylaa.

Hares Just a sampM...

Eastern

Electrolysis

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Public Notice

Due to popu la r de ma nd the TropicaI Breeze Ceilings Fans Advertised in our 6/1/83 Su m mer Sizz ler Sa le will beavailable in limited supply. Weapologize for this inconvenience and will gladly issue a raincheck.

A new shipment willarriveinafew weeks.

WonMn's espadrille with bow. Assorted colors. Reg. $10.97 Qlris 9-4, reg. $7.97.

Womens mesh espadrille Assorted colors. Reg. $8.97

For an

unbreakable

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Nobody ever walks out of Peorle with a brand new pair of glasses and plans on breaking them.

But accidents happ>en, Even to the most careful people.

And when one does, we don'tthink you should hove to pay for it So we guarantee the frames and the lenses for one year * You break them, we'll fix or replace them. Free How con we afford to offer a guarantee this good?

If we wont to earn your trust, how can we afford not to?

*This limiied worraniy IS good tor one vPd' on frcxnes and lenses

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The Long And Short Of Loungewear

SPRING AlVn SUMMER LOUNGEWEAR -and sleepweartake on solf,.fluid shpes in silk-like fabrics. The Grecian-style caftan, left, is fashioned in an easy-care fabric. At

right, the grace of ballet provides inspiration for this wisp of a dress, a swirl edgbd and appliqued in coordinating tones of lace.

CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor PICNIC FARE Cheese Tarts Fried Chicken 4 Ziti Salad Fresh Fruit 4 Brownies Zm SALAD It may be stored in the refrigerator ovemi^t.

16 ounces ziti macaroni >4 cup milk cup sour cream 14 ci^s mayonnaise 2 packets brown bouillon powder 4 tablespoon salt Fresh pepper to taste

1 red onion, diced (4 inch)

2 tomatoes, diced (4 inch)

6 sweet pickles, diced (4

inch)

2 small green peppers, seeded and diced (4 inch) Large shallot (or scallion bulbs), minced White wine vinegar to 'taste

1 tablespoon pickle juice Coarsely chopped fresh dill

Cook ziti according to package directions; drain; rinse in cold water; ^ drain thoroughly. In a large bowl, toss ziti with milk Whisk together until blended sour cream, mayonnaise, bouillon powder, ^Id and pepper; pour

(^er ziti. Add onion, tomatoes, pickle, green pepper, shallot, vinegar and pickle juice; mix well. Garrtsh with dill. Serve chilled. Makes 8 to 10 servings. Adapted from The Store Cookbook" by Bert Green and Denis Vau^an (Contemporary).-

The DaUy Reflector, Greenville, NC.-Wednesday, June 1, i9-3

Letters of congratulations were received by the couple from Congressman Walter B Jones, Senators Jesse Helnris and John East and President

TIME FOR LUNCH Green Lima Bisque 4 Rolls Rhubarb 4 Gingerbread

GREEN LIMA BISQUE.

, Excellent flavor and texture 10-ounce package frozen lima beans 2 tablespoons butter 4 small scallions, minced ii)^4-ounce can condensed chicken broth, undiluted Milk

White pepper to taste

Cook beans according to package directions, omitting salt; do not drain Turn into an electric blender; puree In, a 2-quart saucepan, in the hot butter, cook scallion gently until wilted - about 5 minutes. Stir in lima puree, broth and enough milk to decrease saltiness and thin mixture (about 4 cup). Stir in pepper Heat, stirring oc casionally. Makes 34 cups.

Mr. and Mrs. Walter Glenn Gamer of Greenville are celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary today.

They were honored Saturday night at a family dinner at the Greenville Country Club Their children. Judge and Mrs. Abner Alexander of Winston-Salem, Dr. and Mrs.

WASTE NOT

SEA.mE (AP) - Seattles Pacific Science Center ^expecft to cut its electricity consumption over 20 percent next year by utilizing waste heat generated by a nearby utility.

According to Ener^ User News, the center will take advantage of a waste heat recovery system installed at a nearby City Light substation.

Excess heat is produced by the utilitys transformers, and to prevent them from overheating they are injected with oil. The oil. heated to about 140 degrees Fahrenheit, flows over tubes filled with water which will then be pumped five blocks to the science center.

How a ^a men of ViJ joined Mr. ancKMrs. D^lie Gamer of GreenvUkr' in hosting the dinner.

Special guests included Eva Sanderson of Morehead City, Mrs. Gamer's sisters. Vivian Lindsey and Sarah Wynne of Plymouth, Euplhemia Farrow of Greenville and Madeline Rivers of Newport, sister of Garner, Grandchildren, nieces and nephews were also present

The couple was married in Columbia in 1933. The couple met in 1928 when he went to Newport as a school teacher and in turn met the train in order to see the new teacher

and Mrs. Ronald Regan

The Gamers are members of Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church and he is retired from General Electric Co.

Americans spent $11.2 billion in hair-care establishments in 1982, estimates CutCo Industries, a franphiser of such stores.

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Odd Shoe Exchange Offers Relief For Mismatched Feet

By JAMES KAY,

INDIANOLA, Iowa (UPl) - Jeanne Sallmans left foot is two sizes larger than her right one.

The resulting challenge of finding matching shoes without buying two pairs has provided her with a career and lasting friendships and made iier the heroine of thousands in the same predicament. ^

Mrs:- Sallman owns and operates the National Odd Shoe Exchange, which her mother introduced her to as a' girl in the 1950s. Her mother had heard about it on Art Linkletters House Party television show.

The exchange is a trading post for people with odd-sized feet. Its slogan: "When odd shoes are LEFT, to trade them is RIGHT

My mother got me signed up with a young girl with, polio in Goldfield, Iowa," Mrs. Sallman said of her first encounter. The girls traded shoes for 18 years befpre they met.    '    .

"We met and immediately knew each other like sisters, Mrs. Sallman said. It was like meeting my other half. It was such a thrill. Weve made a lasting friendship.

Early this year, Mrs. Sallman took over the nonprofit group from Ruth Rubin, a former St. Louis therapist who had polio and who now lives in Santa Monica, Calif. Ms, Rubin founded the group in 1943.

^t now has more than 13,000 members on its registry. More than 600 are amputees and "most of these are women, Mrs. Sallman said.

She operates the exchange from the basement of her rural Indianola home.

People register their shoe size and width, age, occupation, preference for low or high heels, and whether they wear a leg brace.

When two people wearing the exact opposites are found, they are notified and make their own arrangements for swapping.

"Sometimes they even meet and go shoe,shopping, Mrs. Sallman said.

We serve people from ages 2 months to 89 years; men, women and children;

all races and creeds; doctors, lawyers, merchants and c h i e f s, M r s. Sallma9;9nG4,.

The initial registration fee is $22.50 - $15 for a lifetime membership and $7.50 for annual dues. No fee is charged if a mate is not found.'

When you count all the people on the registry, were bigger than, the city of Indianola, she said.

The exchanges major hurdle currently is lack of recognition, but Mrs, Sallman said a recent letter to syndicated columnist Abigail Van Buren has brought the exchange 100 to 200 letters a day.

The Dear Abby letter appeared on April 1 and somebody wrote us and said, Is this an April-Fools joket' It may have appeared to be that way but its not. Peo

ple say Its not a big deal, but it is if you have the problem.

The group recently started a newsletter and plans to expand to Canada and Brazil. Still, there are plenty of people close to home Mrs. Sallman would like to recruit,

"I had a man from Urbandale say to me the other day, Where have you been all my life? 1 said, About 25 miles away.

People interested in joining the non-profit National Odd Shoe Exchange may write Jeanne Sallman, R.R. 4, Indianola, Iowa 50215.

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4-The DUy Reflector. Greenville, N.C.-Wednetay. June 1.1983

Editorials

Restraint Is Needed

Its an old story from Washington. Congress has given final approval to legislation which will increase the national debt limit to around $1.4 trillion. This means the government can borrow another $99 billion through September to keep

operating.    ^ x

Few of those who voted for the debt increase were happy to do it and certainly'President Reagan, who must sign it into law,iwould rather have it some other way.

As in past years when the debt ceiling was raised, a failure to act would have been disastrous. Without the ability to borrow money the government would grind to a halt. While some* might think that a few months without government might be beneficial, it is not likely that our society could survive without certain essential services that government provides.

It has to be recognized, however, that there has to be another way. A $1.4 trillion debt is incomprehensible and it simply cannot continue to grow in the future.

A constitutional amendment has been proposed but with government in control of the money supply there are too many ways around such a requirement and they could be more

inflationary than the present method.

What will be needed in Washington is old-fashioned restraint in spending so that government expenditures will fall in line with revenues. If our congressmen do not have that restraint then we as citizens should make it known to them that we want

the continued deficit spending curbed.    ^    ^

Russell Good Choice

Dr. Charles E. Russell has been recommended as acting president of Pitt Community College during the one-year leave of absence to be taken by President William Fulford.

The recommendation, made by the board of trustees, must be confirmed by the State Board of Community Colleges which meets June 9.

The board has moved quickly to fill the position'for the year which begins June 1, and they have chosen a man who has ben dedicated to PCC.

Dr. Russell has served with the college since 1971 He holds BS and doctorate degrees from N. C. State and a masters from ECU. He has contributed much to the growth and development of the college and we believe PCC will be in good administrative hands during the coming year

Rowland Evans and Robert Novak

Power Brokers

T. OXonnor.

Taxes Here, Fees ThereIt's Alt The Same

RALEIGH - If the right button gets pushed, the Legislatures computer \^1 give you a print-out of all the legislation - by category - currently before the assembly. Ask for the print-out for category Fees and the computers hi^ speed printer will need about two minutes to get through the whole list

Theres more this time than any other

session, says Rep. Dwi^t Quinn, D-Cabarrus, chairman of the House Finance Committee which must handle all the bUls relating to fees. Quinn, a 17-term veteran, looked with awe on the three-foot long computer print out of the 86 fee bUls.

All kinds of fees are being legislated upon this year. Theres a higher pistol permit fee for Forsyth County, a fee to be a registered Osteopath, a bigger fee for a CAMA permit, a $2 increase in the fee youd pay if they let you buy a permanent license plate for your ,car. Local gov

ernments, regulatory boards, state gov-emroets, grocery stores, everybody charges fees.

Is there a reason why so many fees are being legislated this year?.Three experts say thertris.

Quinn says most are coming from regulatory boards. Theyve found themselves coming to the assembly every couple of years seeking to raise the fee they can charge for registration of their professionals. This year, he says, the idea ha gotten around to seek one big fee increase. So, maybe widget-makers get the assembly to say they can charge a fee of up to $100 for being a registered widget-maker. That means their board of directors can raise dues a little every year from the current $50 afid they dont have to come back to the assembly.

Milton Heath, an Institute of Government researcher who works for the Finance Committee, says recent legisla-

tkm requires that all state agencies which charge a fee come to the asembly to raise that fee. It is from that area, he says, that many of the fee-increase bills are coming.

Rep. Parks Helms, D-Meckliburg, is sponsor of one of the biggest fee increase bills, the comprehensive rescheduling of state court costs. He thinks the fee increase bills are an outgrowth of a tight budget year and an assembly thats leary of raising taxes generally.

Helms is concerned about several bills that would raise the fees charged for using District and Superior courts. Those fees would be earmarked for specific programs a break in the states tradition of using court costs only for the operation of the courts.

Rather than us taking a broad perspective on the needs of the state, rather than allocating fairly across a broad spectrum fo North Carolinians, we

WASHINGTON - The private knockdown by James A. Baker III and Richard Darman of the leaked report of a massive Reagan tax increase Ip take effect after the 1984 election points to this overriding political fact of life; The administrations tax-hikers do not have support from the powerful West Wing of the White House.

When Washington awoke Saturday, May 21, to read on the Washington Posts front page that senior Reagan administration officials were pushing a $45-billion tax increase to take effect Jan,

1, 1985, conservatives instinctively (and angrily) fingered White House chief of staff Baker and Darman, his lieutenant, as the culprits. But Baker and Darman, in truth, were astonished by the story and, in some heat, set out to find the source. Martin Feldstein, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, denied leaking the story, but the idea of a tax boost -whoever leaked it - was clearly his.

However much they personally would favor a revenue boost, the self-proclaimed pragmatists of the West Wing are resigned to Reagans veto strategy from now through the presidential campaign. In contrast to their shadowy intrigues culminating in the 1982 tax increases, the West Wing power-brokers are vigorous in denying any complicity with the Feldstein proposal.

There is nothing in it for us politically, economically or personally, one senior aide told us. Thus, such non-Reaganite assistants to the president are saying they will permit Reagan to be Reagan for the remainder of his four-year term. Without West Wing support, Feldstein - even with budget director David Stockmans help -hasnt a prayer.

The spectacle of Ronald Reagan saying

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never to a tax boost and then turning into its fervent supporter was a repeated so frequently last year that the congressional tax-cutting bloc has come to regard presidential promises here much as Charlie Brown looks u[K)n Lucy holding the football: with justifiable suspicion. But that is precisely why the presidents overall credibility is at stake.

Behind the latest struggle for the presi- , dents soul are projected budget deficits stretching far into the future. Having correctly reached the conclusion that-Congress will enact no new cuts in domestic spending (either discretionary or entitlements), Stockman privately argues that only tax increases can close the budget gap. That allies him with Feldstein, who has been characteristically forthright in claiming that economic recovery will be aborted without higher taxes in the out years.    ;

But Stockman and Feldstein have lack-' ed that essential West Wing support. Darman, whose gossamer rhetoric is renowned for its ambiguity, has been uncharacteristically blunt in private assurances that the administration will not tolerate any tampering with the third year of the Reagan tax cut effective July 1 or tax indexing against inflation that comes later.

Such assurances, as well as the presidents own promises, contain one major loophole: Might not Reagan retain the third-year tax cut and indexing and still opt for a huge fulure-year tax increase? The Reagan budgets own Fiscal Year 1986 tax increase of $50 billion is pinned to unattainable spending cuts, but liberal-to-moderate Republican senators have been moving to remove that condition. That raised the prospect that the West Wing again would play a tax-raising Lucy, at the last moment removing the football just as Charlie Brown was ready to kick.

Consequently, the most significant moment of the May 18 Cabinet meeting came when Jim Baker argued against the plea for a tax-raising budget resolution by Stockman, usually his ally. On the morning after the Senate passed its budget resolution calling for $50 billion in Fiscal 86 taxes without conditions, Reagan in a White House meeting reaffirmed his opposition to it and his reliance on the veto strategy.    ^

Consequently, it looked like deja vu, 1982, in the manipulation of Ronald Reagan when reports were published the very next day of a $45 billion tax increase, achieved through the politically poisonous income surtax - a supergraduated tax on a tax. Reagan then would not only be disregarding the deadening effect on the economy by raising marginal tax rates but would eliminate any remaining Republican anti-tax advantages for the 1984 campaign.

Next came the call from the West Wing to Marty Feldstein asking whether he was responsible for the leak (answered iii the negativ), followed by the official White House disclaimers. Such disclaimers can come and go, but the fact that Dick Darman is making personal assurances that there will be no such tax propo^ is significant, without a sudden switch in the West Wing, Reagan will be Reagan in fighting higher taxes the next two years.

Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.

Art Buchwald^

All Goes Well?

How goes the economic summit conference in Williamsburg this weekend?

No better or worse than anyone expected.

When French President Francois Mitterrand checked in, he asked what kind of bed he was sleeping in. The room clerk told him he had been provided with a large, American colonial king-size one. Mitterrand said it was out of the question. He only had $275 worth of French francs to spend and he could only afford an army col He said his austerity measures at^ home would be threatened if it was reported he was sleeping in a king-size bed.

The flustered clerk said that there was no army cots available in Williamsburg.

The Japanese prime minister, who was ^ waiting to check in after Mr. Mitterrand, ' slipped off quietly to a telephone and called Tokyo. He told his minister of commerce there was a shortage of army cots in the United States and ordered the Sony Company to start manufacturing them at once. The minister assured Mr. Nakasone the cots would be in Williamsburg by Monday.

Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau was the next to check in. He was wearing a heavy yellow sli^r and carrying an umbrella to make his point that the only reason he had come to the conference was to discuss acid rain. When toldlhe hotel would not accept Canadian dollars, Mr. Trudeau threatened to go home. ,

Fortunately, the West German chancellor, Helmut Kohl, was in the lobby and offered to lend Mr. Trudeau German

marks, which could be charged against Canadas drawing rights to the International Monetary Fund.

Italys prime minister, Amilftore Fan-fani, was asked to pay in advance, and when he produced travelers checks from the Vatican Bank, the cashier said he couldnt honor them.

Mr. Fanfani said the travelers checks ' were now backed by the Bank of Italy, and the cashier replied, "Thats why we cant take them.

The Italian prime minister was prepared to leave the conference in a huff, when a representative of the American Express Credit Card Company asked Mr. Fanfani if he might be interested in doing a TV commercial. All he had to say was, You dont know me, but I am the prime minister of Italy. The only reason they let me attend an economic summit conference is because 1 carry an American Express Credit Card.

Mr. Fanfani did the commercial in the hotel lobby and was then immediately shown to his room Margaret Thatcher had no problem at the desk. President Reagan had left orders that she could pay in British pounds to strengthen her chances of winning the June elections in Great Britai|,

In the meantime, the Japanese prime minister, Nakasone, was taking photographs of all the colonial furniture in the Williamsburg Inn, so his people back in Tokyo could copy it and flood the American market.

The German chancellor. Kohl, was shown to his room, where he found,a bowl of fruit on the table and a Pershing II

missile placed in a champagne bucket with a note, "Theres plenty more where these came from. Love Ronnie and Nancy.

After everyone washed up, they all came down to dinner, which President Reagan was hosting.

President Mitterrand got down to business right away.

He said the worldwide recession was caused by high American interest rates and enormous U.S. budget deficits. President Reagan replied he had inherited them from 40 years of wasteful Democratic spending and he couldnt change them overnight.

Mrs. Thatcher said high unemployment in her country was caused by French farmers flooding the Common Market with cheap poultry and artichokes.

The German chancellor said the British were subsidizing coal and steel exports to the United States, taking jobs away from the West Germans.

The Italian prime minister accused the French of refusing to drink Italian wine and dumping it into the streets. -Prime Minister Trudeau refused to take off his yellow slicker during dinner, and warned all the other heads of state not to drink the water While everyone bickered through the meal. Prime Minister Nakasone kept taking photographs of the Williamsburg china and glassware. As soon as he got back he planned to show them to the Mitsubishi Company, to see if they could reproduce them at half the price.

(c) 1983, Los Angeles Times Syndicate

are cmning up with literally (tozens of 'measures that affect only a few people, trying to do it in a way that is politically palatable, that doesnt rankle too many people, Helms said.

It is his contention that if a program is to be of a general nature, such as the police training improvement bill that Attorney General Rufus Edmisten hopes to fund with a $4 court cost increase, then that program ou^t to be paid for from general tax collections.

That is consistent with the user-fee concept If the courts are used by some taxpayers, they ought to pay for that use.

If the roads are used by others, they should pay for the roads.

A number of tax increase bills have also popped up this year which would tax in very defined areas: A video gime tax instead of a general sales tax Ulerease. The legislators must think^e wont notice if they nickle and dime us to death.

Public

Forum

Totheeditor:

On behalf of the membership of the North Carolina Public Finance Officers Association, we wish to express gratitude to Mr. A1 Averette, former finance director for the city of Greenville, for his service to this organization and to the city of Greenville. From the point of assuming the position of finance director, Mr. Averette excelled in his dedication to the enhancement of public finance for his city and all cities across North Carolina.

Mr. Averette has served our associa- tion as an executive committee member, chairman of the Association Education Committee and other important committees and assignments. His contribution to these efforts is indicative of the importance he placed on a strong financial posture by local governments and further exhibited his dedication and aggressive accomplishments as finance director of the city.

We wish Mr. Averette well in his future professional undertakings and recognize the city for its foresight in appointing Mr. Averette finance director several years ago. His contribution will undoubtedly add considerably to the future financial stability of the city and aid its next finance director Douglas Carter Director of Finance City of Charlotte

Totheeditor:

It is regrettable that you chose to publish the letter of Ann Coward (May 25 1983) containing specific complaints against a local physician. Letters such as this one often contain considerable bias and omit information relative to the issue. They are unfair because they do not allow the accused to provide a timely rebuttal to the allegations before the public.

It should be pointed out that Ms Coward telephoned the Pitt County Medical Society prior to submission of her letter to the Public Forum. She was requested to provide the society with a written complaint in order that the matter could be handled by a committee of the society which thoroughly investigates all such complaints. Ms. Coward did not provide the society with such a letter, but chose instead to write a letter to the editor. Thus,,her plea for help.. with our problem" rings hollow.

All responsible businesses and professional organizations usually provide avenues of redress for complaints against their members through niedical societies, bar associations, better business bureaus, etc. The newspaper would better serve the public by referring such complaints to these organizations.    f

Thomas F. OBrien Jr,, M.D.    /

President, Pitt County Medical Society J

Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer

Their Stories Are Pitiable

WASHINGTON - Two meteoric careers were derailed last week. Unfortunately, friends might have kept both on track.

' In New York, former all-America quarterback Art Schlichter, 23, was suspended by the National Football League for betting on at least 10 NFL games last year and associating with gamblers. Though NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle said he would reconsider the suspension in 1984, it is unclear whether Schlichter, a 1982 Ohio State graduate, will ever play pro ball again.

Meanwlil, in Washin^on, a no-less-promising young man, Eric Breindel, 27, was arrested on charges of buying $150 worth of heroin from an undercover police officer. Only two months before, Breindel had received FBI clearance for a staff position on the Senate Intelligence Committee. If convicted, the New York native is likely to become ineligible for any job of responsibility, in or out of government.

To most Americans, each story is pitiable. Schlichters background is obviously all-American: a four-year starter at Ohio State, fourth pick in last year's NFL college draft, subject of a biography entitled Straight Arrow. Though Schlichter rode the bench last season as the Baltimore Colts third-string quarterback, a three-year contract reportedly worth $1 million provided an ample base for the future.

' On a different field, Breindels record was just as remarkable. Before graduating from Harvard Law School last year, he chaired the editorial board of the Harvard Crimson, and was published widely. Last year he was invited to join the prestigious Council on Foreign Relations and to serve as an assistant to Elliot

Abrams, the assistant secretary of state for human rights and humanitarian affairs.

Indeed, Breindels ties with prominent neo-conservatives such as Abrams were a sure ticket to even better things (though they figured less in snagging the Intelligence Committee job than a longtime acquaintance with the panels vice chairman, Sen. Daniel P. Moynihan of New York, a former Harvard professor).

In the shades of their brilliant careers, however, both Schlichter and Breindel hid their addictions. Schlichters fix was the morning line. His mother owned a harness race horse and his best friend rode one for a living. At Ohio State he

often trotted off to the track with his coach, also an owner of harness racers.

When Schlichter went to the FBI rather than pay the $159,000 remaining on gambling losses of $389,000, those who knew him were unanimously shocked. Even his coach, Earle Bruce, was quoted as saying, I dont understand it - how he could get involved.

According to friends, Breindels battle with drugs was similarly long-standing at the time of his arrest. Hes said to have suffered from persistent hand and back pain. But some sources at Harvard contended that the effects of drugs were evident in class and exams and at graduation. That the FBI, in its routine inter-

Ef/sha Douglas

. I* ^

Strength For Today

There are houses in this town which are always referred to by the name of a builder now dead for seventy-five years. The houses stand out above all others for the beauty and simplicy of their design, and the sturdiness of their workmanship.

What a grand reputation to leave behind! Many feel that no one else who has ever built in this community had his exquisite sense of proportion and design.

The immortality of the soul is a religious doctrine. tHs aiso a secular, doctrine. There is a type

of immortality such as this buiider had which arises from true worth long remembered. There are also people who are remembered because of a book they wrote, or a picture they painted, or a movement they started. But greatest of all are people who are remembered for long lives of loving service. Children ^ remember loving parents. Surviving spouses carry on the immortality of former husbands of wives. This is perhaps the greatest form of immortality.

views with friends and associates, failed to discern Breindels troubles might seem to throw the governments security checks into question.

But what about those friends and associates who should have had some inkling of the problems afoot? Just as Schlichters teammates are said to have known about the quarterbacks gambling. Breindel's crowd undoubtedly saw the effects of narcotics but chose to ignore or excuse them.

To be sure, we often find ourselves bearing a double standard; tolerating extraordinary behavior from friends who are on fast track, while eschewing it in lesser lights. When we are too dazzled by our friends achievements to speak up (perhaps living vicariously in their glow), we bear some responsibility when they slide into ruin.

Because Schlichter and Breindel are victims of compulsive diseases - overcome only with the help of doctors, therapy and counseling - it was all the more incumbent upon friends to nudge the superstars toward rehabilitation. But that .didnt happen: Nobody likes having junkies for friends.

Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.

Quotes

"It is a mistake to look too far ahead. Only one link in the chain of destiny can 'be handled at a time. - Winston Churchill. -

The brighter you are, the more you have to learn. - Don Herold





Braswell...

(Omtinued from Pagel) Braswell said he was holding his wifes hand when she pulled away, started making a crying sound. pulled a pistol and she fired. ,

Braswell said he-went back against the door, and remeiftbers seeing her fall from the car.

Asked by Williamson if he remembers shooting hiS' wife, Braswell said. 1 knew 1 did, but 1 dont rememt^r hearing the shots.

He said that, following the shooting, he sat in the car and looked at myself 1 couldnt figure out why I wasnt dead.

Braswell then testified that he drove home, sat in the driveway thinking, then picked his pistol up and just shot myself, He said he then picked up the pistol-his wife used to shoot him with and took It into the house, leaving the other revolver in his car Chief Deputy Sheriff Brooks Oakley, testifying for the defense this morning, said he went to the Braswell home on the day of the shooting after receiving a

Wall Of Mud...

(Continued from Pagel) officials said three people originally believed missing after a 15-foot-wall of mud and water cascaded Monday down Slide Mountain near Carson City had been found unhurt. The slide killed one man. injured six other people, destroyed four homes, damaged four more and buried 12 to 15 cafs and trucks.

The mountain runoif pouring through streams in Salt Lake City was being controlled by sandbag canals on three major streets, disrupting traffic. Police Chief Bud Willoughby urged employers to stagger working hours County sheriffs deputies were investigating reports of people selling sandbags at $25 a truckload. Sandbags are available free from the county.

About 100 passengers on river-running expeditions were removed from the shores of the Colorado River on Monday and Tuesday after the National Park Service closed a section of rapids.

Many people in Bountiful described a wall of waist-deep mud and water that crashed through dikes, knocking down doors and flooding basements about H p.m. Tuesday.

Resident William Barton said he was sitting in his car helping with the river watch when the water came dowm and washed through sandbagsi "It moved my car back a block down the road, he said.

Beth Howard, nursing . supervisor at Lakeview Hospital, said about five people werp>-4Feated ?and released immmr injuries and Jeff ' Miller, no age available, was being treated for a broken leg.

In I Farmington, Mayor Merrill Petty told people at a town meeting, "We do have a very serious problem ... but not one we cant deal with if we work together.

His head bowed and voice breaking. Petty told those who lost their homes, Our hearts go out to you. When the tiitie comes to rebuild and reclaim, well help. Your neighbors will, too

Bruce Kaliser, state engineering geologist, said the slide which hit suddenly Monday night was still a hazard and officials could not predict what it would do next.

"I believe its likely that well continue to see surges of earth down the canyon. . There is a* possibility that another large mass could come down, but its more likely youll continue to see smaller ones, he said.

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telephone call from Sheriff Ralph Tyson telling him of Mrs. Braswells death. He said he found Braswell sitting in a recliner. "Billy was calm, Oakley testified. "To me, he showed no emotions.

Oalkey said he saw what appear^ to be two bullet wounds in Braswells chest and asked where the gun was. He said there are two, Oakley said "... one in the car and one over there, indicating a spot on the den floor,

Oakley testified that at one point Braswell said he did not want to live and at another time said, I never have wanted to hurt anybody. but she just wouldnt listen.

Oakley also characterized Braswell as way above average as a pistol marksman.

Braswells son, Michael T Braswell, testified Tuesday that he had seen his mother and father argue a number of times over the years and said one time his father pointed a pistol at his mother.

, His, testimony came after a tape recording made by his father, which asked Mike Braswell to forgive him and to bury him beside his wife, was played for the jury,

Dennis Honeycutt, a State Bureau of Investigation agent, testified the tape was found in Braswells county car. The tap was addressed to Braswells son*^ '

"f know this will hurt you for a long time, the recording said,

"Mike, I never did anything to hurt you or your mother, Your mother andJ cant seem to hold our marriage together, 1 made some mistakes . Maybe this will . be the worst mistake of them ^ all, Mike>please dont hate me for what Ive done.

The tape continued: "I know 1 have taken most of your world away by now, but i know you will make it.'I only wish Lillie could have understood how much 1 love her, but she just didnt, or didnt want to. Baby, I hope you dont see what has happened, but if you do, please put it out of your mind.

"This is one thing I wish I didnt have to do,' son. Always remember, '1 love you. I hate this. Baby. Put me and your mother side by side with your granddaddy in Wilson,

"Please dont go back in that house. Itll just hurt you more and you dont need that.

Braswell advised his son to depend on himself. He said "Live your life and dont try to live someone elses, "Keep some money for your future, and Please go to church; youll never regret it,

The resljX the tape was interference from the police

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radio. Braswells message had been taped over police radio traffic recorded in July.

While the tape was being played, Braswell sat still and' rubbed his eyes The recording was similar to a letter Braswell wrote to his son which was read to the court earlier. Honeycutt said the letter was founil in Mrs. Braswells purse on the day she died.

After playing' the tape, Honeycut testified that he searched Braswells office on Get. 6, and found a 1979 separation agreement and torn pieces of paper in Braswells wastebasket On one of the pieces of paper, which was pieced "together and sent to the SBl lab for handwriting analysis, Braswell wrote his son, "1 loved your mother as much as one human con'd love another, but 1 guess I just hurt her too much.

On another sheet, Braswell wrote, I know I have made some mistakes and 1 just dont know how to handle them As you know, me and your mother just cant seem to hold out marriage together anymore , Mike, please dont hate me for what 1 have done because this is the only way out forme "

Braswell wrote on another sheet, Talk can cause a lot of trouble. It^also related that people who didnt ha^ all the facts told Mrs. Braswell things that she believed.

The document also said, "Son, 1 love her too much not to carry her with, me .. Lillie and I grew up together and 1 just couldnt leave her. ' Earlier in the day, Honeycutt said he found two

revolvers, one in Braswells car which had been fired six times and one in the Braswell home which had been fired one time. He also said four projectiles removed from Mrs. Braswell s' body during an autopsy had beep. turned over to, him by Dr. Stan Harris.

Tuesday afternoon, SBl firearms expert R.G, Szymkiewicz -testified that three of the four bullets recovered from Mrs. Braswells body came from a .38-caliber Colt revolver found in Braswells car. The fourth bullet, he said, had desintegrated after entering her body and said he was unable to tell if it had been fired from the same pistol.

Szymkiewicz told the jury that three of the shots, two in the chest and one in the left shoulder, had been fir i at close range    

He also said that a hole in the center of a tie found in Braswells car had been made by a gunshot fired at point-blank range and that two holes in a shirt worn by Braswell were made by bullets fired at'close range

Testifying Tuesday, Harris described the wounds found on Mrs Braswells body and said the shot that killed her entered her body from the rear of the left shoulder pe projectile, he said, hit Nb below her left arm pit broke in two pieces.

One piece. Harris said, the lead core of the bullet, traveled through the right lung and ended up on the right , side of her body The smaller piece, the metal jacket, pierced the left lung and heart and exited the body about four inches from the midline of her chest.

'Pirated' Software Found In Purchase

CHAPEL HILL. N.C.lAP) - The University of North Carolina school of journalism has found pirated software among computer programs purchased on state contract, a journalism professor said Tuesday.

Philip Meyer said the school acquired $1,350 in word-processing software for $430 last year, and later found that' the program's copy protection had been altered,

Meyer said the school bought three microcom

puters through competitive bidding from ETC of CSC Corp. in Apex and wanted some word-processing software for journalism students.

Meyer said he was offered three copies for the price of one, and he accepted the offer because it was less than $500 and did not require a competitive bid Meyer said the copies were discovered when a factory-produced program was purchased later ^

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6-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday^JuneM^

$5,000 FOR WINTERVILLE PARK ... Bruce GrAy, left, chairman of Winterville Recreation Inc., accepts a check for $5,000 from Sammy Hodges, left, president of the Winterville

Kiwanis Club. The funds are to be used for the development of WintervUles new recreational park, including landscaping and the lighting of the new softball field. (Barry Gaskins Photo)

U.S. Signs 5-Year Pact For Bases In Philipp^es

By DAVID BRISCOE Associated Press Writer MANILA, Philippines (AP) - U S and Philippine diplomats signed a five-year agreement today on Ameri can military bases,' giving the Philippines $9(K) million in aid and more control over the facilities The pact covers Clark Air Base, Subic Bay Navy Base and five smaller stations, The United States considers the Clark ancl .Subic facilities crucial to its defense strate gy in the Pacific, Negotiations had been conducted for two months by U.S. Ambassador Michael Armacost and Benjamin Romualdez, who is President Ferdinand K. Marcos brother-in-law and the Philippine ambassador to Washington Marcos and his wife Im-elda witnessed the signing in formal ceremonies at the presidential palace .shortly after a final, 26 minute session of talks ended in a nearby guest house.

In his remarks, Marcos

rejected demands by critics \yho want to dismantle the bases. He called the facilities necessary for the stability of our region and to a certain degree, the whole world

Diplomats, military officers and other officials applauded when Marcos added: Over and above this consideration I am^solemnly convinced about the^epen-dability and sincerity\ of America as an ally .

I'nder the agreement, the United States pledged an aid package* consisting of $475 'million in grants to be used for a wide range of projects, $;O million in arms loans to be paid over over 30 years, and $125 million in military aid.

The total package, to be spread out over five years, is subject to U.S. congressional approval. The present five-year package is $500 million andendsinmid-1984.

The base treaty, originally drawn up in 1947, was amended in 1979 to provide for a rp'oew every five

years: The amendment allows the United States unhampered operations at their facilities. The treaty itself runs until 1991, after which either side may terminate it on a years notice.

A last-minute hitch in the new agreement occurred Tuesday when negotiators called off a scheduled ceremony to initial the duplicate documents .Sources close to the Philippine tiam said the delay was over phrasing in a section of the agreement that concerns the aid package.

One key section gives the Philippines' base commanders nearly unlimited access to all the U.S. facilities

The pact al^ includes a commitment' that U.S. personnel wijl respect Philippine laws and refrain from political activities, and a reiteration of an agreement to consult with the Philippines before using the bases for combat operations or missile basing.

CityCount5 5 Colli$ions

An estimated $7,400 damage resulted from a series of five traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Tuesday.

Officers said heaviest damage resulted from an 8:25 a.m. collision at the-intersection of Garland Street and Gooden Place, involving a truck driven by Jeffrey McCray Daniels of .,1514 W. Fifth St. and a car erated by Ella Shelton nhill of Grimesland.

An estimated J2,000 damage resulted to the car while police said no damage resulted to the truck.

Gars driven by Betsy Jolly Bright of Route 1, Winterville, and Shirley Adell Blagmon of 106B Cedar Court collided about 2:50 p.m. at the intersection of lOth and Charles streets, causing $300 damage to the Bright car and' $1,500 damage to the Blagmon car.

Investigators reported cars driven by Johanna Krump May of 407 Abel St. and Lillian Hudson Powell of 1606 Canteburry Road collided about 2:55 p.m. at the intersection of Elm and Fourth streets Police set damage at $250 to the May car and $1,500 to the Powell vehicle. .

A 2:49 p.m. collision on 10th Street, 120 feet west of the College Hill Drive intersection involved a car driven by James Alvin Stan-cill of Route 1, Grimesland, and an unoccupied car owned by Justin Allen Baumgardner of Route 5, Gastonia, police said.

Damage from the collision was set at $1,100 to the Stancill car and $200 to the Baumgardner car.

Parry Alexander Harrison of Route 1, Robersonville, was charged with failing to see his intended movement could be made in safety following investigation of a 4:31 p.m. collision on Memorial Drive, 25 feet north of the Fifth Street intersection.

Police said damage to the truck driven by Harrison was set at $50, while damage to the second vehicle involved, a car operated by Lloyd Keith Willard of Route 4, Greenville, was placed at $500.

Day Care Personnel At Recent ECU Session

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SUMMER QUARTER 1983

YOU CAN REGISTER NOW Today, June 1 and Thursday, June 2 (ONLY)

ATTENTION FOR SUMMER QUARTER ONLY

(DAY CURRICULUM!

Pill Communily College will operale on a 4-day week (7:30 a.m. 6:00 p.m.) lo enable, lax savings on ulllilies and reduce commuling expenses for sludenis "Evening Classes nol alfecled."

Last day to register; Thursday, June 2,1983 from 9:00 A.M. to 2:00 P.M.; Last Evening to Register: Thursday June 2,6:15 P.M. to 8:00 P.M.

Late registration fee of $5.00 beginning Thursday.

June 2,1983 Classes in progress

Tuition. $3.25 per cre.diV^pr - $39.00 Maximum Tuition

Tuition for Non-Resident of N C. approximately^ times Resident cost "

Activity Fee $6.00

Students may register for as many or as few courses as they wish

'Technical and Vocational Courses 'Curriculum courses approved for V.A. benefits 'Evening counseling services available

For Application Blanks or other information contact: Admission Counselors Pitt Community College P.O. Drawer 7007 Highway 11, South Greenville, N.C. 27834 __    ^    Phone:756-3130

Evening counseling Is available for both present and future students lo assist them in course selection and career planning on Monday and Thursday evenings from 5:00 P.M.-8:30 P.M. For more Information call Pitt Community College, 756-3130, Ext.

Pill Communily College Permits An Individual lo Enroll in Selected Short Courses

-Enroll in a combination ol regular quarter length courses and selected short courses -Enroll in a program that can result in a reduced course load in the quarters that follow Enroll in a course to remove a deficiency that would prevent you from entering a lour year school

212

REGISTRATION IS OPEN

Begin your career by registering in one of the following Curriculum Degree, Diploma or Certificate Programs.

Accounting Agricultural Business Technology Agricultural Science Air and Water Resources Architectural Technology Automotive Mechanics .

Business Administration Carpentry and Cabinet Making Commercial Arts and Graphic Design Correctional Science Cosmetology Electronics Engineering Technology Pre-Business Administration Pre-Education (Elementary)

Pre-Liberal Arts Teacher Assistant Electronic Servicing Electrical Installation and Maintenance Masonry Energy Technology Farm Machinery Mechanics General Office Technology Heating, Air Conditioning & Refrigeration ,    Hospital Ward Clerk

Human Services Technology Industrial Maintenance Engineer Industrial Management Technology Medical Secretary Paralegal Police Science Vet Farm Coop Program Welding

COLLEGE TRANSFER

(Evening)

ACT 150    PnnofAcclg

ECO 151    Economics

ENG 150    Composition I

SOC 150    Sociology I

Cost Hours

13 00 7-9 30 9 75 7-10 9 75 7-10 16 25 7-9:30

EVENING PROGRAMS

Register for the Following Evening Classes Now

DAY

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9.75

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BUS 103

IntermedType

9.75

7-9:30

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Ten-Key Add (SL)

3.25

7-9

BUS 151

Full-Key Add (SL)

3.25

7-9

BUS 154

Cash Register (SL)

3.25

7-9

7-10

BUS 166

Business Law

9.75

BUS 231

Sales & Invent

Proc(SL)

0 9.75

7-10

BUS 272

Prin ol Supervision

9.75

7-10

CAR1102B

Carp:m'wk&

Cabinet Mkg.

6.50'

7-10

OFT 101

Oralting

6.50

6:30-10:30

EDP112

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9.75

6:30-8:30

EDP112L

Micro-Computer Lab

TBA

EDP113

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9.75

6:30-8:30

EDP113L

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TBA

ENG 101

Grammar

9.75

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ENG 1Q2

Composition

9.75

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ENG 204

Oral Communications

9.75

7-10

MAT 100R

Computational Skills

16.25

7-9:30

MAT 101

Algebra 1

16.25

7-9:30

MAT 110

Bus Math

16.25

7-9:30

PHO116A

Photography

6.50

6-10

PME1224

Automatic Trans

9.75

7-9;30

SOC 103

Social Problams

9.75

7-10

WLD121

Arc Weld

> 13.00

6-10

WLD1102

Basic Gas Weld

3.25

6-9

WLO1120B

Oxy-AcetWeld

9.75

6-10,6-9

WLD1121A

Arc Weld

13.00

6-10

WLD1122B

Comm & Ind Prac

9.75

6-9

WLD1123

Inert Gas Weld

6.50

6-10

ECU News Bureau Approximately 350 day care idministrators, teacfiers and aides participated in a workshop titled Look East: Chfldren in Group Care at East Carolina University recently.

The program featured sessions for all ages and was sponsored by the N.C. Office of Day Care Services, the N.C. Day Cane Association and ECU.

The keynote address, Have You Hugged Yourself Today? was given by Rachel Fesmire, director of the Office of Day Care

SLAUGHTER KAMPALA, Uganda (AP)

- Guerrillas armed with guns, knives and spears at-stacked a refugee camp and killed about 100 people, a churdvbacked newspaper reports.

MET HEAD-ON

DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP)

- Thirteen people died Monday when a passenger bus collided head-on with a truck 30 miles from here on-the Dhaka-Aricham Highway.

Services. Three eastern N.C. legislators, Reps. John (iillam II, Walter Jones Jr. and Edward Warren, discussed current day care legislation at an afternoon panel session. *

Woii(sh(^ leaders included Drs. James Hughes and Sudesh Kataria of the ECU School of^ Medicine; Ann Harrison, dirfector of pupil personnel and exceptional childrens services for the Greenville schools; Kay Galloway, director of the Pitt Community College Preschool Laboratory; Gladys Williams and Pam Thornton, therapeutic preschool teachers with the Edgecombe Nash Mental Health Center;

Ebbie Hatton, preschool teacher at St. Pauls Episcopal Day School, Greenville; Jan Kidd, Wilson learning consultant; Dr. Jannis Shea of the ECU School of Home Economics; Brenda Ernest of Waldrop Acres Day/Care Center, Greenville/ .

Du Caiol Veitch of the ECU Department of Library Science; Barbara Burton, educational consultant with Southeastern Mental Health

Center: Lauren George of Southeastern Community College; Lauretta Allen-Adams and Ernie Morrow of the N.C. Department of Human Resources, and Ann Sayetta of the Greenville After-School Pro^am.

Area praticipants included:

AYDEN - Lecia Miller, Hazel Wiggins, Shirlee Williams, Jennifer Wells and Laura McLawho{|i.

STOKES - Margie Smith, Route 1.

WINTERVILLE - Annie Clark, Mamie Edge, Deloris Williams and Vernistine Edwards.

GREENVILLE - Betty Carson, Martha Snipes and Kay Galloway. Pitt Community CoUege Preschool Laboratory; Melva Tyer Pollard, Agnes Fullilove Community School; Pat Oswalt, Pitt County Department of Social Services; Mary Chrisman Gail Wynne, Kaye Anderson, Amy Ma-ness, and Tamelia Denton, Rubetta Shackelford, Pat Adams, Vicki Durnam, Be^ Davis, Margaret Burgin, Shirley Jones, Debbie Free, Betty Flanagan, Stephanie Hudnell, Janet Byms and Ellen Denton.

FARMVILLE - Edith Baines and Charlene Wooten.

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, June 1,1983-7

Falwell Avers Telethon Clls Not A Conspiracy

By DONALD M,ROTHBERG AP Political Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - A Democratic Party official calls it a conspiracy, but the Rev, Jerry Falwell says it was just a coincidence that attempts by the Moral Majority and the Republican Party to stir opposition (6 a Democratic fund-raising telethon sounded so, much alike,

Bob Neuman, spokesman for the Democratic National Committee, cited "striking similarities Tuesday between the messages sent out by the Republicans and the Moral .Majority He noted that the cablegram sent out .May 18 by GOP chairman Frank Fahrenkopf Jr and the letter sent eight days later by Falwell recommended similar courses of action.

Each used numbered

After-School Job Questioned .

NEW YORK (UPl) - After-school jobs for teenagers may do more harm than good, says Laurence Steinberg, a social ecologist at the University of California, Irvine. , .

"People who insist that working is wonderful for kids 'usually have romantic, outdated notions of what it is, says- Steinberg in an article in the Jue issue of .McCalls magazine.

It is usually not. h? says, "anclse, ;one-to-one appren tic&hip With an adult ... for many teens work is nothing " more than standing in an assembly line wrapping burgers."

A UCI study shows typical jobs for teenagers have an impersonal environment, work that appears meaningless. autocratic supervisors and low wages. -

Another study cited by Grace Weinstein, author of the article, showed a majority of 12-to 17-year-olds hold part-time jobs, and the proportion of working teenagers has increased steadily over the past 20 years.

paragraphs to urge their followers to (1) watch the Democratic fund-raising telethon broadcast on May 28 and 29 on NBC and (2) call the toll-free number The Falwell letter, sent to 100,000 supporters of his conservative group, also urged readers in the second numbered paragraph to "let them know that you support the president and resent their slanted distortions."

The Fahrenkopf cablegram. sent to nearly one million Republicans, wefil to a paragraph numbered (3) to urge recipients to "tell them you support the president. Tell them what you think of their unfair attacks on our party. Let them know you do not buy their distortions.

The next paragraph in the Falwell letter asked for a $15 contribution to the Moral .Majority, while the GOP cablegram asked recipients to send $15 to the party.

Cal Thomas, spokesman for the Moral Majority, said he talked to Falwell about the Neuman allegations and that the fundamentalist minister said there was "no consultation with GOP officials "before, during or after" he sent his letter.

Thomas sid Falwell called any similarity a coincidence.

"We've got some people who think like we do, fortunately. at the RNC and that accounts for the similarity in the messages, Thomas' added.

"This thing smacks of conspiracy, said Neuman. ' The Democrats are claiming the'cablegram and the letter were part .of a campaign to jam their telephone lines and prevent peo

ple from pledging money to the opposition party.

Neuman said the partys lawyers were . "building a rather juicy case to claim damages for interfering with their fund-raising program. "We jpst havent made up our mind exactly what action to take, he added Despite the appeals by opponents of th> 17-hour telethon, the Democrats said they received about $20 million in pledges, about double what they predicted in advance of the program.

If the party gets a 75 percent return on the pledges it would net about $10 million from the program, which cost $6 million to produce and get on the air. , Neuman also said the party had learned that ads were placed in newspapers in some California counties urging people to call the telethon numbers and protest

The only county he could identify was Calaveras^ where an ad appeared in the Sam Andreas Enterprise, a weekly newspaper with a circulation of 4,800.

Placed by Mrs. Ruth Caldwell, a local Republican activist, the ad urged people to call "to .support our great leader."    .    

The 81-yearold Mrs Caldwell said she pilaced the ad after receiving Fahrenkopfs cablegram because "he told me to contact "every Republican in my county."

Mrs. Caldwell said she is a former actress who first met Reagan in 1937. at Warner Brothers studio and "he my-dear friend . He calls me up to talk whenever he comes to the ranch "

NOTICE OF BIDS FOR RESIDENTIAL REHABILITATION GRANT WORK TOWN OF FOUNTAIN

Notice is hereby given that the Town of Fountain will receive and_ppen bids on June 9. 1983 at 10:00 a.m. in the Fountain Town Hall for the rehabilitation of one dwelling unit. This work ^.funded through the Department of Housing and Urban Development FY 1980 Community Development Block Grant Program.    ^

Instructions for Bidders may be obRnned Monday through Friday during normal office hours from the Town Clerk at the Town of Fountain Town Hall.    '    .

OFFER EXPIRES 11/30/83

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8-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C.-Wednesday, June 1,Success Could Spoil Drive Against Tipsy Drivers

By JAMES SIMON .

Associated Press Writer

BOSTON (AP) - A campaign to take drunken drivers off Massachusetts highways has been so successful that county sheriffs complain they are running out of jail space to house thousands of tipsy motorists.

Some officials say the get-tough law, passed last September, may be working almost too well.*

Arrests are up, and highway fatalities are down. But prison cells are jammed with drinkers who choose a

short jail term instead of a longer hospital stay that could attapk the root cause of drunken driving.

The guys in jail, all they can think about is an ice cold brew when they get out, said Paul Ruane, a former prison official who now works at an underused hospital program for drunken drivers near Worcester.

There is a tremendous awareness out there of the problem of drunken drivers, but not of the problem of alcoholism - which must be addressed, said Ruane. People dont see that side.

AFTERMATH - Tuesday morning this was the scene outside the east gate of Glen Helen Regional Park, site of the three-day US Festival. Concert goers left behind coolers, bottles, food, fawn chairs, etc. The result was a massive garbage pile. (APLaserphoto)

Construction Is Up 48,7 Percent

KALKIGH, N.C. lAP) -Building activity in 44 North Carolina cities and towns in February increased 48 7 percent, from February 1982 with an 82.9l percent jump in the value of that construe tion, state Labor Commissioner John Brooks says. -The estimatedJ/alue of-the" 2,80:i authorized units was nearly $108 million, up from the year before, when 1,888 units were built. Brooks said in a statement received Tuesday.    '

Compared to January, building activity was up 9.2 percent from 2,888^units, and value gained 7. percent from about $99 million.

Authorizations for multifamily units gained 206.8 percent compared to February 1982, with permits for single-family homes up 184.7 percent. Nonresiljlential construction increased'4.1 per-cent, with additions and al-t terationsup 3.8percent.

' Multi-family units totaled 583, compared to 190 in February 1982. Value, at about $9,9 million, increased i 189.7 percent from about $3,4 I million The units were up 9 percent from January, but lvalue was down 10.1 percent.

Brooks said 831 permits for

I ingle-family homes w,ere ssued, compared to 3,84 in \^bruary 1982, V^ilue, at

tout $34.8 million, increased 1.2 percent from $14.3

Iiillion The number of prmits rose 14 3 percent

from Januarys 727 with value up 8.8 percent

Compared to February .1982, the average construction cost for a single-family home increased 2.8 percent to $41,818, but the average was down 8.1 percent from .January;

Nonresident iai construction, with 201 permits valued at about $39.8 million, was up from 193 in February. 1982, The permits were down 13.4 ' percent from January

Permits issued for additions and alterations, 1,188 valued at about $22 million, were up 108 percent from January.

Charlotte led North Carolina cities in the value of authorized construction in February with about $38.3 million Next were Raleigh at $18.8 million, Asheville at $8.4 million, Durham at $8.1 million and Winston-Salem at $8.9 million. Cary and High Point each reported more than $3 million, while Greensbcro and Jacksonville exceeded $2 million.

Record Kiss Hit 3-Week Mark

I

I

I

I

I

I

>till Growing

TOKYO (AP) - The opulation of metropolitan kyo was estimated at 716,149 as of May I, the y government said sday.

'okyo comprises 23 rds, 31 surburban cities 1 towns, one village and e islands, an area of 1.19 square miles.

he 11.7 million figure m ludes the suburban I es and islands, the of-I als said. The population the 23 wards alone, I *'ch cover an area of H 09 square miles was ^^nated at 8,349,831 and rank Tokyo the sixth ^ populous urban area > world., they said.

LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) - After three weeks of closeness, a New York actor and actress have ended what they believe is the worlds longest kiss,

Dino DeLoren, 20, and Barbara Kane. 27, kissed for 21 days - with a five-minute break each hour - to try to ; win recognition from the Guinne.ss Book of World Records,-    *

The pair began their kissing session three weeks ago in New York City, continued while traveling here by plane and finally ended the smooch on Tuesday.

Chris Harris, their publicist, says the pair initially set the world record on Valentines Day in Los Angeles with an eight-day kiss. However, a Las Vegas couple challenged them and they had to try again. The Nevada kissers gave up Saturday. Harris said the move from New York was. approved by Guinness officials and that he expected the record to be recognized after proof of the mark is submitted.    *

Sheriffs, alarmed by the wave of new prisoners com-ing4o their jails and houses of correction, say most drivers receive no treatment for alcoholism.

Were just warehousing them. We dont have the money to do any treatment, said Edward Henneberry Jr., sheriff of Middlesex County, the states largest county. Nearly one-third of the 628 inmates now in his custody were arrested for drunken driving.

"People have no idea how many drivers are winding up in jaij, Henneberry said. When your neighbor says 'hes going to the Bahamas for a week and doesnt come back with a tan, maybe its

not because, of the bad weather.

The stricter law was designed to stop a revolving door in Massachusetts where a motorist arrested for drunken driving could avoid a conviction by agreeing to attend alcohol education classes. Many drivers had been arrested five or more times without a single conviction because they repeatedly agreed to attend a class one night a week for eight weeks, officials say.

Now those drivers face an automatic seven-day jail term or 14 consecutive days at a state hospital for a second offense. A third conviction brings 60 days imprisonment.

The states public safety office estimated drunken driving arrests will total about 33,000 this year, up from 33,000 in 1982. About 5,000 repeat offenders will be forced to serve prison terms Overall highways deaths are expected to drop 10 percent this year, from the 650 recorded in 1982.,

But the county jails, where drunken drivers are sent, are bursting, operating at 42 percent over capacity. The state prisons, operating at 27 percent over capacity, can offer no help.

All we can do is place them in with the general population, said Plymouth County Sheriff Peter Flynn. Most of these people dont

have a criminal bi^ry, and were placing them smack dab in the middle of a population where they dont belong.

The Legislatures "safety valvel for jail crowding was supposed to, be five alcohol rehabilitation programs at state hospitals or 'similar institutions. Re[>eat offenders would be ^ven a final chance to get help for their drinking problems before being sent to jail.

But only one program - at Rutland Heights State Hospital - has opened, and it has operated at 50 percent capacity.

The reason: MosF judges impose the minimum mandatory jail sentence of seven

days on seoMxl offenders. Many defendants can serve the time on split weekends.

In contrast, a driver who volunteers for the hospital program must be away from home for 14 consecutive days, pay $370.02 for hospital room and board, remain on probation and usually attend Alcoholics Anonymous meetings for 30 weeks after leaving.

However, the Rutland program has been praised by patients, sheriffs, legislators and groups such as Mothers Against Drupkfn Driving for its no-nonseife| approach in forcing drivers to confront their drinking problem.

The hospital, which is run like a minimum security

prison, fteatures individual^ counseling. Alcoholics Anon-, ymous meetings, realistic looks at prison life and workshops on what people can do with their ^lare time instead of ending it in a bar.

You have pe(^Ie talking here who were ex-alc(*dics and now have eight years sobriety. You get it from the horses mouth, said Donald Leathers, 21, of Haverhill, who completed the program Mayl.

Im dazzled by how well it took. I can live my life witjujut alcohol, he sjfid/^efore I left, my ^ndmother said, I hope yoihtome back a changed man. I think I will.

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:.,,', NN.

iDistrict Court

^dge H. Horton Rountree and Judge E. Burt Aycock di^Msed of the following cases during the April 18 - 21 term of District Court in Pitt County.

BClan Corbett Blaine. Eastbrook Apt., larceny, 6 months jail suspended on pay ment of SitXI and cost, probation 2 van

Auataniel Brown. Emma Place, reclcfcss driving. 90 days jail suspended on payment of Sl.su and cost Tony Anson Clevmger. Greenway Apt... stop light violation, 30 days jail suspanded on payment of S.50 and cost Stanley Grav Corbett Farmville 10% bloiod alcohol content. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $170 and cost, surrender opeaiors license Joan Reily Charbonnean Florida driving under influence 6 months jail suspaiHled on payment of SIUO and cost '

Robert Carl [)unn Jr. Greensboro reckless driving. 60 days jail suspended on payment of tiu and cost William Robert Enecks. Hooker KuJj^nspei'tion violation dismissed ^.j^bara Stoner Eutrell, Ayden exceeding safe speed prayer, for judgement continued upon payment of cost

Raymond Lee Gtbbs .Ahoskie driving under influence 6 months jail . suspended on payment of $190 and cost, surrender operators license attend alcohol workshop Mark Alan Hanna Southern Pines, 10% blood alcohol content 6 months jail suspended on payment of SlOu and cost, surrender operators license, attend alcohol workshop Frank Paula Harris Fleming Street, reckless driving resisting arrest 6 months, speeding as.sault oh officer, dismissed Charles F7dward Lamb Jr Garland, speeding, lu days |ail suspended on pay ment of $2.i arid cost Albert Bristol Magginness Student

Sti^. larceny, 9U days jaU suspended on payment of ^ and coct Richard .AJIm Mannuig. Route 13. Greenville driving under influence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and cost, surrender operator iK-ense

Kenneth L. Melton. New Bern, unregisteried vehicle, dismissed < Norris Monk. Winter ville, communicating threats dismissed William Norfleet Grimesland driving while license revoked 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and cost    ,

James Roy Payton. Route 6, Greenville, dnving under influence exceeding sale spieed 6 months jail suspended on pay ment of $,Ttk) and cost, surrender operators license, attend alcohol workshop slop light violation, dismissed Carolyn Crandall Shephard Mumford Road no operators license, dismissed .Michael Scxitt Stevenson Route 13, (ireenville, registration and no financial responsibility violation. 30 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost

Mattie Ruth Stocks. Route 11, Greenville domestic trespass not guilty

Teresa Ann Swam. Washington, "speeding prayer for judgment contini^l upon payment of cost Thimias l,ewis Turner Jr Camp la*jeune. hit and run 6 months jail suspended on payment of SlUU and cost. $7.)U restitution Harold I pchurcb Watkins Jr Raleigh expired license plate. (Iismissenl Ronald lae Windbarger Burlington

C

reckless d'nving. cost Tony Carrol ' Marstjburn. Jacksonville, reckless drivmg. 90 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and

cost

Jimmy Carlton Foreman. Fourteenth Street, no operators license. 3 days jail suspended on payment of cost James Edward Chance. Route 5. Greenville, no operators license. . days jail suspended on payment of IZv and cost

Edward Austin. Charlotte, worthless check. 30 days jail suspended on pa V ment of cost and check Robert Cox. Fifth Street worthless check, 10 days jail suspended mi payment of cost and check janite S Durham. Hudson Street, worthless check lo days jails suspended on payment of cost and check

Preston Ellis. Tarboro worthless check.- 30 days jatl suspended on payment of cost and check Lisa Gay Green. Route 3. Greenville, driving under influence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost, ''attend alcohol workshop surrender operators license Willie James Hoido Jr Route. 8, Greenville, assault on female, malicious prosecution prosecuting witness pay cost Canary ,Wyvona Joyner, Darden Drive. .^BC violation. 6 months jail suspended on pay ment of $150 and cost Anthony Liaps. Hookirtoij shoplifting, not guilty Henry Mills. Winterville. worthless cfleck, dismissed James Edward McNair Bethel communicating threats ,10 days jail suspended on pay ment of $25 and cast

Dorothy Marie ttverton. Mumford Road, a&sault with deadly weapon. I year suspended on paymentof cost, probation 2 years'

William M Peele Bethel, injury personal property. 90 days jail suspended on payment of cost. $500 restitution Beverly Perkins, worthless check, dismissed Willie Lee Roberson Bethel, no financial responsibility. fictitious registration plate, driving under influence 2nd offense, improper passing. 2 years jail suspended on payment of $200 and cost, $800 restitution Sherri Robinson. Cherry Court, worthless check. 10 days jail Paul Vines Jr Farmville. assault on female, malicious prosecution, prosecuting witness pay cost Sharon Brown, Grifton. worthless check 10 days jail suspended on payment of,cost and check Rayfiel3vines. Winterville. dispose of secured property, not guilty Dedria Westmoreland. Lakeview Terrace, shoplifting. 6 months jaii suspended on payment of $50 and cost, probation 2 years Betsy Fleming Nash Street. Irespa.ss not guilty Roger Clinton Venters. Ayden speeding, prayer lor judgment cont inued upon pay ment of cost George Baracus Massachusetts drivmg under influence, speeding. 6 monihs jail suspended on payment of $1.10 and cost W I Godley Grimesland worthless chei'k 10 days jail suspended on pay ment of cost and check ' iaul Vinson III. Goldsboro, safe

*V

movement violation, cost John D Beaver. Cotanche Street, worthless check, prayer lor judgment ixintinued upon payment of remit and check    a

Kathy Bridges, Cotanche SUeet. trespass. 60 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and cost Wiley Ray Chancey Broad Street a.ssauli on female, dismissed Ricky Daniel Crandle. Norcott Circle, registration violation, dismissed Charles Wesley Croom Jr, Belhaven, improper equipment, prayer lor judgment continued upon payment of cost

Roger laivem Davenport Wildwood Villas, exc'eeding sale speed, cost Debra Elaine Georgalis, Elm Street, no operators license, dismissed Michael Wayne Harris. New Bern. lu% blood alcohol content 6 months jail suspended on payment of $Uk) and (jjist surrender operators license attend alaihol workshop Walter Earl Hines. Fountain, driving under influence. 6 monihs jail suspended on, payment of $17t) and cost surrender operators license attend akohol workshop Ilummer Battle Nye. Greenmill Run driving while license revoked 6 months jail suspended off paymeni ol $2ii and cost

David Troy Iage. Cary expireif fivn.se plate dismissed

imothy la^ Ray Gieenlield Blvd inspection violation. dismis.sed Dallas Kay Staton Washington exceeding sale speed cost Michael Clyde Williams Fillti Mnel driving under influence e\ce*sling speed to avoid arrest slop sign violatipn 6 months j.iil susjumded on

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SALE ENDS

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POCKY MOUNT Comer Thomas 8 FraiMln St. 977 2045 TAP80P0 FaMew Shopping Center 823-5191 MfCNVtUf WeslindShopiiig Center 756-9371 ORtNVILU 729Oeklnson Avenue 752-4417

NO. 11N EASTERN NORTH CAROUNA

The Daily Reflector. Greenville.

paymtrnl ol $500 and cost. probalKW 2j years stop sign violation, lail stop blue* iighl speeding, no operators license, dismissed James Karl Dixon Bethel display ticlicious rcgislralion plaje. improper equipment 90 days jail suspended on paymeflt ol $100 and coi^

Curtis Lee Jordan. Grimesland. larceny resisting officer 6 months jail $l75reslitution Jo,seph Beamon Jr: \ illage Drive as.saull on female. dismis.sed Justin Alan Bumgardner Bryton tlilts. 10% blixxi alcohol content. 6 months jail saspended on paynu-nl ol cost and $150i surrender operators license allend alcohol workshop Tina Darlene Corey Fourleenlh street    assault    with deadly weapon

dismisstsi carry concealed weapon 60 days jail suspended on payment otciisl iohniiy Lw Daniels Farmville Blvd as.saull on female. 4 days jail ,

Floyd l.inwood Dunn Wright Hoad no operalors license sale movemrnl violation dismi.vsevl

Daniel Webster Harrison Third SIreel    dnving    under'inlluence lad

yield righl of    way ' months ail

susju'iided on pay mem H 'wi and cost allend    .ilcohol    workshop, surrender

ojH'r.itors license John Hay Hopkins    Kouic    2

Greenville possession ol slolen properly 12 monihs j.iil shellji Ann King Gris'nc street m.sjHS'lion violation disinis.sjyd Maurice Ohm Nono Wiliow si.mi assaiill on leinale dismiss<d Flla M I'eltavvay    Koiite    t

Greenville shopliflmg In davs j.nl siisjieiidisl on p.tv ment ot ^ osi reinil Millon sheiT.oit nonsu(ijHirl s. monihs jail siis|iendisl on paynienl o( $1 week siip(Hirl prohalion 1 vears ^ .lesse Darnell SIw.Ard \vdeii reckless driv ing In davs .ol siis(iendisl on (i.ivmeiil ol im and .osi Mirrender operaloi's license

liminv laylor I'eikiiis    Irepass    In

d.iys j.nl siisiH'iided on p.iy meiil ol cost reiiiil

Milloii lliyanl Ihoimis Vv'deit rei kless driving In d.iv. .ol susjxmdnl on p.iv meiil ol $ Ki .ind I osi .111 render o(ier.dors license.    '

Wild' liirncr lioini I 1 .n-eiivdd-ass.nill dismissed

V inceiil r .til ll.iiIlls . 1.1 iine.I.iiid Mipni(iei (i.issipg JJ . .iiid 1 o^l

.loseph iii'Uit KvereUe Koulc S . l.leemille CM ledlllg s.ilc s|S'd i o.l liH ll.iiisoji F .univjlle.^.isv.mti ;in

:-tem.ite 'maiiiioiis (ir.i.cciii on pi osei iiiiiig w dncss (i.iv , oM

d.llllcs I r.lVemc ll.lldi'e .It F.irinvillc .iss.iull on .Icni.ilc

dismissed iii]iiiv lei son.ii pio|H'|ly '1

d.ivs ),cd sii.peiided On. p.iv iiieid ol i ai .iniliosi V.H. resiiiuln

A'

N.C.-Wednes<^. JuneJ, 1-$

Klizabefh .Ann Harris. Rouic l.t Greenville 10% blood alcohol content., 6 months jail suspended on payment of ' $140 and cost attend alcohol workshop . surrender operators license Jerry Wayne Huggins Ayden. fail reduce speed lo avoid accident dismissed Nathai\,Johnson. Farmville assault on (emalc dismissed Kenneth Kay Joyner Farrnvdle. sale movement violation dismissed Kubert Anthony Moore F.liiabelh Street no operalors iK-ense registation violation no financial responsibility, tkvrrow license plate 6 months jail suspended on pay ment ol $100 and cost Willie C Moore, Farmville damage re.iT pnvperly 60 days jail suspended on pay inenl of cost $20 restitution Herbert Mozingo. Farmville communicaling threats 90 days jail suspenfftxl on pay mcnl ol $5u and cost Jackie Norris Farmville. posses,sion 111 slolen gwid 6 months jail suspended on pay ment ol cast $50 restitution Wiliuim Alfred Shirley, Farmville reckless driving 90 day s jail su.spcMded on p.ivmeni n( $iw) and cost attend alcohol workshop l.inwiHglSmith, Farmville as.saulton Icm.ile prayer lor judgment continued upon paymeni of cost . av.au!I on Icmale ikimeslic Irespav., delaying oKicer disiilivsevt .lames Wesley Slalon Jr F armville ilriving under influence, 1. monihs ail su,s(Hnds1 on pay meni ol $220 ami cost urremter operators license altend .ilcohol workshop regislralion viol.ihon dismis,stM lerry 1 von Sim'ks Ayden rnkless driving 'XI davs ail suspended on IMvmeiil of S.ai and cost altvnd alcohol workshop Kric Terrell .Thompson Washington stMeding 111 ilays ail saspended on pav meni ol $2. .indcosl William Whilehead Maccleslieid iss.iull on female prayer lor udgmeni coiiliniinl 11(601 paymeni of cosl reinil DeUirah Williams F'ounlam allrav lo d.ivs all suspended 01) paymeni ol F 61'.Old cost pnihation 2 years Kolwrt Lrr, Williams Farmville driving under influence 6 monihs ail sus(iendisl on pay ineiil ol Slixi and cost allend .ilcohol workshop surrender o|i<ralors licem e siidii' Gray Williams F'oimlain iss.iull with (ie.itllv weaim 6 monihs l.iil siis|iend(sl nil payainMd-nt'ilno and Misl pViili.ilum2 years    .

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February Construction . Is Reported

Huildinj; pfMniitk \aliUd at Sl,.'>;t7,117 .wore i.ssued in (im'iivdlt' duniiii l-'fltruais, rt'tliTtinn a dcrease from JamiaiA b Sl,H8(Miti7, aa'ording state Lahor ('ommissioner .liiliiu' liroiiks

. He >ai(l the lireeindle lolal ineluded permits (or SI,(Hi:',47') tur LD'siiiple lamih homes. S24d,'J4n for VI rnultitamdy units, $l7.) iio8 for e1|>ht non residenfiaf units, anif $(74,794 for 4t atfddions and alterations    

Iltt County's Fettruary total of $l,(jTi7\lso represented a deerease trom .lanuary wlien perillas amuiinled to $1.90,'),417 Most ot the permits ineluded in lluXitt^olal were issued in (reen\dle    ''X

Hrooks haul liuddmp activity adthori/.ed m 44 of the state s larpesi eilies m Fetiruar,\ pained d L pereent (rom January, whiletliepam Irom Fehruary of l!82 was48 7pereent He said authonzafions for mullilnmily unit.s nuiniHl 206 8 pereent from last Fehruary. with permits for sinple family homes up 114 7 perceiil A total ol 8:il permits for smple lamdy liomes were issued compared to ,u4 in IdKl!

Tlie .iver.ipe cost lor a sinplc lamil\ home inereased 'j H pereent Irom itu' pnAiniis Keliruarv. to S41,.ii,i Irdm $4o,.WK. tint tlie.iverape wasulown T 1 pereent from January's$48,7'.(i Fehriiai'A permit totals in .several e.istern towns ineluded Kli/ahelh City. S:i87,il8(i, ^(ioklst)oro. SAdl.tidI, Jaeksonville, SJ,:l41,(d7. Kinston. S4,i4,.'iOd, New Bern. SI,l4o.J.')J B .moke Kapid.s, SJO'J.Wi Itoekv Mount, $1 tuw.o'fo 'I'artioro $4d7,iHHi and Wilson. SI.IT.' tdii

TOYBRARY - Jon and Jerice Berghstrom. owners of a lending library (or toys (called "Toybraryi in Norwich. Vt,, show off the giant rocking horse and a robot named "Hero', two of the.g^re popular items in their shop, Toybrary also has a full ^sortment of children's and adults recreational and educational toys (AP Laserphoto)

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Tht Daily Reflector, Greenville, NC-Wednesday, June 1,1963

The Legislature    .    ,

State Senate Approves Revising Annex^ion Laws|

Ru MARY ANNF RHYNE    A    1977    law    provides    that    Children    in    the    first    and    secofld    said    would    increase    corn^titi^.        Regulate    the    relationship    between    franchise    holders    in

By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N C (APi - The state Senate approved a bill Tuesday; revising North Carolina s annexation laws for the first time since 1959 after turning back repeated attempts to amend the measure.    V

The bill, approved 44;3, now goes to the HousfJ^^r further consideration

One of the amendmentsVejected 39-9 would haie prohibited cities from annexing sparsely populated or developed areas unless they are surrounded by more densely populated, highlv developed areas.

-Some of these little towns are going out and taking in vacant land indiscriminately, said Sen. Craig Lawing, D-Mecklenburg. noting that such action could block metropolitan areas from annexing the smaller town.

Sen Charles Hipps. D-Haywood. said the bill already addresses that problem and the "amendment could "lead to >pot annexation in reverse, where industrial areas are annexed without accompanvmg residential areas.

Several senators noted the bill has the support of volunteer fire departments, the N C feeague of .Municipalities and the \ (. ,Association of County Commissioners, They urged the .Senate not to tamper with the compromise bill.

Another amendment rejected 37-10 would have exempted Halifax Countv from the bill. Sen Julian Allsbrook, D-Halifax, saidhis home county was exempt from the 1959 foil aijd would like to remain that way.

Sen. Aaron Plyler. D-Uriion. one of the bills sponsors, succeeded Tuesday in removing an amendment added last week As the bill stands, the Burlington school system can continue to automatically expand when the/city annexes an area.

Sen Cary Allred, R Alamance, opposed the amendment. He said It woiild give Burlington rights that are granted to no other school system

The rest of the bill includes requirements that reports of a proposed annexation be available to the public for 30 days instead of the 14 days under current law.

It al.so would require a public hearing be held 45 to 90 days after a municipality's approval of a resolution to annex. Now the hearing mu.st be within 30 to 60 days.

The bill makes new provisions to ensure that everyone is notified of the possible anneiiation and provides that volunteer firefighters extend equal service to annexed areas in return for appropriate benefits:    '    .    .

In other legi.slativeaction:

Child Exploitation

Without debate, the Senate approved and sent to the House a hill setting up crimes and penalties for sexually exploiting children.

The hill makes it a felony for parents to commit or allow commission of any sexual act with a child under age 18, for anyone to promote child prostitution or for anyone to encourage or promote performances in which children commit sexual acts

It also makes it a misdemeanor for any child at least 16 years old to commit a sexual act for payment Dues Checkoff

The House Higher Education Committee postponed action on a bill allowing teachers to have dues for professional orgmiizations automatically deducted from their paychecks

The hill requires a petition from 25 percent of those eligible to join the organizations, primarily the North Carolina As,sociation of Educators, before the dues checkoff can begin.

Rep Jo Graham Foster, D-Mecklenburg, committee chairman, said a Senate committee is working on a substitute hill and the Hou.se panel may wait and Icmk at that before proceeding.

Testing

Testing experts clashed in the House Education Committee over a hill that would allow the state Board,of Education to select the kind of annual test to4)c administered in grades 1, 2.3,6.9.

At the heart of the conflict is debate over what kind of test should he administered.

A 1977 law provides that children in the first and second grade get a criterion reference test, which measures their performance against certain goals. The other students get a norm reference test which measures their performance against other groups of students.

A state testing commission has recommended for three years that the Board of Education switch to a norm reference test in the first and second grades Thats expected to be the result of the bill.

Deputy State Superintendent Jerome Mellon said the primary purpose of testing is to provide accountability to the public and the second purpose is to give teachers information on the childrensneeds Bill Brown, director of research for the state Department of Public Instruction, said the board needs flexibility to meetthe testing needs of the handicapped and gifted But Pamela George, a teacher at North Carolina'Central University, said the move is politically motivated and not in the best interest of children. She said the norm reference test could be used to falsely inflate the image of the public schools while depriving parents and teachers of the diagnostic information they need.

Colleges

The gap between tuition cost^ and enrollment at North Carolinas private colleges and public universities has widened during the past decade. A P Perkinson Jr. told the House Higher Education Committee Perkinsonis president of St. Andrews College.

He said enrollment in the University of North Carolina system has grown from 63,000 in 1973-74 to 79,000 in 1982-83 while enrollment in the states private colleges has grown froip 22,000 to 24,000during the same period. He said thats an increase of one student in private colleges for each 10 additional students in the UNC system.

Perkin.son said that during the same time, the gap in tuition costs has almost doubled. He said its gone from. $1,100 to $2,071.

He said the private colleges dilemma is made worse by the fact that the number of college-age students in North Carolina is expected to decrease by 11 percent in the next eight to 10 years. '    

Instiance^

The Senate Insurance Committe^mproved a bill to increa.se from $200 to $.500 acpktefil^a4ages that must be incurred before an autoprtibile jawner would be assessed insurance points.

.Sen Donald Kincaid/R-Caldwell, said the bill would keep pace with inflation, adding that the $200 figure had not fwen changed in 14 years The committee also approved a bill to let health insurers file for new rales once a year instead of once every two years .Meanwhile, the House Insurance Committee sent tp subccpmittee a bill that would abolish the N C Rate Bureau and extend the cap on insurance rates through 1985 ln.surance lobbyi.sl Ruffin Bailey told the committee the bill would do away with insurance as a private industry in North Carolina.    "

The bill would also extend the rate cap to the N C Rem.surance Facility, which insuresJiigh-risk drivers Bailey said that would make it impossible for the facility to keep operating on a no-profit, no-loss basis,.

Chairman Rep. Foyle Higfifower, D Anson, said moving the duties of the bureau into the Insurance Department would save nearly $2 million a year for policy holders.

The panel delayed action on a.bill to let facility insurers reduce rales for drivers m the facility, a move supporters

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said would increase competition.

Waste Compact

The House Judiciary I Committee heard comments on a bill to include North Carolina in a regional compact to treat low-level radioactive wastes, but took no action.

Robert Jansen, representing Gov. Jim Hunt,,s^id Hunt backed the legislation to share the wastes among as many as eight southeastern states.

But Bill Holman of the N.C. Conservation Council said each state should look after its own wastes and criticized the -compact for not encouraging prevention or reduction of radioactive wastes.

Hazardous Waste

The House Natural and Economic Resources Committee considered a bill that would require a nwMtorium on hazardous waste landfills but took no action after hearing that any moratorium might jeopardize the states waste laws.

Milton Heath of the Institute of Government said Environmental Protection Agency officials opposed any arbitrary moratorium He said a moratorium could result in the loss of North Carolinas control over hazardous wastes, which might be assumed by the EPA

Rep Joe Mavretic. D-Edgecombe. who introduced the bill, said it was prompted by concerns that the executive branch might push through a landfill while the General Assembly is not in session He said administration pressure had already resulted in approval of one hazardous-waste bill by the Appropriations Committee.

"The General Assembly does not want to leave town and be surprised by what is done by the executive branch of government.he said.

Rep. Frank Redding, R-Randolph, questioned parts of the bill critical of federal and state policies.

' Im wondering if your more interested in lambasting the national administration of President Reagan and the state administration of (Gov.) Jim Hunt than you are in controlling-hazardous wastes, he said.

' O.W Strickland, director of the states solid and hazardous waste branch, said if North Carolinas laws are believed to be inconsistent with federal regulations the state could lose federal approval of all it had accomplished so far, as well as its $1.2 million-a-year waste management budget.

The panel adjourned before action could be taken on the . bill.

Newspaper Tax

Sen Ollie Harris. D-Cleveland. filed a bill that would impose a tax on proceeds from newspaper advertisements. Harris said the bill was expected to raise $16 million a year.

Under the bill, gross receipts from newspaper ads would be taxed at a 3 percent rate. The tax,would be levied dnly/n papers that'are sold.

"1 dont have anything against the press, but this is another source of revenue that. \ye*ought to look at as we try to balance the budget, said Harris.    >

Marijuana Penalty

Possession rff one-third of an ounce of marijuana would be a felonv under a bill filed by Rep. James Hughes, R-Avery.

Currently its a fblony to possess more than one ounce of marijuana, and having less than that is a misdemeanor. The .Senate recently defeated a proposal to increase the amount of marijuana that one could possess and still have committed only a misdemeanor.

f New Bills

Bills filed in the state House and Senate would:

Require an official oPhll North Carolina high schools to give fach senior an application to register to vole prior to the students graduation.

Give public schools first priority in borrowing films from public libraries.

- Establish an assigned risk plan for bid, payment, performance, maintenance and other bonds.

- Regulate the relationship between franchise holders in North Cacfllina for automobile parts and services,

-l^^edear that the burden of proof of negligence is on the prosecution when a sheriff, jailer or other official is charged with letting a prisoner escape.

\    -    Amend    the    Uniform Judicial Retirment Act pertaining to

benefits on death before retirement.

Authorize a legislative research committee study of whether to prohibit f^ing garbage to swine

Allow people to vaccinate their own animals against rabies.

- Require that final affidavits for administration of small ' estates oe filed within 90, days of the filing of the qualifying

affidavit.

- Authorize a study of increasing public awareness of the importance of agriculture, forestry, and seafood in North Carolina.

Require licensure of geologists an^ establish a state board to determine their qualifications

Comp Tne

State employees with jnanageriAl^status/arning more than $30,000 would be barred from lakiiTg compensatory time off for working overtime under a bill fil^by Rep. John Jordan, D-Alamance -    I

Jordan said in an interview the bill was inspired by media reports that members of Insurance Commissioner John Ingrams staff had taken up to seven weeks of comp time in one year while earning up to $36,000. He added, however, that he didnt think the situation was limited to the Insurance Department.

1 assume its statewide, said Jordan.

/Management ^ould think like management, not like hourly people. Ive been in management most of my life and the first think you teach (managers) is that you cant be a clockwatcher.

Jordan said he had discussed his bill with Ingram and that Ingram had expressed concern that it was aimed at his department. "He wanted it to apply to everybody, nd 1 assured him it does, said Jordan

House-Senate

Rep. A1 .Adams, D-Wake, filed *a bill to amend House rules to bar rushing bills to the Senate the same day theyre approved by the House.

The bill stems from a clash test Friday in which the Senate refused to return a bill the House had passed but decided it wanted to study further.

iwlMMIMS*'

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SEOUL. South Korea IAP)

- Thirteen students have been arrested on charges of leading anti-government, demonstrations last week, police announced.

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NOTICE OF BIDS ESIDENTIAL REHABILITATION GRANT WORK - TOWN OF WINTERVILLE

Noticeis hereby given that the Town of Winterville will receive and open bids on June 13, 1983 at 3:30 p m in the Winterville Municipal Buildint) for the rhabilitation of six dwelling units This work is tuiided through the State of North Carolina FY 1982 Small Cities (Jommunity Development Block Grant Program. Instructions to Bidders may be obtained Monday through Friday, during normal office hours, from the Town Clerk at the Town of Winterville Municipal Building,

The Town of Winterville is an Equal Opportunity Employer and encourages bidding by small and minority businesses

RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) - A move to shift the Capital Building Authority from the Department of Administration to the Office of Management and Budget started a controversy Tuesday that might require intervention by Gov Jim Hunt

Sen. Kenneth Royall, D-^ Durham, suggested that a"* bill rewriting North Carolinas separation of powers laws be amended to change jurisdiction over the authority, which awards contracts for government building projects.

"The budget is affected by every decision they make, he said. "It's my strong

feeling that the good businessmen* in the (budget of fice I should be overseeing these decisions and looking after the taxpayers money.

He. added that he had sought ways to make the building authority more efficient for years and had served on a fegislative study committee that investigated the situation.

There have been co.st

overruns, that type of thing, Royall said. "This is the only way youre going to gel a handle^ it.

While a vote on the amendment was postponed' until Thursday, news of the proposal quickly reached those concerned Administration Secretary Jane Patterson could not be reached for comment, but sources described her as

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12-TheDaUyReftector,

r^Jreenvle, N.C.

Wednesday, June 1.1M3

A CALL FROM THE PRESIDENT - Dung Nguyen received a call frm President Reagan, congratulating her on her academic accomplishments, (AP Laserphoto)

Refugee Grad

'Top Of Class

PKNSACOLAJ'la. lAlM Ircsulcnt Reagan told.a Vieln;iinese refugee whir tinish((l at the lop of her high school class that she is good tor the cotintry" and to have^ fun at her graduation

Dung. Nguyen, a soft spoken 17 year-old whp ar rived III the I'nited States with h(>r family from Vietnam in l'.tT described Tuesday alternoon's tele phone call from the presi-,denl

'lie just said, YouVe good for the country The whole counlry js proud of you," she recalled Me told me to have lun and said that he rememtiered his own high school graduation"

At graduation ceremonies Tuesday night, .11 Cone, principal of Pensacola High Sctiool, read congratulatory telegrams as he introduced her (OV Boh (iraham, P,S, Hep, Karl Hutto, D Fiipania City, and l^msacola Mayor Vijice Whihhs also sent their compliments

Miss Dung (pronounced zoom) urged her 334 classmates to shun mediocrity

You owe yourself nothing less than the best/ she said in her three-minute valedictory speech, My friends, go and u,sc your wisdom to steer your own course and never settle for anything less than your very, very best,

The teen-ager, who could only say no when she arrived as a 9-year-old at Kglin Air Force Bases Tent City for Vietnamese refugees, finished high school with a 4,f)78 average - made better than a perfect 4,0 by extra points for advanced courses.

She plans a pre-med course of undergraduate study at Baylor University in Texas on a four-year scholarship.

One of a family of nine. Miss Dung feels a little puzzled by dhe national attention that her academic achievement has attracted. She said all it took was hard work.

The :)()lh anniversary reunion of the 1933 graduating cla.ss o't fireenville High School was held Saturday ('Veiling at the Creenville Country Club.

There were 2(i members of the graduating class of 62 attending Harold Sugg extended the welcome with the response given by jimmy Davenpdrt, master of ceremonies. The invocation was provided by Harold Sugg

Mary Lee Riddle read let-ti'Ps of ix'gret and the class history was read by Klsie W. Kagan Davenport introduced graduat('s attending

Lillie Dell Briley .shared pictures and other mementoes while Laurine S. Skinner Neal told of awards and gifts. The appreciation was provided by Mary Hoover Mann.

Placemates depicting scenes from events of the senior year were given as favors to the 43 atteding.

Class members attending wcme Mary Hoover Boyd Mann, Francis Brooks, Charles Cobb, Davenport, Ms. Briley. Allie Lee Flem ing Bunting, Joseph Gaston, Mattie Moye Gaylord Hagerty. Virginia Pierce Basniglit. Tom Rivers, Ms.

A CIqSS RinO Retreating Say Pblovchak Case Violating Accords

GRADUATION

Graduatlpn exercises for the Bonners Lane Day Care ('enter will be held at 7 p.m. Friday in the Parish Hall of St. Pauls Episcopal Church, 41 E Fourtl\ St. The ceremony is open to the public.

Neal, Ms. Eagan, Frank Wooten, Ms. Riddle and Aflepn Hurst Dilda, all of Greenville Others were Minnie Belle Craft Thaxton of Kinston, Lynette "Dixon Angel of Myrtle Beach. S.C., Graham Gulley Jr. of Tarboro, Rose Gurganus Keister of Maitland, Fla, Thornton Meeks of Tarboro, Frances Renfrew Bailey of Midlothain, Va., Maggie Ricks Russell of Oxford, Md Harold Sugg of Roanoke, Va., George Willard Jr. of Wilson, Caiolyn Hamric Tolson of Midland, Mich, and Adallearne.of Norfolk, Va.

COLLEGE STATION, Texas (AP) - El. Doc Watson Jr. never earned his degree from Texas A&M University because he left school in his junior year to serve in World War I.

But 65 years later, thanks to special efforts by his grandson and a jewelry company, the 89-year-old retired civil engineer from Houston has got the next best thing to a diploma - a class ring.'

It was such a surprise. 1 was practically speechless, Watson said after finally receiving the ring Saturday. Its one of the nicest gifts" Ive ever received. I'm mighty proud of it.

The ring had to be custom-made, complete with the crest of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, as the school was known when Watson earned the 92 credit hours required to be eligible to buy the ring.

Officials at L.G. Balfour Co. said Watsons ring "was the oldest one theyd ever done, said Tom Noyes, Watsons grandson.

Noyes went to the Texas A&M ring office aboid six months ago to find ^ut whether his grandfather qualified for a ring. He said although Watson isnt one to complain, he could tell his grandfather wanted a class ring.

LONDON (AP) - After paying nearly $li million in legal costs tai a lost libel suit, the Rev. Sun Myuag Moons Unification Church is retreating from Britain, the Daily Mail reported Tuesday.

The report said Moons organization - whose members are known as moonies - plans to abandon Britain as its EunH>ean headquarters. Moon will reduce his 800 British sUff to 150, sending 200 of them to the United States where his church still enjoys political re-spectabUity, the newspaper said.

Marvin Gaye

Is Hospitalized,

If you are a resident of the City of Greenville, the Police Departments Crime Prevention Officer will provide a security inventory at your home on request Call 7.52-3342 for details.

LAUDERDALE LAKES, Fla. (AP) - Singer Marvin Gaye, making a grueling concert tour, has been hospitalized for dehydration, exhaustion and a possible lung infection, a spokesman says.    jk

Production Manager Andre White said the 44-year-old singer, who lives in Los Angeles, was hospitalized Tuesday at Florida Medical Center after giving eight .concerts in five days at Radio City Music Hall in New York City, followed by four concerts over the Memorial Day weekend at the Sunrise Musical Theater near here.

MOSCOW '(AP) - The government newspaper Izvestia says the United States is violating the Helsinki accords in the case of a Ukranian teen-ager whOi' refused to leave Cliicago and return to the Soviet Union with his parents.

Walter Polovchak, now 15, ran away and went to the home of a relative in 1980 when his parents, who had immigrated to the United States to work, decided after a few months to return to their homeland.

The Illinois Supreme Court ruled Friday that lower courts had erred in designating Walter a ward of the state. It ruled that the Polovchaks could regain custody of their son if they returned to the United States to get him.

Izvestia gave no indication the Polovchaks planned to go to America. It noted that Walter had been granted political asylum and permanent residence status by the U.S. federal government and added:

'The Supreme Court of

Illinois has ... ruled that actions of U.S. authorities were totally illegal. Specifically, they violated state legislation aimed at preserving and strengthening families.

Izvestia said the U.S. federal actions were' at

variance with the provisions of the Helsinki accords, which record the ri^it to reunification of families.

The Helsinki pact on European security and cooperation, including a major section on human^ rights, was signed in 1975 by

the United States, .Canada, the Soviet Union and Wc^

The Illinois Supreme Court* decision said that if Walters parents did not return to the United States, they youth would remain in the custody of the sUte courts.

SIX EXPELLED LUDWIGSTADT, West Germany (AP) -munist authorities expelled six more activist's from jfcipnany, bringing to 18 the "number expelled in tl^ past 10 days, police say.

Com-

have

peace

East

Gaye was resting in stable condition late Tuesday, White said.

TO plac: YOUR Classified Ad, just call 752-6166 and let a friendly Ad-Visor hejp you word vour Ad.

Youll Find It All At Reasonable Reeses

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Box Springs.. 1/2 Coat Racks..

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Bedroom Chair. a 49

FLORAL PRINT NYLON

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fash Hie Pride

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tains to the Atlantic Coast for it. Taste why Pepsi is the

people enjoy the taste of the pride of the Carolinas. And let drink born in the Carolinas... your taste decide.Reunion Is Held By GHS Class Of '33

si' A

SHOT DOWN LISBON, Portugal (AP) -The Mozambican national news agency reports an un-dentified jet plane was shot down over the capital of Mozambique and disappeared into Jhe Indian OceanSOCIAL INTERACTION SKILLS TRAINING GROUP

GROUP SESSIONS FOR YOUNGSTERS BETWEEN 61/2-11 YEARS WHO ARE EXPERIENCING , PEER RELATIONSHIP DIFFICULTIES Conducted by Childrens Services Staff Pitt County Mental Health Center 306 Stantonsburg Road, Greenville, N.C. June Session 9-11 A.M. July Session Mon. 13-Wed. 15    Mon.    11-Wed.    13Mon. 20-Wed. 22    Mon.    18-Wed.    20

Total Cost $12 Per Session (6 meetinge) Payable at the first meeting of each session Contact Bobbie Wade,

Sec Childrens Services 752-7151 L Limited Registration Deadline; June 6. ... ^

V    'ASAVE 25^

25^1

1^

l8On Popsl-Cola. Qood on oiM 2-lltor botti* or any muHi-paek oreansorbottlM;

II

To the Retailef To recetvb pfompi payment send this coupon to PVpsi-Cola Company Box 1705 Chm

:itnton Iowa 52734 You will receive tri face vale plus 7f tor handling in accordance with our corrsumer offer Cortsumer must pay any sates la* mvoNed tnvocesproving purchase 60 days poor to submission ol sufficient stock to cover coupons submitted must be shown upon request Cash value 1 /20 ol 1i Offer void whbrever prohibited restricted taxed or icenae required Offer lirrtted to one coupon per purchase family group or organizatior) Any other use constitutes

C/)

fraud OFFER'EXPIkiS AUGUST 31 1983

Pf PSlnnqotPSI fXX.AArRtt)i!itt>i<jTr(Je"ijikM)'t%';-'<> in( P .'    i-'    N

25^





In'The AreaHPonder Converting Old

Building Info Dormitory

Nahouse Named To Synod Board

The Rev. R. Graham Nahouse of Greenville was elected to the executive board of the N; C. Sybod of the Lutheran Church in America at the cmiventiOB hm at Lenoir-Rhyne Colle^ in Hickory during the weekend. ^

Pastor of Our Redeemer Lutheran Church, he was one of three clergymen elected to the 18-member board for a three-year term ending in 1986.

Senior's Work On Display

Art work by Patti ^one of Williamston, a senwr in the school of art at Ea^arolina University, is being shown in the gaUery of A^enhall Student Center. The exhibition includ^fidai&^y outs and other examples of her art.

Ms. Malone has been a member of Desi^ Associates and has completed a graphic design internship with the N.C. Department of Natural Resources and Community Development in Raleigh. A reception for her show, open to the public, will be held from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday in the Student Center.

f    .

Commission Meets For Supper

' The annual Commission Meeting Supper of the Greenville Recreation and Parks Commission will be held at 6 p.m. tonight at River Park North. In addition to a short business meeting, there will be a cookout at the parks picnic site.

Greene Student Wins Award

Jacqueline C. Capps, a student at Greene Central High yphool, has received a national scholastic award of merit for xcellence in the social sciences. The award is sponsored by Collins & Aikman Corp. and is presented to the graduating senior with the highest academic standing in his or her school. The award includes a $100 U.S. Savings Bond.

Afternoon Services Scheduled

Eldress Viola Clark and members pf Noahs Ark Holiness Church of Greenville will render services at Saint Monica Missionary Baptist Church Sunday at 3 p.m. The service will be for the benefit of the the Womens Auxiliary.,

Area Students Receive Degrees ^

Five students from this area received degrees from Appalachian State University diming recent commencement exercises. They wer^ ElizabettyAnne Dough, Tony Preston Moore, Denis John Simko an^Tami Jo Chamberlin, all of Greenville, and Jacqueline Cariliph Pollack of Ayden

ASU Dean's List Announced

Three Pitt County students have been named to the deans list at Appalachian State University for the spring semester. Making the honor list were David Kent Holley and Mary Elizabeth Hunt of Greenville and Gloria Luanne Keel of Bethel. ^    .

Seventh Grader Wins Contest

Malcolm Smith, a 12-year old rising seventh grader at St. Gabriel, is the first place winner in the statewide essay-writing contest sponsored by the Knights of Columbus.

Malcolm placed first in a field of contestants from 38 school districts in the states. The topic assigned to the young essayists was Why I Should Consider Becoming a Priest.

As first place winner, he received an inscribed plaque at the annual Knights of Columbus convention held in Winston-Salem on May 28.

He will also be honored at a meeting of the local chapter of the Knights of Columbus to be held later this month.

Malcolm is the son of

MALCOLM SMITH

Herman and Gladys Smith of Greenville.    s

Anesthestists Plead Guilty

Two nurse anesthestists pleaded guilty in Pitt County Superior Court Tuesday to charges acquiring controlled substances for their own use by misrepresentation, and were given two-year suspended sentences.

Lilliam Perry Gray of Grifton and Barbara Jean Jaquay of 309 Tobacco Road, Greenville, while privately employed by Pitt County Anesthesia Associates, worked at Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

The two-year jail sentence given each of the defendants was suspended on condition they pay a $250 fine and costs and they were placed on probation for five years.

The charges against the two resulted from an investigation by a sp^ial State Bureau of Investigation diversion investigative unit which concentrates on drug law vijblations involving physicians, dentists, pharmacists and nur

A principal in a Greenville firm that is proposing the conversion of the former Wilkerson Funeral Home structure on Evans Street into a dormitory for student housing said today the project is still under consideration.

Ferree, who ap-efore the Greenville Adjustments as a representative of Greenville Health & Racquetball'Club Inc., owners of the facility at 702 S. Evans St., said the "developers are still looking at the project to deleimine if

it will be economically feasible.

Ferree said that when construction bids come back and if the conversion does prove to be feasible, the developers would probably aim for having the facility^ ready for winter semester students.

Ferree pointed out that the facility would be operated on the sam schedule as East Carolina University, adding that when ECU closes, the dormitory would be closed.

The Board of Adjustments this month granted a special use permit to the corporation

to allow the development of the structure into a dormitory to accommodate students.

Ferree and Drck Paddock, representing the corporation, appeared before the board in early May and indicated that they were considering converting the structure into rooms for 70 students. Paddock told the board the facility would be for male and female residents, with dorm managers on both floors.

The 7,476-square-foot structure would be petitioned to accommodate from two to four students in a room.

Space is also available on the rear or east side of the building to construct a separate facility for 20 more students but a spokesman said the addition would be a future consideration.

A letter of endorsement from Dan Wooten, director of housing operations at East Carolina UnivegUy. was received by the citys director of planning and community, development, Bobby Roberson, and was in-

TO STAND TRIAL

TEL AVIV, Israel (LAP) - Militrary sources said Tuesday that a policeman suspected of torturing An-Arab prisoner in the occupied West Bank would stand trial following an investigation that found the charge justified.

The DaUy Reflector, Greenville. N C.-Wednesday, June 1.1SC3-13 troduced into the boards The spokesman for the

minutes.

Wooten said in his letter that he had reviewed the architectural plans for the conversion and "the size of the rooms and the ratio of students per toilet and shower head, as well as other important features, compare favorably with those found in the resident halls at ECU.

developers said a Raleigh architectural firm is working on plans for the project.

Comptt FUdiator Srdc

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917W 5lh SI.

758-1131

HI-TECH ELECTRONICS

Exprt Repair of Sound Equipmant and Automobile Installations''

3112 South Mamorlil Ofi GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA 27834

DAVID williams Co-Owntr

Phon# (19) Zb6-Vi33

GORHAM CLARK Co-Ownr

\Swimming Pool Policy Set

Swimming pools in the Winterville area will not b filled by the town this summer until payment for the water i > made to the town, according to Town Clerk Elwood Nobles The new policy was approved by the town board at a recent mating.

According to Nobles, the charge for water is $10 per 1,000 gallons outside the town and $5 per 1,000 gallons inside the town. The charge for filling must be paid to the towh clerk, he nqted.    i

Knolls Acres Plat Approved

The Winterville Town Board of Aldermen has approved the final plat for the Knolls Acres located on Tar Road. The subdivision is owned by Clifton Earl OGeary and consists of ' eight lots.

According to Town Clerk Elwood Nobles, the town has agreed to furnish water to subdivision.

Year 2,000' Meeting

WILLIAMSTON - The eastern area meeting to provide information to the pubjic on the North Carolina Year 2,000 program will be held beginning at 10 a.m. Tuesday in Williamston.

William Friday, president of the UniWrsity of North Carolina, and officials from various state departments

OUR

30-60-90

DAY

INTEREST

RATE

00^

NO FINANCE CHARGES OR INTEREST WHEN YOU SELECT BOSTIC-SUGGS 30-60-90 DAY CASH PLAN...PAY 1 4 ON PURCHASE, 1 4 30 DAYS, 1 4 60 DAYS

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SAVE UP TOMO" ON KINGSDOWN COUNTRY STYLE SOFAS IN DISCONTINUED FABRICS

$ /a 71 noo

SALE

PRICE

Retail Price $850.00. Coil Spring Bnse Con struction ... Matching Pillows Includoii Gathered Skirts ... One Piece Seat Cushion.

VALUES UP TO *850". KINGSDOWN LOOSE PILLOW BACK TRADITIONAL SOFA. .

$0/1 noo

SALE

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349

Select From A Rainbow Of'Colors In Cotton Fnnt I'ahiics . I wc Styles To Select From. .'

A

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ON UNFINISHED DEACON CHAIRS & DEACON BENCHES

RETAIL PRICE

RETAIL PRICi 60 INCH DEA

40.00

SALE SOAOO 24 INCH DEAdONS CHAIR. price RETAIL PRICE'65.00.    sale S

44 INCH DEaIoNS BENCH prIce

90.00.    SALE$^y50

30' 50

ONS BENCH PRICE

RETAILPRICE|100.00. sale S'?COO 72 INCH DEAGDNS BENCH price

75'

RETAIL PRICE *40.00 SCOOPSEAT IPORCH ROCKER

$2900

SALE

PRICE

will be n nanu. A slide show-lecture of work, done to date will be presented and input sought from area p^ pie in attendance. Gov. Jim Hunt, who had been expected to attend, will not be present.

The meeting will be held in the auditorium at Williamston High School, located on U.S. 17 south of the city.

Scoop Seat Natural Finish, Solid Oak.

RETAIL PRICE *52.50 TALLBACK OAKPORCH ROCKER

SALE PRICE

Big Scoop Seat, Natural Finish, Solid Applachian Oak. .

RETAIL PRICE 90.00 .

30 INCH TALL 24% CRYSTAL LAMP WITH PLEATED SHADE

SALE PRICE

*54

Importcd 1 cad Crystal With Brass Trim, \

50

I SOLID OAK PORCH SWING

RETAIL 52.50. SLANT FRONT PORCH SWING

Natifial Fifiish ^    -    -    C i

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Fullv Assembled    PRICE

40





14-TheDailvRe''cU)r Greenville, N.r -Wl*w!<lav .lune 1.1983

Crof8ttonl By Eugene Suffer EPA May Change The

Miles-Per>Gallon Tags

ACR*

1 Folds ifer 5 In favor of 8 - -free (safe)

12 Table spread

41 Author Seton 43 Cattle genus 45 Flat-bottomed boats 47 Mentally acute

88 Beach bonus 59 Brogue

13 Manhattan 51 English

ingredient

14 Docile

15 Kind of solitaire

17 Arrow - poison

18 Natural

19 Disfigure

21 One of the (^esars

22 Dogs outer)'

23 Thus: latin 26 Fairn breeder 28 Janet or

Vivien 31 Elliptical 33 Wire measure

35 English , sand hill

36 Church council

38 Jellylike substance 40 Energy source

painter

52 Choral compositions

54 Employs "

55 Gold, in Seville

56 Tall tale

57 Examine

DOWN

1 Particular sites

2 Alda or King

3 Robert-Warren

4 Divans

5 liberty

6 Popeyes Olive

7 Singer Helen

8 Muffled

9 Awnings

Average solution time: 27 min.

[A;Rp^j/V^^Llt. I \o

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D^^E.T BWAL

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ara

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Answer to yesterdays puzzle.

10 Hebrew measure

11 Abound 16 -more

blessed to give...

20 Umprey

23 Mayday!

24 The Holly - and the -

25 Warblers 27 Peruke

29 African antelope

30 Farm layer 32 Of greatest

duration 34 Mideast country 37 Stain 39 The-Weekend" 42 Race locale

44 Corset supports

45 Boxing niatch

46 Church part

48 Western state

49 Poi source

50 Feudal -flunky

53 Macaw

GENERAL TENDENCIES: Early morning confusion can soon be dissipated by adopting a new altitude. New conditions later in the day make it possible for you to achieve much of value ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Make those improvements at home that will bring more harmony and happiness. Study new worthwhile outlets:

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Make long-range plans to have more profitable days in the future. Adopt a more logical outlook on life GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) A good lime loengage in some new enterprise and gam more prestige Maintain a cheerful manner at all times.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) If you pursue personal aims in a positive fashion, you can gain them easily Take steps to improve your health.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Confer with influential persons who can give you the advice you need Strive for more harmony with family members, i VIRGO I Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) After business mailers are properly handled, get together with good friends and enjoy social pleasures. Be poised.

LIBRA (S#pt. 23 to Oct. 22) You can communicate very well now with higher-ups and can easily advance in career activities. Use care in motion.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov, 21) New situations come up in which you can gain benefits if you handle them well. Express happiness with family members.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Go through with whatever you have in mind in connection with a close lie and gel excellent results.

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 to Jan. 20) Ideal day to make new deals in connection with associates with good results. Don't be loo demanding of others.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Schedule your work well in the morning and then all works out smoothly the rest of the day. Use common sense.

PISCES (Feb, 20 to Mar. 20) Use practical sense in all your business dealings at this lime. You can realize a most cherished aim if^you apply yourself mor..

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will understand what is needed to get ahead in any matter, be it of a personal or business nature and can bring harmony between arguing factions. This is a devoted and loving person here and will be happy in marriage.

The Stars impel, they do not compel What you make of your life is largely up to you!

1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

Talk Over MIA

the third since last September when Vietnamese Foreign Minister Nguyen Co Thach ayeed to schedule four sucn meetings a year. Leadkfg the U.S. delegation is lV Col. Joe Harveyi commander of the Joint Casualty Resolution center in Hawaii.

Visit Han

BANGKOK, T(1 - A four-man U.S.-delegation traveled to Hanoi today for talks with Vietnamese officials on the return of remains of American servicemen killed during the Vietnam War but not accounted for.

The three-day mission is

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP> -Those fantastic fuel economy ratings that automakers have been touting in recent years may not look so fantastic in the future. The Environmental Protection Agency is considering slashing the numbers.

The highest figures, for highway driving, would be cut by 22 percent while the ifty mileage figures would be trimmed by 10 percent under a proposal the agency unveiled Tuesday.

Its all part of truth-in-advertising push by the EPA, which has long been criticized for publishing highly inflated numbers that bear no relationship to what a motorist can expect to get in everyday driving    f

The EPA at first.tried to combat the problem by stressing that the numbers should only be used to compare one car against another.

But faced with evidence that this advice was being roundly ignored, the agency began looking for way|,^o convert its ratings into a better predictor of what motorists could expect to achieve on the highway.

After reviewing survey data on actual mileage results obtained from motorist surveys in the past three years, the agency is proposing a simple across-the-board reduction for all cars

Highway mileage figures will 1m; cut by 22 percent, because EPA found they were more inflated than the city figures. EPA officials sav the figures became in

flated primarily because the highway test is conducted at an average speed of 48 miles \ an hour, far below the speed most motorists drive on the open road.

In 1979, the EPA stopped publishing the highway figures because of concern that they were so misleading, but lanufacturers >have been frbe to continue citing the numbers in their advertising Under the proposal, the EPA would go back to publi.shing both the highway and city figures, but only after applying the fixetk percentage cuts.

If these cuts had been applied to the top-rated 1983

Volkswagen, its city rating would have dropped from 50 miles per gallon to 45 and its highway average would have declined from 67 mpg to 52._

John Hartnett, "a spokesman for General Motors Corp., said the giant automaker has seen the gap narrow between the mileage ratings and actual performance as measured by GM surveys'in recent years. For this reason, he said, GM is not sure the EPA proposal is needed anymore."

Phil Hutchison, a vice president for Volkswagen, said his company was opposed to applying fixed reductions to all automakers. -

Each of these advertised items is re quited to be readily available for sale at or below the advertised pni.e .r, each A&P. Store estept as. specjf, (.ally noted m this ad

CORRECTION

The following item appearing in our food ad on page 39 of today's Daily Reflector is incorrectly listed.

It should read as follows;

Meat Franks -

A&P Qualify

12 Oz. Package

1.00

YOUR FRIENDLY. NEIGHBORS #T

KNipWWHAT IT IS TO FEED A FAMILY

GWALTNEY 1ST GRADE SLICED

BACON

1 LB. PKG.

$|29

GWALTNEY

GREAT

DOGS

GWALTNEY

BOLOGNA

GWALTNEY

FRANKS

(MIX OR MATCH) GWALTNEY SPICED

NCHEONaa

AF

GWALTNEY

P&P LOAF

8 0Z. PKG.

GWALTNEY

LIVER

LOAF

GWALTNEY

SALAMI

8 OZ. PKG.

99

GWALTNEY

SOUSE

LOAF

8 OZ PKG

GWALTNEY TURKEY BUFFET

HAMS

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS. WE WILL GLADLY ACCEPT USDA FOOD STAMPS & WIC VOUCHERS. PRICES EFFECTIVE: JUNE 2, 3. & 4.1983.

SHOPEZi SPAINS

WEST END SHOPPING CENTER OWNED t OPERATED BY: SHOP EZE FOOD STORES INC.

MANAGER BURGESS STEVENS .MONOAY SATURDAY1 A M.-9 P M - SUNDAY 9 A M -5 P M VISIT OUR DELI FOR DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS

1414 CHARLES BLVD.

OWNED & OPERATED BY ALTON SPAIN MONDAY-THURSDAY 8 A.M.-8 P.M. FRIOAY-SATURDAY 8 A M.-8:30 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAY

CRYPTOQUIP

KXNKI.OK ALOU EZ VXXK.YKNIPZ

YNKVOAFOK WA CAIWAWHGOU GXCHO.

Yesterdays Cryptoquip IDi KARATE TEACHFIRS IDEAUDINNER; PORK CHOPS.

'Dxlays Cryptoquip due; L eqiials D.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher m 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.

(i) lyglKinqfeituresSyndiiA'e Ini

FORECAST FOR THURSDAY, JUNE 2.1983Gaines-burgers and Top Choiceannounce a

SMtOWPWCt

fry

iffy

SAME GREAT QUALITY

with real beef fora moist deicnustaste

Thats right! Gaines has lowered the prices, but not the quality on Gaines>burgers' ... Top Choice'... Puppy Choice and Prime Variety dog foods. So now you can feed your dog these high quality brands more often. These Gaines products are a better value than ever. See for yourself! .

Gaines Soft Moist dog foods. The Same Great Quality at a' New Low Price!

Use this coupon to save even more!

Save20<^

on any sijg. any flavor ,

Gaines burgers Top Choice' Puppy Choice'

20^

MANUFACTURER S COUPON: EXPIRES DECEMBER 31.1983

20

UN llWMr Gentrji Fooas CO5 'e-nOutM yOv *0' M 'Kt rtiuS , 0* this couooh D'vs T* 'O' hjhflu'ij' yoi, 'ect vt 10h the siie o* toe | soec'tiefl D'OOuct inti' uooh -eouest yov suomit evioehce o' ou'chjse , theteo' saiis'ictofy to Generi' FooOs Co'o Couooh 'hjy oot oe is , siQheo t'ihs'e'red o feo'oducM Customer must oiy i"y si'es ta> j Vom where O'0h>0iie0 tneo o' 'estrmtd Oy itn GooO omy m u S A    ,

Puerto Hrco ltd US Gout hsiir Cashviiue 1'20* Couoonwmnot , Oe honored i' O'OMhtOO through OutSide ygencies b'OMrs or others , who ite not ret' diStr'OutOrs O' Our ihe'ChjnO'Se Or SBeC'lrCi"y , luthorijedOyustopresehi.couoons'orredemotioh for'edemotion | oiproptfty received andhendud cOuOdn ttan to General Foods Coro PO 8o 103 Kinwuet IL 60902

This coupon good omy on outchase ch o'oouct noicated Any othe- , use COnsMulH fraud

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GENERAL FOODS CORPORATION





,

YOUR FRIENDLY NEIGHBORSAT

RESH

GROUND CHUCK ^ 1

YOU SAVE 20< LB.

The Dwly Reflector, Gretrnville, N.C.-Wedneway, June 1,196^1S^

KNOW WHAT IT IS TO FEED A FAMILY

0.

CUCUMBERS 19

LB.

lean TENDER

(CENTER RIB) (CENTER LOIN)

PORK $14 $ *59

CHOPS

END CUT CALIFORNIA

1

PEACHES

YOU SAVE 20' LB.

YOU SAVE 20' LB.

BONE IN

SHOULDER

BONE IN

ROAST

WMW M

Kl

PECAN SANDIES

CHUCK

ROAST

CENTER CUT

$ I 19

I    LB

COUNTRY STYLE

YOU SAVE 20'LB. YOU SAVE 40'LB.

t AN BONELESS

BACK

BONE

$ I 19

STEWING

BEEF

$169

I    LB

LOIN OR RIB

PORK LOIN

ERESH GREEN LOCAL

ROAST

$ I 19

ONIONS

29*

JKM Jm BUNC

REDROME

APPLES

3 LB. BAG

YOU SAVE 70 LB

vnii sAVi .n I H

YOU SAVE LB

13 OZ. I PKG.

KEEBLER

CHIPS DELUXE...

$ 1 M LARGE

HONEY DEWS..

YOU SAVE 30

$19

6 SIZE

EACH

FRESH

PLUMS

89*

LB.

YOU SAVE 20 LB.

PILLSBURY BUTTERMILK

BISCUITS

M 8 0Z. ^ CANS

JACK & BEANSTALK CUT

tllEENBEHIS

YOU SAVE 6

4

VIVA

NAPKINS

$159

CHEER

DETERGENT

tyo/ BOX

$ |98

MACARONI UHEESE 3

7Va OZ. BOXES

99

YOU SAVE 9'

SrOKEl Y LEMON LIME OH ORANGE

DUNCAN HINES RTS

GATORADE

32 OZ BOTTLE

FROSTING

160Z. CAN

$109

YOU SAVE 3/

DULANYSPECKLED

r 1

PET RITZ

YOU SAVE 10

YOU SAVE 30

r

PETER PAN SMOOTH

OR CRUNCHY

1

PEANUT

BUTTER

18 OZ JAR

$139

L

YOU SAVE 36

HIGH POINT

COFFEE

$449

REDGLO

TOMATOES

3    303

CANS

$100

in

YOU SAVE 20

YOU SAVE 10'

MORTON CHICKEN, BEEF, OR TURKEY

BUTTER

BEANS

16 OZ. BAG

99

YOU SAVE 20*

PIE

SHELLS

YOU SAVE 10'

PKG. OF 2

69

POT

PIES

8 0Z. BOXES

79

YOU SAVE 10'

PET RITZ    ^ ^ ^ m

c    CREAM    COCA-

PIES    COLA

MORTON

HONEY BUNS

9 0Z. BOX

89

YOUSAVE^

WELCH

GRAPE JUICE

12 OZ.    ^    ^

CAN

YOU SAVE 10'

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1C ITie Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C,-Wedneaaay, June i,

Stock And Market Reports

By The Associated Press

Grain: No. 2 yellow shelled corn higher at 3.20-3.55, mostly 3.40-3.50 in east and 3.29-3.55, mostly 3.35-3.52 in Piedmont; No. 1 yelloV soybeans lower at 6.06-0.43, mostly 6.06-6.31 in east and 5.80-6.12, mostly 5.93-6.12 i Piedmont; wheat 3.23-3.60, mostly 3.23-3.29; oats 1.20-1.45. (New crop - corn 2.66-2.84; soybeans -5.79-6.09; wheat 2.93-3.33). Soybean meal fob. N.C. processing plants per ton 44 percent 202.80-210.00. Prices paid as of 4 p.m. Tuesday by location for corn and soybeans; Cofieid 3.55, 6.43; Conway 3.40, 6.21; Creswell 6.08; Dunn 3.38, 6.03; Elizabeth City 3.20, 6.13; Farmville 3.54, 6.14; Fayet teville 6.31; Goldsboro 3.49, 6.12; Greenville (3.35-3.40), 6.06; Kinston3.40, 6.06; Lumberton 3.42, (6.14-6.15); Pantego 3.40, 6.06; Raleigh - 6.30^; Selma 3.48, 6.20; Whiteville 3.42, 6.14; Willimaston 3.40, 6.06; Wilson 3.50, 6.08; Albemarle 3.29,5.93; Barber 3.,52, 6.12; Mocksville 3.40; Monroe (3.50-3.55); Mt. Lilia -, 6.00; Roaring River 3 35; Statesville 3.45,5.80. ,.

NEW YJRK lAP) - The stock market opened lower today, extending a broad slide triggered by concern over rising interest rales.

Two stocks fell in price for every one that rose in the early tally of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, off 29.03 points over the previous three sessions, dipped another 1.64 to 1,198.34 in the opening 30 minutes.

Analysts attributed the retreat to heightened concern that the Federal Reserve Board would adopt a more restrictive policy, pushing interest rates higher, unless rapid growth in the money supply slows.

If this money supply con tinues during June to t)e still on the high side, obviously some more tightening is going to be needed," a senior Reagan ad- ministration official told reporters at a briefing Tuesday

interest rates are at two month highs. Yields on three-month Treasury bills, which fell below 8 percent just three weeks ago, stood at nearly 8.7 percent today.

Todays early prices included American Telephone & Telegraph, unchanged at 6.5k; Superior Oil, down U at 36--'h; RCA, unchanged at 28; Associated Dry Goods, up s at 54^'I; and Digital Equipment, up'Hall IIV4.

On Tuesday, the Dow Jones industrials fell 16.16 to 1,199.98 in its biggest daily drop in four weeks.

Declines outpaced advances by nearly 3-t on the/ NYSE.

Big Board volume fell to 73.91 million shares from 76.29 million Friday. The stock market was closed Monday in observance of Memorial Day.

The NYSEs composite index lost 1.15 to 94.08 At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was down 2.66 at 460.72.

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WEDNESDAY

8:30 p m. - Kiwanls'Club meels 6:30 p.m. - REM Crisis In terventlon me^ls 7:30 p.tft.- Wintervilfe Kiwanls Club meets at Jaycee Hut 8:00 p.m - Pitt County A1 Anon Group meets at AA Bldt;.. on Farmviilehwy 8:00 p.m. - Pitt County Ala-Teen Group meets at AA Bldg . Farmviilehwy.

THURSDAY

2:00 p m. - Better Breathing Club meets at Willis BIdg 6:30 pm. - Exchange Club meets

7:00 p.m. - Greenville Elks IxxIgeNo. 1645 meets 7:30 p m. - Overeaters Anony mous meets at First Presbyterian Church

7:30 p.m. - American Legion Auxiliary meets at liOglon Home 8:00 p.m. - VFW meets at Post Home

8 00 p.m. - Coochee Council No 60, Degree of Pocahontas meets at RedlhensHall

Fuuua Ind (iTE Corp

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Doctor Charged In Drug Cose

A Pitt County Grand Jury Tuesday indicted John Waellz of 2608 Jackson Drive on three felony counts of illegally obtaining Schedule II drugs (Percoset) for his own use.

, Waeltz, a physician, is a third year resident employed by Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

According to the indictments, Waeltz obtained Percoset for his own use by writing illegal prescriptions for the drug. The alleged violations occurred over periods in 1981,1982 and this year.

The charges stemmed from an investigation by a special State Bureau of Investigation diversion investigative unit. The special unit concentrates on drug law violations by professionals such as physicians, dentists; pharmacists, and nurses. *

Resigns

FARMVILLE -Farmville Mayor W.R. "Rusty Duke Jr. announced his resignation Tuesday night, effective immediately.

Duke, an attorney, said he is accepting a ^itk>n in the Trust Division of Wachovia Bank and Trust Co. and he and his wife and three children wiU move to Winston-Salem in the near future. He has been mayor of Farmville since December 1981.

The Farmville commissioners, meeting in budget workshop session, accepted the resignation with regret, they said, and unanimously elected major pro tempore John Turner Walston as mayor. They said they will elect a fifth member of the board during another workshop session scheduled for Thursday.

Tve spent most of my life in Farmville and Pitt County, Duke said, "and I will miss everyone here. However, this seems to be an opportunity I cant pass up. Ive enjoyed working with this board and have learned a lot from the experience.

He said he will assume his duties with Wachovia July 11. '

Need Slogan For Boston

BDSTON (AP) - Bean-towrf just wont do any more. Neither will Hub of the Universe.

In fact, (he Greater Boston Convention and Tourist Bureau says theres no appropriate slogan for the ..Back Bay city, so it threw a party to announce a contest toffnd a new sobriquet.

Boston has kind, of a mixed up image, Robert E. (ummings, president of the tourist bureau, said Tuesday night. Boston does not have an image that is widely accepted or universally j)romoted.

The bureau hired an expensive hotel ballroom Tuesday night, pas.sed out free drinks with cherrystone dams and canapes on the house, then announced a contest to produce a few good words for Boston.

For a new theme for Boston in five words or less, th bureau, the Advertising Club of Boston and the Freedom Trail Foundation will pay the winning Massachusetts resident a S.YOOO prize.

Entries will be judged on the basis of originality, sincerity, appropriateness, aptness and neatness, Cummings said.

The Bo Winiker jazz band, in a manner that would have cost points for appropriateness, serenaded the hotel ballroom crowd with Duke Ellington's celebrated paean to the A Train - a subway in New York City.

SITE CHANGED A change in locale for the monthly meeting of the Better Breathing Club has been announced. Instead of the Willis Building, the meeting will be held in the office of the Eastern Lung Association, 112 S. Pitt St. The , meeting .will be at 2 p.m. Thursday with the program the same as previously announced.

Couple Injured In Wrecic

A Greenville couple was injured Monday at 5:55 p.m. in a one-car accident 7.8 miles south of Greenville on N C. 43.

Investigating officer D R. Taylor said Susan Romero Millington, 28, and her husband, Gregory John Millington, 32, both of 707-A E. Fourth St., were injured. Mrs. Millington was charged with driving under the influence. .

Taylor quoted witnesses as saying the car went out of control and hit a driveway culvert, then rolled onto its top.

The Millingtons were transported to Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Taylor said both were seriously injured.

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Obituaries

WATER PROBLEM - Oliveira Isocrates throws up his arms in disgust as he surveys high water surrounding his car i Miami, Fla. A system of heavy thunderstorms over extreme South Florida Tuesday caused temporary flooding in the city and problems for some residents. (AP Laserphoto)

Guilty Plea By ExPolice Chief

WILMINGTON, N.C. (AP) - A former police chief and the supervisor of highway maintenance in Brunswick County pleaded guilty Tuesday to drug charges in connection with the federal Gateway probe.

Former Shallotte police chief Hoyal Varnam Jr. pleaded guilty in U S. District Court to one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute 1,100 to 1,400 pounds of marijuana. He could be sentenced to five years in prison, fined $1,500 or both.

Brunswick County highway maintenance supervisor Steve Jackson Varnam pleaded guilty to two counts ^ of conspiracy to import marijuana. One count concerned 15,000 to 16,000 pounds of marijuana and the other^ concerned 1,100 to 1,400 pounds. He could face 10 years in prison or a $30,000 fine.

Brunswick County Sheriff Herman Strong was also scheduled to appear in court Tuesday, but was rescheduled until today. Strong has pleaded innocent to three counts of conspiracy to possess marijuana with intent to distribute and one count of conspiracy to import marijuana and Quaaludes.

Others scheduled to go on trial Tuesday on charges of conspiring to import marijuana were Steve Jackson Varnam, Cambrn Jordan, Leonard Thomas Hill, Eric Arias, Idael Manuel Jiminez-Mora, Gerald Euguene Michaels and Preston E. Reeves. Laten Gene

Reaves i^ to be tried on charges engaging in a continuing criminah enterprise. Those cases were delayed Tuesday.

The Gateway Indictments, handed down in March, focus on illegal activities. Including public corruption, over the past two years, said U.S. Attorney Sam Currin. He said the probe was related to Colcor, the FBIs investigation of corruption ip southeastern North Carolina.

During the time covered by Gateway, criminals tried to smuggle 200,000 pounds of marijuana into North Carolina. He said the investigation resulted in the seizure of >68 tons of marijuana, 500,000 doses of Quaaludes, six boats, two planes and ^veral vehicles.

Currin said Strong and Steve Varnam allegedly were to provide protection for the smuggling operations. He said there was no Indication that Hoyal Varnam used his job to further the smuggling activities. 1

ELKS NOTICE Elks Pitt Lodge No. 234 and Golden Rod Temple No. 368 will hold a joint meeting tonight at 8. All membeis are asked to be present.

J.N. White, Exalted Ruler William A. Smith, Stry

Help keep Greenville clean! Call the Right-Of-Way Office at 752-4137 for more information.

.     Andrews

\rMr. Mayo Andrews df Route 1, Robersonville, died Tuesday in Edgecombe, General Hospital. He was the brother of Mrs. Lizzie Mae Andrews of the home. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by Flanagan Funeral Home, Greenville.

Barnes FARMVILLE - Mr. Grant Barnes of Frmville died in Washington, D.C. Mr. Barnes was the brother of Mrs. Evangeline Barnes Dupree. Arrangements will be made by Joyners Mortuary.

Polk To Ask Tax Increase

COLUMBUS, N.C. (AP) -Officials of Polk County say they have no emergency funds and no money left over from this years budget, so they are proposing a 46 percent tax increase for the fiscal year beginning July 1.

The county board of commissioners Tuesday^ proposed increasing the tax rate to 66.8 cents per $100 valua- tion, an increase of 21 cents over the current rate.

If approved, the tax increase would be the largest in the countys history and the largest this year for any North Carolina county.

The proposed budget would give a 76 percent increase over last years county allotment to the school system. Polk County students: last year had the lowest competency-test scores in the region.

Im not running for county 'commissioner any more, said Chairman Henry Huntsinger, sworn in last December. And when 1 leave here, I want to leave this county in the best shape as I can.

The only thing I want to run for is the state line, said Commissioner Geoff Tennant, who also took office in December. Weve done the best we can with what weve got.

Gasoline Leak In Electric Vaults

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) Gasoline leaking into underground electrical vaults Tuesday forced the closing of a downtown Greensboro street and an interruption of power for about 10 buildings.

The- gasoline leaked from underground tanks at an abandoned service station, authorities said. Between 20 and 30 gallons of gasoline were discovered in each of two electrical vaults.

Twenty or 30 gallons isnt much, said Capt. Jim Alexander, an inspector with the Greensboro Fire Department. But when you mix 20 to 30 gallons with 24,000 volts, its a whole different story.

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Barrett

Mrs. Florence Corbeau Qark Barrett, 62, of Route 5, Box 172C, Burlington, died Tuesday in Alamance County Ho^ital. Funeral services will be conducted Friday at 2 p.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel in Van-ceboro. Burial will be in Celestial Memorial Gardis, Vanceboro.

Surviving are her husband, Charles Junior Baitett; a daughter, Mrs. Donna Moore of Washingtdh; four sons, James B. Gark of Mebane, Sherwood Clark .of Philadelphia, Charles Barrett Jr. of Mebane and Danny Barrett of Burlington; five sisters, Mrs. Allie Fill-ingame, Mrs. Ethel Hudsson and Mrs. Louise Johnson, all of Vanceboro, Mrs. Joyce Kent of Anchorage, Alaska, and Mrs. Made Dubey of Constable, N.Y.; four brothers, Louis Corbeau, Swendell Corbeau and Garland Taylor, all of Vanceboro, and Hugh Taylor of Atlanta; eight grandchi(firen and one great-grandchild.

The family will receive friends at McClure Funeral Home in Mebane from 7-9 p.m. Wednesday. The body will be taken to Vanceboro Thursday and the family will receive friends from 7-9 p.m. Thursday at Wilkerson Funeral Home, Vanceboro.

Bumett

MOUNT OLIVE - Mr. Charles Daniel Burnette Sr., 84, of 201 N. Chestnut St., Mount Olive, died Tuesday. A graveside service will be held Thursday at 11 a.m. in Maplewood Cemetery.

Mr. Burnette, a retired distributor of petroleum products, was a member of the First United Methodist Church of Mount Olive and Mount Olive Masonic Lodge No. 208. He was a Shriner and a Rotaran.

Surviving are his wife. Mrs. Esther Hatch Burnette of the home; three sons, Charles D. Burnette Jr. of Greenville, Jimmy Burnette of Kinston and Bill Burnette of Raleigh; a daughter, Mrs. Ann Beasley of Chapel Hill; a brother, Richard Burnette of Petersburg, Va.; two sisters, Mrs. Betsy Greene of Wilson arid Mrs. Tammie Walker of Raleigh; 12 grandchildren and one greatgrandchild.

The family will receive friends at the home. Tyndall Funeral Home, Mount Olive, is in charge of arrangements.

In lieu of flowers, donations in his memory may be made to Mount Olive College of^the First United Methodist Church of Mount Olive.

Clemons

Graveside services for Brooks Danielle Clemons, 1' months, were to be conducted today at 3:30 p.m. in Brown Hill Cemetery.

Surviving are her parents, Ms. Diane Gemons and Larry Donnell Lee, both of Greenville, and her maternal and paternal grandparents.

Funeral arangements were handled by Phillips Brothers Mortuary, Greenville.

Dupree

FARMVILLE. - Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Jane Dupree, who died Sunday night at her home, will be conducted Saturday at 1 p.m. from Moyes Chapel Free Will Baptist'Church near Farmville by the Rev. Willie Joyner. Burial will be in Sunset Memorial Park.

Mrs. Dupree was bom and reared in Pitt County where she attended the public schools. She was a membr of Moyes Chapd Church, where she served on the msother board. She was a member of Sunbeam Chapter No. 49, Onter of Eastern Star, and the Helping Hand Club.

Surviving are one son, Allen Jehu Dupree^of New York; one stepdaughter, Mrs. Catherine Capehart of New York; 10 ^andchildren; five sisters, Mrs. Effie Carr Joyner, Mrs. Lola Bell Smith and Miss Mamie Lee Carr, all of Farmville, and Mrs. Ethel Jones and Mrs. Rubell Britt, bothofWinterville.

The body \^1 be on view at Moyes Cnkpel Church Thursday aftel6 p.m. Family visitation will be Thursday at the church from 7-8 p.m. The family will assemble at 100 Williams St. at noon Saturday for the funeral procession.

Farmer

Mr. Marvin 0. Farmer, 70, died Wednesday at his home, 3005 Briarcliffe Drive in Lake Ellsworth. Funeral services will be conducted Friday at 2 p.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel. Burial will be in Martin Memorial Gardens near ^Williamston.

Mr. Farmer was a resident and farmer of the Stokes community for many years. He was a member of Rose of Sharon Free Will Baptist Church.

Surviving are five sons, Billy Farmer, Ray Farmer and Ricky Farmer, all of Greenville, Robert G. Farmer of Richmond, Va., and John 0. (Tick) Farmer-of Robersonville; four daughters, Mrs. A.J. Parrott and Mrs. Helen Roberson, both of Greenville, Mrs. Lucille Godley of Apex and Mrs. Jeannette Leary of Bear-grass; 20 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home ^from 7-9 p.m. Thursday and at other times^will be at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Leary of Beargrass.

Overstreet -

MELBOURNE, Fla. -Funeral services for Mr. L.S. Overstreet, 94, who died Monday, were conducted today in Melbourne.

Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Margaret Broadhurst Overstreet, formerly of Greenville.

Wilson

Mr. George Wilson, 85, of Route 5, Greenville, died Wednesday in Beaufort County Hospital, Washington. He was the husband of Mrs. Maybell Wilson of the home. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by Flanagan Funeral Home.

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Sports

DAILY

classifiedWEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 1, 1983

Coley Pitches, Slugs Pitt Past Wilson In Opener

Malone Takes MVP Honors

Sixers Sweep l-A. For Title

By JIMMY DuPREE Reflector Spwts Writer HOLLYWOOD - Pitt County starting pitcher Doug Coley gave up just three hits in 7^ innings and added a solo homer to a two-run shot by Greg Briley to give Post 39 a 4-1 victory over Wilson in the 1983 American Legion baseball season opener.

Coley also drove in the first Pitt County run in the opening frame with a double and scored on a two-run homer by Greg Briley. On the mound, he struck, out 10 Wilson batters and went five innings before allowing a hit - a leadoff homer by second baseman

Charles Chatman. Mont Carter added a pair of hits, including a double in the first.

Darryl Edwards (ame on in relief in the ^ghth inning to earn a save in his first appearance.

I was really pleased with the way we played tonight, said Pitt County coach Bill Davis. Weve only had one practice all together as a team and that was yesterday, but 1 thou^t th^ played together pretty well.

Carter doubled wifh one out in the bottom of the first, and Coley followed with an RBI double to left. After the second out, Briley ripped his homer to

ECAC'South ADs Vote For Five More Championships

HARRISONBURG, Va. (AP) - The athletic directors of the six schools in the Eastern College Athletic Conference Southern Division    announced    Tuesday    the

league will hold championships in five additional sports in 1983-84.

The ECAC South, which already holds a postseason championship in basketball, will sponsor championships next year in golf, tennis, cross country, soccer and outdoor track.

The decision to sponsor the additional championships was made at a recent meeting of the athletic directors at which James Madison Athletic Director Dean Ehlers was elected president of the ECAC Southern Division.

Athletic Director Chuck Boone of Richmond was elected vice president and Dr. Ken Karr, athletic director at East Carolina, was elected treasurer.

We are also considering the addition Of other sports, as well as championships for women, Ehlers said Tuesday. Season-ending tournaments and meets for the womens teams are quite possible for the 1983-84 academic year.

Sites and tentative dates for the new championships are: golf at East Carolina, April 13-15; tennis at the U.S. Naval Academy, Oct. 14-16; cross country at Richmond, Nov. 5; and outdoor track at George Mason, the date to be determined.

A playoff for the ECAC South soccer championship istentatively set for Nov. 12 or Nov. 13 at a site to be determined. The game will involve the top teams from the two ECAC' South divisions, - James Madison, George Mason and Navy in one and Richmond, William & Mary and East Carolina in the other.

Edwards, Parrott Take Top Awards At Aycock Banquet

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Sterling Edwards and Vicki Parrott topped award winners at the annual E.B. Aycock Junior High School AlLSports Banquet last night.

Edwards received four awards during the evening, tops among them the Outstanding M^e Athlete Award. He also claimed the award for Best Offensive Lineman in football. Most Valuable Player in wrestling, and Most Dedicated player in baseball.

Parrott, named the Outstanding Female Athlete, also claimed the Most Improved in girls basketball. Most* Valuable in girls tennis, and Principals Award (athleUc ability and scholarship).

Other awards presented included;

- Football Most Dedicated, Greg Vacek; Most Improved, Ervin Best; Best Defensive Lineman, Todd-Morris; Best Defensive Back, Darryl Perkins; Best Offensive Back, Anthony Cobb; Most Valuable Player, Anthony Cobb.

Wrestling - Most Dedicated, Brian Walsh; Most Improved, Todd Morris.

Basketball - Coachs Award, Waylon Moore; Most Valuable Player, Dwight, Smith.

Girls basketball - Most Valuable Player, Kim Dupree.

Tennis - Most Improved, David McDonald; Most Valuable Player, David Lee.

Girls Tennis - Most Improved, Cari Smith.

Track - Most Outstanding Track, Stephen Strother; Most Outstanding Field, Greg Vacek; Most Valuable Player, Alphonso Young.

Softball - Most Dedicated, Suzanne Tadlock; Most Valuable Player, Lisa Harkley. Baseball - Rookie of the Year, James Matthews; Golden Glove, Dwight Smith; Outstanding Pitcher, Tyrone Jones; Most Valuable Player, EricJarman.

Special Awards - Pep Club presented awards to Coach Wilson McDowell and Principal Kay Whitehurst.

Art Baker, offensive coordinator and assistant head coach at'East Carolina University, was the speaker for the occasion.

left field to put Pitt County in control 3-0.

Pitt County threatened in the fourth inning, with Kenny Kirkland getting things started by reaching first on an error. Kirkland stole second, but the throw from the catcher sqiled off Chatmans glove at second allowing Kirkland to take third. After Joey Kennedy was hit by a pitch, Wilson got out of the inning with a double play.

Chatman jumped on Coley in the top of the sixth for a convincing homer over the fence in right field. Coley rebounded to strike out Mark Davis before surrendering his second hit of the night to Mark Logan on a double down the line. A strikeout by Woody Mercer ended the inning for Wilson.

Coley bounced back for a homer to left field in the bottom half of the Inning to preserve the three-run Pitt County advantage.

In the bottom of the ei^th inning, Chatman led off with a pop out, and Davis lined a single to right. When Coley walked Logan, Edwards was brought on to close out the game.

Edwards walked the first batter he faced, but retaliated to strike out the final four batters to end'the Wilson hopes for a rally.

I thought Doug threw the ball real well, but 1 could tell starting In the seventh that he was getting a little tired, said Davis. "His curve wasnt breaking as sharp, and some of the pitches were up in the strike zone. Edwards came in and really closed the door on them.    ,

The pitchers we have are young, he continued. If we continue to work hard in practice, well improve. I think were going to be all right

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Walslon.ll    3    0    0 0    Hudson.rf    3 J    + 0

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HBP by Proctor iKenne^ . WP Coley Save Edwards    y    /./ ,y

INdLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) - The Philadelphia 76ers, an overpowering machine in the fourth quarter of every game in the National Basketball Association championship series, are champions at last.

The 76epi dominated the ' final 12 minutes for a fourth and final time Tuesday night as they rallied for a 115-108 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers to complete a sweep of the defending NBA champions.

The injury-riddled Lakers were trying to become the first team to win consecutive NBA crowns since the Boston Celtics accomplished the feat in 1967-68 and 1968-69.

Instead, they became only the fourth victim of a sweep in the championship series and the first since Golden State beat Washington in four gam?sqight years ago.

Meanwhile, the 76ers have every right to stake their claim as one of the finest teams in the 37-year history of the NBA. They were 65-17 during the regular season, the fifth-best mark ever recorded, and became the first team ever to go through the playoffs with as few as one loss.

Were going to have to be remembered, said a sweat-soaked Philadelphia Coach Billy Cunningham amidst a jubilant dressing room celebration. When you win 12 out of 13 in the playoffs, thats something.

The 76ers, who swept the New York Knicks in four games and eliminated the Milwaukee Bucks in five to qualify for the championship seriesjrailed the Lakers 93-82 entering the fourth quarter Tuesday night.

* But with Moses Malone and Julius Erving leading the way. it was. as Earvin Magic Johnson of the Lakers likes to say, winnintime.    '

Only not for Los Angeles. ' Malone, a unanimous choice as the Most Valuable Player of the series, scored nine points and grabbed 10^ re

bounds in the final period.

And Erving. a member of the three Philadelphia teams that reached the NBA finals in the past six years only to come up empty, also had nine points in the period including seven in a fow for the 76ers in the waning minutes.

The Lakers, playing without starting guard Norm Nixon and key reserve forward-' center Bob McAdoo, both sidelined with injuries, nevertheless led most of the way.

Thejnront on top 26-24 on a three-poini goal by Michael Cooper' as the first period ended and. after a couple of ties at the^ start of the second quarter, the Lakers led until Ervings steal and dunk with 2:02 left tied the game at 106-106.

Johnson, who played all 48 minutes, made a free throw with 1:44 to go. giving the Lakers a one-point lead. But after Kareem Abdul-Jabbar missed a skyhook, Malone rebounded and Erving scored onafastbr^aklayup.

He was fouled on the play and made the free throw, giving, the 76ers a 109-107 advantage with 59 seconds remaining,.    ^

Abdul-Jabbar made one of two free throws with 42 seconds left, drawing the Lakers ,to within one point, but Erving sank - an 18-footer with 24 seconds to go, making it 111-108.

After Cooper mis^d a three-point attempt, Bobby Jones stole the ball from Abdul-Jabbar and Malone scored on a dunk with 11 .seconds left. Maurice Cheeks completed the scoring^ with another diink with one second to go.

The 76ers scored 20 of the games final -28 points and 33 in the fourth quarter to only 15 for the Lakers,

All-told, Philadelphia out scored Los Angeles 124-79 in the fourth quarters of the four games after trailing at halftime in every game 11 was 6,5:51 at the intermission

Tuesday night.

"I felt to win this game, we had to control the boards, said Malone. Im not saying were the best team ever. Were the best team now. After next year, maybe well be the best team ever.

Malone, who signed a six-year. $13 million contract with the 76ers before the 1982-83 season, finished with 24 points and 23 rebounds. In the four games, he averaged 25.8 points and 18.0 rebounds.

Malone made the difference in the series. said Los Angeles Coach Pat Riley. The guy in the middle makes them a championship team He was the missing element on the team.

All four games were'great games. Philadelphia was just able to put it all together in the fourth quarter and they beat us. Theyre a great, great bs starting guards, Andrew Toney and Cheeks, added 23 and 20 points,- respectively. Bobby Jones came off the bench to add 13 for the 76ers.

1 remember everybody crying.last year in this building, said Erving, referring to Philadelphias sixth-game defeat that gave the Lakers their second title in three years over the 76ers Seven years (before winning the championship I is a long time, but'it was worth the wait

It was his (ErvingsI game, he said he was taking over. said Jones, It's In his back pocket now

Sure, 1 wanted Dr J to get a ring, but not against us," said Us Angeles forward Jamaal Wilkes Philadelphia IS a second half ballclub They made the big playcv "

Abdul Jabbar    Us

Angeles with 2ir^oints, Johnson had 27 points and a game-high 13 assists while Wilkes added 21 points for the Lakers.    

They-, were three key players on last' years championship team, which shared the kst previous plavoff record (12 21

Sports Coltndor

Editor's Note Schedules ut stvplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice

Babe KuUi League Pepsi-Cola vs Wachovia Bank Planters Bank vs. Coca-Cola Thursdays r

City League California Concepts vs Pantana Bobs

Sunnyslde Eggs vs. Liberty PTA vs. Ormonds Pair Electronics vs. Airborne Industrial Lei^

Fire Fitersvs.GUCO Grady-^itevs. WNCT-TV

Womens League

^ Welk

Grenville Travel vs Copper

PTA vs. Burroughs-Wellcome Green KetUe

Wachovia Bank vs. Carolina Leaf Burroughs-Wellcome l vs. East Carolina II CIS vs. Empire Brushes #2 Cox Armature vs, Coca-CoU Burroughs-Wellcome 12 vs. Bdvolr

Public Works vs. Empire Brushes

#1

Womens League Greenville Travel vs. Prep Shirt Burroughs-Wellcome vs Pitt Memorial        .

Fred Webb vs. WachovU Bank PTAvs.PlajersRetreat

LitUe League UntonCarhide vs. KiwanU Pepsi-Wavt.Eicban|e

City League J As vs Metal Craft Whittington vs. Jlmmys66 Airborne vs. Ormonds Church League Trinity vs. First Free Will First Pentecostal vs Immanuel Faith vs. Maranatha Black Jack vs. Grace Church of God vs Fl^st Christian Mt. Pleasant vs. Memorial First Presbyterian vs. Jarvis Unity vs. Oakmont Peoples vs. Arlington St Co-Ed League Western SIzzlin'vs. Bonds Ervin's vs. Bill's Goodies

Jamesvilleat

Ule

federal

Wellcome vs. Fii Jayceesvs. L

American Wayne County at Pitt County (t

p.m.)

Dixon Downs Jamesville, 6-3

JAMESVILLE - Dixon High School finally shook loose Jamesville in the seventh inning yesterday and gained a 6-3 softball victory over the Lady Bullets in the 2-A,1-A playoffs.

Dixon will now continue in the playoffs, moving into the fifth round of the quest for the state chprnpionship.

Dixon scored two runs in the third to take the lead. That came on a freak homer by Gena Duff, who also hurled the victory. On the play, the Lady Bullet leftfielder, moving to cut off the ball, no more than a single, slipped down and the ball got though and Duff and a previous ruwre^ were able to circle the bases for a 2-0 lead.

Jamesville fought back with two in the bottom of the frame, and then both teams scored single runs in the sbfth for a 3-3 tie.

In the seventh, however,, Dixon pushed over three more to gain the win.

Duff and Padgett each bad two hits for Dixon, while no one had more than one for Jamesville.

The loss ended the season for the Lady Bullets, and gave them ieir only defeat in 20 games this year.

Jamesvilles boys, however, continue' in the state l-A baseball playoffs, traveling to Hayesville on Thursday for the first of a best-of-three series for the championship.

with the 1971 Milwaukee Bucks. Abdul-Jabbar was also a member of that,.Milwaukee team.

"It was winnin time for Dr J, said Johnson. "We came

to play tonight. Im happy with our season. We gave it all we had. They proved that they are the best team at this point and were on the top of their game

Hauling One Down

Philadelphia J6ers center Moses Malone (2) hauls down one of hjs rebounds as Los Angeles center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (33) trails the action. Malone and the Sixers defeated the Lakers 115-108 to sweep the NBA Championship Series. (AP Laserphoto)

Pate Plans Return To PC A At Kemper

BKTIIKSDA, M(1 lAli Jerry Iate will make an attempt to return to IGA Tour competition this week m the $4(K),(H)0 Kemper Open golf tournament "The shoulder feels pretty good now It's almosk hack to where 1 want it. to Ih'.' the bright and breezy Pate said after a practice round over the 7,173 jard ('ongressional Country (job course 1 stilLnaye to put ice on it atter 1 play, but at least I can swing a club now, said Pate, who is scheduled to make his fifst start in more than two months Thursday ^

/ j%e, a former U S. Open champion, has been bothered for almost a year by a neck and shoulder injury he sustained while practicing for last years British Open ^ Pate, troubled by the injury, played poorly early this season and then was forced to withdraw before opening defense of his title in the mipor tant Tournament Players Championship in .March He ,has not played since missing the Masters among other tournaments and has Miy

$1.705 m earnings (or the year The year's bc'eii a loss so far I'm 'anxious to get back," said Pate, one of a field of 1.56 [(layers who will be chasing a $723HH) first prize Leading the p.ick is defend mg champion Craig .Stalder, who will bt' attempting to turn around a disapRoinlmg season on his most priKluctive golf course

I've finished 2 11 here, so 1 guess you could say I play d prettv well,' Stadler said "1 haven't played particularly well most of the year, but maybe 1 can turn things around here "

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Philadelphia Coach Billy

Cun-

-- ^    ^        lured

ove7 his head in^eiflers dressing

ningham has cl^ampagne poured iie/76e

room Tuesday night after the teams victory over Los Angeles in th NBA Championship. (AP Laserphoto)

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l-TV Dly    GrnvtiJe.    N    C    -Wednaday.    June    1.    IW

Death Takes Ex

NEW YORK AP-He had the golden fi^ts m the Golden AgeoSporis He was an-Amencan hero, a man remembered as a great heavyweight boxing champion who achieved riches and worldwide populaniy that lasted long after his ring career ended Jack Dempsey, who had been in declining health in recent years, died Tuesday of natural causes at age 87 in his

Manhattan East Side apartment Dempseys body will be at the Frank E Campbell Funeral Home in New York today and Thursday. There will be a private funeral and burial

He was a legend, said Jack Sharkey, a Depression Era heavyweight champion who was knocked out by Dempsey in a 1927 fight at New Yorks Yankee Stadium

"It was universal with him. Wherever he went, people knew whohe was.

Dempsev. who began fighting in 1914 as Kid Blackie for less than J2 per bout, went on to earn the nickname The Manassa Mauler - along with the biggest paydays in a bygone era of sports that included luminaries such as Babe Ruth, Red Grange, Knute' Rockne and bobby Jones.

Dempsey

-S

fi.

"He put th ^rt of boxing into the American mainstream. said Harry Markson, head of boxing at Madison Square Garded from the 1940s through 1973, times when the arena was the mecca of the sport. He was the first to bring in what was called the million-(kdlargate.

Dempsey won the heavywei^it title on July' 4, 1919, by knocking out Jess Willard and held the crown throu^ Sept. 23.1926. when he lost to Gene Tunney. Ironically,. Dempsey - who won 60 of his 80 bouts, 49 by knockout - defended his title just five times while manager Jack Kearns waited patiently for large purses.

Yet Dempsey did not disappoint his faithful fans during that time as he fought scores of exhibitions all over the country. During an eight-year span, his purses totaled more than $4 million.

Perhaps his most famous fight - and one of the most talked-about bouts in history occurred when he lost a 10-round decision to Tunney in a second title bout in 1927,

In the seventh round of that fight, Dempsey knocked down Tunney but 'stood over the fallen champion for several

secoDQs. rbe referee did not begin counting until Dempsey had moved away, and Tunney was able to get up in time to avoid a knockout. Tuno^ managed to bold for victory in what became known as the long count fight.

I^ite the two losses, Dempsey and Tunney remain^ close friends. When Tunney died in 1978, Dempsey said; I feel like a part of me is gone.

Many who knew Dempsey said they traced the start of his fading health to Tunneys death

Dempsey retired from the ring in 1932, but came back to fiit three exhibitions - he won all three with second-round knockouts in 1940. He then went on to referee and promote fights and also worked the comers of several fighters he took an interest in, including Max Baer.

In 1974, Dempseys famous Broadway restaurant was closed in a lease dispute with his landlord. For years, the restaurant had served as a rallying point for his fans.

He used to sit in the window of that restaurant and shake everyones hand, re

called Irwin Rosee, who was former beayywei^it champion Joe Louis personal man-a^f for many ye^. He was a worldwide attraction.

Four years ago, Dempsey suffered a small stroke and be been plagued by heart problems since then. He was hospitalized in April 1982 when a pacemaker was implanted.

Dempsey spoit most of his later years enjoying a simple, private life with his fourth wife, the fiffmer Deanna Pieatelli. Dempsey, who had two daughters from a previous marriage to singer Hannah Williams, his third wife, gradually limited his public activities to an occasional charity or civic-minded appearance and boxing functions.

I think Ive lost my best friend, said U.S. District Jud^ John J. Sirica, who presided over the Watergate case. Demp^y was the best man at Siricas wedding in 1952.

He was just like a brother of mine, Sirica said.

Others added their^ condolences.

To me. Jack Dempsey was one of the greatest heavyweights that ever

lived. said tormer heavyweight champion Muhammad Alir He was fast, he had power, he kept coming, he could take a punch, he was controversial and he had personality.

Said former heavyweight champ Joe Frazier: 1 remember in 1964 whn I came back from the (Olympic) Games 1 met Mr. Dempsey at his restaurant and he was a fine gentleman. 1 feel that God gave him. the gift inside the ring and he didnt take advantage of a man outside the ring.

Luther Bagwell, 93. is the -only person still living in Manassa. Colo., from the days when Dempsey, bom William Harrison Dempsey, was a boy When we were kids that age, that (boxing) was about the only amusement we had, Bagwell said. It was a hard-up family. He had to,go barefooted all during the summer, just like the rest of us kids did.

At 15, he left his 10 brothers and sisters to fight in mining towns of Colorado, Utah and Nevada. He became a hobo, riding the rails, living in jun^e camps and earning

small change ? through whatever work he could find,. usually fitting.

The young fighter was often accused of rou^ tactics and was severely criticized for his failure to serve in the miliUry during World War I. Such attacks on his integrity and patrmtism hurt him and be attempted to enlist immediately after the United States entered World War II. The Army told him he was too old at age 46 since he had no previous military experience.

Eventaully, he became a physical instructor in the Coast Guard with the rank of commander and served almost four years, Uking part in the American invasion of Okinawa in 1945.

He was a natural fighter, said Ray Arcel, who has trained 19 world champions and knew Dempsey in the 1920s. and a very decent man.

STHL

Brushcutters

AvaUabieAt

HENDRIX-BIUIILL

Memorial Dr. 752-4122

Cedric Talks Of Celt Woes

Ex-Champ Dies

Former World Heavyweight Champion Jack Dempsey poses in front of a mural depicting his knockout of Jess Willard in Toledo, Ohio, July 4,

1919, in Dempseys New York Res- taurant in 1972. Dempsey died Tuesday of natural causes. He was 87. (AP Laserphoto)

.^CHARLOTTE (AP) -Bo^n Celtics forward Cedric Maxwell, who spent the entire year< without speaking to the media, broke his silence this week and told of his uncertain future with the club and the teams turmoil.

Maxwell called the season his most difficult since he was an National Basketball

Steinbrenner Benched For Crifie/zing Umps

Association rookie in 1977-78. His scoring average dipped to 11.9 points, lowest since he was a rookie. His playing time was down, and he was criticized for his on-court performance, including an obscene gesture made to referee Earl Strom in

NEW YORK lAP) Owner George Steinbrenner of the New York Yankees, a noted critic of umpires who call ,;them the way they see them and not the way George sees them, has been suspended and perhaps even silenced -for one week for his latest criticism of the umps.

Steinbrenner said he would not appeal Tuesdays suspen sion by American League President I^ee MacPhail, the fourth time this season the Yankees have been punished for episodes 'involving urn pires. But he said he would continue to speak out "when 1 feel that my players have not been dealt with fairly and protected.

The suspension, which begins Friday and bars Steinbrenner from attending games or being in his office until June 1, is the second for the controversial owner, who was barred from baseball by Commissioner Bowie Kuhn for two years after pleading

guilty to making illegal campaign contritiutions to former President Richard Nixon That .sentence later was reduced to 1.5 months Last month, Kuhn fined Steinbrenner $.50,(MK) for statements during a spring training game which the commissioner thoughts ce-flected on the integrity of National League umpires. Yankee Manager Billy Martin was suspended for* three games for kicking dirt on umpire Drew Coble and also was fined Sa.iKK) for two other incidents, one in which he "declared war on the urn

MacPhail told him he could not understand why Heath was not ejected also, a charge denied by MacPhail.

"The American league has experienced    repealed pro

blems with Mr. George Steinbrenners mode and philosophy of    operating the

Yankees with respwt to the umpiring    of games,

MacPhail said in announcing the suspension. This philosophy has been apparent in their publications and television-commercials, .in action on the field and in the public statements of Mr. Steinbrenner. '

pires

Steinbrenners suspension came four days after he rapped    umpire    Derryl

(ousins handling of a bean-ball incident last Friday night Dave Winfield of the Yankees was ejected for a shoving match with Oakland catcher Mike Heath after a close pitch from    Mike    Norris

Steinbrenner al.so claim%d

Youth Baseball

"The American l.ague constitution provides that umpiring shall be under the exclusive administration of the league president. While 1 welcome    constructive

criticism and suggestions from any of the clubs, 1 will not accept constant negativism from "one club which includes public tirades and attacks against the umpires integrity and professionalism

Litti Ltagu

Carroll ft Asipc.....6

Truo Valuo........0

Carroll & Associates got a three-hitter from Julius Smith and took a 6-0 Tar Heel l,-ittle League victory over True^^ Value Hardware yesterday.

Smith gave up single hits in the second, third and sixth innings, but managed to hold onto his shutout. He struik out ten and walked two.

Carroll & Associates got all It needed in the second inning, scoring twice. Smith led off with a single, moving up on an error. He was sacrificed to third and scored on an error Margin Gay reached on an error and scored on Michael Suttons double.

C&A added one in the fourth and closed out the scoring wlththre in the fifth

Smith paced the hitting with three, while Sutton added two. No one had more than one for True Value.'    ^

Johnson led off with a double and Moore was intentionally walked Wild' pitches scored Johnson and Moore moved to third. Jamie Brewington walked and stole second. Kelvin Yarrell then singled in Moore and a wild pitch let Brewington score. "

Sportsworld got only three hits off the pitching of Walter ^Gatlin, who walked three and struck out eight.

No one had more than one hit.

Prep League Hendrix & Dail 7

"The Yankees, and Mr, Steinbrenner personally, have already been warned and disciplined with respect to this by both the league and the commissioner during the course of the 1983 season. The latest incident must be considered against that background. Moreoverj in addition to conduct with respect to the umpires. there is concern and dissatisfaction on the part of the league that the game on the field Should constantly have to be encumber^ with the machinizations' and publicity pronouncements of the owner.

Sportsworld 3

Coco-Colo.........1

Sportsworld nipped Coca-Cola, 3-1, yesterday in the North sute Little League behind the no-hit pitching of Tom Moore. Moore walked six and struck out 13 in tossing the victory.

Coke got its only run in the first inning, giving the Bottlers an early lead

Sportsworld rallied for three ruiis In the fourth. Kedowick

Shop-Eze..........0

Hendrix ' & Dails Jeff Mahoney tossed a three-hit shutout at Shop-Eze Foodland last night for a 7-0 Prep League victory.

H&D got all it needed in the second inning scoring three times. Terrence Cherry led off, reaching on an error and Mitch Mitchum was also safe on an error. L.L. Everett walked, loading the bases, and Brian Pierces single scored two runs. A double steal brought in Everett.

Hendrix & Dail added three in the third and one in the fifth to wrap up the scoring.

Mahoney led the H&D hitting with two. No one had more than one for Shop-Eze.

Steinbrenner declined to meet with the media, but issued a statement before Tuesday nights game.

"1 have a great deal of personal feeling for Lee MacPhail, it said, Therefore, I have no intention of appealing this suspension regardless of whether I . feel it is proper or improper because 1 am convinced that Lee feels in his own mind that this is the course of action to take.

The game between First Slate Bank and Garris-Evans -was rained out and will be played at a later date.

I will cohtinue to speak out any time I feel that my players are being thrown at and are not being properly protected. I am not going to allow Dave Winfield or any of my other players to be a standing target for teams to feel that by going after them, they can incite them and thereby have them ejected from the game.

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Milwaukee.

1 was sad we lost, said Maxwell, but overjoyed that a new season would be beginning soon and all this would be behind me.

Maxwell said his silence this season was prompted by published reports last summer in Boston of a paternity suit filed against him. Then, after he had considered ending the ban early in the season. Maxwell said he was angered by reports about his behavior in a December game in Milwaukee.

He was ejected from the game for arguing a call, then made his obscene gesture. Boston Herald columnist Joe Fitzgerald said Maxwell should make a public apology. Maxwell did not appreciate the suggestion, so he kept quiet.

But after the urgings of his attorney, Ron Grinker, as well as Celtics president Red Auerbach and former coach Bill Fitch, Maxwell decided to talk.

1 think 1 probably will (grant interviews), said Maxwell. You make yourself less marketable and less admirable when you dont talk to the media. "More than likely. Ill get back into doing them. I dont mind. I was just fed up with the situation.

Most Celtics feel uneasy about recent changes, said MaxwelJ, including the resignation of coach Bill Fitch and the decision by owner Harry Mangurian to sell the team.

When a Boston acquaintance called with the news of Fitchs resignation last week. Maxwell figured the news was, about him.

I was thinking I was traded, said Maxwell There were rumors Id be in Atlanta. There are only two people who can be assured of being there next year - Robert (Parish), and Larry (Bird), and maybe a couple of others. No, 1 dont, include myself on that list. Id say now the odds are 75-25 that I will return, but you never can tell.

If they do sign Kevin (McHale), me and Larry will be up next year and one of us will have to go. And youve got two of the best white players in the NBA (Bird and McHale) - theyre drawing cards -and 1 might get caught up in that situation.    -    

It Was a season, all things considered. Maxwell would like to forget. But he still has maintained a sense of perspective about it all.

Its been a compressed, jumbled and confusing situation, he said. But it was still fun.





Cleveland Fans Finally See A Homer

By The Associated Press

. Cleveland Stadium is 320 feet down the lines, 377 in left-center, 385 in right-center and 400 feet straightaway. It htrfds 74,208 spectators, but none of the fans who patronize the building had seen a home run hit by the Indians since Aprils.

Until Tuesday nighU The Indians had sent 637 men to bat at Cleveland Stadium since George Vuckovich and Julio Franco hit consecutive homers inthe Indians home opener. Andre Thornton was No. 638.

Thornton lined his sixth homer of the season to lead off the second inning, and the Indians got some fine pitching from Juan Eichelberger and Dan Spillner to beat the Seattle Mariners 5-2.

1 hadnt thought about it, Thornton said of the homer drought. There havent been that many home runs hit here.

period. Im just hiding were on a cycle where we can put some wins together, Eichelberger, 2-3, worked 6 2-3 innings, giving up six bits, and Spillner retired the last seven Seattle hitters for his sixth save.

Dannys been the stopper for us the last co(^le of seasons, Thornton said. We need his experience out of the bullpen. Its nice to see him get back in the groove.

In other American League games, Boston Iged Chicago 2-1, New York rallied to beat California 5-3, Milwaukee defeated Oakland 5-2, Minnesota whipped Baltimore 10-3 and Kansas City beat Texas 6-5.

After Thorntons homer, .Toby Harrah singled and scored on Broderick Perkins double. The Indians scored three more runs in the fourth on RBI singles by Miguel Dilone and Manny Trillo and a bases-loaded walk.

Dave Henderson hit a two-

run homer for Uie Mariners.

Red Sox 2, White Sex 1 Boston pulled within a half-game of AL East-leading Toronto, which was idle, by ending Chicagos four-game winning streak. Bobby Ojeda and Bob Stanley combined on a seven-hitter to outduel White Sox left-hander Floyd Bannister, who went the distance.

Boston scored both its runs in the fourth on an RBI single by Reid Nichols and Dave Stapletons sacrifice fly.

Ojeda, 3-1, surrendered a first-inning homer to Carlt^ Fisk, one of four hits off tre

Boston lefty, and Stanley yielded the oUier three hits ^Ue earning his 10th save.

Yankees S,Angds 3

Ken Griffey ripped a two-run single to snap a 3-3 tie and cap New Yorks winning four-run rally in the eighth inning, giving the Yankees five strai^t victories.

The rally ruined the night for California starter Bill Travers, who hasnt pitched in two years and hasnt won a game since August, 1980. Travers took a 3-1 lead into the eighth, when he walked Roy Smalley.

Don Baylors sacrifice fly and an RBI single by Lou Piniella tied the score 3-3 before Griffey delivered his two-run hit. The big inning was helped along by a double steal executed by Roy Smalley and Dave Winfield.

Brewers 5, As 2 Robin Younts two-run double sparked Milwaukee to four runs in the third inning, backing Moose Haas to his third victory in four decisions, Haas scattered ei^t hits for the Brewers, retiring H in a row at one point. ;    .

Yount sustained a cut leg-in

the inning and. was taken to a Milwaukee hospital. He received nine stitches in his left shin.

The As were held to one hit through 5 2-3 innings before scoring twice in the sixth on Rickey Hendersons double, an RBI single by Mike Davis and Wayne Gross run-scoring double.

1|)^ 10, Orioles 3 Rhi% Bush and Gary G^ti drove in three runs apiece, and Kent Hrbek went

2-for-3 with three runs-scored as the Twins pounded out 16 hits to beat Baltimore. Ken Schrom won his fourth game without a loss by scattering seven hits.

Schrom held together his perfect major league record with the victory. He is now 6-0 lifetime, including parts of two seasons with Toronto.

Eddie Murray hit a two-run homer for the Orioles.

Royals 6, Rangers 5 Hal McRae drove in two

runs \^th a double in Kansas Citys four-run fourth inning as the Royals defeated Texas. Bud Black scattered five hits over six innings, and Dan Quisenberry pitched the final 1 1-.3 innings to earn his I2th save..

The Royals also scored twice in the second inning on Frank Whites bases-loaded forceout and a single by John Wathan.

Buddy Bell homered for Texas.

Robinson's Era May Be Ending

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Has outfielder Bill Robinson finally reached the end of the line?

I Robinson, 39, was designated Tuesday for reassignment by the Philadelphia Phillies, so they could activate righthand pitcher Charley Hudson from their Portland farm in the Pacific Coast League.

Robinson, a native of McKeesport, Pa., is a 14-year major league veteran, who first came up in 1966, with Atlanta tabbed as a potential superstar.

He was traded one year later' to the New York Yankees, where the media hype described him as the next Mickey Mantle, one-time Yankees star outfielder.

But Robinson never reached his potential in New York,

where he hit .1%, .240, and .171 iri' three seasons. He was sent back to the minors before the Phillies rescued him in 1972.

Robinson played 2/2 seasons for the Phillies, befor being dealt to the Pittsburgh Pirates for pitcher Wayne Simpspn.

The outfielder had his best years with the Pirates, twice hitting over .300 and .287 in 1981. He was an integral part of the 1979 Pittsburgh World Series winners.

In 1981, he suffered an Achilles tendon injury and underwent surgery. A year later he was sent back to the Phillies for outfielder Dick Davis. Robinson rarely played regularly, but was a valuable substitute as an outfielder, first or third baseman.

In 4976, when he hit .303, Robinson was voted Pirates Player of the Year.

^ Hitless Davis Uses Glove To Aid Giants

Well, Heck!    '    .    V    ^

Texas Rangers pinch hitter Larry    to end the game    with Kansas City

Biittner takes a kick at his batting * Tuesday night in    Arlington, Texas,

helmet after his fly ball was caught    Kansas City won the game, 6-5.(AP

on the warning track in right center    Laserphoto)

i

By The Associated Press

Just because Chili Davis isnt hitting doesnt mean he cant win games for you.

Without a hit in his last 17 at-bats, Davis used his glove to help ie hot San Francisco Giants beat the New York Mets 2-1 Tuesday night.

Chili> catch was a gamesaver, said San Franciscos Darrell Evans after the Giants closed out May with a 19-7 record.

Hubie Brooks led off the Mets eighth inning with a drive to the center field fence on a pitch from Giants starter Bill Laskey Davis raced back and caught the ball as he leaped against the fence, tumbling to the ground.

In other National League action, it was Houston 12, Chicago 10; Atlanta 10, Pittsburgh 2; Cincinnati 2, St. Uuis 1; San Diego .5, Montreal 3 and Los Angeles 4, Philadelphia!

. Laskey, 7-4, won his seventh straight decision getting relief help in the eighth from Gary Lavelle, who gained his eighth save. Scott Holman, 0-3, was the loser -

Astros 12, Cubs 10

Phil Garner drove^in (our runs With a home run^^and a bases-clearing: double in the seventh inning to lead Houston

over Chicago Garner s double drove home three runs in the Astros' fourrun seventh to help erase a 9-8 lead that Ryne Sandberg had given the Cubs in the sixth inning with his first'career , grand slam

Sandbergs grand slam gave him six RBI in the game and came off reliever Frank LaCorte, 3-2, who benefited from the Astros comeback. Dave Smith pitched the final three innings for his first save. %aves 10, Pirates 2 Claudell Washington and Brett Butler lined two-run triples, and Bob Horner belted a three-run homer as Atlanta routed Pittsburg    i'

Winning pitcher Phil Niekro, 2-4, allowed just three hits over five innings before leaving because of strained hamstrings suffered when he slid into home plate in the fourth inning. Steve Bedrosian worked the final four innings for his sixth save Niekro also had an RBI single and struck out two to move past Cy Young into 11th place in the all-time majbr-. league strikeout list with 2,812 Reds 2, Cardinals 1 , Alan Knicely and Paul Householder each knocked in a run, scoring Hon Oester bofh times, to lead Cincinnati over

St. Louis.

Right-hander Charlie Puleo, 1-2, held the Cardinals to five hits before needing relief help in the eighth from Bill Scher-rer,.who posted his third save. ^ Padres 5, Expos 3 ^ Steve Garvey hit a two-run

homer with one out in the eighth inning to lead San Diego past Montreal Garveys blow came off Expos reliever Jeff Reardon, 2-3, and was his ninth of the year.

John Montefusco, 3-1, the third San Diego hurler, worked the final two innings to gain the victory.

Dodgers 4, Phillies 1 Greg Brock hit a hOme rpn leading off the fifth inning to break a 11 tie, leading Ix)s ' Angeles over Philadelphia behind Jerry Reuss seven-, hitter Brock ended a long hitting slump with his first homer in two weeks Steve Yeager hit a two-run homer in the seventh to give winning pitcher Reuss, 6-3, some breathing room.

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jO-Tbe DtUy Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Wednetay, Jime 1, ittSWlandr Drubs McEnroe In Tennis

PARK (AP) - Defend-iDg champion Mats WUaoder of Sweden won 23 points in a row today as be bounced John McEnroe out of the French Open Teimis Championships 1-6, 6-2,W,WI.    ir

After a brilliant first set in which be played a serve-and-voUey game on ^the slow clay of Roland Garros stadium, McEnroe folded, and, in the end, was compieteiy humiii-ated. The American ieft-hander won oniy seven of the last 47 points/

Once again the U.S. bid for this prestigious ciay courts titie ended in disaster. McEnroe was seeded to meet Jimmy Connors in the final.

Christophe Roger-Vasselin of France, ranked 130th in the, worid on the

Computer, elim-Connors on Tus-. So American players still seddng their first mens title since won it 28

years ago.

Wilan^r, the l8^ear-old baseliner, moved ii|to the semifinals wbere^ joined two Frenchmen, Yahnick Noah and Roger-Vasselin.

The remaining quarterfinal battle pitted Guillermo Vilas of Argentina against Jose Higueras of Spain.

PARIS (AP) - Twenty-six American men have fallen while trying to end a jinx that has haunted U.S. tennis players for more than a quarter of a century on the slow red clay courts of Roland Garros Stadium.

became the latest American casualty in the famed Grand Slam event, losing to unheralded Christophe Roger-Vasselin on Tuesday.

Now only John McEnroe remains standing as the last hope for the first victory by an American male at the French Open in 28 years.

McEnroe, the No. 2 seed who has been booed at and fined for his bad manners here, comes on court again today to battle defending champion Mats Wilander of Sweden for a place in the semifinals.

The winner of that match will meet the victor of todays only other mens quarterfinal - No.4 seed Guillermo Vilas, the 1977 chitmpion from Argentina, and Spains Jose Higueras, seeded eighth.

Frenchmen Yannick Noah

Award Winners

Rose High School presented its annual sports awards Monday night at the All-Sports Banquet. Top award winners were Frances Barnhill, left, and Donnell Lee, right. Barnhill was named the schools Female Athlete Of the Year, while Lee gained the honor as the Male Athlete of the Year. (Reflector Photo)

Top-^eded dtamy

Roger-Vasselin, an un-seed^ 25-year-old who has never won a tournament, surprised Connors with a 6-4, 6-4,7-6 victory.

Noah, the 22-year-old sixth seed, bettered Czech Ivan Lendl, seeded third, 7-6, 6-2, 5-7,6-0.

The two Frenchmen now face eadi olfiei later this week for a place in thg final. They are attempting to become the first Frenchman to win. the French Open since Marcel Bernard took the title 37 years ago in 1946.

McEnroe, 24, is aiming to become the first American man to win in Paris since Tony Trabert did it in 1955.

American players in recent, years have made their names on faster courts than the clay so prevalent in Europe.

McEnroes quarterfinal match against Wilander -their first encounter on clay -promises to be difficult for the fiery New Yorker.

The 18-year-old Wilander last year became the youngest man to ever win a Grand Slam title when he defeated Vilas in four sets in Paris.

Now ranked the worlds fifth player, Wilander is one of the best clay court specialists on the circuit. He has played McEnroe only once before -battling the American for six* and a half hours on a hard court last year in St, Louis

before falling in that Davis Ciqimatdi.

I dont think the outcome of this match will be different, McEnroe said going into Wednesdays dual. It will be tougher because Wilanders tougher on clay and because he won here last year. But I should have won our earlier match easier than I did.

McEnroe, a three-time tJ.S. Open champion and a onetime Wimbledon winner, has never made it past the quarterfinals at the French Open - the last time in 1981.

, Im. capable of playing better on clay now than I was two years ago, a confident McEnroe said after his fourth round victory over fellow American Eliot Teltscher, the No. 10 seed here.

McEnroe did not play in Paris last year. This year he entered the tournament at the last minute despite a doctors warning that it could aggravate a shoulder injury and' hurt his chances at Wimbledon, which begins June 20.

McEnroe has been subdued during his last two matches here. In his first two matches, he was fined $3,350 for condorf violations that included shouting obscehities, kicking a press photographers camera, arguing over line calls and unsuccssfully demanding that an umpire be replaced.

Those fines brought McEnroes total during the past 12 months to $5,750. If he is fined again during the French Open and his total goes above $7,500, McEnroe automatically would be suspended from all Grand prix events for six weeks - in-' eluding Wimbledon.

The women have a day of rest Wednesday following the semifinal qualifications Tuesday by Americans Chris. 'Evert Lloyd and Andrea Jaeger.

Evert Lloyd, the 28-year-old tournament favorite after the elimination of top-seed Martina Navratilova, next plays No.3 seed Andrea Jaeger for a place in the womens final.

Chasing her fifth French Open title. Evert Lloyd de-feated Czeclf Hana Mandlikova 4-6, 6-3, 6-2.

Victory At Lost

Jubilant Philadelphia 76ers fans leap from their seats at OBrians Pub in Philadelphia Tuesday night during the final moments of the NBA

championship game. The 76ers defeated the Los Angeles Lakers, 115-108, in Los Angeles to sweep the series, 4-0. (AP Laserphoto)

Sixers' Fans Finally Celebrate Long-Awaited Championship

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -The anticipation had been bottled inside them for many frustrating years, but when Philadelphians finally got a chance to celebrate a National Basketball Association championship, they knew how to let the world know how much they loved their 76ers.

They jumped in glee. They danced ecstatically in the streets. They guzzled and virtually bathed in beer, wine and liquor. They leaned on car horns. And they yelled and screamed until they were

SCOREBOARD

Bowling_

Thunday Night Mixed

W L

Tar Landing Seafood .    12    0

Western Sizzltn 11    1

Sweet Revenge.........9    3

High Timers............9    3

Give Us A Break    7    5

Shoneys..............6Vj    5/

ewCrew  ......5    7

Home Cleaners    5    7

Team 2    5    7

Team #12    4'/i,    7'/i

Stnigglers ........4    8

HangTen3    9

Hanging Gang    2    10

Team #10    1    n

Mens high game, Doyle MaU thews. 241, women's high game. Susan Puryear, Sue Holman. 226; mens high series, Cecil Keel Jr, 593; womens high series, Susan Puryear, 640

Roc Softboll__________

Church League

1st Presbyterian 201 000 0-3

Oakmont ,> 000 000 00

l.eading hitters FP - Bobby Sasser 2 3, Greg Nelson 2-3, Allen Hahn 2 3; Jeff Scarborough 3-3.

Unity. .........., 000 (10)00-10

St James    000    000-0

Leading hitters: U -    Sammy

Harris 2-3

Church ol God 021 020 2-7

1st Free Will . .',......100 302 0-6

Leading hitters:    FF -

MikeTyson 3-3, Steve Boswell 2-3; CG - James Ross 3-4, Mel Boyd 24,

Trinity.............000    101 d- 2

Jarvis..............503    Oil x-10

Leading hitters: J - Bill Kuykendall .3-3, Sam Johnson 2-3; T

- Lee Cherry 3-3, Jason Garris 3-4.

Women's League

Prep Shirt..........009    031    0-13

FredWebb.........010    028    0-lt.

Leading hitlers: PS - Sandra Fleming 3-4. Margaret Daniels 2-3; FW-X Phillips 3-4

Wachovia  ......000    003    0-3

Pitt Memorial......112    036    x-13

Leading hitters: none listed.

^ Co-Ed League Western Sizzlln .... IM    OM    4-10

BUIS Goodies.......001    200    3- 6

Leading hitters: W5 - Kyle McKaIg 2-3, Lynn Davidson 2-4, B J Bass 2-2, Stan Joyner 3^; BG

- Calvin Gatlin 2 3, Dollte Johnson 2-4, Billy Savage 2-4

Ervins won by forfeit over Bonds.

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TANK IFNAMARA

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

hoarse.

Sixer fans literally took over the city Tuesday night and this morning, turning the downtown area into a human zoo.

About 11:30 p.m., with a few minutes Left in the 76ers NBA championship game with the Los Angeles Lakers, the exterior of this city of some 1.6 million people was as quiet as a country hamlet.

But inside the houses and especially the bars, 76er fans were watching noisily and gleefully as their team whittled away at a Laker lead.

When local hero Julius Erving hit a layup to give the 76ers a 108-107 lead with 59 seconds left, several hundred people inside a Bellevue Stratford Hotel bar exploded in jubilation.

Were No.l, they began chanting.

When Maurice Cheeks hit a layup to give the 76ers their

final margin of 115-108, they pulled out all the stops. Dancing on the bar and on table tops, grinning patrons shook their fists at television cameras and hugged each other.

The once-quiet streets quickly became a scene of bedlam.

Traffic cops on horses were ignored, and dozens of people began running madly, down Broad Street, one of the citys main thoroughfares.

The Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority-(SEPTA) halted all bus and trolley servicein the city at 1:40 a.m. today, when crowds made some str impassable.

The difficulty of (JDvIng didnt deter many motorists.

Cars, station wagons and all sorts of vehicles cruised through the downtown area, and the honking of horns became so loud conversation

was impossible.

Those who didnt have convertibles made do with sedans and hardtops. hanging out windows and clinging to bumpers and roofs. One young man sat in the middle of the windshield of a small car, waving a 76er pennant.

It seemed more people were on top of cars than in them. One wrecker drove by with nearly two dozen people lounging on the back. .

SOLAR

ONE

WATER SYSTEMS

TAR ROAD EfYTERPRlSES

iMMWVlif, N.C (919)756-9^3

MiiwauKec    23    21

Detroit    22    23

Cleveland    21    25

WEST DIVISION CalKornla    27    20    574

Kansas City 21    20    512    3

Texas    22    24    478    4'v

Oakland    22    25    468    5

Chicago    20    25    444    6

Minnesota    22    28    440    64

Seattle    20    30    400    84

TuMdaytGame*

Boston 2. Chicago I Cleveland 5. Seattle 2 New York 5, California 3 Milwaukee 5. Oakland 2 Minnesota 10. Baltimore 3 Kansas City 6. Texas 5

Wednetdayi Garnet ^ Chicago (Hoyt 4-6) at Boston iTudor 3-2, in)

Seattle (Perry 3-6) at Cleveland (Bly leven 4-4), (ni Toronto (Clancy 4 3i at Detroit (Rozema 1-01, (nl California (GolU 0 2) at New York (Guidry 6-3), in)

Oakland iNorris 4-5) at Milwaukee (McClurel 7) (ni Baltimore (McGregor 5-3) at Minnesota (Ellsonl-0), (nl Kansas City (Gura 4-6) at Texas iTanana I II, (nl

Hiunday's Garnet Toronto at Detroit Oakland at Milwaukee SeatUe at Cleveland, ml California at New York, ini Kansas City at Chicago. (n i Only games scheduled

NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION

W    LPct    GB

St Louis    25    18    581    -

Montreal    22    2 i    512    3

Philadelphia    20    20    500    34

Pittsburgh    18    24    420    6(4

Chicago    17    28    378    9

New York    16    28    364    94

WEST DIVISION lx)s Angeles    32    14    686    -

Atlanta    30    17    638    24

San Francisco    26 21    553    64

Cincinnati    22    27    449    114

San Diego    21    25    457    II

Houston    22    28    440    12

Tutaday'tOamea Houston 12, Chicago 10 Atlanta 10, Plltsbur2 Cincinnati 2, St Louis I San Diego 5. Montreal 3 San Francisco!, New York I Lot Angeles 4, Phllade^la I WadDttoaytdainet Houston (Knepper 1-7) at Chicago (RalneyU)

AUanta (Peres S-D at Pittsburgh (Candelaria l-S).(n)

Cincinnati (Soto 7-2) at St. Louis (J. Martln2-lorVonOhlenl-0).(n) -Montreal (Sanderson 4-4I at San Dlefo (Show 8-2), (n)

New York (Seaver J4) at San Fran-clsco(Hammaker5-2), (nl Phlladelj^la (Carlton Mi at Loa Angeles (Welch 1-4). (n)

TtandnysGamas Pittsburgh at Chicago ^

Philadelphia at SanDlcgo St LouUatAUanU,(n)

Montreal at San Francisco, (01 NowYarkalLoaAaplas, (n) MygaaMsadMduSd

By The AisocUted Press AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING (90 at batsi Carew. Callfomla. 443, Brett, Kansas City. 371, Boggs. Boston, 369. McRae. Kansas City. 358Mulllnlks, Toronto, 348 R(jNS: Castino, Minnesota, 39, Brett, Kansas City, 36. Ford. Baltimore. 32. Boggs. Boston. 31, Ripken. Baltimore,, 31. Yount. Milwaukee, 31 KBI Ward. Minnesota. 37. Kittle. Chicago, 38, Rice, Boston. 35. Brell, Kansas City. 34. Hrbek, Minnesota. 34 HITS Carew, California, 74; Boggs, Boston. 62. Castino, Minnesota. 62. Yount. Milwaukee. 80. Ford. Baltimore. 56

DOUBLES' Hrbek, Minnesota, 18; Bernazard, Chicago, 15, Ford, Baltimore, 15, McRae, Kansas City, 14.

5 Henderson. SeatUe. 14

TRIPLES G Wilson, Detroit, 5; Win field. New York. 5. C Moore, Milwaukee. 4. Griffin, Toronto, 4; Herndon, Detroit.

4

HOME RUNS Brett, Kansas City. It DeClnces, California, 11; Kittle, Lliicago. 11, Rice, Boston, to, Castino, Minnesota, 9, L A Parrish, Texas, 9, Lynn, California, 9; Upshaw, Toronto. 9. Win field. New York J STOLEN BtES J Cruz, Seattle, 32. W.Wilson. Kansas City. 20. R Henderson. Oakland, 18, R.Law, Chicago. IB. M Davis, Oakland. 15.

PITCHING (4 declslonsi Flanagan, Baltimore, 64). 1 000. 2 72, Schrom, Min nesota, 4-0, 1 000, 3 19: KIson, California.

6 1. .857, 3 23; R L.Jackson, Toronto, 4 1, 800, 4 42; Whitehouse, Minnesota. 4 1. 800,2.83

STRIKEOUTS: Slleb, Toronto. 72, Blyleven. Cleveland. 54. Morris. Detroit. 5f Wilcox, Detroit. 52; Norris. Oakland. 50

SAVES (iulscnbern, Kansas City, 12; Caudtll, SeatUe, II; Stanley, Boston, 10. Gossage, New York. 7; R Davis, Min nesota.7.

NATION^LEAGUE BATTING (90 at baUI: Madlock. Ptt tsburgh, .352, Knight. Houaton, 340. Evaila, San Franclaco, .338; Benedict. Atlanta. .333; McGee, St LouU, 328 RUN: Murohy, AtlanU, 42; Garvey, San Diego, 38, Evani, San Francisco, 13; LeMaster, San Francisco. 33, Raines, Montreal, 31.

RBI: Murphy, AUanta. 38; Garner. Houaton, 35-"Hendrick. St.Louis, 33; T Kennedy, ^ DM, 13; Brock. Loa Angeles, 31: Dawson, Montreal, 31.

HrrS: Thon, Houston, <2; R Rsmlrei. AUanU. ; Dswson, Moatreal, 57; Gsrvey, San Dtefo, M; Muiphy, AtlanU. 58-Gestor JClnclnnaU,6.

bOUBLES; JRay. PiUsiNir|h. 15; K.Hernandei. St.Loub, 13; 7 arc tied with

TRIPLES: Moramx HotisU. 3; BuUer, AUanto, 4; Dswaoii, Montreal, 4; Raines. Montreal. 4; SSax, Los Angeles. 4. Washington, Altonto, 4.

HOME RUNS: Evam, San Franclaco, ' 12; Muiphy, Allanto, 13; Guerrero. Los Angelet, 11; Brock, Lot Angieles. 10; Klnmtn,NtwYork,lO.

STOLEN BASESilm. PiUiburgh. 16. Moreno, Houtioa, 11; SSax. Lot Angeles. 18; WUaon, Now York, II; Rodus. Cincinnati, 13; Thon, Houaton, I5 PITCHING 14 dieWoatl: A Pena.

Angeles, 5 1, 833, 2 38, P Perez, Atlanta, 5-1, 833 , 2 88. LaPoint, St l,ouis, 4-1. 800, 2 27, Stewart, Ixis Angeles, 4 1, 800, 1 85. McMurtry. Atlanta, 7 2.    778. 2 84,

Rogers, Montreal, 7 2, 778 , 2 34, Solo, Cincinnati, 7 2 , 778,2 17 STRlKEOtcrs Carlton, Philadelphia, 79, Soto, Cincinnati, 74,.McWilliams, Pittsburgh. 69, Rogers. Montreal, 57; Berenyi, Cincinnati, 55, Valenzuela, Los Angeles, 55 S^VES Lavelle, San Francisco, 8. SHowe, lx)s Angeles, 7, Bedrosian, Atlanta, 6, Forster, Atlanta. 6, Minton. San Francisco. 6

Transactions

, By The Associated Presa BASEBALL American League

AL-Suspended New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner for one week for his remarks glmed at umpire Derryl Cousins after a bench^learlng brawl last week between the Yankees and Oakland AE .

BOSTON RED SOX-Called up Dennis Boyd, pitcher, from Pawtucket ol the lallonal

Inlernali

League Returned Marty

Barrett, pitcher, on'option to Pawtucket.

NEW YORK YANKEES-Recalled Steve Balboni. fint baseman, from Columbus ol Uie International League Designated Doyle Alexander, pitcher, lor assignment

h'OOTBALL National FootbaULeagM

CINCINNATI BENGALS-Signed Jimmy Turner, cornerback CLEVELAND BROWNS-Traded Henry Sheppard, offensive lineman, to the lx)s Angeles Raiders lor a 1984 draft choice

United sutes Football League

HOUSTON GAMBLERS Named Jack Pardee head coach and signed him to a five year contract

HOCKEY National Hockey League WASHINGTON CAP1TALS-Announced that they will not renew Uie contracts of Milan Novy, center, Randy Holt, defenseman. and Ted Bulley. left wing

SOCCER Major Indoor Soccer League

KANSAS CITY COMETS-Traded Greg Villa, forward, to Uie Chicago Sting of thC North American Soccer Uague lor a player to be named later COLLEGE COLORADO-Announced the re signatlon of Ted Layne, men's trainer, efiwtive July I

N.C Scortboard

, By The Aaaoclated Press Carolina League

Winston-Salem at Kinston 1 ppd rain 1 Peninsula 8. Durham 2

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22-The DaUy Reflector. Grwavte.Ml-Wednestay.J^ 1.19

/

Escalates

ROBERT MACY Associated Press Writer

LAS VEGAS. Nev. (AP)-Sophisticated surveillance cameras hidden in decorative bubbles or behind smoked glass sweep across plush casinos, picking up details as minute as the number 'of diamonds in a players ring.

The unending war between jtthe casino and the chiseler ^ escalates daily, with a small army of surveillance people and elaborate electronic equipment constantly challenging the cheater The card sharks of the Wild West era would slip an ace up their sleeves Today they count cards with the aid of toe-operated calculators concealed in their shoes.

The game is the same -the house vs the cheater But now the stakes are in the millions James Avance, chairman of the Nevada Gaming "Control Board, estimates cheaters take S2o million a' year .from the state's casinos.

Those same casinos spend millions more sorting out customer from cheater and prosecuting the latter.

if one man can invent it. another man can figure out how to beat it. Summa Corp spokesman Fred Lewis says of the never-ending battle to design a cheat-proof slot machine.

With some slots paying jackpots of $1 million or more, the one-armed bandits have become an attractive lure to cheaters and a focal point for surveillance cameras which babysit them around the clock We can tell when a winner began playing one of our progressive slots. says Dave Hull, chief of security at the Las Vegas Hilton. "H someone hits a big jackpot, we can tell when he started, how many coins he's put in Five people look at^a videotape of that jackpot win. We get a computer printout of everything thats gone into that machine. We check every mechanic whos

worked on-it.

The smart slot cheaters know the attention paid the big winners. They opt to hit quarter machines for less blatant jackpots.

If they can empty the quarter slots and get repeated payoffs, they can get away with hundreds of dolla'rs a day. says Ralph Wente. a former FBI agent who now heads security for Summassix casinos.

Some slot cheaters tie a coin to a string, dipping it up and down in the coin slot like a yd-yo. Now there are devices that snip the string.

Some use drills so tiny they can be carried in a womans purse The drills quickly chew a tiny hole in the side of the machine. Ihto -which a wire is slipped to regulate the spinning reels. -When manufacturers countered with hardened steel cases, the cheaters responded with diamond drill bits.

Manufacturers responded with an electrical jolt for the cheater manning the drill or

a shrill alarm to alert security guards.

Guards keep a wary eye for clusters of three or four people around a machine - a tell-tale sign that blockers are being used to hide the illegal activities of a cheater.

The Gaming Board provides casino security departments with training films detailing cheating operations and how to spot them.

If a cheater is caught, Nevada law provides he can be detained by hotel security until Gaming Control officers and police arrive.

Wente is in charge of 250 security officers at the Summa properties while Hull heads a 109-member force at the sprawling 3,200-room Las Vegas Hilton.

On the second floor of the Hilton, surveillance specialists watch walls .of television receivers. They can aim cameras to any corner of the casino, zeroing in on the action to detect the tiniest of spots on cards

fanned out across the green felt.

At the card tables, dealers watch players.' Floormen watch dealers. Pit bosses watch floormen. And the surveillance crews, in the eye above the casino, watch them all.

They watch for a cheater who might slip a dealer a cold deck - arranged in a certain order so the player would know the sequence of the cards.

Dealers have been known to work with cheaters, slipping such decks into the shoe from which cards are dealt

We had one case where we lost over $50,000 in half an hour because of a cold deck, Wente says. If we can prove a dealer is involved, well prosecute him.

Dealers, floormen,'' pit bosses and surveillance crews pay strict attention to any markings on cards such as a tiny spot to identify a 10-card, a knick from a fingernail, a slight crease

And they monitor the sequence of bets.

If you have someone betting $2 and then they start betting $1,000, you know something may be wrong, says Wente.

Testing Buffet For Breakfost

We pay strict attention to the control of the cards and dice from the time we get them from the company until they go on the table, says Wente. Theyre not availa-ble to anyone except top trusted casino peqple.

Dice are checked with micrometers to prevent tampering and dealers must always separate the two cubes so a floorman or surveillance worker can see three sides of both cubes at any one time. *

' NEW YORK (UPI) - Several restaurant chains are testing the breakfast buffet^ concept p<^ar in hotds for many years.

' An article in a recent issue of Restaurant Business magazine says the chains are trying to determine if such buffets will boost sales and customer traffic^during the morning meal period.,

The article by Ralph J. Raffio says one chains test of an all-you-can-eat

breakfast bar was so successful that all company stores and a majority of franchised-units were providing the service by fiscal year-end in October 1982. A company advisor told the magazine bar sales now'ac-count for 75 percent of the chains breakfast sales.

Food cost is generally higher for the breakfast bar in most restaurants, Raffia says. Labor costs may increase 1 to 2 percent, though not always.

Anytime dice leave the sight of the dealer, such as being dropped on the floor by a player, it is mandatory they be examined before being played again, Wente says.

BABY BOOM

LONDON, (AP) - The F.alklands War has fostered a mini baby boom, and 66 percent of the British war wives are estimated to have , become pregnant after their husbands returned from duty last year, the Sunday People reports.

READY TO TELL

LONDON (AP) - Yet another Buckingham palace servant, a 22T.year-old housenjaid, was reported Sunday as being ready to sell her story of behind-the-scenes life with Britains royal family.

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C.-Wednesday. June 1.186323

Wooden Carousel

ByBOBDVORCHAK Associated Press Writer^ STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) - The hand-carved wooden carousels that grace some carnivals and amusement parks are more than childs play to Nancy Strailey. To her, merry-go-rounds are valuable sculptures t^at should be saved from extinction.

Tlfey are works of art, just like old weather vanes and cigar store Indians are American folk art,.said Mrs. Strailey, a painter who also is vice president of the 500-member National Carousel Association.

"The carver left a piece of himself in each horse. It was a commercial enterprise, but the carvers went way beyond what was necessary to make money. They created treasures, she said during a recent interview.

"You can identify the personality of the artist in each horse, just as you could identify a Rubens from a Rembraodt. The more I look at them, the more I appreciate the skill of the artist who made them.

The association was' founded a decade ago to save the sCulptiired ^carousels, which went out of production about 50 years ago during the Great Depression.

Only about 270 working carousels are believed to remain from- the thousands shaped by woodcarvers, cabinet-makers and wagon-makers such as Marcus Illions, William.. De-' ntzel and Daniel Carl Muller and his brother, Alfred.

At one time, there were 16 shops producing two to 30 carousels a year between 1890 and 1930. Th chiseled " masterpieces also are known as merry-go-rounds, gallopers and round-abouts.

"They are vanishing rapidly. They are definitely an endangered species. We lost some of the best examples before they were appreciated, said Mrs. Strailey, who uses carousels as a primary subject in her painty igs.    , t

"If they arent saved, they may only exist in museums or the major theme parks, she said.

Some were destroyed in fires and storms. Many were demolished to make way for condominiums and shopping malls. Others were chopped up and used as props in barber shops or stores, and one restaurant owner xut horses in half and mounted them on a wall, Mrs. Strailey said.

Carousel horses also are prized by collectors, and one horse was purchased for $51,000 at a recent auction. Mrs. Strailey found a . German-made horse being used as window dressing in a Lewistown, Pa., shoe store. It was covered with about 25 coats of paint, and she now is refurbishing it.

"I would really like to see whole operating machines be available to the public so our children and their children can enjoy this little piece of American history that is vanishing,'. said Mjrs. Strailey. . * ^

"1 still must be very much a kid. 1 want to look at them, admire them, ut I still want to ride. I want the total experience - the li^ts, the laughter, the music, she said.

"They were indicative of a whole culture. It was a very innocent, gentle and simple kind of amusement in a slower paced, more innocent time, said Mrs. Strailey.

A Log Garage Also Available.

KANNAPOLIS, N.C.(UPI) - A manufacturer of build-it-yourself log homes .has added a live-in log garage to its line.

The free-standing, two-story, build-it-youtself garage can be put together with only a hammer and a come-a'^long, the manufacturer says. A come-a-long is a portable lifting device.

The 624-square-foot building accommodates two cars on the ground floor. Ah equal space on the second floor includes living and dining areas, kitchen and a bath.

It comes in kit form with precision cut, 8-inch diameter logs.

PRETTY HORSE - Artist Nancy Strailey' examines a carousel horse worth $11,000 in her State College (Pa.) studio. (AP Laserphoto)

District Court

i

Judge W. Lee Lumpkin and Judge E, Burt Aycock Jr., disposed of the following cases during the March 28 -April 1 term of District Court in Pitt County. '

Nancy l.ynn Bailey, l.angston Park, improper pas.sing, dismis-sed Amy Ulth Burroughs, Washington, ABC violation, not guilty Dennis latuls Elks, t'hocowinity, sp-eding. reckless driving, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost, attend alcohol workshop Anne Gregory Hodges, Washington. 10% blood alcohol content. 6 month.sa jails suspended on payment of $150 and cost, attend alcohol workshop, surrender operators license    ?

Alvin Ray Ingram. l.aGrange, driving under influence, restriction cixle violation, dismissed Deborah Marie Jarmon, Kennedy Circle, shoplifting, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and cost, probation t year Ian- Scott Jenkins, Michigan, 10% blood alcohol. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $150 and cost, attend alcohol workshop, surrender operators license

Julius Anthony Kennedy. Contenna Street, no operators licen.se.: days jail suspendtHl on payment of $25 and cost Arnold Kwce .Mooret Scotland Neck, stoplight violation, cost Thomas Willard Moye, Nichols Drive, stoplight violation, dismissed Sharon Denise Perkins, Cary Circle, trespass, ;it) daysjail suspended on payment of $25 and cost, probation R months

Tommy B Underwood Jr , Greenville Blvd . worthless check, JO days jail suspended on payment of $U) and costand check Doris Ann Williams, Third Street, shoplifting, 6 months jail suspended on 'payment of $25 and cost, probation 2 years

Helen Culley Baker, A'anceboro, exct'ding sale speed, cost Albert Eugene Joyner, Rocky Mount, ex,ceeding safe speed, prayer lor judgment continued upon payment of cost

James Hubert Stocks. Snow Hill.

' exceeding safe speed, prayer for judgment continued upon payment of cost

Marie Radford Taylor Kinston, speeding, cost Frahkie DeMarco, Bonners l.ane, trespass, not guilty Danny Ray Dunn, Fountain, ABC violation, 10 days jail suspended on pavmentof $1.5andcost MiUon Boots Carmen. Ayden. trespass, 6 months jail Milton Hardison, Bethel, stop light violation, $25 and c(t William Douglas Etheridge, Rixky Mount, exceeding safe speed, cost Edward Earl Anderson, Farmville. possession of marijuana. $25 and cost t'arson 1^ Avery Ayden. ABC violation, dismissed l.arry Eugene Barrett. Montclair Drive, fail display city tag, dismissed * Alan Frederick Broadhurst. Crown Ioint Road, 10% blood alcohol content.

months jail suspended on payment of $1,50 and cost, attend alcohol workshop, surrender operators license Jes.se Brooks, Farirtyille. inspection violation, dismissed Davena Cherry. Umslead Dorm, worthless check. 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost and check, probation I year Thomas C Cherry, Bethel. ABC violation $15 and cost William Fogg. Ayden. obtaining-advances, ; days jail suspended on pavmeni of cost, $2.50 restitution Florence Matthew Harris. Holberl Street, driving under influence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $150 and cost, unsupervised probation 2 years, attend alcohol workshop, surrender operators license Gregory Raymond Head. Summitt Street, communicating threats. 60 days jail suspended on payment of cost remit

Donnie Ray Hines, Glendale Court, communcating threats, dismissed.

Theartis Hinton. Rocky Mount, ABC violation, cost Mrs. Catherine Johnson. Riveebluff Apt, worthless check, .to days jail suspended on payment of cost and check.

Jackie Ucener Une Broad Street, ABC violation. $15 and cost Edward l.ee. Farmville, resist arrest, dismissed, trespass. 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost Sondra Padgett, Templeton Dnve, injury personal property, dismissetr Silvia Baro Padrn. Ragsdale Road. 10% blood alcohol content. 6 months jail suspended on payment of 1150 and cost, surrender omrators license, attend alcohol workshop George Hadley Prayer, Ayden, ABC violation. $15 and cost Andrew Tailor. Line Avenue, assault, dismisxd

6 Jonathan Eric Tripp,Route, 3 Greenville, 10% blood alcohol content. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $ISO and coaL surrender operators license, attend alcohol workshop Raymond Warren, Edgewood Trailer Park, communicating threats, trespass, dismissed: worthless check (4 counts 1. 30 days jail suspended on payment o coat and check Arvin Lee Williams, Ayden. possession of marijuana. $25 and cost William, Ramsey Wright. Orton

Drive, eiiceeiling safe speed, cost James R Barrett, Rawl Road, worthless check. :10 days jail suspended ' on payment of cost and check Jacqueline Juanita Bogue. Uhegry .Street reckless driviijg tki days jail, suspended on payment of $llXi and cost, iilteird alcohol workshop Douglas Wayne Brinkley, Scott Dorm, speeding, cost Katherine Ixe Brmiks. Green t)orm, exci-eding safe speed 5 days jail suspended on payment of $5 and cost Irving lx;e Brown Kinston, larceny, dismissetl Brian Matthew fatty. .Dak Street, stop light violation. ,5 days jail suspended on payment of $5 and cost Harold Ebron. Phillip Circle, intoxicated and disruptive, dismissed laiuis Milton Fletcher, I'mstead Avenue, speed compcdition. dismissed, speeding, 3(1 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and cost, surrender op>rators license Walter Lee Hardy. Grimesland, speeding, 5 days jail suspended on payment of $5 and cost Arthur Lloyd Harward. Langston Park, fail stop at scene of accident, 10 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and cost

William Alln-d Joyner, Greenbrier Drive, speeding, :in days jail suspended on payment of $.50 and cost, surrender opralors license W illiam Douglas Keck Wilson iV'tes. safe movement violation 10 days jail suspended on paymeni of $25 and cost Mark Andrew Massei .Iones Dorm, spiasling, 5 days jail suspcmded on pavmeni of $10 and cosi

David l.alla Nt-el., Washington .Strtxt. driving under influence (kl days jail suspended on jiayineni of $100 and cost, attend alcohol workshop surrender operalorslicen.se (leurge Nelson Jr , Dakgrove s Avenue, stop light violation, fail give name al scene of accident 10 days jail suspended on pavment of $20 and cost llesley Earl toss. W'lnterville. stop sign violation 5 days jail suspended on payment $5 and cost Benni Robert Rounlrie, Fourth Street, fail yield right of way. dismis.sed    -

Howard Louis SharefI, Cedar Lane, stop sign violation cost - Zeno Smith 4tounlree Drive, assault with deadly weapon , 12 months jail suspc-ndisl on pay ment of $25 and cost David Charles Steward, Pineview Drive, reckless driving, '20 days jail suspcmded on pay ment of $40 add cost Wayne McRae Sugg, Crockett Drive, improper equipment dismi.ssed Ray Taft. Gum Road, assault on female, not guilty Shaw.nne DtO' Wier, Ellsworth Drive, shoplifting, not guilty David Glen Ifartwig Jr. New Bern, breaking and entering com operated machine, 24 months jail, 60 dayy active balance suspended on paymeni of cost. $47 ;>0 restitution Ann Fenner, Rocky Ioint worthless check, dismissed Anne Elizabeth Vanlilh Clarks Trader Park sale mdvement violation.

10 days jail suspendisl on paymeni of $20 and cost Rena Knight Jordan, Cum Road, as.sault on child, not guilty Iharles Bractoii Farmville, worthless check 15days jail suspended on paymeni of cost and check Bobby James Cole Route 2. Greenville, 10% bloid alcohol content,

CiO days jail suspendesl on paymeni of $100 and cost, attend alcohol workshop, surrender operators license Michael A Bi^iley Route 2. Greenville, trespass, dismissed, possession of marijuana, $25 and cost Gloria Brown Wataugua Avenue, pon attendance to school, 30 days jail suspc-nded on payment of cost Marvin Earl Carroll, Wixidview ilace, driving while license permanently revoked. 12 months jail Charles David Haynes Jr Riverbluff Road, fail display city lag. dismissed Stalvey M Horton. Manhatten Avenue, as.sault on female, dismissed Sciilt F Johnson, Route6. Greenville, intoxicated and disruptive, dismissed .

Dons Hill Justice Battle Drive, fail display city tag. dismissed Charles 1-eslie Motts, Texas, larceny, 30 days jail suspended on paymeni of $25 and cost Zeno Smith, Jr . Allen Street, reckless driving, dismissed Annie Tyson Suggs, Candlewood Drive, fail display city tag. dismissed Scott lawis Walker, Raleigh, reckless driving. 60 days jail suspended on payment of llOO and cost, attend alcohol workshop Clyde Willis, Winterville. trespass, dismissed Lonnie Cherry. Third Street, dismissed

William Daniels. Contentnea Street, breaking entering and larceny, dismissed William Samuel Daniels. Sixth Street, trespass. 1 day jail, larceny, forgery and uttering, dismisssed Terrance Grau. Paige Drive, larceny, dismissed G W Hamlll, Homestead Trailer Park, assault with deadly weapon with intent to kill, no probable cause found Michael Williams. Falkland, forgery and uttering, dismisaed Terry Mel let Conners. Route 5, Greenville, possession of stolen goods, dismissed Allen Ray Jones, Conley Street, possession of stolen goods, dismissed James Clifton Smith. Farmville. posseMlon of stolen property, 90 days jail suspended on payment of cost. , probation 2 years

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Memory Of A tornado Lingers On

By TERRI COLBY Associated Press Writer

MARION, 111. (AP) - She moves more slowly now, but Alice Silkwood can still walk to the window where she watched in awe a year ago as > the tornado that blasted her apartment tore through town, killing 10 people and ^ injuringscores more, e 'i was standing in the kitchen watching it and I ' guess I was just mesmerized.

I couldnt move, says the 80 year-old woman. "Just the sight of it was awesome - it just had me spellbound, 1 guess.

Many town residents -especially school children -still scan the skies nervously , whenever the weather is cloudy.

In a memoriarl service Sunday, about 450 people gathered to remember the 10 who died, pausing for a moment of silence at 3:15 p.m. - the instant the twister hit last May 29, cutting a path of destruction that touched virtually everyone in town.

Mrs Silkwood clearly re-caUs-th^* moments after the iornafto struck,'" when she a'i^e under a pile of rubble in her apartment. She suffered a gashed head, mangled feet and broken bones

"When 1 heard my name 1 couldnt move except this one hand, she said. "I got it up through the rubble and they saw it and came running.

The town sustained $85 million in damage, said Mayor Robert Butler, with about 100 homes destroyed and another (iO suffering major damage.

Most of them have been rebuilt or repaired. Of about ,50 businesses destroyed or damaged, all but two have reopened. The 192-unit Shawnee pillage apartment complex, where seven of the 10 . people were killed, has been rebuilt And 21 new businesses have opened since the twister touched down.

The reconstruction created jobs and improved business - when people began buying building materials, replacing cars and furnishing their new homes, he said.

"It was terrible price to 'pay for improving your community, but it is good that as much good has come out of the tragedy as did, Butler said Most of the citys visible scars are healed, although trees along the path of the tornado are gone. But the sight of storm clouds on the horizon still sparks more than the usual anxiety.

Educators who coped with the loss of a school also had to deal with children who panicked when clouds dark ened the skies.

The bigger problem has been the anxiety and the fear the kids experience every time there was a bad storm, said Johanna Verkamman, Williamson Countys assis tant schools superintendent. Particularly with as much rain as weve had lately, with all the clouds and dark skies, they just jog all the memories.

Its not just the children who watch the skies in Marion.

Many, if not most, people in town still have the effect of the trauma, and when they do hear advisory weather warnings youll find many peopif*looking to the skies, looking at the clouds," Butler said.

The Rev. Carl Hearn, who was hospitalized for four months with a crushed chest from last years tornado, says he and his wife. Bo, get ready to leave the house immediately whenever they hear a radio report of a tornado watch these days.

Her said doctors were con vinced he would die after he was injured when the laundry room where he and his wife took cover was thrown into the air and dropped 45 feet away in a parking lot.

Every once in awhile 1 wake up yelling, says Mrs. Hearn. It was so real to me going up into the air and lying in the rubble and Carl was dying."

But Hearn says, If youre going to be in a tornado somewhere, Marion is the place to do it. ... I never knew that I had so many friends.

Says Mrs. Silkwood, "I just think the Lord must havoj kept me here for fooething ^ beeauK 1 had flKh a mrrov I exjp ri a nirade.

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Dying With Children is Near-Custom

By JIM ABRAMS Associated Press Writer TOKYO (AP) - Almost every morning, squeezed into a few paragraphs in the human interest section of Japans dailies, are rejwrts of family annihilation, parents who kill their children before endirtg their own unhappy lives.

In recent days there was the Tokyo salesman who, apparently at odds with his wife over his addiction to mah jongg, strangled her and their 6-year-old daughter before dousing himself with kerosene and burning to death.

A chauffeur in western Toyama Prefecture drove off a pier with his wife and two children, leaving a note apologizing for leaving housing and other debts of more than $43,000.        

An elementary school teacher in central Mie Prefecture stabbed his wife and^ .

14-year-son and set off a gas'" explosion, killing himself, after the son was caught shoplifting items worth $4.

According to a recent, -study, there are more than 400 cases of miiri-shinju, literally "forced suicide, every year in Japan, with more than 1,000 parents and children the victims.

Susumu Izuka, a sociology professor at Momoyama University, near Kyoto, found in 1982 .study that, although previous figures are scanty, family suicides seem to have increased somwhat from before World War II.

At the same time, individual suicides have declined. Today the country known for its hara kiri" (ritual suicide) and "kamikaze traditions, has slightly more suicides per capita than the United States? but fewer than most European nations.

The inclination to make self-destruction a family affair has long been a source of anguish and anger for Japans socially concerned.

Anthropologist Kunio Yanagida. writing in 1936, noted that "parent child suicides have increased precipitously in the past four or five years. We must do our utmost to find out why In Japan alone so many choose this kind of death before we attempt direct preventive measures against such ragedies.

,lapan apparently is not alone. Izuka reports similar family suicidal tendencies in other Asian nations such as .South Korea, Vietnam and Thailand, hut experts see elements that are uniquely Japanese.

"Despite our democracy and g(M)d welfare facilities. Japan retains its conservative tradition of regarding children as personal -property." said Hiroshi Shinagawa, head of- an orphanage north of 'Fokyo and a leader in Japans small anti family suicide move- , men!.

"In feudal times it was common to die ones masteu-, he said in a telephone interview. "Some parents still feel its pitiful to leave behind children unable to fend for themselves,"

Society is to l)lame, he said, for forgiving, if disapprovingly. such sentiments Although the police regard suicide-related child killings as murder. Shinagawa said a woman who abandons her child is much more the social pariah than one who strangles her baby before ending her own life.

Izuka, in his compilation of, family suicides from 1975 to 198, also found subtle shifts in the motives for them. A similar study in the 1930s, a period of hardship in Japans rural areas, showed that . economic travail was the leading cause of family suicides. In affluent 1980, while sickness was the most * common reason, a sizable * number chose death as a way to escape unmanageable home loans, or gambling debts.

With the decline of the extended family, there has also been a conspicuous rise in the number of young women, isolated jn cramped urban apartments, who are ' driven to murder-suicide by the strains of raising young children.

Izuka reports 235 mother-child suicides in 1980, compared with 72 father-child suicides and 95 involving both parents or other relatives.





2fi

. The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C.-Wednesday, June 1,1983

By JAY ARNOLD / Associated Press Wrile|

HOLLYWOOD (APiV Alter a record launch tail week,' Return of the Jedi rocketed past $41 million ift ticket sales during the Memorial Day weekend, making it' look like a \ond dry summer for the movie competition so far .Jedi, the much-anticipated final chapter in Oeorge Lucas' "Star Wars trilogy, rolled up million m box-office sales from Kridav through Monday. Its six-davtotal;S41.1 million.

That surpassed by far the S2.5 million, seven-day record set bv another spaceman,

E . T . the Extra-Terrestrial, last summer, said Barry Glasser, (jirector nf West Coast publicity at 20th Century-Fox, where executives were smiling all the way to the bank Tuesday because of the massive ,Jedi" numbers.

ilt's unbelieveable. We're not even finished with the week yet." Glasser said, noting that "ET." set its mark at 1,271 movie .screens, compared with the 1.002 screens on which .Jetii is playing If) of them around the clock A distant No. 2 for the w e e ke n d was " B1 u e Thunder, ''which stars Hoy Scheider as the pilot of an ultra sophisticated police helicopter The movie grabbed $(1.2 million at I,')').') theaters for the four days. Columbia Pictures said

The Scheider film has grossed a very good $26 million in 18 days through Monday, but it may be tougher for Thunder" and others now that Jedi" is here

In fact. "Jedi." which set an opening day record last Wednesday with $6.2 million and then a single-day^ mark of $84 million on Sunday, may exert so much pressure on the flock of also-rans in the next few months that some producers and distributors may wish they had saved their films for next summer.

Those doing'battle with

Jedi' so far included Par-amounts Flashdance, which drew $4.7 million for

Peter Fonda In Producer Role

HOLLYWOOD 'UPD -Peter Fonda will follow in sister Jane's footsteps -by forming his own motion picture and television production company.

Fonda has joined Orion " Television as an independent , producer for his Pando Productions to develop a full range of network series, television motion pictures and cable projects."

Fonda announced his principal concern will be as a producer and that he will not necessarily be concerned with seeking starring vehicles for himself .*

the four-day weekend at 1,032 screens. The movie about a , factory-working woman who turns into a dance sensation at night has grossed $36.6 million in 46 days,

"Breathless, starring Richard Gere in the remake ,of the French classic, collected $3.4 million on 1,073 screens for Orion Pictures for the four days, down from $3,7 million the previous weekend, Be film has an 18-day total of $14.5 million.

Columbias other summer

competition, Spacehunter: Adventures in the Forbidden Zone in 3-D," took a real beating, dropping to $4:6 million on 1,344 screens f the four days, compared with a $7 million take the weekend before, Spacehunter has taken in $13.3 million in 11 days.

Another Columbia entry, "Cheech and Chong Still Smokin, had a cool $2.1 million at 730 screens for the weekend for $10,8 million in 25 days.

Off

Roaring^SfSrt

It was too early to predict how well "Jedi will (to through the summer, since some big guns still were warming up in the wings. Those included Superman III, "Psycho II, "Staying Alive, Jaws 3-D, War Games and the latest James Bond film, Octopussy."

But Jedi already has made back its $32.5 million production cost, which do not include promotion and marketing expenses, and could

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go into the black by the middle of next week, officials said.

Industry guidelines say a film must earn 2-24 times its production cos^t to be profitable fi^e Jedi' seems ce^ain to reach.

Star has^_

$525 milliory worldwide since its releas in 1977, while The Empire Strikes Back, the second part of the trilogy, has earned more than $365 million since 1980.

But Lucas and company no doubt have their eyes on No. 1 "E.T., which so far has grossed $550 million worldwide.

'Crystal Award' To Bette Davis

HOLLYWOOD (L'PI) -Bette Davis, winner of two Academy Awards, will will be honored at the Women In Films seventh annual Crystal, Awards Luncheon June 3.

The long-time movie queen will be presented the award along with similar honors for -actress-author Ruth Gordon an(l pioneer film editor Margaret Booth.

Actress Carmen Zapata will received Women in Films Norma Zarky Humanitarian Award for her support for the advancement of equal opportunity The Crystal Awards were established in 1977 to honor outstanding individuals for their professional achievements and for Hheir contributions which have improved and increased the participation of women in the entertainment business.

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By LINDA DEUTSCH Associated Press Writer LOS ANGELES (AP) - A dispute by two lawyers over what one called cheap theatrics marked the closing moments of Dan Rathers testimony in the CBS "(iO Minutes" slander trial.

. The television news star, who spent three tense days on the witness stand, left the courthouse Tuesday pursued by reporters and camera crews. But he remained silent outside court.

Inside the packed courtroom, an attorney for the doctor who is suing Rather, CBS, and "60 Minutes for $30 million at tempted to end his cross-examination with a dramatic flourish,

Bruce Friedman, the attorney for Dr. Carl Galloway, the Lynwood physician who is suing CBS over a phony medical report he allegedly signed, produced a large blowup of the controversial report.

Galloway claims the signature is a forgery.

Rather conceded that the signed report was "the most important thing we had in preparing a segment on in-

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Its cheap theatrics." he said

"Take that thing down," said Superior Court Judge JackSwink,

Then. after conferring with attorneys, Swink told the jurors: Ladies and gentlemen, as to this blowup page, this document is not m evidence. You are to disregard it in its entirety and consider it as never having been an exhibit in this case Friedman spent several hours of cross-examination trying to show that Rather made inadequate attempts to reach Galloway before he publicly accused the doctor of participating in an insurance fraud scheme in the December 1979 program entitled Its No Accident.

Rather insisted his efforts were consistent given the large amount of evidence he had pointing toward Galloway.

"If it walks like a duck and lool.s like a duck and quacks like a duck, youve got a duck," he testified, "As a piece of solid investigative journalism, this was a home run." '

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Miss Johnson was in tears as she entered the courtr(M)m, but on the stand , regained her composure and claimed she was misled about her role in the disputed '60 Minutes" segment.

Miss Johnson was featured on the show confessing to an insurance investigator that she once filed a false accident claim.

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1 didnt know 1 was going to be on TV," she said, maintaining she told her story for CBS only to insure that'she "wouldnt be hassled anymore"

Miss Johnson said she met 60 Minutes Producer Steven Glouber who told her he was "doing a survey."

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C.-Wednesday, June 1,1913-27

New Comedy Seres, "Buffalo Bill", Is Making Debut

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ByFREDROTHENBERG AP Television Writer

NEW YORK (,\P) - Bill Bittinger is obnoxious," unscrupulous, insensitive, phony, vain, selfish, hypocritical, sneaky, mean and licentious. He may be the first central character in television history without a single redeeming feature Bittinger is a talk-show-host in Buffalo. N Y., in NBC's - Buffalo Bill, which begins a 13-week summer run tonight Stated simply,

this show is hilarious and nfiay be the mot daring comedy since ".\ll in the Family."

.Archie Bunker was a boor and a bigot, but you could feel for him because he was a victim of his own ignorance. Besides, he had a family that tended to buffer his bluster.

Ted Baxter was childish and egotistical, but you could feel for him because he was so pathetically inept and, beneath it all. he was as i nsecure as the rest of us.

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, Bas^ on the first two episodes, this is an oul--loud-laughing kind of comedy. with Dabney Coleman playing the same counterfeit lout he did in Tootsie," 9 to 5 and the TV series Mary-Hartman, Mary Hartman.

Its a tour de force performance for the dynamic Coleman, a reai one-man show. Character relationships. if they ever develop here, wont matter Everything funny stems from Bill, an evil, conniving prima donna who thinks he's a big fish in a little pond.

But no matter how much contempt he has for his fans, guests and colleagues, when the camera's red light goes on. he's always a star, occasionally charming, and usually controversial - and the little fish out there love hjm.

He bounds oh stage with bravado and the folksy greeting, "Hello Buffalo." then hes off and running He embodies the sleaziest in TV, He does all the things that stars pay publicity agents to hide. His casting couch is always open He'll slab anybody in the back, whether they're ahead or behind him. .(in tonight's show, 'a fictitious correspondent from "(10 Minutes dies. Bill considered him a friend. Yet, the corpse is barely cold when Bill sends his resume to the network. Then he tries to

impress the network with a grandstand play, unveiling a huge poster of the dead man on his show, and telling the audience that the whole journalistic fraternity shares

grief

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WEDNESDAY    30    Youngand

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9 00 NBA Game II 00 News

II 30 Late Movie

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WITN-TV-Ch.7

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8 00 Real People

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10 00 Quincy

11 00 News

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7 00 Today 7 25 News

7 30 Today

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9 00 Gold Monkey

10 00 Dynasty

11 00 'Ac lion News

11 30 ABC News

12 30 StarskyS, THURSDAY

5 00 Bewitched

5 30 J Swagdart

6 00 AG Day i 30 News

7 00 Good Morning 6 13 Action News

6 55 Action News

7 25 Action News

8 25 Action News

9 00 Phil Donahue

10 OO Good Times 10 30 Laverne

11.00 Love Boal 12 00 Family Feud 12 30 Ryan s Hope

1 00 My Children

2 00 One Lite'

3 00 Gen Hospital

4 00 Carnival

4 30 BJ LOBO

5 30 Peoples

6 00 Action News

6 30 ABC News

7 00 ThreesCo

7 30 Alice

8 00 Benson

8 30 Condo t ,

9 00 Too Close 9' 30 Amanda s

10 00 20 20

11 00 Actions News*

11 30 Nightline

12 30 Starsky &

1 30 Mission

2 30 Early Edition

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

WEDNESDAY

7 00 Report

7 30 Statehne

8 00 Creatures

9 00 Performance

10 00 Scrapbook

11 00 A Hitchcock II 30 Mortcambe

3 30 Planning tor

4 00 Sesame St

5 00 Mr Rogers

5 30 Powerhouse

6 00 Dr Who

6 30 Sherlock

7 00 Report

7 30 Stateline

8 00 Previews

8 30 Inside Story

9 00 A Behavior

10 00 Cosmos

11 (So A Hitchcock II 30 Morecambe 12.00- Sign 0(1

TONIGHT 8.00

CHANNEL

Academy Plans Awards

HOLLYWOOD il'lMi -Bob Hope, Lucille Ball, Steve Martin and .Joan Kivers.are among the founding mem bers of the .American Academy of (omedy, an eglablihhrnent that is billed as a major show business developmejil

A non profit organization, ^the American Academy of Comedy will promote, enhance and give recognition to comedy entertainment m varied forms Other founding members are Milton Berle, Dudley Moore, Redd Foxx. George Burns, Richard' Pryor and Carl Reiner

Heres the reason - a television special, the Amer-icap Comedy Awards, will be the organization's first major event scheduled for the fall TV season

WITH COLORTYME YOU CAN RENT A BETTER TV OR APPLIANCE THAN MOST PEOPLE OWN!!!

Ameiica's Uigesi TV/Aixo/*)liani Rental Syswin

TV Video Stereo Appliances

Dallvtry And Sarvic# liKludod

Greenville Square Shopping Center Greenville Boulevard (Next to Kmart)

Hours: Monday Thru Saturday 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. Friday 9 A.M.' to 7 P.M. Closed Wednesdays

Except June 1

Phone 355-2101

Next week, in an even stronger show, a model-actress is brought in as co-host for the show, and Bill suggests drugging her. "Just thinking out loud, he says.

He practices golf in his office, smacking real balls through an open window and into downtown Buffalo. The possible damage doesnt dawn on him. "You cant get the distance with practice balls, he contends.

Hes an unprincipled con man. but his fans eat it up. proving in television, at least, you can fool some of the people all of the time. He shamelessly stoops for whatever he can get from the audience. When he wants sympathy, hell buddy up to his viewers, bare his emotions - a la Jack Paar - and, spew pretentious sincerity.

Hes the consummate anti-host. Hes rude to his guests, especially if theyre boring and make him look bad. He wields his on-air advantage like an ax "1 dont care what the jury said, you look like a rapist to me. He wont read the authors book, and he refuses to do research. What's so big

The Recreation and Parks Department summer program schedule is ready! Brochures may be picked up at any Recreation and Parks facility. For more information, call 7,2-4137, Ext 202

about facts

His colleagues at the station know him well and. for the most part, reluctantly tolerate him. They also rarely stand up to him. Theres the bumbling general manager (Max Wright), the efficient director (Joanna Cassidy) and the solicitous stage manager (John

Fiedler). The absentee owner hates him. but loves hisrat'ings.

Tom Patchett and Jay Tarses, who were staff writers forThe Carol Burnett Show and ^ then writers-producers for The Bob Newhart Show, are executive producers on this series. In Buffalo Bill,

they have created a monster It deserves to be a monster hit.

Carolina Grill

Hot Cakes & Sausage With Coffee^ 1

I    tax m

Com o( nh a OtcklnMn

752-1(sa

Putt-Putt Golf & Games

....since 19S4

JUNE 1983 M T W T F

6 7 8 9 10 11

12 13^14115 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23> 25 26 27 28 29 30

ANNUAL ANNIVERSARY SALE

20 Games 0( Putt-Putt Golf for only $ 10.00

Regular price is $40.00 SAVE $30.00

PUTT-PUTT

OI)COURSt$.L^

Rnrthcfiuiaofit!

(BVYcA SUMMER OF PUTT-PUTT O^UNI

only 50C per Game.... Regular price is $2.00 per Came

Wednesday, June 1st through Sunday. Jurre 5th only! 10th Street Ext.    Open    12    Noon

758-1820

MniML

PMMETIML SPORTS TIME MOVIE TIML

IMMng's 1ID Intimate Those New Therapists

TVGUIDE

LIEI    channels.    All those

shows. All those choices.Tohelp.you watch the best thats on,pick up the best...TV Guide. On sale now.

YO , DEiCIDL





n The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C-Wednesday. June 1,1983

GOREN BRIDGE

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

1963 Tribune Company Syndicate, inc

Both vulnerable. South deals. NORTH

Q6 ^K 752

OAK 9643

A

STRANGE WAY^rTO StIT

DEVELOP A

EAST

105

T Q1096 0 Q1072

964

WEST

9843 J3 .

J8

KOJ83

SOUTH

AKJ72 ' A84

5

10752

The bidding;

South West North East 1 Pass 3 Pass

3    Pass    4    Pass

5 'i?    Pass    6 "*    Pass

6    Pass    Pass    Pass

Opening lead: King of .

There is no substitute for foresight at the bridge table. On this hand declarer found an intriguing way to retain control while he developed his long suit.

With only a partial fit for his partner's suit, North was a trifle light for a jump shift. As a result, North South landed in a slam that re quired masterful technique on declarer's part.

West led the king of clubs, taken by the ace. Since the

probable trump break was-4-2, declarer realized that he could not afford to ruff two clubs on the table that would set up a trump trick for the defenders. Also, if diamonds followed the percentages and split 4 2, declarer would have to ruff twice in his hand to set up the suit, which would leave a defender with a long trump.

Declarer found a rather elegant solution to his problem. He decided that he would lose a diamond trick -and the only convenient time to do so was immediately!

At trick two declarer led a low diamond from dummy.

East won the queen and shifted to the ten of hearts, but declarer was in control. He won the ace in hand, crossed to the queen of trumps and ruffed a diamond. Now he drew all the trumps, entered dummy with the kingof hearts and took the four diamond tricks to bring his total to twelve tricks.

When you first looked at this hand, did you think that the only way to make the slam would be to concede an immediate trick in diamonds? If your answer is yes, we would hate to have you as one of our opponents next time we sit down at the rubber bridge table.

PEANUTS

Great Peppis Specials

Monday thru Friday 11:00 a.m. To 2:00 p.m. Monday Nights 5:00 p.m. To 8:30 p m

All The Spaghetti $ft75 You Can Eat  it '

Servad with tossed salad, garlic brpad and coHre or tpa

Every Tuesday Night 5:00 p.m. To 8:30 p.m.

All The Lasagna $075 You Can Eat......

Served with garlic bread, tossed salad and coHee or lea

Every Wednesday Night 5:00 p.m. To 8:30 p.m.

All The Beef Ribs $ T 95 You Can Eat......

Served with garlic bread, tossed salad or potato salad and coffee or tea.

den

421 GrccnvIlU Bld (.rrrnvlllr N C PhoM 7M 0S2S

The Cats Meow

.June i.s National Adopt A Cat Month - a good time

to make a new feline friend. Cats have been household

pets for,more than 4,()()() years. The Egyptians were probably the first to dome.sticate the cat. They regarded the animals as sacred and gave them the run of^their homes and cities. Unfortunately, the cat population in Egypt soon got out of hand, and there was no way to deal with the problem, because harming a cat was punishable by death. F'inally, for a fee, Phoenician traders agreed to take the cats to Europe where they were soldas house pets. Domestic cats were very popular with Europeans from about 900 B.('. on, and, when explorers and colonists came to the New World, they brought their cats with them.

DO YOU KNOWWhat was the name of the Egyptian cat goddess?    '

TUESDAY'S ANSWER-JIm and Marian Jordn ilarred in "Fibber McGee and Molly.

fi 1 h;i

VE(', Inc. 1983

Three Doctors

In The House

WASHINGTON (AP) -There are three physcians sitting in the U.S. House of Representatives, according to a medical publication.

Dr. Roy Rowland, D-Ga., elected in November is the only physician in the House certified by the American Board of Family Practice.

The other two are; Lawrence P. McDonald, another Georgia Democrat, who went to Congress in 1974 from Atlanta where he practiced urology, says Family Practice News; and Rep. Ron Paul, a Republican who took office in 1976 from Lake Jackson, Texas, where he ag|iced obstretics and gynecology.

There are no physicians in the U .S. Senate.

REPORT RAID

LSLAMABAD. Pakistan APT - Moslem Afghan rebels say they attacked a military air base west of Kabul, killing 21 government and Soviet troops, and destroying two helicopte|;s.

A ENTERTAINERS

T

Thurnday, June 2nd Doors Open At 6:00 - Band Starts At 7:00

Z

Come Early For Happy Hour

PRIVATE 1.UB-MEMBERS& GUESTS <

locatId on RIVERBLUFF RD.

I

1

MAYBE-'imi'LL.aELilClCV'ANP IT UlONt RAIN TONIGHT

oee,i/i^i<jou?see

THg PC^ELiSaUSlLLUiiVll If

NUBBIN

RaVfelLLB, 00 VDU LOV& Me ENOUirH IDP/^ FOR Me?

BLONDIE

TOOT9IE, I'M GOING )l^ BOWLING TONIGHT ^ AND you CANT SW ME

PHANTOM

FRANK & ERNEST

IN The 60J I /1i|cFP. IN TN^ 70? I J0G6EP. Now X Fun.

JO vvKY po 1 [cee?

LOSING

.i,,    fe-(

fUNKY WINKERBEAN

THECUI55 OF I95 FACES achauengimg and

COAAPLEX (a)ORLP...

AND IT IS TO VOP GENERATIOM THAT THIS . WORLD NOO TURNS, SEEKING SOLUTIONS 10 THE DIFFICULT PROBLE/VIS ITWC66,/

FORSETTING POK THE AAOMENTTHATVOOf^ 5.A.T. SCORES URE THE LOWEST IN RECENT /yiBlAOPAi...

SHOEmi





The DaUy ReHector, Gr^vUle. N.C -Wednesday, June 1,1983-

CLASSIFIED

INDEX

MISCELLANEOUS

PUBLIC NOTICES

Fite NO U-CVD1532 FILM NO INTHE GENERAL COURT OF JUST

DISTRICTOURT DIVSION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

HERLEY LOUISE ATKINSON (JONES)

Personals............

InMemoriam ..

Card Of Thanks.......

Special Notices

Travel & Tours.......

Automotive

Child Care ......

Day Nursery.........

Health Care........

Employment.........

For Sale..............

Instruction...........

Lost And Found ......

Loans And Mortgages Business Services ....,

Opportunity..........

Professional..........

Real Estate .. ......

Appraisals...........

Rentals..............

.002

.003

.005

.007

.009

.010

.040

.041

.043

.050

.060

.080

.082

.085

.091

.093

.095

.100

.101

.120

RONALD EXCELL JONES

notice OF SERVICE OF

PROCESS BY PUBLICATION TO RONALD excell JONES take notice that a Motion seeking relief against you has been filed in the above captioned action The nature ol the relief being sought is as follows The transfer of all your

right, title and interest in and to a 1973 General Mobile Home

_ _ _    Serial

No GCFXMNOGE6364. North Carolina Title No 11650595. as child support, and an Order directing you to pay child support in the amount of $l(5o (X) per month beginning June I. 1983. plus all future medical and

dental'expenses of your minor child Den

WANTED

Help Wanted.......

Work Wanted.......

Wanted ............

Roommate Wanted

Wanted To Buy.....

Wanted To Lease Wanted To Rent

.051 .059 . 140 .142 . 144 .146 .148

RENT/LEASE

Apartments For Rent......

Business Rentals..........

Campers For Rent. .....

,,-Condominiumsfor Rent...

\Farms For Lease..........

Houses For Rent...........

Lots For Rent .. . .,......

Merchandise Rentals,......

Mobile Homes For Rent...

Office Spa^p For Rent.....

Resort Property For Rent. Rooms For Rent

.121 .122 .124 ,125 .107 .127 129 . 131 .133 .135 .137 .138

SALE

Autos for Sale . ........

Bicycles for Sale........

Boats for Sale ........

Canopersfor Sale.....

Cycles for Sale.........

Trucks for Sale........

Pets...................

Antiques..............

Auctions..............

Building Supplies......

Fuel, Wood, Coal.......

Farm Equipment.......

Garage Yard Sales.....

Heavy Equipment.....

Household Goods......

Insurance

Livestock.............

Miscellaneous.. ......

Mobile Homes for Sale.

Mobile Home Insurance Musical Instruments ..

Sporting Goods........

Commercial Property . Condominiums for Sale

Farms for Sale........

Houses for Sale........

Investment Property .

Land For Sale..............113

Lots For Sale...............115

Resort Property for Sale.... 117

Oil 029

.... 030 ...032 .... 034 ..r.036 .... 039 .... 046 ....061 .... 062 .... 063 .... 064 .... 065 .... 067 ...068 .... 069 ...071 ...072 ...074 .    075

.... 076 ...077 .... 078 .... 102 .... 104 ...106 .. .109 .....111

Michelle Denise Jones The undersigned will bring this Motion for hearing before the District Court Judge Presiding over the July II. 1983 Session of Civil District Court (Domestic) tor Pitt County on July 11, 1983. at 9 30 AM. or as soon theretter as the matter may be heard, in the Third_Floor

PUBLIC NOTICES

LEGAL NOTICE , On June ), 193. Certificate of Need review of proposals for home health agencies, a proposal for a ICF MR lacility and a proposal for CT scanning services is scheduled to begin in North Carolina Health Ser vice Area VI For an application to be included in this review cycle, it must be determined complete prior tb June I. 1983 Applications for the following projects have been receiv ed and are expected to be reviewed during this cycle P 1846-BJ. Neuse River Heme Health Agency. Inc . Goldsboro. N C , Proposed establishmerit of a

home health agency in Goldsboro. Riv

N C (Neuse River Home Health Agency . Inc .). (S3.0(X)). L 1853 83, Halifax Memorial Hospifaf Inc . Roanoke Rapids N C Proposed esfablishment of CT mobile body scanning services (shared), (i912,030), Q 1851 83. Pauline A Vin cenf, Greenville. NC. Proposed home health agency in Greenville. N C (Phoenix Health Care, Inc.) S7.700). P 1854 83, Thomas H Lamb, Jr . and Sharon L Raynor, Goldsboro, N C . Proposed conver Sion of 2 five bed family care unifs fo an ICF MR facilify. ($50,000), Q 1858 83, Tri Counfy Health Ser vices, Inc Aurora, N C Proposed establishment of a home health may be hearo, in me iniro noor | agency in Aurora NC (i 0 ), Hearing Room of the Pitt County , l 1859 83. Wilson Clinic. PA

Courthouse You will please attend Court at said time and

_______  place.    iPyou

so desire, but the plaintiff will ask the Court to hear said Motion regardless of your presence or absence This the 16th day of May, 1983 UNDE RWOOb 8, LEECH By

David A Leech, Of Counsel tor the Plaintiff

P O Box 527, Ml Evans Street , N C 27835

Greenville Telephone (919 ) 752 3303 May 18. }5. June 1. 1983

NOTICE

qualified as Administrafrix of the estate of Ida E Cannon late of Pitt County, North

Having strafri

Carolina, this is to notify all persons Ih

(having claims against the estafe of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Administratrix on or before November 25. 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 I3th day of May. 1983 LucilleC Cannon 619 Park Avenue Ayden, N C 28513 Administratrix of the estate of Ida E Cannon, deceased May 25, June I, 8, 15, 1983

Wilson, N C . Proposal to provide home health care services in Wilson,

NC ($3,000). P I860 83. Tar Heel Health Care Services, Kinslon. N C

Proposed establishment of a home health agency

Lenoir County

($ 0 )

The review is expected to take ap proximately 90 oays During the review period, an affected person may request a public hearing on the project proposals delineated above Sucn a request tor a public hearing should be submitted in writing to the Eastern Carolina Health Systems Agency, Inc Greenville, N C , or the Certificate of Need Section, Divi Sion of Facility Services, Depart ment ot Fbjman Resources-iPost Office Box 12200. Raleigh, N C , 2765, on or before July I, 1983 June I, 1983

NOTICE OF SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY

NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY

Under and by virtue ot the power ot sale contained in a certain Security Agreement executed The Alamo, Inc , to Bernice C Branch Larry R Tackett, Marcus J Zbar and Curtis J Flanagan, dated the 3rd day of December, 1982, and evidenced by UCC_ tiling

LEGAL NOTICE ^

The Certificate ot Need Section. Division ot Facility Services, North Carolina Department ot Human Resources announced on May 27 1983 approval of Project I D 0 1803 83 for Pitt County Memorial Hospital, Inc Greenville, N C , to incur a capital expenditure j tor the expansion ot surgical facilities, radiology services and emergency department ($8,490,1501 Review ot me proiect was con ducted pursuant to Chapter I3l, Arti cle 18, as amended, ot the General Statutes ot North Carolina Prior to approval the project was reviewed by the Eastern Carolina Health Systems Agency, Inc . Greenville N C and found to conform to the ap plicable plans, standards and criteria

82 4351. in the Office ot the Register of Deeds of Pitt. County, North

Public

Notices

Carotina, default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured, and the holders of the indebtedness thereby secured hereby exercising their power ot sale, tor the pupose of satisfying said indebtedness, and the Clerk ot the Court granting permission tor the forec losui*e, the undersigned attorney for the holders will offer tor sale at public auction to the highest bidder tor cash at the Courthouse Door in Greenville, North Carolina, at 12 00 Noon, on the lOth day ot June, 1983, the property more particularly described as follows "All personal property and fixtures located in or attached to that certain premises known as "The Alamo' located on Memorial Drive Greenville, North Carolina SUBJECT, however to taxes, special assessments and prior encurribrances ot record, it any Five percent (5%) ot the amount ot the highest bid must be deposited with the undersigned pending confirmation of the sale

Dated this 19th day ot May 1983 Fred T Mattox, Attorney June 1 8. 1983    ,

022

PJymouth

1972 PLYMOUTH Good condition iSSOorbestotfer Call 752 1705

1973 DUSTER 2 door Coupe Cragar rims, full length headers, fold down rear seat. 3 speed, automatic with

brakes and distributer All original. 340 motor Must see to appreciate Call 756 6730    __

023

Pontiac

1966 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 421. 2 door hard fop Excellent condi tion Second owner $895 752 4903

1973 TRANS AM

2829    .

$1200 Call 752

046

PETS

BOXEK HUPS for sale AKC, champion line, males and females, tails clocked, new claws removed, wormed and healthy 758 0975 anytime

BRITTANY SPANIEL PUPS, AKC registered, champion bloodline, excellent field stock, maybe picked up June 12 19.    $100    946    228).

(Washington).

DALMATIAN

with black Pollocksville, alter 5 p m

PUPPIES white dots. $100 Call 224 7941 or 224 5431

051 Help Wanted

059 Work Wanted .

PART TIME o<ld and end work tor local builder. No heavy physical labor required. Must have own fools and transportation. Expereince necessarv. 756^8085.

WOULD LIKE TO TUTOR in Pho 1 nics and reading Preleribly ele mentarv students Call 756 9484

060 FOR SALE

PART TIME position in Bethel area - For person with chauffeur's license to operate, do maintenance work, and run errands. Ideal for retiree Call 825 99)1

06t Antiques

PROJECT SUPERINTENDENT

Experienced in grading and asjshalt paving Experienced with Slate D O work Mail resume to

ANTIQUE PIANO $550 anlique swivel stool with glass ball and claw teet $90 Call 756 9103 before 6pm 1 or 756 5596 after 6

074

Miscellaneous

CARPET, CARPET, CARPET!

Assorted sires and colors 9x12 s 9x15$ 12x)2's. 12xl5s Priced to. move Financing available Furniture "Wbrld 2808 East 10th Street. 757 0451___

CENTIPEDE

4994

CHAIRS, 2

SOD 758 2704    752

indoor outdoor Chairs $90 for both. 752 1231'__

FULL BLOODED triever puppies 6 752 3914____

Labrador weeks old

Re

$50

'Proiect Superintendent", P O 1967. Greenville, N C 27835

Box

1978 FIREBIRD AM FM stereo, cassette, air, radials. Call 756 5060

1981 GRAND PRIX Economy engine Loaded with accessories Low mileage tion, 756 0594

Immaculate condi

024

Foreign

IMMACULATE 1974 MGB 30 000

actual miles, factory air, orange $3000 firm Call 758 1277 or 752 6700_

MUST SELL! *1972 Porsche 914 Good condition. $3150 758 6721

1976 DATSUN 280Z, automatic, air, AM FM stereo cassette jet black with mag wheels, excellent condi tion 756 4568 __

1976 VOLKSWAGEN Dasher station wagon, automatic, air cortdition, good gas mileage Call 756 W0___

1977 DATSUN HONEYBEE slight

body damage $1200 758 7964______

1978 HONDA ACCORD 5 speed AM FM radio, air condition extra clean $2800. 746 2741_______________

1978 MGB* 38 000 miles good tires E xcellent condition 756 0(38

1979 HONDA CIVIC Best otter, will negotiate Call 752 6874 between 6

and 9pm.........    _

1979 JAGUAR XJ6, 4 door sedan, excellent condition All options Priced to sell Call 757 132I or call

collect 523 1524 ask tor BMI LewiS "1979 MGB Dark brown, AM FM Excellent condition 752 1551 ask

tor ^oH________

1979 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE con vertible 4 speed with electric overdrive 30.O0 miles Excellent condition 758 1809 weekdays 752 6712 weekends and nights

After reviewing the findings ot the recommending Health Systems

Agency, the Certificate ot Need Sec tion determined that the project is in conformity with all the applicable plans, standards, and criteria con sidered during the course ot the pro ject's review Any qualified person aggrieved by this Certiticate ot Need decision is offered the opportunity to appeal this decision within thirty days of the approval date For addi tional information please "*contact the Certificate ot Need Section, Divi Sion ot Facility Services. Depart ment ot Human Resources. P O Box 12200, Raleigh, North Carolina, 27605

June I, 1983

1980 BMW 5281 Dark,blue, sunroof automatic Excellent condition Ui' 5QP 3 2245 or 355 6422 19) DATSUN 200 SX Hard top, SL package, sunroof, low mileage on ginal owner $6,pOCL 355 2525 after 6

1982 TOYOTA TERCEL, 4 door automatic dir AM FM 12 000 ac tual miles Excellent condition 758 1809 weekdays 752 6 7 1 2 weekends and nights _________

1983 AUDI 5000 S Automatic sun roof, AM FM stereo cassette, electric mirrors, gray blue interior 12,000 miles Like new, $14 200 756 3291 after 5 30

LABRADOR RETRIEVERS AKC

puppies Field trail and gun dog stock Wormed, shots, and ' de wclaws removed 1 242 6529 or 1 242 483Q

iRESTAURANT management (personnel tor the Greenville and I New Bern area Starting salary I $13.000 and up Send complete resume to PO Box 2672. New Bern NC 28560_____

Woodside On Allen Road Come out and brouse Don t forget Antige Show & Sale. June 5 James Allen and Jenny Move 756 1133__________

REGISTERED ENGLISH Springer Spaniel, female, 1 year old, black and white $50 756 2087____

063 Building Supplies

051

Help Wanted

ASSISTANT MANAGER Immediate opening for fast food restaurant in Farmville Experi ence needed Salary based on expe rience Hours weekends days and nights Send resume to Assistant Manager. PO Box 54. Farmville, NC 27828    ____

SECRETARY/BOOKKEEPER One Girl Office Must be accurate and efficient in handling receiv ables payables, ^payroll general ledger and telephone* G(x>d typing ancT math skills required Salary commensurate with experience Send resume to Boyd Associates Inc , PO Box 1705. Greenville, NC 278351705    _

SUBSTITUTE WANTED for rural I paper route 756 2045.______

I T E C H N I C A L ' A S S I S t'a N f

I American Red Cross Bloodmobile

MUCH GOOD lumber from large i i', pack barn $1200 Phone 752 7937 or V'! ''-,,    ,,

y 787 0479___    ^

Fuel, Wood, Coal

064

CLEARANCE SALE on Sony Tele visions Savings, up to 25% Goodyear Tire Center West End Shopping Center And Dickinson

Avenue  _____________

COFFEE MACHINE. $50 Call 756 2L2)

COUCH, CHAIR and end table

Rust background $250 756 7189 No calls after 30p.m    _

DATSUN FORK LIFT 3,000 pound 14 lit) height Hydro ansniission F xcellent con 52 6900" days 752 0895 nights    __

EXOTIC COFFEE TABLE,

i Cypress I 752 1231

$800

tor $400

AAA ALL TYPES ot firewood tor sale J P Stancil. 752 6331

065 Farm Equipment

FACTORY 2nds NOW avaitable direct from manutac turer Hand woven rope hammocks $19 95 to 55 1 Hatferas Hammoi'ks 1104 (i.eksheei  .....

s ALLIS CHALMER WD tr

mower 758 0732

t ow sA( (.

W,

BLOODMOBILE ASSISTANT Head Nurse American Red Cross Blood Services has a full time supervisory position available tor a registered nurse at the Tar River Sub Center Greenville NC Major re sponsibilities is the management and supervision ot mobile blood collection activities in the absence of the head nurse NC licensure and driver s license required Proven monaqemeni experience required IV ,, or venapuncture experience preferred Ability to travel dally and work irregular hours and some weekends Join our professional friendly team Apply Tar River Sub Center Post Otlice Box 6003 Greenville NC 27834 Part time statt nurse position also available EOE

BODY SHOP MECHANIC needed Must be experienced Apply m person to Bill Brown Brown Wood Inc Dickinson Ave

tor full Idren s

BRODY'S HAS an opening t time salesperson in the chi

.p,

department Broc ,

hursday 2 to 5 Mrs Kinley

- i    ^ Tvr , I iUvJvvc 7 .JO v/ ja

High school graduate or GED Work | rni TiuATn^swFPPs 8 when needed position Requires CULTIVATOR bWccPOo responsible person fo care tor olocxi collective at Bloodmobile and to

assist nursing staff with donars Proper handling ot equipment and supplies loading and unloxiding truck and vehicle operation re quired    Flexible hours and

weekends, valid NC drivers license

and good driving record "required Apply at Tar River BIcxKf Center 758 1141 from 9am to 4 p m E^(DE_

WANTED SOUND MAN tor rock band Call between 11 12 midnight Call 638 6934

XRAY 'technician needed to work temporarily Must be certified Will have to perform some nursing duties Contact Greene County Health Care PO Box 657 Snow Hill 74? 8162

059

Work Wanted

leriencepreqciired Apply Brody s Pitt Piara Monday thru Tt

032

Boats For Sale

ACHILLES 4 man intlatable dinghy, motor mount, foot pump ^80 Day 757 6484, Niqht 752 7292 SUNFISH, trailer extras Very good condition $1000 Day 757 6484 Night 752 729^

WANTED 10"to 12 Jon boat Call 7W 7645

1972 GLASTRON 16 with 65 horse lower Evinrude and trailer $1595

P

355 2970

1973 16' CRUISER with 105 horse

1974 Cox allon built in tank, 6

power Chrysler outboard Tilt trailer, 12 gallon built

life jackets, flares lire

$1695

trailer, 12 gallon tank

extinguisher and paddles

756 6989 after 6___^__

22" NORTH AMERICAN 175 Black Max. $5500 Call atter 6 , 757 3636 or 752 5748

NOTICE OF SALE NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained m acertain deed of trust executed by The Alamo, Inc to Malcolm J Howard, Trustee, (Fred T Mattox being Substitute Trustee) dated the 3rd day ot December 1982, and recorded m Book I 51, Page 71 in the Office ot the Register ot Deeds of Pit) County, North Carolina, default having been made in the pay men! ol the indebtedness thereby secured and the said deed of trust

WANT

ADS

being by the terms thereof subject or foreclosure and the holder ot the in

debtedness thereby secured having ;lo

demanded a foreclosure thereof for the purpose ot satisfying said in debtedness, and the Clerk of the Court granting permission tor the

foreclosure, the undersigned trustee otter for sale at pubtic auction to

the highest bidder for cash at the Courthouse Door in Greenville. North Carolina, at 12 00. Noon, on the lOth day ol June 1983, the land, as improved, conveyed in said deed

of trust, the same lying and being Carolina, and I

NOTICE NORTHCAROLINA PITT GREENE COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF THE REMOVAL OF GRAVES FROM VICKSCEMETARY US '264 from Wilson Greene County Line to East ot NC 121 Project 8.1230101, R 525

Claim of Edna Lewis Baker Parcel 28

Notice is hereby given to the known and unknown relatives ot all those persons buried in the Vicks Cemetery located south of Survey Station 312 00 and being further described as being IcKateo one half mile north ot US 264 west ot the Farmville city limits, that the following named persons are among the known deceased buried in said cemetery, James Hall, Pennie Evans, Ann Elijabeth Smith. Leon Smith, Willie Battle, Leander Bynum, Lexie Faison, and "Baby " Johnson, that there are seven unknown graves located in this cemetery, that the known and unknown deceased are to be reinterred in the new Vicks Cemetery on land owned by Edna Lewis Baker which is located in. Greene Cbunty, North Carolina, that the exact location ot the reinterment sites ot the known and unknown deceased can be found on a map filed with the Register of Deeds ot Greene County, NorthCarolina

You are further notilied that said graves are being moved under the provisions of North Carolina General Statute 6513, and that said removal will begin after this notice has been published once a week for lour weeks over a period of thirty (30) days in The Daily Reflector,

ubiished daily in Greehville, North

arolina

This the 28th day ot April,T983 ------MENTOF

DEPARTMt TRANSPORATION By C. Jack Baldwin

Acting Manager ot Right ot Way James E Magner, Jr

Department of Justice May II. 18. 25. June 1. 1983

NOTICE NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY

Pitt County North ing more particularly described as tollows

BEGINNING at a point on the eastern right of way line ol Memorial Drive (US 13 N C II) said point being the northwest cor ner ot the S I Dudley Division, thence from said point ol beginning and with the eastern right of v^ay line ot Memorial Drive, said right ot way line being a curye having a racfius ol 2937 789 feet and running with said curve a chord distance of 309 31 feet at a bearing ot N 27 18 44 E to a point on said curve thence leaving the right of way line ot Memorial Drive and running S 75 46 58 E 400 75 teet to a corner, thence S 13 13 02 W 300 00 fet to a point in the northern line of the S I Dudley Division, thence with the northern line of the S I Dudley Divi Sion N 76 46 58 W 476 06 teet to the point of beginning and containing 3 00 acres

SUBJECT, however, to taxes, special assessments and prior en cumbrances of record, it any ' Five percent (5%) ol the amount of the highest bid must be deposited with the Trustee pending confirma tion of the sale

Dated this I9th day of May, 1983

FredT Mattox, Trustee June I, 8, 1983

002

PERSONALS

WE INVITE MIXED COUPLES to

worship with us For information

____

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

FREE! Stop in and register at Floyd G Robinson Jewelers Downtown Evans Mall lor tree qilt to be given away weekly No purchase necessary

JACKTAYLOR

Formerly ot Jack s Auto Mart ot Ayden invites all his friends and customers to come see or call him

034 Campers For Sale

ONE SHAKESPEARE trolling motor 12 pound thrust, 3 speed forward and reverse $50    15

camper trailer 2 double beds, good condition $995 753 5800 TRUCK COVERS All si/es, colors Leer Fiberglass and ^ortsman tops 250 units in stock O Briants Raleigh N C 834 27/4 1973 TAG A LONG 20 ^ell contained. $2.000    756 7173 or 757

1841

BULK TRUCK DRIVER toi de

liverinq gas to-tobacco barns 8 5 Monday Friday Some overtime involved 753 3124

CARPENTERS HELPERS

Requirement transportation Call 753 2105

CARPENTER    OR first class

helper needed Call between 6 and 9 evenings 746 3519    _

CONVENIENT STORE manager Must live in Bethel area Great opportunity Only serious people to Convenient Store

apply Apply to Convenient Store Manager PO Box 1967, Greenville

NC 27834    ___

DRYWALL FINISHERS needed 3 years experience Government Project Beals 8, Western J V.

Havelock 1 447 0677    ______

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY Large corporation has outstanding sales opening tor a sales repre senlative IncJividual must beJcxal resident with managerial ability ambition and show progress tor aqe Business or sales background helpful In requesting personal in lerview    please submit resume

slating personal history education

and business experience Write Box 40(5, Greenville NC 27835

EXPERIENCED SHEET METAL

workers only Apply in persctn at Larmar Mechanical Contractors between 8 and 9 a m only EXPERIENCED TV TECHNICIAN to work with established tirm Excellent opportunity good benelits Please call 756 3240 lor interview

FULL TIME ot part lime solat energy systems (hot domestic not waterl liberal commissions Great Western Solar ot N C. Call 756 7046 After 5 355 6654

FULL TIME instructor, diesel and Heavy t quipnient F igtil years bar k'ground experience in diesel H(>avy E guijiment ,ind Hyctrauli r e q u I

12    $5    69

Siies from

16" $8 91 to 22

70

sioi

E OR sAt f

atso carry sweeps to fit Damsti iin, cultivators anci Southern p>'anit

'rn Tppcon d'lion T wo iu '-s.' 856

sweeps Ag NL 742 3999

^Supply Greenville

(RIGIOAWF DWYER Operaiii

JOHN DEERE MT all good condition $1,980 c .i

6|.

Gt . Cl 0T-ir.,s-

07 Garage Yard Sale

0 R V e R bl .1.'

seliincj :lir cTtKi

F or r

C I tISSf 0

ter r ed

036

Cycles For Sale

HONDA 1980 cm 400 T 2.368 actual miles Just like new Many extras A gppd deaLCall 752 3619 MOPED Like new Great deiM 600 miles Call 355 2160 after 5 )974 HONDA CB 450 Good condi tion New rear tires $600 or trade for small truck or car in good conditiori 752 0084    j

1979 HONDA CBX, 6 cylinder, like new, completely chromed $2400 746 2540after 6pm

1980 CB750 Custom Honda 5600 miles $1700 Call alter 5 752 7096

1981 YAMAHA XS400 Special 2 Helmets E xc elleni c ondilion Crash bar and sissy bar $1 000 Call 752 0641 or 752 1767

1902 XR80 DIRT BIKE Excellent condition $350 lirm Call 758 2658 alter 5

1982 YAMAHA 750 Seca E xcellent Conditio(p I owner only 2300 miles $2"J50 Call 758 5876 alter 5

Beqinnirig dale July t 1983 Send resumes and ajmlic aliens to Tm Heath Division Chairperson Indus trial Services Beaulort County Community College, Washington NC 2/889 An Equal Opportuni ly Allirmalive Action E mployer HEADS UP HAIR SALON now takinq applications lor lull time hair stylist Call 758 8S5J tor ap pointmenl

IMMEDIATE OPENING lor a

c areer minded individual as sales person, with some bcxjkkeeprnq knowtPdge Opporlunily tor advancement Pleasant working conditions Apply in person only Absolutely no phone calls please' Zales Jewelers, Carolina basi Mall MAINTENANCE PERSON needed ten apartment complex Must be knowlecigeahle in all areas ot gen eral macnleriance work Send de scription ol qualilitations and work experience to Maintenance PO Box 1967 Gri>eiiville N( 278 14    *

MANAGER lor last toud re.I.iu rant Pi/?.i subs hamburgers (tiuken ell Must lie hard wur k cr

Send resume to M.in.iqer PO Bo> IUIV6 (.(ild'.tiiit o

ABLE BODIED, responsible indi I vidual would like to do odd jobs I yard work oardeninq etc, in Pill County 756 6913

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE

liiensed and tully insured Trim I ming cutting <$nc) removal Free I estimates J P Slancil 52 6331 ANY'TYPE OF REPAIR WORK c arpenlry masonry and rooting 35 years experience in building Call James Harrington alter 6 pm 752 7765

CALL SEARS ROEBUCK A Co tor free estimates on siding guttering mobile home rootover insulation interior and exterior painting and roof vents Call 756 9 700 ext 232 A^orid^ Saturday 10^ m 9pm

'CARPET SPECIAL

2 rooms and hall    $39    95

HomeCireClearwri    756    5453

CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use Elimnate creosote and musty odors Wood stove specialist Tar Road Erj lerprises 7S6 912J day 756 1007 night

DARLEENS DOMESTICS Tired need more lime? Lei someone else cio your housecleaning 752 3758 F R TRIPP PAINTING and home repair work Insurance covers . II inleresled in having work done call 757 1033 alter 5 Houle I Box 4/B Grimesland NC

FURNITURE STRIPPING Painl and varnish rtmioved trom wood and nutal F quipmc'nl luimally ol dip and Strip All items relumed wilhin 7 days Iai Road Antiges'

C all lor tree esbn.iale' days 756 . 9121 Night 756 1007 GRASS CUTTING, trim .iruund sidewalks ,ind driveways tall .52 7 14 1

GRASS CUTTINt. al reasonable |)r u es All si/e yards Call 752 5SHJ HOMF S PAINTED in.tenor and ex ler lur (>rachiale sliideiil witti expe r leiK e m p.diitmg We give ex. elleni work wdh sulrsi.inlial savings over prolessioii.il pr u ev 756 HV48 anytime

HOUSE CLEANING tan lutnish r rtt*r prKts t $iH M$u it*

PAINTING

No joti too small Interior and exterior low rales Mr Earl Paint

Co

757 3604

PAINTING, remodeling storage buildings 758 6212 PAINTING, interior and exterior 12 years experience work go.iraii teed Heterenies Free estimates 756 6873after 6p rti PAINTING Tired at paying con tractors high prices Experienced painters wor k guaranteed 757 12)3 PICKUP FOR HIRE H.iul .iny thrng Y ai d woi k dolie (.ill ?57 (84 7

SANDING

THE SALE YQd VE been .v.i for Neighbors have c leaned .n closets, 'atilt s .(Oft bams tiv .u gigantic sale Sa'. d.IV '    m...

are a tew .'ems > don t come Antique ( us' i . > new gas heater i.ugr iq .e,. with stand CB eiiuipou;!'"' bicycles includrog' .    ,\i..

Avon bottles c uri.i ..s j., .    .

clothing knu k h u x ,i hundreds more iteir.-, '>,    

to see to tiebeve ki,.,, .    .....

on County Rcrad do i . front ol Rotrersoo s N u ' . third brii k house on let* 'S6 i "(i YARD sale. Saturday U.ne i Mi I Several tamibes t U'lhes lions, hold items albums eU 1104 c..le Arthur Avenue near K.isii A katr on 14lh Street ^

YARD SALE, Saturday Corner . Cooper and Rose Wood m W. terville 8 lo"2

$225

iiul and top I. Kho* cilso ^ p ni J.n>

Hcdsor.

MFDiUM Bl.UF CAkPET

072

Livestock

HORSEBACK RIDINC. Stables 752 52i7

073 Fruits and Vegetables

,llr ei

FOR SALE yeHow coMards and cabbdge plants Manon Mae Mills ;S6 32/9or 3SS

PUERTO RICAN potato platds tor sale S?0 per thousand Calt^^'^AOsM or write. PO 00* 3M WinterviHe

hiindffil

tr iqer tVA, only in.nid three .rut white OK tDf e and t)l( 'and ti' f)Of t.hle '..hie ( i>Uit

de

074

Miscellaneous

hkt

AIR CONDI nONFR Kelvmatoi Deluxe 8 (XX) t'TU hkr* new Siso Queen si/e. mattr*ss ft months old

sso /S6 m;m

ALL USED REFRIGERATORS/a.r tonditoners    tree/ers    ranges

washers attd .d'    yers ara* reduc ed tor

UI( k s,ile    (all 0 )    Milts

Aidtior i/ed *    Appliarue    Serv-fif

4ft ? \ ift at Hla k I.C k ASSUME PAYMF NTS o' 1. t^n (1 ft piete Westr-m living i.ii^n . Stdit $ twnr rocker and ' hdm-s I Ormtore WorUt S.r04Si We tr ade ins

BEDDING&WATERBEDS

Wtiy (>.iv ret,III when y'cni'can s.ivo op ill' , Mod mom an budding .iiicl w.iluxbeds lactory Mallruss K W.ilurbud duflut iNuxI 1u Pilt Pl.i/.il 155 ,'6,6

BICYCK Buys 20, loi s.ilu oi ll.ldulUI 16    '56 84 (11    

BROWN VINYl ROtKFR" luu >15 C .III '56 14 '2 .lllui 6 11 III BRUNSWICk SLAE POOl I,dill-. C .isb diMouiil', dulivuiv and inslall.ilion 919 /6.i|9/l4

BUMPER POOL TABiIe Ixcullunt summer recreational .wlivdy Good c oncldion 7S6 0806    ^

CALL CHARLES /iCE. 758 3011 tor small loads ot r.ind Io(i5oil and stone Also dr ivuw.fjy wor k

Nf

.II I    X    ',,1 tv' $250    dC

I,,.. 01 I, k Old vvhdu TV S o I V ,inli;iu. 1    561 'lluruo C lOC k

t.idio >19    r.m    .1    .' .tuna catiiiiel

..olul *\ood 5.6-..' c lu.l $1295 All 6 it,.m> l.ku    liuvc ,c    .d't    .S6 1521

Nf EL) to St I    I    IE WE LHV    F or

till th,.', ,,i-,ii ,'ii , ,ill wor k 'SH

lAl F

Snapi

I'f NT-A I

hfd pi

proper I. t! ! Wet Id has ,1

' diVMt1' alt tor the >sf OtM

QUFEN SI/E niattrcss and toon d.tfion I .III ''H '08 SAVANNAH CHINA liy Nontake xippf ox inra'ely ' pn*te setting t osU

Mi; AdfV.ai Ijtr n    W.tl

I.1) ni/iii.AY

WE install ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING

CLASSIFIED OISPl AY

C.L. laip* an. Co.

I li Mil.

'all

loh'

I $nntrf . toi

).e k haki'f I l(H>i'

Ol)'.

;hftH

II I).

inager ; / S 10

Leo Venters Motors

HIGHWAY n    AYDEN

746 6171

039

Trucks For Sale

I Nf t d BABYSII TE R .11 hoiii.

I .,    [I 111    ( .ill 756 8, IH ,lll

Sludt NC INTF Ht Sit D m

( ulting RiMSOii.ihIu i ,ilu%

lu.foru lOa iiv '58 1216, r REFS TOPPED iiuiimud I .fbwn lohiiPurry '58 1625 lYPING PROFfSSIONAL

xjiur

1 utlu

p.ijii

,4y me.

1, t'sft /Ift; liny tietoi

1967 CHEVY I ton $800 Call 756 7149 1970 RANCHERO.

12 stout body

air AM f M,

8 track tape player Good condition 378

Oil

Autos For Sale

$950 756 8781 1971 DATSUN Eickup good condi '38

lion. Call 758 623

SELL YOUR CAR the National Aulotinders Way' Authori/ed Dealer in Pitt County Hastings Ford Call 758 0114    _

1973 FORD RANGER $1200 355 2352

Good shape

012

AMC

1977 AMC HORNET, air, power steering $1595 Call 752 1 138 from 9 10 5, after ,6,30^ 946 5836

FILE NO 83CVD712 FILMNO:

INTHE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

PATTI GAY THRAILKILL BLACK VS

MICHAEL JOHN BLACK

NOTTCE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICA!

ATION

'Take notice that a pleading seek mg rebel against you has been.tiled in the above entitled action The nature of the relief being sought is as tollows'

Absolute divorce based on one year's separation

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than July 12, 1983 and upon your failure to do

014

Cadillac

1975 CHEVROLET pickup Carolina $2.000

OVE RSt AS I 1 SftO (XM)    p<

600(1 t xt J H7S2

CLASSIF IED DISPLAY

Steel BUILDINGS

BY

Riverside Iron Works

Toll Free 1-800-682-3705

An Authorized Dealer for Mitchell Steel Buildinqs for over 15 years

SALES POSITIONS

With a Present and a Future

Call

runs.

blue with tool box 756 7067

1975 CHEVY, standarc longbed $4()0 Call 756 7149

1977 DODGE PICKUP automatic and power steering Long body $1800 756 0653

1978 F too pickup striaqht drive, long body, six cylinder $2400 756 0653

CADILLAC, 1970 4 door hard I Sedan Deville One owner. $ negotiable 756 8999

! 040

Child Care

015

Chevrolet

MOTHER and

ike to keep your '    '    837

CAPRICE 1902,    4    doi

equipped, extra clean Smith Chi

or, fully Call Rex

so the party seeking service against you wMl apply to the Court'tor the relief souqnt

relief soug.

This the 27 day of May, 1983

Mhe27dayot M^, ivbj WILLIAMSON. HERRIN, STOKES& HEFFELFINGER

BY

ANN HEFFELFINGER BARNHILL ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF 210S WASHINGTON STREET P O BOX 552 GREENVILLE, NC 27834 TEL (919) 752 3104 June I. 8. 15, 1983

legal NOTICE

The Certificate of Need Section, Division ot Facility Services, North Carolina Department ot Human Resources announced on May 27, 1983, approval with a condition, of

Chevrolet, Ayden. 746 3141____

CELEBRITY 1982    4    door,    low

mileage, extra clean Call Rex Smitjt Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141 FOR SALE: 1973 Nova Runs good Needs body work $400 Call 756 8081 alter 9

1955 CHEVY STATIONWAGON Very good condition 758 5731 alter j

1957 CHEVROLE^T Excellent con d I t ion C^ll 758_0/J2_

196* 4 DOOR SEDAN Automatic-, needs minor body work Engine and transmission good condition Col lectors edition Reliable trans portation with minor work $350 ^all 756 6730

1976 CHEVETTE Low mileage Excellent condition Call 752 2429

EXPERIENCED

baby siller would cl Id while you work Call 752 48 V ANTED Children to enjOy during toe summer for working moms Responsible energetic leenager (assisted by her mom) has great summer planned for your child It interested call 756 9428 anytime

YOU CAN SAVE money by shopping tor bargains in the C l.issitiud Ads

3 POSITIONS

E xceptlonal Opportunity Average over 1500/week

To 'quality edui ational

Must have" car qoqd and character back

ground bondahle Free to travel in F astern North Carolina Must be

agqaressivu alert highly soc lable ambitious and responsible If you areselerlud

Your Future Is Secure

a roniplete

th

lassrooni sales Irainirjq program CxUARANrFfD

AN

F XC F L LF NT JNCOMt to start in ' field Iraining

Our represent.ilives are given [every opportunity tor .'dvaiH emrmt to key mariaqemeni jrosit.ons

046

PETS

018

Ford

PINTO, 1980

speed,

.Likenew_$J200 752 361 PINT

d, 10.000 miles

The uh(Jerslgned, having qualified as E xefufrix under the Will of Louis

L Forbes. Sr., deceased, lateot Pitt County, this IS to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before November II, 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 5th day ol May 1983

s/LucyT Forbes E xecutr jx Under the Will ol Louis L Forbes, Sr , Deceased RFD1,Box46 Winterville, NC 28590 May n, 18, 25, June 1. 1983

NOTICE ^

Hawing qualified as Executors of the estate of Lula, Mae Moore Tyndall late of PIM County, North Carolina, this is fo notify all-persons having claims against the estate of

having claims against me esiaie o. said <^#aed to present them to the undersigned executors on or tefore Novemfitr U, 19*3 or this notice <jr same will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. AI/ parsons

said #8lata please mak* immediate payment.

-rhls Uth

Norman Route 2,

tm.

Granvllks,NCJ7l4*

f^ton Ray Tyndall Route 2. Box .<____

Greenville. N C 27836 Executors ot fheeitaNof tula Mae Moore Tyndall

j{l!a^8*25, June l 0 1983

ippro. -.......

ProjecllD Q 1801 83 tor Pitt Coun Memorial Hospilal'East Carolina

ty t__________

University School ol Medicine. Greenville. N C . to incur a capital expenditure for the establishment of Open Heart Services The condition placed on this approval is as follows , Pitt County Memorial Hospital/East Carolina University School of Medicine must achieve and continue to operate at a minimum ol 350 adult open heart surgical procedures per year after three years following completion ot the project, as set forth in Certificate ot Need special services criteria 10 NCAC 3R 1706 Review ol the project was con ducted pursuant toChapter 131. Arti cle 18. as amended, of the General Statutes ot North Carolina Prior'fo approval with a condition, the pro lect was reviewed by the Eastern Agency found Ic

RUNABOUT, 1974, good condition. 4 speed, air ' reliable Best qtl^ Calf Richard,^ 3J^ 2362 1972 FORD LTD 4 door white AM/FM. air Excellent condition

$700 757_0776    _

973 FORD GALAXY 500 Best otter Call Joe at 756 8950 before 2 30 NqcaMson Sunday    ___

Brougham

1976 FORD LTD Brouq Loaded $600 negotiable Call 756 0962 alter 4pm    ________

1976 PINTO STATIONWAGON

Good dependable, inexpensive transportaliori $550    756    8977

transportation $550    756

756 6^and leave message 1977 MUSTANG Good condilion i185P. CaJI 75? 1705      ^____

lect was reviewed by the Carolina Health Systems Inc . Greenville N C . and found

conform to the applicable plans, standards, and criteria

Atter reviewing the findinigs ot the recommending Health Systems

Aoency. the Certllicate of Need Sec tion determined that the project Is ir conformity, as condition, with all the

applicable plans, standards, ana criteria considered during the

course ot the project's review Any qualllied person aggrieved by thit Certificate of Need decision is oi fered the opportunity to appeal this decision within thirty deys of the ep prove dete For et

pis**

ct the Certifcete of

...........ilrty

al date For adoitlonel Informa

Jt

SespuFces pro'Box 12200, Rereigh

019'

Lincoln

ABOVE AVERAGE 1974 Lincoln Continental 4 door, canary yellow with black vinyl lop Real sharp car inside and outside and much more Low mileage Has 429 engine with 2 barrel! carburetor, excellent on gas mileage You must see to appreci ate at this wholesale price. $1550 Call 756 0692 _    ___________________

020

AAercury

1973 MERCURY statlonvliagon. mechanically good, needs paint, $700 756 0653    _

021

Oldsmoblle

CUTLASS Supreme 1902 Fuiiy

Ivision of Facility tment ot Human I 746 3Ui

equipped, extra clean, low mileage Call Rex Smith Chevrolet. Ayden.

AKC BLACK Labrador ketrievpr puppies All shots and worrned F leld champions in line 756 1268 AKC GREAT DANE puppies Championship blixid line Call 756 619/ If no answer, call 756 1257 AKC REGISTERED Cocker Spaniel puppies been wormed $100 each 244 1139, Midlred Tripp AKC REGISTERED female black Coc ker Spaniel puppy 2 months old $100 Calf 758 3 )05.

ALERT BRIGHT AND active kil lens Free 2 males 2 females Call atter 5, 756 5285    '

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

North Carolina 27605 Juno I. I983

1*76 OLOSMOBILE Vista Cruiser Slationwagon Call alter 6pm.

uum 1---------

This Phone Call Can Change Your Life

II you have some sales bar kground call Chuck Carroll in Greenville N C Tuesday Wednesday or Thurs day 10 AM lo 5 PM tor personal interview only

919-758 3401

Our people ire earniny up to i000 per week m North CaroliOi now

our (ornp.iny supplied

EOE M/F

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Morris Blueberry Farm

LOCATED: 1 mile North of New Bern On US 17 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

Bring Your Own Container

mmi

HESE CARS ARE PRE0WNh...6UT'

1982 Pontiac Trans-Am

rl-linij red I'.i '.lill, . >.llh Vl'lciul he

1980 Olds DfltcTRoy.ile

1982 Chevrolet Citation

1979 Honda CVCC Wagon

1979 Cadin.M Dp/

.Villo

1982 Pontiac J-2000 Wagon

1979 Pontia/ 'i''rui

1981 Buick Century

4 door, dark Ir.liie rnnl.illK. with AM FM radiM crie'." "'ir.l a miU",

1981 Cadillac Sedan Do ViHe

SIdlti fjrayvwitti jiadded vinyl ronl .e d . m luh equipped ;.)0,001) miles

1981 Olds Cutlass Supreme 9

Be

Brougham

eige with blue landau vinyi i"(i and tilu

1979 ChoviDlf^ (vhp'.

2 door

Sjieed .or    f    M

t:/

2 door

velour trim Tilt wheel, (.ruisi., AMFM '.tei split seal wire wheel covers. 33 800 rim trade

f.Uie lin ,1

1978 Cadillac Sedan De Ville

Dark gi ' i "    '    '    '    ;    ;    :

1980 Fiat 3pider Convertible

While with dark red interior AMFM .teiei, cassette rspeed 31 400rniles sharj, sp'urs ,.ir

1978 Chevrolet Irnpala

1980 Pontiac Phoenix

2 door dark blue rnetalln with lihi'' steenncj and tiiakes 4 speerl tr.iri'. condition, AM FM radir.

1978 Olds Cutlass Cruiser

Before You Trade Your Used Car See Us /

WE BUY GOOD CLEAN LATE MODEL USED CARS

Wagon

Mediiiii |.liii' IT .leering and ( i wtieel viui-,*'

1976 MG Mtdent

Dickinson Ave.

y

Brown-Wood, Inc.

752-7111

PONTIAC

1

ft, .    X.        A    jryxx-.





30-The Day Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, June 1,1983

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

MEN AND WOMEN 17-62 TRAIN NOW FOR CIVIL SERVICE EXAMS

No High School Necessary Positions Start As High As

1.21 HOUR

$10

POST OFFICE Clerical

MECHANICS INSPECTORS

KEEP PRESENT JOB WHILE PREPARING AT HOME FOR GOVERNMENT EXAMS

Write a Include Phone No To:

National Training Service, Inc.

P.O. Box 1967 Greenville. N.C. 27835

074

Miscellaneous

SCHOOL BUS SEATS for sale Call 7S6 5989

SEARS PUSH AAOWER Excellent condition $I50 Call 752 1983 after 6:30

SET OP PINE bunk beds and mattress and box springs Almost new! 7SA 7QAAafter 5 30

074

MiicellaneouS'

SHAAAPOO FOR FALL! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company

SMITH CORONA TP I letter quail ly printer 5 months old U^ t mopth In mint condition 752 3980 SOLID WOOD pecan finish 9 piece dinino room suit, Mediterranean

like new, $150CLCa!]lM17q2.

style

STANCILTREE SERVICE

J P Stancil, 752 6331    __

STANDARD TRUCK tool box and racks for sale 2 'jailer axles, wheels, and tires Call 6631 between 8 and 1 p m or 7S6 1050

between 6 and 9pm_________

TRS 80 MODEL III 48K, 2 drives,

RS232C I year old 758 0789    _____

TWO 50 waft Lyric speakers Good condition $75 or best otter Days 756 9371 or nights 756 7887

UPRIGHT PIANO Good condition Fir.stSIOO 756 0982 alter 5_____________

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WASHINGTON MOTOR CO., INC.

Iin CtnlM IfMM WatlMClaa, MX

48 77B8 M.424

1983 BUICK REGAL LIMITED

2 door, black, black landau vinyl top

1982 CHRYSLER LEBARN

Medalion, convertible Pearl white, white convertifile top Mark Cross Edition

1982 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE

4 door Navy bk/e, while vinyl top. loaded

1982 FORD ESCORT GL

4 door,-red

1982 CHEVROLET CAVALIER

4 door, t wagon Charcoal gray '    >

1982 CHEVROLET CAPRICE CLASSIC WAGON

it door, white

1982 PONTIAC GRAND PR IX

2 door, tan, brown landau vinyl roof

1982 PONTIAC J-2000

4 door,'wagon, medium blue

BON-

1982 PONTIAC NEVILLE SAFARI WAGON

4 door, medium blue with woodgrain

1982 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME BROUGHAM

2 door, sandstone, beige padded landau vinyl roof

1982 BUICK ELECTRA PARK AVENUE

4 door Dark claret, claret padded vinyl rool

1981 PONTIAC GRAND LEMANS safari"'^

WAGON

4 door Beige with wooO-grain

1981 CHEVROLET CHEVETTE

4 door Medium blue

1981 CHEVROLET ' CAPRICE CLASSIC

4 door, dark blue, doeskin vinyl tool

1981 CHEVROLET CORVETTE

2 door, daik tilue, T-lop

1981 BUICK SKYLARK

4 door, dark blue -

1981 OLDS CUTLASS LS

4 door, while, rt'd vinyl roof

1981 OLDS DELTA 88 ROYALE

4 dooi, beige, brown vinyl roof

1981 OLDS TORONADD BROUGHAM

2 door, silver, gray padded landau vinyl root

1980 FORD MUSTANG

2 door ,Rod . .

1980 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME

2 door, rod, red landau vinyl top

1980 LINCOLN TOWN CAR

4 door, lawn, lawn vinyl roof

1979 MERCURY

COUGAR

XR-7

2 door, while with white padded landau root

1978 MERCURY MARQUIS BROUGHAM

4 door, dove gray, dove gray vinyl roof.

MAR-

1978 MERCURY QUIS

4 door, cream, cream vinyl roof

1978 CHEVROLET PAPRICE ESTATE 'WAGON

Beige with woo^rain

1977 MGB ROADSTER CONVERTIBLE

2 door, dark green

1977 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO LANDAU

2 door, black landauvinyl rod!

1976 VOLKSWAGEN DASHER

Wagon 4 door, dark brown.

1976 FORD GRANADA .

2 door Dark brown, tan vinyl roof

BON-

1975 PONTIAC NEVILLE

2 door, silver, red fandau vinyl roof

1970 FORD CUSTOM 500

4 door, light blue

TRUCKS

1983 FORD RANGER XL

Medium blue and whit^ two tone.

1981 CHEVROLET C-10 SILVERADO

Silver Long wheel base

1980 FORD ECONOLINE CONVERSION VAN-

Maroon with gold striping, raised roof, loaded

1980 TOYOTA PICKUP

Medium blue Long body

1979 CHEVROLET SCOTTSDALE

C-20 Long wheel base Charcoal gray

1979 FORD F-100 CUSTOM

Long wheel base, red

1979 FORD F-150 RANGER

Long wheel base, walnut and gold

1974 FORD COURIER

Medium blue with camper shell

1973 FORD F-100 CUSTOM

Red

4 WHEEL DRIVE TRUCKS .

1982 FORD BRONCO

Ranger XLT Larial 4x4 Walnpt and desert sand

metallic

1982 AMC JEEP " WAGONEER LIMITED

4 door, white with woodgrain

1981 AMC JEEP SCRAMBLER "

Dark blue with while hardtop

1981 AMC JEEP , WAGONEER LIMITED

4 door, dark green wilh woodgrain

1980 CHEVROLET . SILVERADO

Short wheel base, 4x4, black

1980 GMC JIMMY HIGH SIERRA

4X4, medium green and white two-tone

1980 AMC JEEP CJ-5 RENEGADE

.Red with gold stripes Nutmeg soft top

lf80 TOYOTA SR-54X 4 SPORT TRUCK

Medium blue with stripes.

1979 BUICK ELECTRA LIMITED

2 door, light blue, medium blue padded landau vinyl rool

1979 MERCURY CAPRI RS

Turbo 2 door hatchback, white

1979 FORD F-100 RANGER XLT

Lariat 4x4 Dark blue and silver two lone.

1979 FORD F-150 RANGER

4x4, Long wheel copper and beige.

base.

1979 AMC JEEP CJ-7

4X4, while wilh blue stripes white hardtop. Renegade.

1979 AMC JEEP CJ-7

Renegade., White with blue siripes, blue sotljop.

Sf

1977 AMC JEEP WAGONEER

4 door, red with woodgrain

1965 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT

4x4. blue.

HWMi) RCiKS

Membei I DIC

WANTED:    Collections of Super

Man items Comic books, buttons, anything Call 756 1311

WOULD LIKE to buy used refrig erafors, air conditioners, freerers. ranges, and clothes dryers that need repair 746_24^

19 " COLOR TV Rent to ovin $23 It er month Furniture World. 757 51    _

19" GE COLOR TV Programmable remote Brand new. $500 value, for $450 Sears Exeter 3 in 1 bumper pool table Like new $600 value, for 1375 756 7766alter 7p m

19 CUBIC FOOT Hotpoint frost tree refrigerator with ice maker, side by side doors, $350 Magic Chef electric range, $150. Both are white and in good condition Call 756 8944, ask tor Susan, it not there leave message and phone number__

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

14x70 R NALL 3 bedroom^, 2 baths Assume loan. Call 757 3964_

1969 RITZCRAFT 12x45 All major appliances Many improvements Located in Winterville Cannot be rented out at present location. Call Randy at 756 3479 or Carroll at 752 6147    ____

12x60, 1970 HILLCREST Located in good park. $4800 756 0801

14 WIDES lor as low as $190 per month Call or come by Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841    _____________

i

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

075 AAobile Homes For Sale

BRAND NEW 19B3 top ot the line double wide. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, many extras including masonite siding, shingle roof, frost free refrigerator, garden tub, cathedral ceiling and much, more Regular price. $21,995

much

legufar pFice. $21,995 Limited Time Only

$16,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up

:rosslano

(formerly Mobile Hoine Brokers) 630WeK

I Greenville Boulevard 756-0191

EXCELLENT INVESTMENT

70x14 3 bedrooms, I'a baths, total electric repo Great condition. Less than $600 down and less than $200 per month tor only 9 years Call 7^ 0131     j.

limited time ONLYMI 1983 70x14 2 bedrooms, 2 baths To see is to believe! Need to sell immediate ly 10% above wholesale plus set up Only 1 home, so hurry and call! 756 0131_____

NEW QUALITY built Marshfield. 3 bedrooms, I'j baths Payments under $200 per month Only 1 home left! Call 756 0131

REAL NICE AND CLEAN 70x12 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths Low down payment, low monthly payments Should see this one! Thomas Mobile Homes, North Memorial Drive across from airport. Greenville, NC 752 6068 _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FINAL

REDUCTION

Up"'    60^^    Savings

on

MARINE ACCESSORIES & SUPPLIES

CAROLINA SALES

MARINE DIVISION LIQUIDATION Corner 14th and Evans Streets

BOAT, MOTOR & TRAILER PARTS    MARINE PAINTS & CLEANERS

MARINE ELECTRONICS    BOATING    SAFETY EQUIPMENT

ALL OTHER MARINE ACCESSORIES

Products By: Lowrance. Taperflex, Cypress Gardens. Cybernet & Many Others

SALE HOURS 12-6 PM MONDAY-FRIDAY

4i))i    Cash    Masleicard    oi    Visa    Only    Dealeis    Welcome

SHOP THE BEST SHOP HOLT QUALITY USED CARS

1983 Olds Cutlass Supreme

2 door, 9,000 miles, sable brown, bhpwn velour interior, bucket seats, automatic, air. AM-FM slereo.'tilt wheel, cruise control.

1982 Datsun4 X4Truck

Long bed White with blue inlerior, 19,000 miles, one owner

1982 Olds Delta 88 Royale

Brougham 2 door Loaded, diesel engine, 36.000 miles, gray with gray velour interior

1981 Subaru

2 door, burgundy with Ian vinyl interior. 5 speed, air, AM-FM stereo, 19,000 miles. Looks new

1981 Buick Regal Limited

2 door Diesel Loaded 31,000 miles Brown with brown velour interior, one owner.

1981 Datsun 280-ZX    ^

Copper with Ian leather interior, T-lop. 5 speed,loaded, one owner

1981 Datsun 4 X4Truck

Long bed, 4 speed, air, AM-FM, red with ttlack interior

1981 Plymouth TC-3

Blue, blue cloth interior, loaded    '    f

1981 Mercury Marquis *

4 door, tan and brown, beige cloth interior, miles, one owner

loaded. 22,000

1981 Datsun 280-ZX Turbo

Gold with tan leather interior, loaded

1981 Datsun 210 Coupe

2 door. 5 speed, AM-FM r^dio. silver with black interior.

1980 Ford Fairmont

Two tone blue, blue vinyl interior, automatic, air. AM-FM radio, one owner, 40.000 miles    *

1980 Buick Skylark Limited

Yellow with light tirown velour interior

1980 Pontiac Sunbird

Silver, burgundy vinyl interior. 4 speed, air. AM-FM stereo,

34.000 miles, looks new

1980 Chevrolet Malibu Classic

4 door Automatic, air, brown with buckskin velour interior.

1980 Pontiac Firebird

Sliver with white vinyl interior, automatic, air, tilt wheel. AM-FM, one owner . 39.000 miles

1979 Chevrolet Silverado Pickup

33.000 miles Light blue with blue vinyl interior Automatic, air, tilt wheel, AM-FM stereo Looks new

1979 Olds Delta 88    ,

2 door Blue with white landau top, white interior, 44,000 actual miles, looks new

1978 Olds Delta 88 Royale

4 door White with blue velour interior, 58,000 miles, one owner, automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo, till wheel, cruise control, power door cks. loks new

DISCOUNTS UP TO $2500.00 On These Company Demonstrators All Vehicles Carry Full Factory Warranty

1983 Olds 98 Regency

4 door, loaded, moon root, silver with beige top

1983 Olds 98 Regency Brougham

4 door, diesel. Loaded.. White with blue lop with matching blue interior

1983 Olds 98 Regency Brougham

4 door, diesel. Loaded. Beige wilh maroon top with matching maroon interior.

1983 Olds 98 Regency

4 door. Loaded. White with sable brown top with matching sable inlerior.

1983 Olds Custom Cruiser Wagon

Loaded. Silver sandstone with woodgrain.

1983 Olds Cutlass Ciera Brougham

4 door, diesel. Loaded. White with tan top and matching tan inlerior

1983 Olds Cutlass Calais    ^

Loaded Light gray fern, bucket seats.

HOLT OLDS-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd.

756-3115

i

075 AAobile Homes For Sale

14X70 OAKWCXJD mobile home 3 betjrooms, 2 full baths, central air.

equity, a jnth Calli

179 12x50, 2 BEDROOMS Assume loan and take up payments No equity 756 8396______

1980 14 X 70 three bedrooms, i bath Some equity and assume loan of $181 per month Call Art Oellano Homes, 756 9841    _

1981 OAKWCXJD 14x65 Adrlah 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, heat pump. $2000 and fqke up payments Days 752 0977, nights 756^4^.

1982 TAYLOR 14x70 2 bedrooms, 2 baths', semi furnished, with appli anees and air conditioner $4500 equity, payments $180 946 0248

1982 14x70 2 bedrooms. 2 full baths with garden tub. Total electric, central heat and air, fully furnished Call 756 4376or 756 1601

1982 24 X 64 Parkway $500 down Assume loan at 12% interest Call Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841

1983 14' WIDE HOMES Payments as toy as $148 91. At Greenville's volume dealer Thomas Mobile Home Sales, North Memorial Drive across from airport Phone 752 6068

076 AAobi leHomelnsurance

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage tor less money Smith Insurance and Realty, 752 2754    _______

077 AAusical Instruments

BABY GRAND PIANO, completely rebuilt and refinished Must self

Best otter Call 757 0020 _i_

PANO UPRIGHT, $300 Call 753

5638^    _______________

WINTER SPINET PIANO with bench, beautiful cabinet $550 Plano 8. Organ Distributors, Greenville, 355 6002___

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DDORS & AWNINGS

C.L. l.upton. Co.

078

Sporting Goods

ONE CONN GUITAR Jumbo flat with JSOO

lop with case and music stand, $125 753

2 REMINGTON 1100, 12 gauge Magnum shotguns. 30" full vent rib barrel ExceTlent condition $250 each 758 2342after5o m

742 WOODMASTER Carbirw 30 06 Callattero m , 756 7315    '_

080

INSTRUCTION

SWIMMING LESSONS available tor all levels mother and infant to adult Ray Schart Swim School 752 3400 ______

WILL TUTOR ENGLISH, all levels, MA English, 2 years experience Call 752 6924 after __

082 LOST AND FOUND

LOST:    10 month male Siberian

Huskie Mostly black, little white. 1 blue eye, 1 brown/blue eye. Name is Raider Vicinity ot 113 North Jarvis, no collar Special pet reward! Call days 758 0707, nights 752 2742 John Voncannon_

2 DOGS LOST Saturday near McDonalds on lOfh Street Red Doberman,left ear bent, black and white mixed Basset Reward ot fered 752 3795    _

091

Business Services

IF LIGHTNING STRIKES Are you protected? Total Home Light ning Protection is the proven

ig Protection is the ore method for Insuring the salety of 'Our home and family. Don't fake

yi

chances with one ot natures most destructive forces For tree estimates call "Carolina Chimney Cleaners Your Home Safety Professionals Since 1978 All in stallations meet U L standards and your satisfaction is guaranteed For more information call Carolina )T74.

Chimney Cleaners, 758 Ot

093,

OPPORTUNITY

DESIGN YOURSELF a'new wav of .life Full time/part time Realize your ambitions through the Shaklee

opportunity Bonus program, bonus car and travel For information call Max or Carolyn Gray. 752 0919

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Project Sales Manager

for Beal Estate Development in Greenville, North Carolina. Sales experience in Real Estate helpful but not necessary. N.C. Real Estate license not requiredg^ Excellent opportunity with established firm. Call 756-1234 or send resume to Chapin & Associates, Inc., 3106 S. Memorial Drive, Greenville, N.C.27834.

V

093 OPPORTUNITY

106 Farms For Sale

ESTABLISHED BUSINESS for sale Good location. Complete oil business with 2 trucks, garage, parts and groceries. Daytime call 752 6213 or niahts 752 2372

Sd ACRE FARM Good road fron^ tage on SR 1753 and SR 1110. 51 acres cleared, 6,20 pounds tobacco allotment, pond and 2 ^rwm house St. Johns Community Can for more details Call /toseley^ Marcus Realty at 746 2166 for full details.

HAVE YOUR OWN HIGHLY prof table iean shop Over 300 nationally

oOvCrTISCM DTonO naMw. iw

$15.500 includes training, inventory, fixtures and much more Call Mr.

Tate 704 753 4738

109 Houses For Sale,.

INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY

need cash. Assume $6,000 deed ot trust on house that was sold. Willing toneootiate. 752 9278.

ASSUAAABLE LOAN Pav off $22,500 Payments $249 03 PIT 1 3 bedroom brick home Centrally located $39,900 Lily Richardson Realtv 752 6535

LIST OR BUY yodT business with C J Harris & Co., Inc. Financial &

a a ^ a L w i A1A A as 9 A sv 4 e%ae

AAdrK6TinQ v.on$UiTanT9. serving ine

Southeastern United States Greenville, N C 757 0001, nights 753 4015.

ASSUME THIS FHA LOAN with no qualifying. Truly one of the cleanest homes you will ever see Plush

NIGHT CLUB tor sale Located downtown Greenville Call 757 3J21, leave name and number.

green landvcaping, 3 large bedrooms, 2 full bahts, roomy kitchen and dining room, greatroom with fireplace Only $56,W, with low down payment. #557 CEN TUR Y 21 Bass Realtv 756 5868.

TO BUY OR SELL a business Appraisals Financing Contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATES, Licensed Brokers, 401 W First Street. 752

3575

ATTENTION INVESTORS Assume 9^/a% loan to qualified buyer. Brick Veneer duplex Rented, each side $2tio. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen,

095 PROFESSIONAL

utility, family room, heat jaump on each side $40'$ Call Davis Realty 752 3(X)0, 756 2904, or 756 1997

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman North Carolina's original chimney

ATTENTION LARGE FAMILIES! Here's your chance to own that 4

I__I_____ a 1 3 w C

sweep 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. CaF day or night, 753 3503. Farmville

100

REAL ESTATE

ABOUT 20 ACRES wood land for sale 429' frontage Has some pines about 30' high and hardwood 12 miles from Greenville and very secluded About $500 per acre Bentord Realty, 758 2386_

104 Condominiums For Sale

PICNICON THE PATIO

Of your own townhome or con dominium Little down and low

tlhly payments Call Jane ren at 758 6050 or 758 7029 or Wil

mont Warren'.

Reid at 758 6050 or 756 0446

MOORE & SAUTE R 110 South Evans

- . 758-6050

Searching for the right townhouse? Watch Classified every day

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR iCREENS& DOORS

C.L. Lupton Co.

7 ,2 hllb

The New Truck In Town Is At

Brown-Wood, Inc.

1983 Isuzu Pickup

M33.94

Per Month

Based on Selling Price of $6000.00, $1000 down (cash or trade). Amount financed $5000.00. 48 monthly payments, 12.9% Annual Percentage Rate, Finance charges $1429.12. Total note $6429.12. Stock no. 710050.

Brovvn-Wood, Inc.

Dickinson Ave.

752-7111

Safe Buy BuOUsed Cars

1982 Lincoln Continental

4 door Walnut metallic, fully loaded, low mileage.

21982 Mercury Zephyrs

4 door All fully equipped, low mileage

1982 Mercury LN-7

2door Blue, fully equipped, 3,000 miles

1982 Mercury Grand Marquis

4 door. Light pewter, fully loaded, low mileage

1982 Mercury Lynx Wagon

.Red Fully equipped, low mileage

1981 Lincoln Mark VI

4 door Dark pewter metallic, fully equipped, air condition,

1981 Lincoln Mark VI

2 door White with white root, blue velour interior Low mileage, elrcellent buy

1981 Buick Regal

Beige, beige interior, 20,000 miles, fully equipped

1981 Mercury Marquis Brougham

4 door. White, red interior Fully equipped

1981 Ford Escort Wagon

Beige, fully equipped, new tires. Excellent buy

1980 Lincoln Mark VI

2door, light fawn wi4h fawn leather inferior. 30.000 miles, one owner Excellent buy

EAST

CAROLINA

trucks

4

LINCOLN-MERCURY-GMC

UtMt End Clicle    Grcnvlll.    N.C.

756-4267

/

ate $49,000 Cair Davis Ifealfy i752 3000, 756 2904, or 756 1997._

wan'ted'tor under $OO This brick ranch otters you very roomy kitch

en, I'j baths plus carport Large corner lot, located only a lew blocks from schools $43,900 4545. CEN TURY 21 Bass Realty 756 6666

ATTRACTIVE BRICK VENEER Ranch Located near shopping and schools In excellent condition 3 good size bedrooms, 2 full baths, central heat and air, woodstove. good size kitchen and breakfast

rea, utility, carport, fenced in backyard You must s^ to ,

attractive HOME

Prlce/$4.000 Beautiful Club Pines Assume 9% loan Recently painted and carpeted. 3 bedrooms, spacious den, 2 baths, garage Some owner financing with equity Priced for immediate sell. Only $65,900 Call Davis Realty 752 3000 , 756 2904, or 756 1997

BELVEDERE Owner moving in a few weeks and must sell this 3 bedroom brick ranch Otters formal living room with hardwood floors, dining room, and a large family room with an energy efficient

room with an energy elficiem woodstove. plus a Casablanca fan $61.900    #531 CENTURY 21 BaS!

Realty, 756 6666

BETHEL Farmers Home Loan Assumption 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, brick, large lot. mint condition FTei

Speight 758 7741

Teaity, 756 3226; nights

BY OWNER 1718 square foot, brick ranch 3 bedrooms, i baths, close to

schools, shopping, den with fireplace .and wocidstove. living room, dining room, eat in kitchen, extra room. 12 X 14, perfect for shop or game room. Large lot Assume It'2% VA loan $7500 equity Call after 5p.m '752 6448

BY OWNER IN Club Pines 534 Crestline Blvd 2 story brick Williamsburg, 2400 square feet, 3 4 bedrooms, 22 baths. Great

room

wilh fireplace, large spacious Double carport

kitchen Double carport with storage Fence All electric. Only $IOO,(W Assumable 9'j% VA loan. Call 756 8953. for appointment. No realtors please

BY OWNER II'2% assumable loan 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal living and dining room, den With fireplace, carpeted throughout Central air. gas heat, fenced backyard, patio, 1 block from Aycock Junior High 756 8281 or 758 9090_

BY OWNER Brick ranch 3 bedrooms, 1'2 bath.s, dining area, family room with fireplace, new GE

heat pump, new paint, new carpet, new wall paper, carport, utility ' id

room', outside storage, well land scaped yard, 1200 square feel No realtors please Call Jim Days 756 3142. nights 746 3297

COUNTRY LIVING can be yours in this like new I story home with 1500 square teet Plus 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, large den with fireplace and dining combination. Beautifully decorated kitchen Heat pump.

wooded lot Only $65,900 Call Davis Realty 752 3(100 , 756 2904. or

756

1997

DOLL HOUSE About 1 year old Brick veneer ranch in the country Two large bedrooms, attractive family room, kitchen and breakfast area (glass sliding doors), utility

oom. carport Lot approximately 2 acre Call Davis Realty 752 300(), 756 2904, or 756 1997_

ELEGANT WILLIAMSBURG All

formal areas, family room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths apartment lor relative Quality throughout Approximately 3,009 square feet Large wooded lot $120's Call 756,9103 before 6 p m or 756 5596 after 6 No Realtors. please

EXCELLENT LOCATION Brick veneer with double garage Quality can be easily detected in this well decorated 3 bedroom, 2 bath home Winterville school district Large corner wooded lot Provides at tractive setting for the bay windows and kitchen beautiful great room yvith fireplace and woodstove Price reduced $68.500 Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, or 756 1997

EXCLUSIVE AGENCY Walking distance ot university 3 bedrooms, large family room with fireplace, garage, deck, patio, extra large room tor office, study or etc. Early $40's Call Davis Realty. 752 3000 756 2904, 756 1997' _

FHA LOAN ASSUMPTION with no qualifying Beautiful 3 bedroom with 1'2 baths, garage, and $52,900

Only

fireplace CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666

547

HOUSE, BUILDING, and lot for

sale S R #1551, 2 2 miles on right

past caution light at Stokes $13.C_ Contact Charles M Vincent, 758

4000

LOCATED ON atmost an acre.

beautifully landscaped lot Immac

le    -    -    ,

ulate starter home 2 bedrooms, 1' baths, beautifully wall papered family room, cheerful kitchen and breakfast area $39,900 Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, or 756 1997    .    _

Look Whafs Home!

New house under construction In beautiful Baytree Country charm with city convenience in this com lorfable, affordable house with a touch of luxury

CALL 758-6410

Diversified Financial Services,Inc. or your REALTOR___

LOVELY OLDER HOME, Universi

tv area $55,000 Call Joe Bowen East Carolina Builders, Inc

7194

752

MODULAR HOME on brick foun dation Over 1400 square feet Highway 33 3 large bedrooms, 2 large baths, good size den. all ap;^lances retnain Good size lot $4(J's Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, or 756 1997

NEW LISTING Excellent location Winterville school district' Large

'QQ

fenced in backyard One story while masonite sioir

cling, Williamsburg styled home With 2 beautiful bay windows and carport. Assume 9' 2%

FHA loan Payments approximate ly $420 41 PITl 3 bedrooms. 2 lull

baths, living room, dining room den with fireplace, kitchen, breakfast room, utility, 2 heating systems You must see to appreci ate Wont last long! Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, or 756 1997,

NEW LISTING BELVEDERE

This two story home, nestled among the trees is the answer to your home

, needs It features a foyer formal areas, plus a cozy den

Owners regret having to leave this 3 bedroom charmer $69.900    #554

CENTURY 21 Bass Realty 756 5868 NO CREDIT CHECK Payment less than $400 a month Owner will finance equity Starter home 3 bedrooms, central heat, woodstove, deck Good size lot tor gardening $30's Call Davis Realty. 752 3000. 756 2904,756 1997

NO MORE RENT! $1200 or less will get you settled In this starter home Located on large lot. 2 bedrooms, den, kitchen, I bath Only $23,500 Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904 or 756 1997 ,

OAKDALE 120 Holiday Court 3 bedrooms. I'z baths, large corner lol. excellent property tor VA FHA

lot. excellent property tor VA, FHA financing Call for details. W G Blount, 756 3000or 756 3M0

SHOP THESE columns lor lust everything you need And call us when you have something for sale Our Ad Visors are committed to classified

WHEN SOMEONE IS ready to buy.

Classified Ads

they turn to the _____

Place your Ad today lor quick results.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY .

FLEMING FURNITURE APPLIANCE

CraebyAffNeneee KeMiMrter ApfNa

Speeddueen Laundry FaddaraMrCendNlonara -iHtO(erinaenAe.    Tlt-IM





The Daily ReHector. Greenville, N C -Wednesday, June 1,198J-31

109 , Houses For Sale

ON SHADY LANE

There ere some good buys on Greenville's market and this nice 3 bedroom hidden in the trees is a good example. Recently a new he^ump and new roof were added Two fireplaces with stained hardwood floors Over 1700 square feet for SSa.800. Call Carl at Darden Realty, 75B 1983. nights and

weekends. 758 2230__

PRETTY Perfect and prestigious Williamsburg design home now under construction by one of Greenville's' best builders You'll love the floor plan, greatroom with fireplace, formal dining room, and three bedrooms Buy now and you can choose appliance colors, wallpapers, etc $85,900    *549

rFfsrTURY 71 Bass Realty, 75a A6A

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call 758 4413 between 8 and 5

NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Self Stwage. Opei day Friday 9 5 Cat! 756 9933

We have

n Afton

WAREHOUSE AND office space tor lease 20,000 squa^ feet available. Will subdivide 78/5097or 756 9315.

121 Apartments For Rent

RED OAK Corner lot. three b^rooms, two baths, foyer, living room, dining room, family room, double garage Possibly some owner financing $59,900 Ouftus Realty Inc., 758 H95.

THE SHADE from the trees and central air will keep you cool this summer in this 3 bedroom, 1' t bath brick ranch $46,000. Call Sue Dunn, 355 2588 (nights) or Aldridge 8. Southerland 756

I 3^)0.

THIS 3 BEDROOM charmer ready for your inspection Extra builtins, conveniently located in Colonial Heights Excellent $46,500 4548. CENTURY 21 Ba< ~    

756 5868.    _

Realty

WHITE ALUMINUM SIDING One story home Situated on a corner wooded landscaped lot 3 bedrooms, |ij baths, family room with fireplace, heat pump, (huge attic could be converted into large rooms). Garage wired for 220, patio Home needs some love and Tender care $40's Call Davis Real tv 752 3000, 756 2904, or 756 1997

WINTERVILLE SCHOOL district No city taxes Beautiful neighborhood Pines in Winterville Brick veneer home with 1,375 square feet 3 bedrooms. I'3 baths, central heat and air, woodstove Good garden spot $50's Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, or 756 1997.___

2 BEDROOM HOUSE with fireplace, dining room, screened porch, space for garden 12 miles north on Highway 4'3 238 3330

4 BEDROOM, 2 bath contemporary 2,000 square feet of sheer space! Cathedral living room, dining room with skylights, master bedroom with private deck, and gourmet kitchen, and comty den are iust a few of the extras Call NOW 80 s #556. 'CENTURY 2J Bass Realty 756 5868,___

111 Investment Property

DUPLEX FOR SALE 10% assumable loan Beautiful brick 3 and V bedroom duplex near ECU 3 fireplaces, brick walkways, Florida room, large unattached garage 411 East 4th Street beside Episcopal Church. Hioh$60's 756 8085

INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY, need cash Assume $6,000 deed of trust on house that was sold. Willing to negotiate 752 9278.____

113

Land For Sale

LAND IN COUNTRY 6

approximately, woodei cleared.XIose to hospital. Excellent home site $18,500 firm Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, or 756 1997.___

AZALEA GARDENS

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 porthes

Frost free refrigerators

Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club Shown by appointment only Couples or singles No pets

Contact J T or Tommy Williams   756 7gl5 -

Cherry Court ^

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with . I' 3 baths Also I bedroom apartments Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, free cable TV, washer dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and POOL 752 1557

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three bedroom

?larden and townhouse apartments, eaturing Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air condi tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools

Ottice 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100    .    o

EFFICIENCY I bedroom, maid service $70 week Call 756 5555, Heritage Inn Motel.     ^

NEAR FOUNTAIN 19' 3 acres, 540' road front, excellent perking, pasture, beautiful pond, $32,000 756 7417___

2 ACRES OF LAND with 2 drilling houses and garages $45,000, 757 1033 after 5

115

Lots For Sale

'/j ACRE TO 5 ACRES, over 100 lots to choose from Locations on Highway 43 south, Chicod Creek, Griffon area. Highway 33 south Call 757 0277; after 5 p m 756 2682

BAYTRE SUBDIVISION

Attractive wooded lots within the city 90% financing available Call 758 3421

EQUAL HOUSINGOPPORTUNITY BUILDING SITE 3'3 acres Heavi ly wooded $18,500 Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500 041

EVANSWOOD RESIDENTIAL lots from $9.000 $12.500 Call W G Blount 81 Associates, 756 3000 LOT FOR SALE, 95x146 Isleview Beach, South Creek near Aurora with or without 1979 mobile home, 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, air Excellent condition Nice truite frees Septic tank, well, low taxes Access fo the water For more

information call I 322 5419_____

REDUCED DRASTICALLY! 2 acres, well, and septic tank 1 mile East of Hams Cross Roads $11,500

Call 757 3964_____________

2 LARGE LOTS Cherry Oaks Call 756 6676 alter 5 p.m______________

117 Resort Property For Sale

ATLANTIC BEACH oceantront, 3 bedroom, 2'3 bath condominium,

new, furnished $99.000. 756 4207___

BROAD CREEK PAMLICORIVER Cottage near Washington Yacht and Country Club Three bedrooms, 2 baths, waterfront lot. high eleva tion, pier and boathouse Slip lor up to 4(V sailboat Call 79 2 2036 or

291 6497 atter 7 pm___

PERFECT BEACH FRONT house for now and year round 4 bedrooms. 4 baths Modern kitchen Ufilify room with washer/dryer Outside ' shower Large screened porch Over 2,000 square feet Aluminum siding Lot 80'xl50'. Bulkhead Pamlico Beach Only $80,000. (and negotiable). Les Riley Real Estate, 798 746)    _

2 NEW HOMES ON Pamlico River, water front lots with bulkheads. 3. bedrooms, l' 3 baths, large kitchen and family room, large closets Built for year round comfort, with heat pump, air condition and fireplace. Owner will finance 80% at good interest rate for 10 years Excellent location, 2 miles below Bath, NC at Bayview Vance Overton, 756 8697 or 923 270)__

EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS

All utilities Cable TV 30 day leases

Furnished

With or without maid service Weekly or monthly nates

Starting $250 month and up

756 5555

The Heritage Inn_

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom, garden apart ments, carpeted, dish washer, cable Tv, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and P(X)L. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club 756 6869 IN WINTERVILLE, 3 bedroom apartment, appliances furnished, no children, no pets Deposit and lease $195. 756 501)7._

JOHNSTON STREET APART MENTS 1 bedroom unfurnished apartments available immediate Water and appliances furnished No pets Call Judy at 756 6336 before 5 p m , Monday Friday__

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments Carpeted, range, re trigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools Located just ott lOth Street

Can 752-3519 _____

LARGE NICE 2 bedroom duplex Shenandoah Subdivision $295 756 5389

LARGE 2 BEDROOM duplex 705 Hooker Road Stove, refrigerator, ci^tral air Available June 3 Lease and deposit No pets $275 355 2544

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ARMY SURPLUS

CAMPING    SPORTING

MILITARY GOODS Over 1000 OiHefpn! Hems New and U-ed

ARMY-NAVY STORE

1501 S. Evans

121 ^Apartments For Rent

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apart-menfs. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included. We also hay* Cable TV Very convenient to Pttf Plaza and University Also some furnished apartments available.

_ 756    4151_

ONE BEDROOM apartment Near campus No pets $215 a month. 756 3923

ONE BEDROOM furnished apartment. 1 block from university. Heat, air and water furnished. Short or long term lease No pets 758 378) or 756 0889._

ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT Carpeted, central air and hMt, looer

3311

ern appliances $195 Call 758

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815__

QUAIL RIDGE 3 bedrooms. 2 bath flat. Available end ot June $525 per month. Call Clark Branch, REAL TORS, 756 6336

RIVER BLUFF

otters 1 bedroom garden apart ments and 2 bedroom townhouse apartments, 6 months leases For more information call 758 4015, Monday Friday. 10 6p m

SMALL EFFICIENCY apartment Student or professional person

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Office hours 10a m to5p m Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

7M-

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2. and 3 bedrooms, washer dr^ hook ups. cable TV, pool, c house, pipyground. Near FCU

Our Reputation Says If All "A Community Complex "

1401 Willow Street Office Corner E Im 8. Willow

752 4225

TIRED OF ROOMMATES? Call us tor immediate occupancy In

bedroom apartment Energy etti cient and reasonable rent Days 758 6061. nights and weekends 758

121 Apartments For Rent

RENT FURNITURE. Livino. din inq, bedroom complete $79) month. Option fo buy U RE 756    _

X) per

N Co,

1 AND 2 BEDROOM Available immediately 7

rfments.

ipartn

g33,l

1 BEDROOM apartment in upstairs of house. IIto Arlington Boulevard $175 a month, includes utilities Call

756 8423.

1 BEDROOM APARTMENT 'in country $135 a month 756 9132

2 BEOROOM duplex available In June near the hospital. 2'3 baths and brand new with private loca tion All appliances included $325 per month. Call Clark Branch. RE ALTORS, 756 6334

2 BEDROOM townhouse at Univer sity Conck^iniums available June

sity 1.

Branch

$265 per month Call Clark inch, REALTORS, 756 6336

2 BEOROOM TOWNHOUSE Energy efficient heat pump, I'j baths, carpet, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, hook ups $310    756

7480,_

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX, stove, re trigerator. central heat and air. deposit, lease, no pets. 756 6834

2 BEDROOM, air plus appliances No pets or children. $250 to $275 plus deposit 752 3750 trojn 3to6p m

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX Air condi tloned Available June 16 $240 per month. Call 756 3369 atter 5pm 2 BEDROOM apartment $325 per month Call 756 7647.

2 BEDROOM apartment Central air. carpeted, appliances $250 a month. Brvton Hifls. 758 3311.

2 BEOROOM apartment- Central air, carpeted, appliances 804 Willow Street, Apartment 4 $250 758 3311     L..

2 BEDROOM, carjjet, refrigerator, dishwasher, air 5 blocks from campus Also duplex 752 0)80 756 3210. nights 756 2966

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX on Meage Street near ECU Central air range, refrigerator hook ups, $270

756 7480__^_____

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX for rent 1109 Willow street Call 746 6741____

122

Business Rentals

FOR RENT Prime retail space Arlington Boulevard 4500 square teet $4 25 per square loot Call

756_?3IAor 256 50?2L_________

FOR RENT 10,000 square loot building Ideally located *Ofy Highway 33 in Chocowinity Call Donnie Smith at 946 5887

125 Condominiums For Rent

LEXINGTON TOWNHOMES

SQUARE 2 bedrooms, I'j baths, fully carpeted deluxe appli anees furnished No pets J R Yorke Construction Co , Inc 355 2286 _

5960

TWO BEDROOM apartment, low uniities, $225 per month 752 3270 TWO BEDROOM apartments available No pets. Call Smith Insurance t, Realty, 752 2754_

TWO BEDROOM DUPLEX

Carpeted, all appliances Including dishwasher Heat pump, storm windows and doors Located off 10th Street near university. $260 per month Call 758 2558or 756 7677

TWO BEDROOM APARTMENTS

Near ECU Most utilities furnished $275 up Available immediately 758 0491 or 756 7809 before9p.m.

TWO NICE spacious apartments In quiet neighborhood near college 5 room duplex includes washer and dryer hook ups $260. 2 bedroom apartment includes wafer and sew age $250 .756 5991

LOVE TREES?

E xperience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your ddor

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), di.shwash er, washer/dryer hook up4. cable TV,wall to wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation

'""Office Open 9 5 Weekdays

9 5 Saturday    I    5    Sunday

Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd

________________5067

NEW DUPLEXES near hospital med school $300 per month John or

Brvant, 752 3152 or 752 6715.  ___

NEW 2 BEDROOM duplex Available July 1 Washer and dryer hook ups. heat pump Efficient $300 756 0471 atter 6 p m____

VILLAGE EAST

2 bedroom, I'z bath townhouses Available now $2957month 9 to 5 Monday Friday

756-7711    1    _

WALK TO UNVERSITY Super nice I tMSdroom. utilities furnished, $220 per month 756 7417

WEDGEWOODARMS

NOW AVAILABLE

2 bedroom, IVj bath townhouses Excellent location Carrier heal pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis court.

756-0987

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

127

Houses For Renf

HOUSES FOR RENT In Ayden 3 bedrooms, kitchen, living room,, bath, central hall and 2 porches. Also 2 bedrooms, living room, kitchen, bath Call 746 3674 IN AYDEN Corner lot 3 bedroom house For sale, rent, or lease Call (919) 524 49009to5    _    _

THREE BEDROOM I'z bath central heat and air conditionin

oning,

u.ired

$330 month $330 deposit reqi Available now 102 North Jarvis Call 758 7997 atter 6 p m IJNIVERSITY area' Large 7 bedroom house. |ust painted, 2 baths, appliances furnished ideal for group ot students $400 114 Easf

litfi.StreeL 756 0765________________

VERY NICE! 3 bedrooms. 1 bath, dining and living room with wall to wall carpel lireplace, central heal and air conditioning, with appli anees 2 car garage and oufsidc storage room on a fenced private lot Near university and schools In Colonial Heights Available July 1 Married couples please $325 per month with lease and deposit 756 8075 after 5

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CONCERNED ABOUT RADIATION LEAKAGE

from your

MICROWAVE OVEN

Call 355-2712 M-F HAVE IT TESTED

FAIRMONTVILLAGE , APARTMENTS

TIRED OF PAYING HIGH UTILITY BILLS

Come to Ayden-wttere lower utility rates, energy efficient heat pumps plus free water will insure you savings each month. 1, 2 and 3 bedroom Colonials, fully carpeted with range and refrigerator furnished, washer/dryer/cable hook-ups, large p^y area with well maintained grounds. Only minutes from Carolina East Mall, on old Hwy. 11, Ayden.

We Have Two Bedroom Vacancies Starting At $180 OFFICE HOURS 2-4 WEEK DAYS OR

CALL 746-2020

Equal Housing Opportunity

J

S-1 SENTRY SAFE

M19

UMUMomaEguinHict.

Cornar of Pitt i Green St.

FOR LEASE - 2500 SQUARE FEET PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE ON ARLINGTON BOULEVARD CALL 756-8111

STATEMENT

HARRISON ELECTRIC hll.Cf UK 'A I ,s IAI I AI /(MA IS 11 \A\> I

ABRHY HARRISON

May 25,    1983

Your name here

Your address

Pitt County ,

PHONE 7f)2 im HI ( H()Vl>t I    (iKI    1    NVll    1    1    \(

;-------; J - -------

Electrical work New and Old

1

<

Telepho work (installation & repair)

J

Maintenance work

t

X -1

Let me make your day by not

breaking your bank account! "

I

*

r

Call today - 752-7889 rnMiM,)iviw

-

for estimate \ saiT,tx

-

" 1 abnt

-----

Save here!!!

$

.

127

Houses For Rent

UNtVERS'TY -AREA 3 b-droom house. 1 beth, appliances furnished, ideal for students or family. U2 East 12th Street $275 756 0765 2 STORY HOUSE 3 bedrooms, t' l baths Call Deborah, 758 3191

133 Mobi le Homes For Rent

SPECIAL RATES on. furnished 2 bedroom.mobile homes. $135 and up. No pets, no children 758 4541 or 7i6 9491._

12X60 RITZCRAFT 2 bedrooms, furnished, carpet, washer/dryer, no ^^ts, no children 756 5501 or 756

23^

2X65

12X north ot 752 6068

Washer, dryer, air, 3 miles ity (Tall 758 2347, or

12X65,    2 bedrooms 2 baths,

excellent condition Located in good park 756 0801 atter 5p m

2 BEDROOMS, all electric. 6 miles out on New Bern Highway No pets 756 0975_

2 BEDROOMS, completely furnished washer, air, 2 miles South ot Greenville No pets 756 7381 anytime

BEDROOM Mobile Home for rent all 756 4687 _

135 Office Space For Rent

DOWNTOWN, iust ott mall Singles and multiples Convenient to courthouse Call 756 0041 or 756 3466.

FOR RENT 2500 square teet Suitable tor ottice space or com mercial 604 Arlington Boulevard

756 8111 ______ _______ ^

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J_T or Tommy Williams, 756 7BI5 _ 3101 SOUTH EVANS Street next to Fasttare on 264 By Pass 4 offices, carpet, reception room heat air condition Excellent location Available June I Call Van Fleming. 756 6235 or 752 2887

142 Roommqt Wanted

FEMALE ROOA4MATE NEEDED

by June 5 to share nice, furnished 2 bedroom apartment For summer only $125 includes rent, utilities, air and cable No deposit required, but must be a non smoker Call 752 1891

atter 5 :30.____

FEAAALE ROOAAAAATE wanted for 3 bedroom townhouse at Windy Ridge Pooj. tennis courts and sauna. 756 949)._____

NEED AAALE fo share 2 bedroom apartment, 55 Riverblutt. Call Doug 81 752 8008    ___

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

137 Resort Property For Rent

ATLANTIC BEACH large oceantront, 4 bedroom cottage.

sleeps 15 $500 weekly 756 0041________

ATLANTIC BEACH condominiums I bedroom and 3 bedroom,

oceantront 756 4207_______________

EMERALD ISLE Pebble Beach Ocean Front Condos Sales

Rentals 1 800 682 7810_____

cm'OCEAN FRONT large duplex. Emerald Isle Each side accom modates t4 New Game room Near fishing pier Very reasonable Ask tor Oakley Duplex. 354 2958 3 BEDROOM BEACH HOUSE tor rent Near Sportsman s Pier at Atlantic Beach Call 756 278/after 5

138

Rooms For Rent

SINGLE FURNISHED room tor discreet male student ,or young businessman $125 month Nice home near Pitt Plaza 756 5667

142 Roommate Wanted

'RESPONSIBLE RQOMMATE to

share nice, spacious, brick house in Forest Acres in Gritton $75 a month plus ' i utilities Call 756 6736 Mike

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

1982

CHEVY

VAN

Customized by Zimmer Full power    Like    New

Call 758-1131 or 756-1463 anytime

142 Roommate Wanted

roommate wanted to share furnished 2 bedroom apartment $200 includes all Call 756 7^09________

144

Wanted To Buy

1975 VEGA condition Call :

144

Wanted To Buy

148

Wanted To Rent

JAPANESE SWORDS JAPANESE SWORDS JAPANESE SWORDS

LocaH collector will pay cash tor Japanese swords and. daggers Call 752 3585 alter 5jm ________________

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SERIOS PREMED STUDENT

looking for room to rent Preferably garage type apartment or upstairs apartment Private entrance nice but rrot necessary Call collect atter 3, Amy 443 7757

Sell

your uMd

Classified way Ca

talevlslon all 752 6166

me

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Greenville's Finest Used Cars!

(Located At Honda Store)

1982 Honda Accord Hatchback

Silver with dove gray mlenor, 5 speed air, sieioo hatch release, digital clock, radial tiies. 19.000 miles

1981 Honda Civic Hatchback

4 door, chocolate with Ian interior.'5 speed ao stereo, radial tires, trunk release

1981 Honda Prelude '    .

Red, like new, one ownei 5 speed AM FM siemo

1981 Horida Civic

4 door. P'rown. automatic ttansmissipn, an condition 46.'900 miles    *    _

1981 Mazda 626 Luxury Edition

Dove gray with gray vet.qm mlerior^-Fully equippoil with sunroof

1980 Ford Mustang

2 door. jiaPy" blue. 4 speed transmission AM ! M stereo, sport wbeeili, like new

1980 BMW 3201

2doot Green, one owner, like.new

1979 Honda Civic Hatchback

Medium green with tan iritorior 4 speed. AMFM ra'dio Cheap

1979 MGB Convertible

Like new. 47 800 miles, green with blai k conv|'ititne lop. AM FM stereo

1978 Mercury Bobcat

Red with black interior Inexpensive fo own

1977 Olds 98

4 door Blue with tilue vinyl leot. lull powei

1977 BMW 320i    ^

?door,red AM-FM sloteo an condilum

1977 Chevrolet Nova

Medium blue Fully equipped, with low^mileage A real nice dar

Bob Barbour

MuiTioii.il Hi (iiLcnvilU-355-2500

ll ocdted At Volvo Morel

1983 Renault Alliance

tOOO miles Get a brant) new ene at a used pnce    

1982 AMC Jeep Scrambler

Low mileaqt' loaded

1981 Cadillac Eldorado

Leather interior, sunnio' an th>> nptuins

1981 Toyota Tercel

,door hatckbacK Aniondition -.retn.i r.ntii'

1981 Volvo I)L

4door Air cotldrtion extremely'is e car

1980 Volkswagen Rabbit ^

.    Atf LonUilvon.' qchkI    '.mv    'nex

1980 AMC Concord Wagon

Nu'f.'.K Wt'ii txihVn I <iff 1980 Jeep Renegade

. oxc 'rme.tqe. t'U.i -1 speexi !',ei','ris',nin sh.ep

1980 Renault LeCar

An    stereiM.HlK

1980 Olds'^Delta 88 Ruvale.

niiHigfiam H.i-, every option ,iy,iiM|,|e Low mileage, liKe new

1    k

1979 AMC Jeep Honch Pickup

An I oiiiiiiion sleieo i.idn- isiwei sleeiinq and I'i.tkes t X.IM nu e IriK k

1979 Pontiac Sunbird

All cornlitinn. nihm.ihi till wtioe. loyy mileaqe

1979 Pontiac LeMans Wagon

I'UJiH'J 1 Oiullht)'' .llltOHMfK ,nr M'llxjllll'n (llitMat

*1976 Ford Thunderbird

AlfUK'WS iK'At'f    .ill    I'OfbllllOM.

Bob Barbour

VOIXOWK Avp Kciicuili

ll/w I puiI. St (iMviiviil.' 758-7200

FOR SALE

PRIME COMMERCIAL LOT

Comer of Evans and Red Banks Road

Call 758-1131 or 756-1463 anytime

AUCTION ,

Prime Location. Office Building and Land. 4200 square feet of heated area, 800 square teet ot office space. Room for additional strip office center. Excellent Investment potential. All offers must be presented by sealed bid on or before June 3rd. For maps & information, contact; Mike Aldridge

Aldridge & Southerland Realtors

756-3500 N.C. Auctin No. 2810 Seller reserves right to reject any bid.

East Carolina University Condominiums

W G Blount & Associates announces a new offering;Affordable new brick 2 bedroom, 1 1 ;2 tiath Condominium located within walking distance to the university financing at 12% IS available to qualified purchasers We have only 6 units that are now available Why pay rhnt when, you can take advcjntaye of tax deductions and real estate appreciation Ari ideal investment (or alumni, parents of students and real estate investors These units are offered at $43.600.

Call

w.g. blount & associates

.    756-3000

RC

WATERS

CONSTRUCTION CO.

756-5805

QUALITY CONSTRUCTED CUSTOM BUILT HOMES

E 300 ENERGY EFFICIENT COME BY AND SEE OUR PLANS OR LET US HELP YOU DESIGN A HOME TO MEET YOUR INDIVIDUAL NEED

CALL FOR APPOINTMENT TODAYShenandoah Village Townhomes Begin at $39,900Down Payment Less Than $2,000.00 Payments Comparable To Rent!

Private Patio

Convenient To Carolina East Mall'

Professionally Landscaped

Professionally Decorated

* Brick

* Energy Efficient

* Frost Free

k

Refrigerator with Ice maker G.E. Appliances

Call Us For More Exciting Details!Aldridge & Southerland756-3500

REALTY, INC. : 355-6889

NEW LISTING

Rodney Road, Greenwood Fo.rest

A PERFECT BEGINNING tor your family in this new contemporary home Still time to choose your wallpaper & floor coverings Features loyer. 18x14 6 great room with lireplace, large dining room, pantry in kitchen, 3 spacious bedrooms 2 full baths, laundry room fl concrete patio Convention, FHA & VA financing available, all plans    '

$59,900Elaine Troiano REALTOR 756-6346

yN





J2-The Daily Wlctor, (ireanvlle, N.C.-Wednesday, June 1,1983

Suing Army's Marijuana Test

FAYETTEVILLE, N.C (AP) - A class-action suit filed Tuesday asks a federal court to reinstate all soldiers who have been discharged from the Army or not allowed to re-enlist because of positive marijuana tests.

The suit claims that the Armys urinalysis testing to identify marijuana smokers is inaccurate and violates soldiersconstitutional rights.

The suit names as plaintiffs all soldiers discharged, prevented from re-enlisting, reprimanded or denied promotions based solely on the results of urinalysis tests since January 1982. Army Secretary John 0. Marsh Jr. is named as the defendant.

The lawsuit asks for an induction to stop the Army from taking administrative actidhs a^inst soldiers identified as marijuana users through urinalysis testing.

The biochemical tests ... result in false positive (identifications) due to the internal and inherent inaccuracies in the testing procedures or as a result of passive or indirect use of marijuana, the lawsuit says.

Margaret Tackley of the Armys public affairs office said in an interview from Washington that the Army would not be able to comment on the suit unlSl officials see the court papers, which could take several dayk Included in the lawsuit are affidavits from three Fort

wiuiuieiisi OBOcmiM

Cares About Your Food Budget. We Honestly Want To Help. We Have Cut Our Operating Cost So We Can Sell You    ,

Bragg soldiers who claim they were identified as marijuana users in the test, althou^ they do not use the drag.

Another soldier identified as a marijuana user in the test claims in an affidavit that he submitted water from a toilet instead of urine.

The Army first tests samples through a a process called radio-immunoassay. Those samples i(tentified as containing marijuana traces are tested again through a method called gas liquid chromatography.

Only samples identified as containing marijuana in both tests are considered positive, according to an Army spokesman in Washington.

More than 630,000 samples were taken from soldiers in 1982, and about 12,000 were identified as positive, the spokesman said.

The lawsuit asks that a federal judge order the Army to:

- Reinstate all soldiers discharged without an appeal

board because of positive test results.

- Allow all soldiers identified through the test to ^?peal possible discharge to a board.

- Stop all administrative adverse admimstrative actums against soldiers identified s marijuana users through the tests.

DEFECTED KHARTOUM, Sudan (AP) - Ten Libyan officers have defected to Sudan after studying in West Germany for two years, the Sudanese news agency reports.

FLEE INTO LfflERIA

MONROVIA, Liberia AP) - Nearly 4,000 refugees from Sierra Leone have fled to Liberia to esciqie political violence in the last 11 days, government officials say.

FOOD FOR USSI!

FRESH PORK

PICNICS

"1212 N. Greene St., Gree/rville. N.C. Mon.-Thur. 8:30 a.m.-7 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 8:30 a.m.-8 p.m. Closed Sunday. No Limit On Quantities, None Sold To Other Merchants. We Accept Food Stamps, WIC Vouchers & Manufacturers Coupon.    _    '

FRESH LEAN SLICED Vt

PORK

LOIN

FRESH LEAN    -    mtcnrw.-.x

GROUND BEEF.u FAT BACK,.... 38' HG TAILS .... 38'ECKBONES ... 38'

FRESH PORK

LB.

LB.

CRISP

GREEN

CABBAGE

GREEN

REDROME

ONIONS .... 8 bunch apples .....

aOLDENRIPE    ^    m

BANANAS   .......

SHASTA

DRINKS

2 LITRE BOTTLE

ROYAL GEM CUT

i1 eSiuiis...sIs* 1

XncT'S    M    1    -B 00 A C

MISTMD *^68' ipiit 1 s 88'

IMPERIAL    e Cft    10V,    oz. A'AC

CHARCOAL ; B 1 CHILI ....... 3    98

HUNTS

CATSUP

32 OZ. BOTTLE

COUNTY FAIR HOT DOG & HAMBURGER

BUNSob,v>ub BREAD . 3 FOR

BANNER    ^

BATHROOM TISSUE.. Tck T8

GENERIC

APPLE JUICE......

MILLER

BEER

8 PACK $ . 7 OZ. BOHLES

1

88

CRISCOOIL.......

CREAMETTES    

MACARONI & CHEESE.... JpKs'bR M"

RUFFLES

POTATO CHIPS

JIF

PEANUT BUTTER...

GIBBS

70Z. AO* . PKG. 7 0

OR

40 OZ.

JAR 303

PORK & BEANS STOWER PEAS .. 3^f^r^88*

MAOLA HOMOGENIZED    a    _

MILK..............rfr*

PUREX

LAUNDRY

DETERGENT

42 OZ. BOX

GWALTNEY GREAT CHICKN

BOLOGNA 18

GWALTNEY BEEF

BOLOGNA

1LB.

PKG.

1LB.

PKG.

$ 168

GWALTNEY

BACON

Ub.

PKG.

1

28

GWALTNEY

SMOKED

HAM

GWALTNEY

38 CHOPPED HAM

GWALTNEY

LIVER

LOAF

8 0Z. PKG.

98

GWALTNEY

COOKED

SALAMI

8 0Z. PKG.

98

GWALTNEY

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iconomy Rebouncing, But

The DaUy Ref^tor. Greenville. N.C- Wednesday, June 1, IWIt-S

BySTEVENP.ROSENFELD AP Business Writer I The economy is on the mend, but analysts say job prospects ' the nearly 3.3 million young Americans entering the labor ce this summer are not much brighter than a year ago.

With millions of workers laid off from full-time jobs and early 30 percent of the nations factory capacity idle, oviding temporary jobs for teen-agers and young adults is ring a back seat to rebuilding businesses following the cession.

1 dont think the recovery has filtered down to summer hiring yet, said Joseph Garcia, a spokesman for the New fork City Partnership, one of the most extensive programs organized by business to provide jobs for youth from poor families.

Garcia said an estimated 200,000 youths are unemployed in [New York City, but the partnership expects to provide only 116,000 jobs in private businesses this summer,, about as many fas last year. A federally financed municipal program hopes to provide an additional 45,000 jobs.

Its the tip of the iceberg but its better than nothing, Garcia said    >

Nationwide, one out of five youths who sought employment could not find work last July, the peak of the summer hiring season. Among black youths, the jobless rate was twice as high. The jobless rate in the 16-21 age group, while down from its peak of 21.9 percent in December, still stands above 20 percent.

Among signs of optimism is a survey conducted by the National Federation of Independent Business, an organization of more than 500,000 small businesses. The poll found 21 percent of those surveyed plan to add employees in the current quarter while only 6 percent plan labor reductions.

While the hiring plans are at their highest level since the Apnl-June quarter of 1979, unemployment rates will remain ' uncomfortably high, as good economic news attracts new job seekers who will not immediately find jobs, the quarterly survey cautioned.

Manpower Inc.. an employment service specializing in providing teniporary' workers, has predicted substantially fewer office jobs for students this summer than the 50,000 it estimated were available last year.

Business is still cautious, said Manpower spokeswoman Kathy Rogge-Anas. When a secretary goes on vacation the boss tries to get along without her. A lot more people are coming into the office than we have assignments for.

The federal Office of Personnel Management, which is, responsible for hiring at* federal agencies, reports 10 to 20 applications for every summer job and expects to fill slightly .fewer positions than last years 37,610 sufnmer jobs.

At Sea World, a summer theme park near Cleveland, personnel manager Richard Payson reports3,000 applications for 300 openings, saying he can afford to be choosy in hiring. Its nice to be able to screen through that many people for the number of positions available, Payson said.

More federal money is available to subsidize summer jobs this year and a new federal tax credit is available to private employers who hire disadvantaged youngsters.

The Labor Department's Employment and Training Administration hopes more than 50,000 new jobs will open up as a result of the credit, which allows an employer a tax deduction of 85 percent of the first J3.000 in salary paid to a " qualified young employee this summer. -

In addition, federal subsidies will pay for an estimated l3,000 young workers, compared with 683,000 jobs last

TALL story - George Humphreys of Los Angeles, known as the King of Strings, gives a yo-yo performance on stilts at the Save-the-Yo-Yo Festival in New York. Although billed by the Police Athletic League as a fair to help save the yo-yo from extinction because of video games, the event actually helped fund the organizations summer playstreets program. (APLaser^to)    ,

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summer and 776,700 the previous year. Five years ago, the federal government subsidized nearly 900,000 jobs for disadvantaged youth.

^ Abby Martin, a ^eswoman at the Employment and Training Administration, estimated that in addition to new summer jobs resulting from the tax credit, 200,000 to 300,000 jobs for the disadvantaged would be provided by private businesses under programs similar to New York Citys.

Among the new private programs to emerge this year Is one at Cornell University that offers to pay private employers 40 percent of the salary of any of its students hired for the

summer and to pay 70 percent of the salary at a job at a non-profit organization.

More than 700 jobs have been lined up with financing from part of an anonymous $7 millicm pledge last fall to the Ithaca, NY. school.

In communities yet to emerge from recession, however, many youngsters are not even seeking jobs.

There is definitely a filing of hopelessness involved here in respect to the prospects for getting employment, said Ronald Sullivan, director of Gary Manpower, a municipal program with 3,200 jobs available for an estimated 12,600

unemployed youths in the slumping steelmaking city of Gary, Ind.

Economists are hopeful, though, that with more private business groups organizing summer jobs programs despite the downturn of the past three years, a sustained economic recovery should make the outlook bright in future years.

As the economy straightens out and becomes more healthy, we think that would mean a substantial increase in ^ the year to follow, said Leonard Lunt, manager of urban ' research at the Conference Board, a business-financed study group:

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Hard Coal Fortunes Plunge: Miners Just Survive

ByBOBDVORCHAK

Associated Press Writer

SHAMOKIN, Pa. (AP) -These are hard limes for hard coal, with commercial anthracite output at the worst level since records were first kept 113 years ago.

But jobs are scarce in north-central Pennsylvania, sO miners still toil with pick and shovel to scratch out a

living in family type mines, a far cry from the bygone boom times of a half century ago.

"All youre doing is existing. Its survival, said Jim Shevitski, part-owner and foreman of th Pine Line Coal Co., where his son, son-in-law and best friend work 1,800 feet inside the earth.

But so far, were not on welfare. We can still hold our heads up, said Shevitski, whose office is a coal-heated yellow school bus with duct tape over the holes made by vandals bullets.

"Where else are you going to go? There are no other jobs. This is all we got. See that cemetery? he said.

13^

HARD COAL - Terry Weiner, with shovel, and two helpers load raw coal from a bootleg mine into a tipple. The city of Shamoken is

visible in background. These are hard times for hard coal, so miners toil with pick and shovel to scratch out a living. (AP Laserphoto)

pointing to a Northumberland County hilltop where his grandparents, father and uncle are buried. Thats what you call roots.

There are 16 billion tons of known anthracite reserves, and 8 billion tons are recoverable. A six-county region in northeastern" Pennsylvania has 97 percent of U.S. anthracite deposits.

But the industry has been on the skids since production peaked in 1917 at 100.5 million tons. During the World War! heyday, 181,000 miners were employed.

Last year, total raw production was 5.2 million tons. Coal sold in the marketplace was 3.6 million tons -_the lowest since records were first kept in 1870. Where once thousands of mines were bustling, only 89 deep mines are still active. Just 637 miners are working.

"Its terrible right now. The bottom just dropped out, said Wayne Troxell, 55, one-third owner of a mine located three miles from a paved road in the hills near Shamokin.

But the mine is typical of the ingenuity and ^it that keeps the anthracite industry limping along.

Troxell and two partners have modified, a 1970 Ford pickup truck by bolting a winch on a rear wheel drum.,, By putting the truck in gear, they can hoist a half-ton coal buggy on a five-eighths-inch cable fiom a shaft that goes . 350 feet into the ground at a 45-degree angle.

It takes a special breed. Everybody isnt cut out for this, Troxell said.We have enough coal for this month so we can put food on the table.

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Youre never going to get rich in this business. What were looking for is a very comfortable living - to have a car, a pickup, a nice home, maybe get a beer once in a while and buy a couple of ' songs on a guitar.

Several factors have contributed to hard coals sinking fortunes, according to Michael Clark, head of the Anthracite Industry Association in Washington,

Extra Space In An Attic Room

LINCOLN, Neb. (UPI) -An attic room may be a less expensive way of extending living space in a house than adding a room at ground level, says housing specialist Kathleen Parrott.

The University of Nebraska Cooperative Extension specialist says an attic is suitable if it is large enough for the intended use, with plenty of head clearance in most of the room, accessible via a good stairway and with floor joists large enough to support added materials and furnishings.

She recommends standard treads and risers for the stairway and calling in a professional to determine if the floor joists can bear the extra weight.

Ms.. Parrott says a bedroom is the most popular choice for an attic room. Adding a bathroom may also be possible.If it is above another bath, you may be able to use the same vent stack and plumbing.

Attic space is also suitable for a hobby, play or family -room, a workshop or a separate apartment.

D.C.

He blamed the global recession, a U.S. D^artment of Defense policy that used some European coal at military bases abroad, a drastic drop in exports to South Korea and the Far East because of a mild winter, a temporary dn^ in oil and kerosene prices and the mild winter domestically.

Its pretty bad. But we think the industry will be slowly rebounding, Clark said, pointing to signs of an economic upturn and a return to use of domestic coal by the Defense Department.

Anthracite sells at $70 to $75 a ton, more than twice as much as 4$!^inous coal. But you wotM have to burn $188* worth of oil or $230 worth of natural gas to get equivalent heat, Clark said.

Gov. Dick Thornburghs administration is aggressively pushing anthracite and has invested $26

million to improve coal handling facilities for export from Philadelphia, but buyers are hard to find.

The main thing is that you have to have a market for the product. 'There is no market for it, said James Shober, directorio! the state Bureau of Anthracite Deep Mine Safety. "It will never be what it was.

Coal hauler Cal Lorenz, 37, looks at the wealth of unmined'coal deposits and, sighs. He owns a rpine but wont develop it until the market improves Its like being in the middle of the desert with a million dollars. What are you going to do with it? Lorenz said. But we as coal miners are proud people. Well do anything to stay off welfare.

Meanwhile, mines like the Pine Line load 16* tons, in fact, every day when they can sell it.

Deep inside a horizontal tunnel. 14-inch thick, oak posts support a slate roof. A kneeling, miner scoops coal into a runway so a drag bucket powered by a 20-horsepower motor can collect it. 'The coal is dumped into a buggy that hauls it to three wooden cars in the main tunnel. *

An 80-year-old electric motor pulls the load outside, where two tons of tunnel rock are hand-picked from the hopper before the coal is hauled to a preparation plant.

Charles Leihy, 23, earns $45 a shift - less than half of what a union miner makes, and with none of the benefits.

It aint much, said Leihy, an aspiring foreman whose biceps and forearms were forged from 6/2 years of back-breaking work in mines, But times are tough. You take what you can get. Its a living.

STUDENT PROTEST

MARSEILLE, France (AP) - About 400 medical students protesting proposed university reforms burned their white lab coats in downtown Marseille yesterday, then marched to thfi docks and threw a police officer into the sea.

POOPED OUT IN A PUPPY TENT - A puppys life can be a tirmg one. so with the weather turning warmer theres nothing quite as peaceful and enjoyable as a mid-afternoon nap. Here, Scooter - an ll-week-old

peek-a-poo - settles down for a few winks in a scale model of a tent that seems tagged just for him. Scooter until recently belonged to the owner of a store specializing in outdoor camping gear. (AP Laserphoto)

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The Diily Reflector. Greenville. N.C.-Wednesday, Jufie 1,190-35How Tar Heel Representatives And Senators Voted

Roil Call Report Service

WASHINGTON - Heres how area members of Con-^ss were recorded on major roll call votes May 19-25. House

PRESERVE The* House voted, 325 for and 86 against, to repair the West Fron of the Capitol rather than extend it with a new facade.

The West Front, which

faces the Mali, is deteriorating as its sandstone crumbles. It is thebhly side of the original Capitol that remains an exterior wall.

At issue were perquisites as well as historical preservation, for a new facade would contain space eyed by senior members for personal hideaway offices and committee quarters.

The vote approving $49 million for West Frton preservation rather than $70 million for expansion oc^ curred during debate on HR 3069, an appn^riations bill later sent to the Senate.

Supporter Samuel Stratton, D-N.Y., said this is the wrong time for us to be spending'ihillions...for extra space in this Capitol or any

building associated with the work of Congress.

Opponent Bob Traxler, D-Mich., said the extension of the West Front is to fulfill the manifest destiny of the U.S. Capitol building.

Members voting yes opposed extending the side of the Capitol that faces the Mall.

NORTH CAROLINA Voting yes; Walter Jones, D-1, Tim

Valentine, D-2, Charles Whitley, D-3, Stephen Neal, D-5, Charles Britt, D-6, Charles Rose, D-7, W.G. Hefner, D-8, James Martin, R-9, James Clarke, D-ll.

Voting no; James Broyhill, R-10.

Not voting: Ike Andrews, EM.

MX The House voted, 239 for and 186 against, to release

$625 million in fiscal 1983 funds for speeding development of the MX missile.

Projected to cost taxpayers $20 billion to $30 billion over the next several years, the 100-missile system, based in existing silos in Wyoming and Montana, would replace the Minuteman later this decade as the land leg of the Triad nuclear arsenal.

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Objecting to an Administration plan to house the MX in a dense pack underground cluster. Congress last year refused to approve the $625 million.

The funding resolution (H Con Res 113) was sent to the , Senate.

'Supporter Robert Michel, R-111., said the MX will make the transition to meaningful arms control easier to endure - and survive - by putting the Soviet Union on notice that it runs grave risks if it thinks the time has come to attack.

Opponent William Rat-chfod, D-Conn.. ^id the MX would present a high-value target in a vulnerable basing mode which would invite a first strike by the Soviets. Members voting yes wanted to release the MX monev.

' NORTH CAROLINA Voting yes; Walter Jones, Valentine, Whitley, Ike Andrews, Neal, Bntt, Rose, Hefner, James Martin, Broyhill Voting no: Clarke Not voting: None SENATE MX By a vote of 59 for and 39 against, the Senat follow ed the House and released $625 million for a test flight and other development of the MX missile.

While this was a significant Administration victory, many senators said they will vote for future MX funding only if President Reagan con tinues to be flexible with his arms policies Supporter,John DanfOrth, R-Mo. said "U S negotiators in Geneva would be placed in a weaker position if the Congress refrained from deploy ipg the MX while the Soviets maintained their large SS 18 missiles

Opponent John Glenn, 1) Ohio, said he favors mobile basing of new U S missiles He added that the Soviet ambassador to the U S told him MX deployment will scuttle the SALT II arms control agreement between the "superpowrs Senators voting yes favored continued development of the MX

John East, R, and Jesse Helms, R, voted yes DEBT The Senate passed, 51 for and 42 against, and sent

to the White House a bill (HR 2990) raising the national debt ceiling by $98.8 billion to $139 trillion.

The current limit will be reached by early June. The new ceiling is expected to suffice until Oct. 1.

Supporter Russell Long, D-La., said that because the government must pay its bills ;there is no room for politics in debating the Issue

Opponent Howard Metzen-baum, D-Ohio, was among Democrats who wanted to use the bill as a vehicle to atack the third year of the Administration's supply-side tax cut, which is to take effect Julyl.

Senators voting yes favored the hi^er debt ceiling Voting from North Carolina were East voted no Helms noted no.

BUDGET By a vote of ,50 for and 49 against, the Senate approved a fiscal 1984 budget blueprint calling for more taxes and domestic spending and less defense spending than President Reagan wants.

The measure iS Con Res 27) recommends federal outlays of $849 7 billion in the year beginning next Oct 1 It must be blended with a House budget plan even more distasteful to the White House

Here arc the^jor disputes In 1984 tax hikes, the Senate wants $9 billion, the House $30 billion, the president $2.7 billion. In domsestic spending, the Senate wants to exceed the president's 1984 request by $12 6 billion and the House wants to go $33 billion beyond the president in inflation adjusted defense hikes over 1983 levels, the Senate wants a six percent increase ad the House wants four percent. Reagan asked (or 10 percent Also, the Senate will accept a 1984 deficit of$l78-.6 billion, the House $174 5 billion and the White House $192.4 billion

Senators voting yes supported ttu Senate budget resolution and parted company with the White House Voting from North Carolina were East voUxl no Helms voted no

Power Plants Along Canals

Py JOE BIG HAM Associated Press Writer TUKLOCK, Calif (AP) Irrigation tairals in the northern San Joaquin Valley are .sprouting small power plants that are generating new revenue for their owners and new electricity for Northern California rcsi dents

A $')() million project to t) u 11 d eight mini hydroelectric plants along canals will tie completed this .summer All but two already are on line in the Turlock, Merced and South San Joa quin County irrigation dis tricts 1(8) miles southeast of San Francisco When the last two plants kgin operating, the system will provide 23,000 kilowatt hours of electricity a year for customers of Pacific Gas & Electric Co., which is buying the power from the districts Officials say thats enough to serve more than 17,000 homes.

Mini-hydroelectric plants are not unique, but they are uncommon in the United States, Turlock Irrigation District spokesman Robert Nees said in a telephone interview.

"Small hydro projects have been around a long time, especially in Europe, he said. But they have not been found commonly in this country in the last 20 years The economic scale wasnt there

That changed during the energy crisis of the late 1970s. Turlock developed plans to generate electricity from the miles of canals in which water flows by gravity from the Sierra Nevada to valley farms.

The district has been in the forefront of mini-hydro development in the United States and is recognized that way across the country, Nees said.

The irrigation canals contained two essential ingredients to develop hydroelectric power - a quantity of water and a drop in elevation, Nees said. You need the right mix.

Engineers found locations along the canals where there were drops in elevation

ranging from 18 to 75 feet Then, small power plants were built to harness the water rushing past those sites

Its actually just a miniature version of a large hydro project. Nees explained "What you have is water fulling, from one elevation to another That spins a turbine which .spins a generator and produces elec Iricity''

Turlock has been the lead agency on the project, iH'gmning construction of its first plant in 1978 Voters approved an $80 million revenue l)ond issuu,^l'WT>svears later, allowing cmstnktion of all eight plants envisipned for the three districts

Custom-Desigri Soles Techni^e

PARKERSBURG. W^^ (AP) - Instant technical information, obtained by the touch of a computer key, is helping plastics manufacturers improve their products

To help custom molders acquire the latest data on the design, processing and use of its products, Borg-Warner Chemicals has introduced a new information network that uses the customers terminal to obtain the data. Under this system, designers feed data into their computers' and receive design computations in seconds, according to William Hernandez, company executive

Sales calls are incredibly expensive," said Hernandez, "and calls by our team of technical service reps are even more expensive. If we can answer a few questions . through this network, we might save an expensive visit for us and provide cost-saving information to our customers on a more timely basis.

Borg-Warner claims the system, called Plastivision Molding Assistance Network, is a first for suppliers of metals, plastics or wood ma-lerials.





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36_Xhe Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Wednesday, June 1^^983

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m

1SC0T

'iiit'HiiG 8yi Jyiii'i

We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities None Sold To Deaflers Or Restaurants We Accept Food Stamps And WiC Vouchers PRICES GOOD WED. THRU SAT.

QRECNVILLC-AYDCN-tnHEL-TAIItOMO

FRYERS

WHOLE CASE 70 LB.

$4425 DOC WW FOOD

FRISKIES BUFFET

CAT

ALL FLAVORS

FOOD

MIGHTY DOG

00

ALL FLAVORS 6.5 OZ.

3ri

3/*r

KRAFT

BBQ

SAUCE

18 OZ. ALL FLAVORS

69

fv

RUB

FRYER LEG QUARTERS

EMBERS

CHARCOAL

10 LB.

FRYER WINGS.... .4 9

LB.

BAKING HENS..... 4 9

LB.

SMITHFIELD

SMOKED

PICNICS

WHOLE

SLICED

75

IB.

JOHN MORRELl SLICED

BACON

I2 0Z. PKG.

$119

JOHN MORRELL CHEESE    S    O    39

FRANKS.

JOHN4ORRELL GOLDEN SMOKED ^

BOLOGNA..,

JOHN MORRELL QUICK CARVE

CANNED HAM

3 LB.

1

79*

$599

SMITHFIELD 10 LB. PORK SALE

   $099

BONES

TAILS..........

3

$399

$399

$^99

LIVIR '3

$A99

CHITTIRUNCS

FAT BACK.....

V.C. SMOKED

$^99

99

SAUSACE......*8

H.C. FRESH $ v^99

SAUSAGE...

13

1/3 SLICED

A

i

CHMKOA^ 4^ mi

. BRIQULTS M

1

69

JAMESTOWN ROLL    ^    ^

SAUSAGE.. 79

TURKEY

LB.

BREAST ^ I

LB.

CHUCK

STEAK

$|39

LB.

BONELESS

CHUCK ROAST*

$ |49

LB.

RIB EYE

STEAKS.....

NEW YORK STRIP STEAKS...

?3

49

LB,

TIP STEAK..

FRESH

GROUND

49

LB.

$|99

LB.

REF

DBBr MORE PER PKG.

99

LB.

KL MONIE CATSUP

32 OZ.

99

PARADE TEA BAI

100 a

$ 149

1

DT inc

5*5?

When you buy up to 12 regular siz convenience packs mh

Jim,

See display in our store(s) for complete details. Offer expires June 30,1983

or-

i iT

LUVS CONVINIRNCi PAKS

LARGE 32 a. OR MEDIUM 48 CT.

PARADE

MACARONI i CHEESE

7 0Z.

4/ I

IN

PARADE MAYONNAliE

QUART

89

GRADE "J "URGE

EG6i

69

June is Dairy Month^^^

CAEOUNAOE    MERICO    BUHERMENPT    ^    fO    

MILK    ^

QT.

69

NEW PARADE CHILLED

COUNTRY FRESH HOMOGENIZED NEW PARADE CHILLED

MILK LEMOHAPE

1/2 GAL.

APnijuici...,,,99

j/i|

9 9 9 1/2GAL.

CHILLED

^ ^    ORANGE JUICE ...."*99

SUITES!    PMtDE

cHiisi

rNRMVK    ^

MARGARINE QUARTERS 31

00

7-FARMS SLICED'mim





ALTH& BEAUTY AIDS

$169

BUDWEISER OR BUDWEISER LIGHT

12PAK 12 OZ. CANS

UBBING ALCOHOL

3^$ 100

DAWN

OS

DEL MONTE CUT

GREEN BEANS OR FRENCH STYLE SLICED

BEANS

NO.303

DISHWASHING LIQUID

2201. . '

$119

DEL MONTE GOLDIN WHOLE KERNEL^

20* OFF LABEL

COBN

DEL MONTE

NO.303

SWBIPMS..

SOFT PLY BATHROOM TISSUE

TEXAS PETE

HOT DOG CHILI SAUCE

10 OZ.

4 ROLL PACK 20* OFF LABEL

00

I&

I

I

I

S

DO

PEPSI, DIET PEPSI, MT.DEW

2LITER

OUR VALUE SHORTENING

$109 P! I H

42 OZ.

GENERIC

lE

CNARCOUSTARnB

99*

TREET

f

LUNCHEON MEAT

PUREX

12 OZ.

'i"UR6E

BS

r

UIMDBTDIIEB6NT

42 OZ. GIANT SIZE

$109

FROXEN FOODS

PARADE

PARADE

WHIPHDTOPMNC umonadI

7 FARMS CRINKLE CUT

FRENCH^ ' MiB FRIES ^    

2 PACK

6 0Z.

PARADE

BROCCOLI SPIARS

10 OZ.

2/^1

00

PARADE

BRUSSRL SPROUTS

10 OZ.

COUNTRY FRESH

ICE

CREAM

Vi GALS.

19

21^

00

IT'S SALAD TIME

CALIFORNIA ICEBERG

UTTUCE

HEAD

SMALL

CUCUMBERS

EACH

CELLO RED

RADISHES

6 0Z.

2~/19

FLORIDA

CARROTS

1 LB.

PKG.

MEDIUM GREEN

PEPPERS

EACH

TEXAS JUMBO

CANTALOUPES

18 CT.

99*

. W W EACH

GOLDEN

BANANAS

14 CT.

BUNCH

WASHINGTON STATE RFOTmiCIOUS

APPLES

lUoa.

'\1;

LB.

MEDIUM YELLOW

3 LB. BAG





38-The DaUy Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Wediiesday, June 1,1963

Work Hours ^ Chosen By Employees

By WERNER ZWICK Associated Press Writer MUNICH, West-Germany \P) - The West German department store Ludwig Beck am Rathausedu^s taken the concept aftCTib^ working hours one step beyond to flexiyears.

The result is a radical new approach to work schedules allowing employees to work pretty much when they please during a year as long as they put in an agreed upon minimum number of hours.

Store managers say the system works well. Sales by the staff of 800 increased an average of 9 percent when the system was implemented in 1978. The next year sales went up 6 percent, the store said.

The program is known in-house as the Individual Working Time system.

Helga Ranacher, who runs the, program at Becks, said it was developed after a store study comparing the frequency of customer visits to the availability of sales personnel.

"We soon discovered our entire staff was in the store at 8:30 a.m., but there were no customers^ she said.

Since the introduction of individual working time, Miss Ranacher said, employee attendance is generally highest during the time of peak customer visits.

Since the store pays a premium on sales in addition to basic salary, most clerks want to be in .the store during rush hours.

Most employees who used to work the legal limit of 173 , lours a month and who cut iheir working hours to 160 lanaged to maintain their Income by increasing sales 4ind premiums, Miss Ranacher .said.

The system works like this: a contract is drawn between the store ' and employee, stipulating the minimum number of hours to be worked each year.

Actual working time is arranged by each department on a weekly basis. Each employee has a time account controlled by a computer that operates like a bank account.

"It can be overdrawn or stuffed with extra hours, Mi.ss Ranacher said. But salaries remain the same >egardle.ss of the number of hours worked.

SomjL employees accumulate, enough credit hours to take a three-month vacation. Others work only a few hours each day to supplement the family income.

All personnel are required to be on duty during the Christmas holiday sales.

An interesting side effect is that the number of full-time employees has dropped from 6.6 percent to 3.6 percent since the program began.

Beck employee Erwin Bauer, 52, said he decided to cut his working hours to 120 a month when the new system -came into effect.

r

Round Top Bread

JANE PARKER

3100

1 H

pkgs.

Flav-0-Rich

HOMOGENIZED LIGHT BUTTERMILK

Margarine

ANN PAGE

V2 gal. ctn.

F3100

JXly pkgs. H

Storewide

f acf. at ihpsi ad*>lisea .lemi .s requnea to be readily available to sale ai or below the adyeHised puce in each A4P Store eicepi a spei '!.(.Illy noted in Ihis ad

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. JUNE 4 AT A&PIN GREENVILLE, N.C.

ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS

LAMBRUSCO, BIANCO, ROSATO    _

Celia Wine    sil

GOOD IN GREENVILLE, N.C.

I ! 35OFF LABEL    You Pay Only

Quick Grits 1

Idaho Potatoes

FOR YOUR SALAd NEEDS

JIFFY

Com Muffin Mix 4 .^>1"vW.Cucumbers 3

i I"* Oreen Peppers

CRISP

for

only

Green Cabbage

FOR YOUR SALAD

Green Onions

-    TENDER    FRESH

1M ^llow Onions

3

3

bunches

only

lb.

bag

Cantaloupes

FRESH JUICY WESTERN

12 Oz. Can Carton

"Nqw I can do a lot of things other people envy me for before the pension shock at age 6.6, he said.

Miss Ranacher said that since the system allows employees to use one to two hours per month - depending on total working time -for, personal business, absenteeism also has dropped.

The time off can come in handy in West Germany, where businesses close early during the week, have half days on Saturdays and are closed on Sundav.    *

The flexiyear concept has proved especially helpful to women trying to work and run households

GOOD IN GREENVILLE, N C.

PACKERS LABEL

Tomatoes    3

GREER

^plesauce    3

VERY YOUNG TENDER

LeSueur Peas 2

16 oz. cans

16 oz. cans

17 oz. cana

each

only

no

SEALTEST

If it werent for lAZ (Individual Working time) I couldnt work at ail because I have to take care of my 6-year-old son, said Susanne Kuerzinger, who has been at Becks since 1981.

Unions, however, are* opposed to the system, contending it is only a device to save money for the store owners. Unions also see the system as potentially dangerous to plans by some trade unions to press for a 35-hour work week next vear.

Sour Cream 2

ANN PAGE

Frozen Lemonade 4

6oz.

cant

LAND-O-SUN

Sliced Strawberries 2    1

[eWNgy STOKELY CREAM STYLE

GolffenCorn 3

STOKELY CUT FRENCH STYLE

Green Beans 3

VAN CAMP

fork & Beans

17 oz. cana

16 oz. cana

Tonys Pizza

HAMBURGER PEPPERONI

15 oz. pkg.

900

Even so, flexiyears is firmly entrenched at Becks. When employees were asked after a year whether they wanted to do away with the system, there was a storm of protest, Miss Ranacher said.

BEEF CHICKEN'TURKEY

*

The woman executive said flexiyears will be inlroduced* a( the firms New York branch. Becks of Munich on Fifih .Avenue, lalefthis vear.

Ann Page Pot Pies 3    1

TATER BOY

Shoestring Potatoes 3    1

LEAF on CUT

A&P Spinach 3

GREEN QIANT

10 oz. pkga.

Broccoli

dlffH SiHCf

PILL8BURY BIG COUNTRY

Butteimilk Biscuits 3

FRUrrONTHE BOTTOM

Flav-0"Blch Vi^t 3

Open 24 Honn A Day Monlay 7:00 A.M. to Saturday 12 Midnight. Open Stnnlar7.-00 A.M. to lOdIO P M.





mm

Between now and JUNE 4 , we will redeem national manufacturer's cents-off coupons up to 50' for double their value. Offer good on national manufacturers' cents-off coupons only (Food retailer coupons not accepted.) Customer must purchase coupon product in specified size. Expired coupons will not be honored. One coupon per customer per item. No coupons accepted for free merchandise Offer does not apply to A&P or other store coupons whether manufacturer is mentioned or not. When the value of the coupon exceeds 50' or the retail of the Item, this offer is limited to the retail price.

Coupon Savings!

FOR EVERY S10.00 YOU SPENO, WE WILL DOUBLE 3 MANUFACTURER'S COUPONS.

EXAMPLE: S10 PURCHASE = 3 COUPONS;

$20 PURCHASE = 6 COUPONS; S100 PURCHASE = 30 COUPONS; AND SO ON!

ADDITIONAL COUPONS REDEEMED AT FACE VALUE! .

$aings are Bre mmsAvim

atwithABP's

^SCOUPOMS!

MFCS

COUPON

MFC "CENTS OFF

ASP AOOEO CENTS OFF

TOTAL COUPON AT AAP

COUPON A

25*

25*

50*

COUPON B

18

18*

36*

COUPON C

50*

50*

$1.00

COUPON D

75*

25*

$1.00

Sensational Values Mn all departments

Bottom Round

WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF

Boneless Whole 20-26 lb. avg.

Cut Free Into Roasts, Steaks, Trimmings

Poik Roast

FRESH LEAN COUNTRY FARM

Boston

Butt

WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF BONELESS

Bottom Round Roast

A&P QUALITY FRESH

Lean Ground Round

FOR YOUR COOKOUTS

Jamestown Franks

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH

lb.

lb.

21b.

pkg

269

200

Whole Fryer Legs > 79^

^ JAMESTOWN

^ Pork Sausage z 88^

NATALINA FRESH (NEVER FROZEN)

Pepperoni Pizza

DUBUQUE SUPREME

26 oz. pkg

79

Canned Ham

FRESH LEAN COUNTRY FARM

Pork Steak

FROZEN    

Dressed Croakers

Cut From Boston Butt

Sliced Bacon

Meat Franks

SAVORY BRAND

1 lb. pkg.

20% FREE (REG. 6V, OZ.) (GEL 5V2 OZ.)

Colgate Toothpaste

normal / DRY OILY

Pert Shampoo

Your

Choice

btl.

A&P PEROXIDE OR

A&P Alcohol 21

oz.

btl8.

Pine Sol

cat FOOD

Friskies Buffet 3

DOG FOOD

Mighty Dog 3

evi 02. cans

6Vj 02.

cans

AVAILABLE AT: 703 GREENVILLE BOULEVARD GOURMET

Turkey Breast

SANDWICH CUT

Swiss Cheese

15' OFF LABEL

Bath Tissue

COTTONELLE

BEEF CHICKEN PORK ORIENTAL

Oodles Of Noodles 5 is

long GRAIN

Mahatma Rice

3 lb. pkg.

1

in

TEXAS PETE

Chili Sauce

MT. OLIVE PROCESSED

Dill Pickles

10 oz. cans

46 oz. ,|.r

r

in

A&P QUALITY

Elbow Macaroni 2

LIBBY ^    .    o

Potted Meat 4

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Wednesday, June 1,19031

Brazilflans A New Home For Archives

By BRUCE HANDLER Associated Press Writer RIO DE JANEIRO. BrazU (AP) - This countrys most important historical documents, now decaying in a 165-year-oid, termite-infested firetrap, are to get a new home.

The government recently decided to move thousands of Irreplaceable historical papers to a modem, air-conditioned, fireproof building

Its the realization of a long-time dream. said Celina Moreira Franco, director of Brazils National Archives.

We were in danger of losing the written records of our history and traditions, she - said. "The archives would not have lasted much longer where they are now. The present building, built in I8l8'as a residence for a baron when Brazil was still a colony of Portugal, has begiin to crack on-overburdened foundations. It had to be fumigated against termites, "and the fire department has condemned it, according to the director. Documents currently in precarious sdorage conditions but which will move to the new quarters include the 1888 imperial Golden Law that freed Brazils slaves; originals of most of the nation's constitutions; land deeds granted by the iortuguese crown, and 8.000 historical maps,

"The National Archives has had seven different headquarters, none of which offered the minimum conditions fpr preserving these priceless records," Mrs. Moreira Franco said. "Now, not only will we be able to protect our historical papers, hut we alsd will he able to display them properly for scholars and the general public

Now, for example, the original hand-lettered Golden Law, signed by Princess Isabel, the daughter of the Krnperor Dom Pedro II, while her father was in Kurope, lies far. from public view, looked in a safe on the present buildings ground . fl(K)r. Nearby are a large fire extinguisher on wheels and a ' hot line" phone to the central fire station.

Kios tropical heat and humidUy have caused splotches to appear on the emancipation proclamations parchment, But Mrs. Moreira Franco says she cant turn on the air conditioners, "because all the wiring in the building will explode."    

> Showing the Golden Law to a visitor, the director remarked, "It's a"*little more yellow than it was when I t(K)k over the archives That was m 1980 The new headquarters for the National Archivtfs will be in what until recently was the National Mint, across from the present building in downtown Rio on the other side of the Plaza of the Republic That building features a palm lined, neoclassical entrance hall built in 186.5, which will be refurbished and used for historical expositions and lectures. But more important, the former mint complex includes a secure, modern, seven-story office-type building, built in 1967, where Brazils precious papers will be stored The director said she hopes to have all the documents transferred by early next . year.    **

The next step, she said, will be to try to collect and organize countless thousands of additional historical documents said Jo be scattered throughout this vast nation, in private hands or under the jurisdiction of other government agencies.    .    -

She added that the documents could change Brazilian history. , ,

The true history of Brazil is yet to be written, Mrs. Moreira Franco said. Researchers dont have the slightest idea of how many records really are available or what might be in them.

The National Archives now contains 11 miles of historical papers if they were laid end-to-end, the director said, but there are at least (125 miles) more lying around in federal offices, just in the city of Rio de Janeiro. ' There might be some interesting surprises, she said.

4 lb can

798

|69

|00

lb.

11b.

pkga.

3oz.

cans

|00

|00703 Greenville Boulevard Greenville Square Shopping Center Greenville, N.C. ' 9    -    ............

The City provides picnic shelters I at City parks for use by citizens. [To make reservations, call 7524137,





40-The DaUy Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Wednetday, June 1,1983

Ml

il/i

^rm

THANK YOU CUSTOMERS FOR MAKING THE PAST WEEK OUR BIGGEST WEEK IN OVERTONS HISTORY. IT IS OUR PRIVILEGE TO SERVE YOU AS WE ENTER OUR 38TH YEAR. THE WINNERS OF OUR ANNIVERSARY DRAWING ARE AS FOLLOWS: GRAND PRIZE TV WINNER: JOAN PADGEH, WINTERVILLE, NC, 2ND PRIZE-ANNA TILLMAN OF GREENVILLE, NC, 3RD PRIZ^WINNERS-FRANK EDMUNDSON OF GREENVILLE, NC. AND JACKIE TAYLOR OF GREENVILLE, NC.

OVERTONS FINST HEAVY WESTERN

SIRLOIN STEAK

$

PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY THROUGH SATURDAY

PEANUT CITY OR BEALES SMOKED

CaUNTRYH

GWALTNEY

FRANKS

...............12    OZ    PKG    99^

BACON................12    0Z    PKG

TURKEY HAM 3-slb avg lb

HEAVY WESTERN    <

BONELESS CHUCK ROAST lb ^

BONELESS SHOULDER ROAST

WHOLE OR HALF

FRESH

PORK

LOINS

CUT FREE!

Overton s

FRYER THIGHS

Supermarket, Inc

211 JARVIS STREET

HOME OFXJREENVILLES best meats

QUANTITY

RIGHTS

RESERVED

LIPTON FAMILY

TEA BAGS

FAMILY PAK SPECIALS

PORK SPARE RIBSiolb    pkg ^9

PORK NECK BONES .....' iolb    pkg

PIG FEET ..............10LB    PKG

PORK CHITTERLINS  ..........i'olb    pkg    4

FRYER LEGS............lb 79'

FRYER BREAST.........lb.99'

GRADE A"

WHOLE FRYERS lb49<^

DAIRY SPECIALS

or

FRESH WHOLE

MAOLA

MILK.....

SAV-MOR . n/$i MARGARINE....Of I

, 9RA0E"A ' PITT COUNTY

lUMBO    ygc

STAR-KIST OIL OR WATER PACKED

TUNA

6Vi OZ. CAN

LIMIT 4

chunk LIGHT TUN*

DEL MONTE

FINE FARE

MAYONNAISE.

QUART

JAR

oqc CHARMIN

VW TOILETTISSE

4 ROLL PKG

RUFFLES ASSORTED TYPES

POTATO CHIPS...

8 0Z. BAG

99

CATSUP

CLIPTHISCOUPON

COCA-COLA, MELLO YELLO, DIET COKE

2 LITER BOTTLE

this coupon ind $10.00 food order sxcluding advortissd Itsms. Without coupon sach $1.29. Limit 2 ot your cholea. Expiras M.83.

FLORIDA CRISP

LETTUCE

38^

HEAD

SOUTH CAROLINA RIPE

CLIPTHISCOUPON

tomatoes paper TOWLS

WESTERN jHAPPY HOST SUGAR

cantaloupes!-

68^i

GIANT ROLL

5 LB. BAG

With this coupon and $10.00 food order excluding advertised items. Without coupon $1.60. Limit one per customer. Expires 6.4-13.

(23 SIZE) EACH %#    |

FRESH LOCAL YELLOW I I I I I

rni^wn    i    ckkv/

SQUASH 00

S7.00 BUSHEL

FRESH LOCAL |

TRAWBERRIES

98'

QUART





$sensalional

Dress, Sport Or Knit Shirts And Jog Shirts Or Shorts

Dm Or Sport short sleeve shirts in solid colors or woven prints and plaids. to 17 and S.M.L.XL. KmH Shirts in solid colors with collar, placket and pocket styling. Sizes S,M.L.XL.

Coordinated jog shirts or shorts in terry, poly/cotton jersey or fleece look. Some shorts are reversible. Sizes S,M,L,XL. ^

Fndt-Of-Thc    aq

Loom Tics.................^yy

Opair

Dress Or CaSual Pants And Fashion Denim Jeans

Dm Or Casul Paits in solid color woven polyester or poly/cotton twill with matching striped belt. Sizes 29 to42.

Fashioi Jcaia with back pocket detailhig. Sizes 28 to 38.

 .............2.99

Cannon Bath

E^ach Towels

or print terry bath towels. Each towd is iy 22x 42**. Slight irregulars.

Action 4 Pack Pack Light Bulbs

Oioofe 40,60, 73 or 100 watt 4 pack light bulbs.

3 War Balb ....2 For 1.50

V Quaker State 10W30

VTrQt. Motor OU

Regularly 1.091 Super blend 10W30 year round multigrade motor oil. Limit 5 quarts.___





) Infant And Toddler Each Playwear

Solid color shorts for toddlers. Pull on styles with adjusUble drawstring waists. InfanU* and toddlm tank and tee tops. Screen prints, stripes and solid colors.

Boys And Giris Tops, Shorts And Playwear

Boys screen print tank tops in 8 to 16 and print tee shirts in 4 to 18. Jogging shorts with piping or stripe detailing in 4 to 16.

Giris tanks, camisoles and polo style tee tops. Embroidery, appliques or screen prints. 4 to 14. Jog and merona style shorts with embroidery, d-rings, appliques and suspenders. Sizes 4 to 14.

Girls Short Sets And Boys Jog Each Shirts Or Shorts

Giris* solid, striped, print or tone on tone short sets. Assorted neck treatments. Sizes 4 to 14.

Boys fleece look or terry jog shirts and matching shorts. Crew nck style shirts and some reversible shorts. Sizes S,M,L.    a

Boys 4 To 7 Short Seto........................Vy

Short AHi

Sizes 7 to 11. Skrompcn irith and drop 1 listt tone colors .Siz

' tbmm

am.

3S3S3;..

naafts "L.

^-1

[xnm

lOiw

V'- ^finpfior

'jGW.^ Paiat. >

pH-

mm

ar

mtmmiiymmtmr. Bmrnmm ckmvp.

kMUBNlhlMMra)

   Special Purchase!

\^Reg. 8.99!    Decorator Sheet Sets

No'iron bed ensemble deludes flat and fitted sheets with matching pillowcase. Kismet by Danville of Dan River print and floral patterns. Plus other famous maker print patterns. > Machine wash and tumble dry.    '    \    /

Fidl Size Set ^ , .-a awat    Queen Size Set    ^    aai

Regularly 14.99 Sale 10.99!    Regularly 17.99......Sale 14.99!

'9.

CHMOML

MiQuni

V^iwaumy

im

Foam Back,

Drapes

48x 84 solid color foam back . drapes. Slight irregulars.

40*i 63 Ninon    ^ ^

Sheer Ptnel...............3*99

40x 81 Ninon    .

Sheer Panel...............4.49

.-Ml

m

A

ki104

99

s

Cannon Wash Ootlu

First quality deluxe solid color velour or terry wash cloths.

Set SPiecc Bath Set

Two piece tank cover, | seat cover, contour rug and bath mat.





Special Summer Shoe Sale!

Mens and boys hi-top and oxford style athletic shoes. Nylon, vinyl or canvas with action trims. Padded collars and cushioned insoles.Childreai Sixes............ 7.99

Summer sandal selection includes knot v^mp slides, striped classic slip-ons, wood wedge styles plus more. B^lerina step-ins with bows. Terry trimmed canvas casuals. Sizes for ladies and girls.

(O Girls Short ^^7 AUs And E|ch Skrompers

n stripes, solids, or color blocks.

n with tie shoulders, key hole fronts ) 1 lists, ^lids, stripes and tone on )rs Sizes 4 to 14.

'Tii WiriMin.r-nfrr"- vtt(siiivo/i'iWH5a'S!aewS^

69

48MiM

ilifliifnH thornt Ii4<

_  ________

5

^Pack Disposable Diapers

Pack of 48 extra ' absorbent or pack of 40 toddler diapers.

Clogs Or Thongs

Ladies exercise clogs or cork wedge thongs. Childrens Clogs Or Thongs 2.oo

nasties

.OaiOiltia

h.iGM9Tny

c.MMh

^ .Montee PMetMyi .fli^ttOMGe

f.M0r8M9/

Tucker Housewares

n

.jXMh SOOaace GiMMf ' '

UrsedrhikiBi

fiMMSWilll

hmoroi ii|iil|i>

Ghmi I Household And 22SS    Health And

S2i..4|6r*l|Be**yAids

3.5 Ounce Brut 33 Splash On Lotion

1.5 Ounce Brut Roll On Antlpcrspirant

9 Ounce Aqua Net Hair Spray 15 Ounce Faberge Organic Shampoo Or Conditioner 15 Ounce Faberge Shampoo Or Conditioner With Aloe Vert 6 Ounce Vaseline Intensive Care Lotion Regular Or Extra Strength

Assortd Holiday Trash Bags Twin Pack Bic Ughters 8 Pack Blc Razors 9 Ounce Brut Hair Spray 2 OuBce Brut 33 Solid Antlpcrspirant

2.5 Ox. Brut Stkk Deodorant Or Antlpcrspirant 3.5 Ox. Brut Spray Deodorant Or 3 Ounce Antipcrapirant

gTPlSOi.OH

^ TitttmBiit

motor oil hrttdEdown.

.1.99

If

% SIP Stalk

' oaiMin

j^watKcw.

i ir'

Household And Health And Beauty Aids

25 Count Korditc Fonm Pintes 1 Gnllon Pnrcx UqnM Blench 12 Ounce Funlly DoUnr Window Ocnner lOnncc Mr. Bubble Liquid BttbMc Bath

16 Ounce Mr. Bubble Powder BnbMcBadi

54 Count Q-Tlps Cotton Swnbs 9 Onnce Bln-lloy SoUd Toilet Bowl ClfP'

40 Count 9 Ounce Cold Cups

32 Onnce Family Dollar Dish Detergent

dRoBPcrtBathTlssHC 11 Oncc TNT Ronch And Ant Spray

64 Onnce Family Dottnr Fnbrk Softener 7 Ounce Rcnnxit Spray Air Freshener 16 Ox. Snowy Powder Blench

Spin-Fresh Air Fipshcncr 1.75 Ox. VaicUnc Petroleum JeBy





SPORTSWEAR

SPECTACU

Tremendous $3,000,000 Purchase Of World Famous Retailers Inventory. Fantastic Selection Of Famous Name Sportswear And

More! Save Up To 50%!

Tops And Blouses, Skirts, Active Look Tops And Pants, Mini Skirt Sets, Short Sets

Tops And Blouses with short, 3/4 len^h or dolman sleeves. Tops in tone on tone colors with assorted neck treatments. Blouses with collars or bib fronts, nautical and ruffle styles. Sizes S,M,L and extra sizes.

Skirts in summer stripes or solids. Variety of pleated, ekutic waist and yoke front styles. Sizes S,M,L 1uid extra sizes.

Active Look Coordinates including 100% cotton tops with drawstring bottoms and stripe trimmed sleeves. Matching pants with side taping and stitched waists. S,M,L. Short Sets And Rompers in poly/cotton, terry or woven knits.

Sohds or stripes. Sizes S,M,L.

^199

^^Each

Tops ,Blouses, Tanks, Camisoles And Shorts

Tops Ami Blouses with short or cap sleeves. Tops in solids, stripm, crew, square and vee necks. Blouses with lace and collar fronts. Sizes S,M,L and extra sizes.

Tanks And Camisoles with embroidery, appliques and lace trim. Stripes, prints and color blocks. Siz^ S,M,L and extra sizes.

Shorts with drawstring inside waist, snap pbckets, d-rings, cuffed leg, pleated fronts and piping) Sizes S,M,L and extra

8

99

Pair

Fashion Pants Or Jeans

fails in belted, pleated and baagy styles. Twill and poly/cotton blends. 3/6 to 15/16 and 8 to 18. Jeans with fancy stitching and back pocket trims. 5/6 to 15/16, 8 to 18. E*ltn    Q    QQ

Sites

mM





. CAROLINA PRIDE 19 22 LB AVC WCT-WHOLE OR SHANK HALF BONE-IN .

Smokd

Ham

' OOMTOWM

OhtovirydapandkigifMntwnunteofQamTlclMliyoualiiMn Tha mora tciiati ooM Iw bMi your ctMnow ol wtnrtng

OOOSCNARTWFECnVE AS Of MAY 29, 198S

PMIE

OP

oonran

OWOAMi

oonran

oonran

1S0AMK

. AUK

t2AH . tPOP 200

PKB

to

62

167

imti

In 25 5M

lei"

in JW5

i n Mil '

lnl*>

too

270-

In 16 206

in 2026

Itnl.qjJ,.

602

7"266

i n 909

in *

>9

s -1 '

U22 . 6852 1 106 065 111570

if 1

in , . ''je

ln_J._

161 i

lin

in ' in I

Llii .

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY SEE COMPLETE DETAILS AT YOUR NEAREST KROGER SAV ON

USD A COV T INSPECTED QUALITY CONTROLLED CHUB . PAK OR STORE-MADE^

Ground

Beef

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY Each Of these advertised items is required to b readily available for sale in each Kroger sav on, except as specifically , noted in this ad if we do run.out of an item we will offer you your choice of a comparable item when available, reflecting the same savings or a raincheck which will entitle you to pur chase the advertised item at the advertised price witjrun 30 days Limit one manufacturer s coupon per item '

Items and Prices Effective thru Sat., June 4,1983

' RECQLAR OR LIGHT

Budweiser

Beer

DIET COKE, TAB OR

k

LIMIT 5 LBS PLEASE

KROGER GRADE A

Large

Eggs

large

Brown Eggs oo;

75^!;.C0PEN 8 AM TO MIDNIGHT

600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville

Phon 756-7031

PG1M

K rbf-M





05-

Mighty Dog

AU FLAVORS

Dog Food

35

6-Oz

Can

Buffet

ALL FLAVORS

Cat Food

BATHROOM

Waldorf

Tissue

a-Roii

Pkg

LYSOL SCENT II OR

lysoISpray

Action

Btl

JUMBO

HiDri Towels .

ASSORTED

Kleenex

Napkins

ARM & HAMMER

Laundry

Detergent

11-Oz Box

99

ELBOW MACARONI THIN OR LONG

Creamette Spaghetti.

2 $129

Boxes

Jumbo

Roll

50-Ct

Pkg

59

79<

WITH TAGS

Lipton Tea Bags

ALL VEGETABLE

Kroger

Shortening

100-Ct . Box

$-|99

l$i9

can

PG 2M





k/vith Cost Cutter Prices and

.    .    ISpecial Savings this week!

SLICED CHUNKED OR CRUSHED ^

Dole pineapple

79<

20 0Z Can

PLAIN OR SELF RISING

southern Biscuit Flourg

laundry

Fab    $^79

Detergent49<>r I

long grain

Success Rice....

roast beef spread or

underwood Devil Ham

KVj





KRAFT

Real

Mayonnaise

$^39

12'02 J.ir '

K >S

^yonniljy

KRAFT REDUCED CALORIE

Barbeque

Sauce ...    7    5^

KRAFT REDUCED CALORIE

1000 Island

16-Oz T 29

Btl

Dressing

KRAFT AMERICAM

Cheese

Singles

KRAFT PHILADELPHIA

Cream Cheese

KRAFT SALAD DRESSING

Miracle Whip/#

   8 Oz

\    Pkq

KRAFT MARGARINE

Squeeze Parkay

1 LU Btl

79

Kroger Cheeses Add 'Pizzazz'

to Summer Meals!

KROGER COLBY, MILD CHEDDAR OR MONTERAY JACK

Incredible Hunk Cheese

$

Random

weight

1

KROGER CHUNK

Swiss

Cheese

KROGER CHEESE LOAF

Nice 'n Cheesy

KROGER NICE N CHEESY INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED

Cheese

Singles

KROGER ASSORTED

Shredded

Cheese

weight    Lh    flii    I    40z    I

BOX        Pkgs    "

PG 4 LM





withFamousBrandSavings at Kroger This week!...

ASSORTED FLAVORS

seaitest ice cream

$

MINUTE MAID

orange

Juice

KROGER HOTDOC OR

Hamburger

Buns

I    LEE    FRENCH

CHEESE OR

Strawberry $269

WISE LITE LINE CHEESE PUFFS OR

Tortilla Chips..

8-Oz

Bag

33

Cake.

SARA LEE

Pound Cake.

Dannon

23-Oz

Pkg

lO-Oz

Pkg.

Dannon ^ 8^ Yogurt.

SHEDD S SPREAD

country crock

99

29

ROYAl VIKINC SCXHNECKEN OR DANISH

Cinnamon Twist... '

COST CUTTER ^

l?e"aT''2r 99

KROGER FOIL PAK OR NEW ORLEANS STYLE

French

Bread... .210.-,

ErnrwKaePw*.#?

FROZEN TREATS

FREEZER PLEEZER

ice Cream Sandwiches

FREEZER PLEEZER

ice Milk Bars

FREEZER PLEEZER

Assorted Pops

FREEZER PLEEZER

Twin Pops

FREEZER PLEEZER

Fudge Bars

DELMONTE VALUES

DELMONTE WHOLE KERNEL DELMONTE    OR    CREAM    STYLE    ^

catsup corn

FRUIT FLAVORED    DELMONTE

Hawaiian Cut Green punch Beans

69^

12 Ct

Box

ASSORTED FLAVORS FREEZER PLEEZER

Pudding Time

$

12 Ct BOX

Bars

69

DELMONTE    -y

S.weet ,7 0/ corn ... f-Ti'

79*

89

DELMONTE PEACH SLICES

Peach 290/

Halves . . Can

DELMONTE ^

Fruit .leo/S'llS cocktail cans I

DELMONTE NO SALT

Whole Kernel

corn...     Can

DELMONTE NO SALT '

sweet . ,7 0/

Peas .... Can

DELMONTE

Tomato oV wedges can

DELMONTE

Stewed 1^5 0/ Tomatoes can

a9

as

69 75 V

DELMONTE NO SALT

Cut Green ,6 o/ Beans...

as<

DELMONTE

Spinach

2 IS O/ $1 Cans

PG 5 LM

KU rot-ivi





u S D A GOV T INSPECTED QUALITY CONTROLLED EXTRA LEAN

U S.D A GOV T INSPECTED QUALITY CONTROLLED GENUINE

Ground Beef..

Lb

38

Ground Chuck .

Lb

58

U S.D.A. GOV T INSPECTED QUALITY CONTROLLED

Chopped steak.....

Lb

68

3-5 LB. AVC. WCT. LEAN AND MEATY FROZEN PORK

p..

Spare

Ribs

'i

KWICK KRISP

Chipped

Meats

Sliced

Bacon

HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED

Beef

COUNTRY CLUB IMPORTED

$29

Sausage... i

HILLSHIRE FARMS CHEdDAgJNURST

smoked $299

Sliced Ham.

12-Oz.

Pkg.

$299

sausage..

HILLSHIRE FARMS

smoked <^e9 Bratwurst. ib/'Z

Serve N Save Wieners . X. 88^

RUTH S SALADS COLE SLAW OR

potato

Salad

2a-oz.

ctn.

COST CUTTER FRESH

OSCAR-MAYER

All Meat

8-Oz.

Fryer

Drumsticks. ib

89

Bologna. pkg

98<

OSCAR MAYER

Cheese Hot

Dogs

Lb.

1

98

HILLSHIRE FARMS REGULAR

Smoked sausage

HOLLY FAiaWIS FRESH

Fryer Combo Pac

OSCAR MAYERAll Beef

Lb$239

Lb98

Contains 5 Breasts | 3 Thighs I 3 Drumsticks ^

Franks. Pkg

88

PG 6BFM





Cook-Out Time!With better cuts of meat from Kroger Say-On and at Cost Cutter Prices too!

U.S.D.A. CHOICE HEAVY ; WESTERN BEEF BONELESS

CAROLINA PRIDE 19-22 LB. AVC WCT. WHOLE OR SHANK HALF BONE-IN

Smoked

Ham

U S.D.A. CHOICE HEAVY

WESTERN BONELESS BEEF TOP ROUND

London Broil .

Lb

$288

U 5 D A CHOICE HEAVY WESTERN BEEF BONELESS'

88^

I LMMB *1

98

$28

FRESH DOMESTIC CUP UP INTO WHOLE LEG ROAST. LOIN CHOPS,

SIRLOIN CHOPS AND GROUND LAMB

Lamb

Hindquarter... ib

UNTRIMMED FRESH DOMESTIC

Whole Lamb

Leg .. .. Lb

COST CUTTER HOT OR MILD

Sausage ..: ib 88^

OSCAR MAYER ROUND OR SQUARE BULK PACKAGED COUNTRY STYLE

Sliced <i^Ao Bacon . . Lb ^1^

Rib Eye Steak.

Lb

BUTT HALF

Smoked

Ham ...    .    Lb

JOHN MORRELL WHOLE

GOLDEN BONELESS 7 9 LB AVC WCT

Smoked $>j68

JIMMY DEAN ALL VARIETIES

Pork

Sausage

. Lb

$'188

COST CUfTER

Sliced

Bacon ... Lb

Fresh

OSCAR MAYER

All Meat Wieners

FRESH FARM POND RAISED

Catfish

PREVIOUSLY FROZEIM MEW ZEALAND

Fillet

Lb

99

Fillet

PREVIOUSLY FROZEN

Dressed

Whiting

BULK! PACKACED FRESH FROZEN

Turbot 1 Fillets . .

FRESH NEVER FROZEN "ICELANDIC

Perch

Fillet.... Lb

f

Orange

Roughy $1

FRESH FARM POND RAISED

Dressed Catfish

\

PG 7BFM





Co Krogering and Save with TheseKroger Brand Specials

KROGER

Peanut Butter

$119

18 Oz I

18 Jar

KROGER ASSORTED VARIETIES

salad    _ fii-e

Dressing. b?' 65

.KROGER

Bacon    < OAC

Buds .    89^

KROGER

Black    Qoc

pepper..    oO

PET PRIDE BURGER W CHEESE .

rood    IS* 1

KROGER

steak Sauce

10-OZ

Btl

. Packs

99

ASSORTED FLAVORED UNSWEETENED POWDERED DRINK MIX

Drink Aid .

REG OR MINI

Cold Crest 2 $ ^

Marshmallowsio^oz 1

KROGER

zanv zoo - AC Pops .... pkcj # w

KROGER

9 0, S'! 09 Olives... Btl I

KROGER REGULAR,

SMOKED OR HOT

Barbeque Sauce

69

^ ^ Btl

PET PRIDE HI PROTEIN

?^d .f*a

CRYSTAL BLUE OR GREEN KROGER

Detergent'Bt?'99^

KROGER MOCHA SUPREME, CAFF AL ORANGE OR TOFFEE KAFFEE

international

coffees

KROGER LIOUID

Hand Soap

Large    $^509

Garbage Bags..

20CT BOX

Large Trash Bags

15 CT SUPERWEIGHT

Sheer    $    *1    5    9

Trash Bags:. I

$229

Dixie Crystals sugar

decorative or designer

viva Toweis

79^

#    Jiiir

"     on

JlimlDO

Roll

f

BATHROOM TISSUE

Coronet Family Pack

8

Roll

Pkg.'

69

ORANGE GRAPE OR PUNCH .

Hi C Fruit Drink

assorted flavors

fj^Favgo soft Drinks

$159

^^16 OZ \ I    %

Rtls :    .

sugar

tx/ziA

PG 8ABDFHJKLM





\

t vV

. n^s^r\!VS^

Stop by the Kroger Deli, Your "Summer Fun,Time" Headquarters!

FREE! 12-Oz. Soft

Drink WITH PURCHASE OF

Va Lb. Super Dog

98^mm-w-

AMERICAN OR MUSTARD

Potato

Salad

SLICED TO ORDER

Roast4^| Beef

Ea

DIM

89

ONION, NACHO, CLAM, BACON

Deli

Dips.........Lb

FRESH CHEESE OR

Pepperoni $C50

Pizza ...... 2por ^

m Lb

LARGE FLUFFY

Angel food Cake

French Bread

Cheese 75^

Shoppe

CREAMY RIPE

Swiss

Cheese

FEEDS a HUNGRY PEOPLE-

Super Sub Sandwich

FRESH BAKED

sandwich Buns

2 LAYER B    ____

Pina colada $?99 cake..... Ea kJ

FRESH FROM THE OVEN

Loaf

OLD FASHION STYLE.

Sour cream Cake Donuts

2 LBS. OF POTATO SALAD OR COLE SLAW WITH THE PURCHASE OF

12-Pc. Wishbone

Fried Chicken

S'?.?.

$^98

12-PC

Bucket

PG9 M





r

Health & Be

Goppertone

Dark Tanning Oil Or Lotion

COPPERTONE

SUNSCREEN

LOTION

yAids

Shade

4-Oz Btl

COPPERTONE TANNING OIL

Tropical

AFTER TANNING LOTION MOISTURIZES

COOLS THE BURN,SPRAY

Tan

solarcaine Car,e

NON-GREASY

For Faces OT Lotion Only

TAN IN ONE SUNNY AFTERNOON

SUNTAN

LOTION

3 can

Coppedone

\

$379 $777

Btl

DARK TANNING OIL OR LOTION

Hawaiian Tropic

LOTION FOR SUN-SENSITIVE SKIN

pre-Sun !

SPF-8 SPF 15

^Kroger Pharmacy

Professional

Pharmacist

ADVANCED FORMULA

crest

Toothpaste

lenses that change

Any quaetlons on family haalth mattara?

Your Krogar pharmacist Is avallabla,

accasslbla and Informad.

Sunglasses

Your Kroger pharmacist is a trained health professional. He'll be happy to advise you on norvprescription medicines, dosages, new products, and other family health matters. Dont hesitate to call or come by.

REGULAR

PRICE

GREENVILLE

756-7393

DEODORANT

Playtex

ANTISEPTIC FOR THE SKIN

Sea Breeze

ROLLON

DEODORANT

Secret

roz . Btl

27

10

_ Btl ATACID

ANTI GAS ACTION

47

fclairc'sst'    shampooin

HAIR COLOR

Clairesse

NEW CLAIROL HAIR SPRAY

50Ct

BOX

DEORDORANT 8-OZ OR ANTI PERSPIRANT

Tempo

* DADRFFsOTPiStr

^ jm C.Ck HAIR SPRAY

1^ Clairmist

8 Oz Can

1

27

Head & Shoulders

11 oz Btl

DISPOSABLE

RAZORS

iGiHette/i

J Good News

$157

6Ct

Pkg

SHAMPOO, LIQUID 16 0Z OR CONCENTRATE

Prll ..... Tube

1

97

MOUTHWASH AND GARGLE

Scope

24 oz . Btl

27

ROLL-ON

DEODORANT

Dry Idea

1; oz Btl

47

PG 10M





CRANITEWARE A LONG TIME FAVORITE . ENAMEL COOKWARE HOLDS 21 QUARTS .

Big canner

$099

SAVE

CRANITEWARE

PRESERVING

   .    CRANITEWARE

7-Ot. Blancher i6-0t. Kettle

,$997

Your

lirp    -    

FOLEV 6 OT

Blancher

got    canning

pot

$99

Reg

$g8

CRANITEWARE 4

Jar Funnel

CRANITEWARE 4

9-Oz. Ladle

CRANIIEWARE 0

Collander

$279

$219

$488

PRESTO

EASY TO USE ALUMINUM

17-Ot. Canner

Recj

69^

pazey Seal-a-Meal II

SALE PRICE

$1997

LESS MFC MAIL IN REBATE $300

HEFTY 18 X40 ' FREEZER PAPER OR S PINTS 4 U - PINTS OR 5 1 OT

Xontainerd

$449

m

PRESTO *4-0T. STAINLESS STEEL yoUR FINAL COST RETAIN FLAVOR & NUTRIENTS

Pressure

cooker

^ Reg

#31

124*

$1697

PLAYTEX

HANDSAVER

Clove . Pr 99''

WEXFORD CRYSTAL BEVERAGE

Class. Ea yy

Your

Choice

KORDITE 1801 40 CT FREEZER

rA>,^vA'i i y*    -

I yypint Bags 69^

KORDITE I8O5'

Ot. Bags . oy

HEFTY 75 FT

ia'pe. 99.

WITH CAPS

Mason Pint Jars

KERR WITH CAPS

REG MASON DOZ    ^9 00 KERR DOZ    9Q

Quart Jars ^3 Reg. Caps

KERR

WIDE MOUTH DOZ    KERR DOZ    E? A

Pint Jars .    3^    Reg.    Lids .    59-^

KERR WIDE    KERR DOZ

$188

MOUTH DOZ    ^^^0'    DECORATED

9 4

KERR DOZ DECORATE

Quart Jars    Reg.    Caps

*KERR

DECORATED 8 OZ    CVft    WIDE    MOUTH    DOZ    C    ^    Q    fi

^5 Kerr Caos

Jelly Jars.

A.

KERR HOME CANNING

Book....

88^

Kerr Caps

WIDE MOUTH DOZ

Kerr Lids.

89

PG 11 DFGHJKLMNVWX





risemier the Kroger

Carden

'    :    CALIFORNIA

Nectarines

RED RIPE

watermelon

. , I. "

LI'I)*/'"        w        if:.    i1    m    it    <t!^^

SLICER SIZE

Cucumbers

GENUINE

vidalia

Onions

jH

1

PENCIL THIN

Green Onions ..

GREEN TOP

Bunch Carrots.

CALIFORNIA    ' A

Avocados , for I

GREEN TOP

Bunch 7 <4 Radishes.. OFor'' I

4,0*1

2.*1

FLORIDA

FLORIDA YELLOW

WASHINGTON STATE

Limes Delicious Apples Sweet corn

Uotteiy S|)eaa

SEEDLESS

Eurropean Cucumber . Ea

TROPICAL

Snow

Diffenbachia

double your money back GUARANTEE!

we II double your money back if you re not, satisfied with the fruits and vegetables you buy at Kroger

PG 12 M





ECKELEISURE UVING SALE

CHARM TOIICT TISSUE

4WNiPlACK

MAXIMUM STRB40TH PANADOL

OTAMIltoraCANUUI

AspMrvRM.IJmtl2plaM .

218

MUl COMMUMINOER

^;^OIIMPAD . eil

PEPSI, DIET P6PSI or ^ MOUNTAINDEW 4 09

Mtia

DELMONnSUCED

"** 2 /77^

OZ.

CANS,

SUPMIZE CREST

UfT)tt2pMse I

KODAK

COLOR PRINT HUM

lOOAiAClia

emc, 465 AFTatBBATE    I

WITH ECKERD PROCESSING, YOU CAN BUY 2 ROLLS FOR THE PRICE OF 1 EVEN WHEN IT'S ON SALE'

CMIAKnSTATE SUPK BUND MOTOROIL .7W

lowMi-ar.

Limilpleatedial

dial

DUL BATIfSIZESOAP

StTm.

i/I

00

DURACELLfiii

DURACBL"AA'' BATTERIES    -

PK.OF2    r|    AT

No.MN1500B>2

R5,6,7/01





YOU CAN SAVE UP TO ON YOUR PRESCRIPTION WITH ECKERD oBiHncar^

Last year alone our custonten saved over $8 mHlion with Eckerd Genetics. ,

Ask your Eckerd Pharmacist it your prescrfpHon con be tilled with one of the 300 Generics now available.

-ii

NoCiZMtib 12^

MMIIY3MT.

***" 14

Navti

MMHY^MAUiON

MCMCJUO

NOvMI

0.2.9#    I

ICB>nA

OiASM 2 /400

P6NI/

oonHmAM

CHHOWmMlJ

H|.1.99plL    I

0-199

M7/c7

0.1.99

JACCHIAKD

MACHIOWa

Wn&r

0.4.99

47

mnm

MATTmS

trnir

.1.99

447





y:

WITH FREE OAK SHELF

REBATE

m.m

m. m.n

Uproot conlrote. Automatic puihbulton ilartor. 270>iq. inch grtd.

119'

irTABLETOPORIlL

No. 9 log. 3.99 3 grid heights

24"iRAZIER

GRILL

No. 2407    M    J107

HH7.99

4^slttongrid    I W

K

HlkAGHI i

og. 9.99 Wooden hondiet.

MrMGMin    OOA

eg.1J9    OQV

*3#IECERM    ^49

TOOlSnNeg.4.49 O

*HICKOflVWOOD

CHUNKS    OOA

24l.ieg.1.29    y7

R^PAPK

PUTES

PK.09100

ig.1.19pk.

779

FRByMTAIS

PARTYWARE

eg. 1199

Ttays,mugi9 bowtt.4eoch. aVMioiad bamiiZ

> j

8*

liLMiATIIIIOKiR

Aliy*wmiidcloor.

A dihnnt NWI lo eook food.

348

OLE DIZ CHARCOAL BRIOUETS

1041 eg. 1.79

1

39R5,,7/C-3





DOUOlSDaU}^lONHANDU OARDENTOOLS    9^^

yicMCHOKi*ia.ix.t

llak*.StK>Mlo>Ho*:

DOUOtASTOMMN tPRmORAKi -oo

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14"WS)EA1ER<'

HCTHCTRIMMB

Mo.07ig.l4.ySAutolMlM(l.

14"Wn)fATiROAS

WSOB/THMMB

Ne.MMIt14*.ffutokwlM<t

39

118

JOM^S HOUSmANTSmOS

K . 2/400

Mfpk.    m/    

POTTIN0SO4L

sL /889

m. 19.99

ULMed.

Brand may vary

11

88

^/r"x5(TREINK)RCH) GARDWHOSI^gg

N0.1S11

80.6.49

OARDBIHOSi

Siglim ^ 2

DoubtoBMofMd Im

BUROCSS2-OAUON TANKSPRAVa^

19

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MNOSPMNKIK

No.7

Jtoo. 19.99

NowlOOOef No. 2880 iog.149

999

mbnorpuuauno

orOSClUATINO

SPRMKURS

7

ORASSSHEARSor

No.9870or No. 69 00.9.99

rANVILPMINER

27

No.081S8or

No.KO*101

00.1.99

MBTSAIADIEr

COnONWORK

2SS* 699

FWCIAORASI

w xas S^.98 O

5at7c3

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11-02. T 00.149    .    I

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mneiiciDi^

00.6.99

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44ftai.1.99

OfffNOlMU

srananiA

ENDR SPRAY wMlPRICOR

1141.

00.6.99

497

DOOorCAI HIA01KK eoiu444





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IXCUWIVEECKaSOfFER

Summer photo fun naturally ' begins with a camera. Buy a Kodak. Keystone or Canon. camera from Eckerd & get snapping. We'll process your first roll of photos FREE!

THE CHOICE IS YOURS When sharing is important, get twice the prints with our System 2 photoprocessing. If ' you're serious about 35mm, UltraLab 35 Is the right choice!

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LEISURE LIVING SALE

ECKEIW

AiyPCASFAMPrPI^ STORE

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Save ^2 to ^5 Play wear for Misses and Jrs.

Reg $7    A 99    1 099

to $17    .    ^ to

For misses. Tops and bottoms in summer colors.

A. $12 tank top with built-in bra   .........7.99

$10 Shorts ...............  6.99

B. $14 embroidered v-neck top  ..........  9.99

$15 culottes........................9.99

Not shown;

$10 to $16 Short sleeve and sleeveless tops ... 5.99 to 11.99 $17 Bright duck jeans............................12.99

DOV04* Jr. acUvewear in summer colors. S, M, L

C. $7 nylon tennis-style shorts ...... . 4.99

0. $16 striped tank-style body suit   11.99

Now shown: $10 Nylon pull-on shorts   ......  6.99

Starts Wed.. June I ends Sat., June 4, unless otherwise stoted

Special purchase!

Straw handbags

099

X each

A natural look with rich leather trim. All come with roomy compartments. Choose from many styles While quantities last.

Manufacturer'! rated wattage

Beauty appliances are not available In Aahland, Beckley and

Save *8 1400 watt* dryer

n99

Reg. $19.99

With 6 apeed-heat combinations Including super low speed for gentle drying.

Save 2 on curling iron

399

Reg $5.99

Professlonal-style curling Iron. For larger, softer curls.

You con count on

SaHifofhn GuaranHt^d or Yottr Monwf Bok

SIABS,aOUCKANDCO.

Soara Pricing Policy ... If an item is not deecribed as rackjed or a ^Mclal purdtaee. it la at Ha regular price. A apecial purchaae. though not reduced, la an exceptional value.

Large Items such as furniture and appliances are Inventoried in our distritMJtiof^. center and wilt be scheduled for pick-up or delivery. Delivery la not Included In selling prices.

6/1/83





r.r.TSiSw^i;::; -





mm

Save 25Vt

Men s Perma-Presi separates from our Classic Collection

Blazer Reg. $70

Slacks Reg. $29

Vest Reg. $26

Action separates of stretch-woven polyester for comfortable movement and easy care. Slacks have Ban-Rol* waistband Choose from solid colors, pinstripes and plaids. All in men's sizes. Sale ends June 11.

Ask about Sears Credit Plans

Save ^5 Men's dress shirts

Short sleeve Perma-Presf' dress shirts of polyester and cotton in summer tones, oxfords, fone-on-tones. Mens sizes. Thru June 11.

10 Via Re neckwear 6.99 m.





I Kids' top

spectacular!

1/3 off!

Top styles. Top colors. Top fabrics. Tops for dress. Tops for play. Tops for big and little boys and girls. Hurry in for lots of tops now on sale!

Reg. $2.99-$12.99 ... .each, now 1.99-8.69

SAVE BIG on Shorls tool

Dont miss this fantastic chance to stock up on simmer camp shorts, merana shorts fo#big and little boys and girls, and tennis shorts for big girls.

Reg. $2.99-$6.99  each, now 1.89-4.59

Ask about Sears Credit Plans

lt)7

Mi

V V

tj

Vi/ i M

. -

Designer bath towels NOW REDUCED 36%

699

each

Reg.? $11. 10b"/p, cotton terry loops for absrbency, polyester base to help prevent shrinkage.

$6.00 Hand towel.........4.99

$3.00 Washcloth    .2.49

*25% off Accessories

$l621x36-in.rug........11-99

$16 Contour rug ........1199

$10 Lid cover,. ....... . .7.49

$16 Tank cover..........11-99

Sale ends June 11

SAVE 30%

Fabric Shower Curtain Dian* Von Furstenberg

24"

Reg. $35. Double drape solid ^ color polyester curtain. Liner.

Blinds Mfg. by Levolor Lorentzen. Inc.

Save 30% on labor for all custom fabrics. Save 30% to 50% on over 500 ways to decorate .. with custom fabrics, woven woods, shutters and blinds!

Save 30**/^ on selected custom fabrics; antique satins, prints, jacquards, more. Labor for custom drapery also 30% off.

Save. 30%-40% on custom blinds in aluminum or wood-look styles.

Save 30%-50% on custom woven woods in Roman shades or roll-up styles.

Call or visit Sears Custom Shop and let us call on you. We have a free 68-page booklet for you -full of new ideas to help you decorate one window, one room, or your whole house'.

Custom shop not in; Ashland. Greenville. Rock Hill and Williamson

Installation Is extra.    .

O





Large itms such as furniture and carpet are inventoried in our distribution center and will be scheduled (or delivery or pickup. Delivery extra.

Carpet BONANZA!

SAVE M-5 per sq. yd. on a big selection

A Great Gift for Dad ... Fathers Day, June 19

Our ENTIRE Stock of Reciiners are on

SALE! YOU SAVE ^80-M50 on these:

8

99

sq. yd.

SAVE 4i

Summer Glow. Reg. $12.99 sq. yd Made of durable nylon. Our glow collection has choice of 5 sculptured carpets.

*5 off on 3 great carpets

12

All in beautiful colors. Choose from Secret Dream, Gallant Star and Grand Splendor. Reg.

$17.99 sq. yd.,    lAsq.    yd.

Carpet not in: Concord, Danville, Goldsboro, Greenville, Rock Hill

Cushion and installation extra

You Save *150 He Man recliner with heater, vibrator. Has fully adjustable 3-way recliner. Nylon velvet upholstery. Has handy side pouch. Save now. Reg. $399.99.

Your Choice

Ask about Sears Credit Plans

Furniture not in: Concord, Danville, Goldsboro, Greenville, High Point, Rock Hill, Rocky Mount

SAVE MOO!

2 Greot Wallhugger^ Reclinen

A. Triple soft, Reg. $449.99.

B. Livingstone* , Reg. $449.99.

SAVE *80 SAVE *80

SAVE *100

319

Fullbock rodiner

Rag. $399.99. 100% vinyl by Stratolounger* has nallhead trim.

199    349

AAanhandUr racliner

Reg. $219.99. 2-way recliner with easy,-to-clean vinyl.

Bridgeviow rociinar

Reg. $449.99. Youll love the comfort of this rocker recliner.

SAVE *100

249

Dallas rocllnar

Reg $349.99. Comfortable with 100% nylon velvet cover.





Dryer cords sold separately

Washer/Dryer installation, extra

Save M80 on this laundry pair!

359

Large-capacity washer

Reg. $459.99. 2-speed, 5-cycle washer handles big loads. Sale ends July 2.

299

99

Large-capacity dryer

Reg. $379.99. Features automatic termination, Touch-up setting. Thru July 2. Hurry to Sears.

Save on this terrific Kenmore heavy-duty washer and dryer pair!

299

Kenmore heavy-duty washer

Regular $329.99. Heavy-duty washer has 3 water levels to match load size. Sal ends June 25.

239

Kenmore electric dryer

Regular $269.99. Electric dryer has 3 cycles, includes permanent press cycle. Sale ends June 25.

73001

Kenmore 18.0-cu. ft. refrigerator-freezer with icemoker, MOO ofl

599

99

Regular $699.99. Features conve automatic icemaker, 2 full-width adju: shelves and twin crispers. Has plei storage in doors. Icemaker hook up Sale ends July 2.

Ask about Sears Credit Plans Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised





ERIM

Kenmore electronic touch microwave oven with 2-stage memory and now you Save ^140!

359

Whole<^eal cooking, cook up to 3 foods at the same time in accordance with instructions. 100-min. delay start. Touch controls. Temperature probe, hold warm. Large-capacity oven. Regular $499.99. On sale until July 2. i

Whole-meal cooking, cook up to 3 foods at the same time in ac-cljrdance with in-staictions.

Sensing probe. Food cooks to temperature set, then oven turns off.

SpoceMotlf mkrowov* oven

Reg. 1609.99 Over-the-range microwave. Built-In hood, work light. Thru July 2.

Terrific value!

4^ 399

onvenient adjustable plenty of (up extra.

10.4 cu. ft. Kenmore refrigerator

Only 24-inches wide. Full-width food crisper. For apartment or limited space.

Save20!

129

1.7 cu. ft. compoct

refrigerator

Reg. $149.99. Removable shelf, cold control. Thrd July 2.

Save MOO!

499    799

Save M50I 99

Kenmore 18.0 cu. ft. refrigerator <

Reg. $599.99. No more messy defrosting, ali-frostless. Twin crispers. Sale ends July 11.

Kenmore 19.0 cu. ft. tide-by-side

Reg. $949.99. Has ice-maker, plenty of storage. Thru July 2.

Icemaker hook-up, extra.

SoveMOOh

199

Kenmore portable LP gas grill

Reg $299.99. Match-free ignition. Sale ends July 2.

92631

Save M50!

399

Continuous-cleon

electric oven

Reg $549 99 Gleans spatters at baking temp Thru July 2 Cord extra.Large items such as appliances are inventoried in our distribution center and will be scheduled tor delivery or pick up, delivery is extra.,





i SAVE

199

Stay comfortably cool. Kenmore air conditioner

4,000 BTUH single room Cool NLight model with built-in carrying handie to move from room to room with ease. Weighs only 43-lbs. Quick-mount installation. Operates on 115 voits. Carry home some cooi today!

Large items such as ap-plianees are inventoried in our distribution center and will be scheduled for delivery or pickup, delivery is extra.

Take advantage of sales Keep It in a Kenmore freezer

Your choice, reg. $419.99 ea.

13.1 cuu it. upright freezer

Convenient, organized storage on 3 grille-type shelve^ Thinwall foam insulation and adjustable cold control to help save energy. Key-eject lock.

12.0 u. ft. chest freezer

Store, find food fast in DynaWhite epoxy-coated lighted interior. Thinwall foam insulation. Key-eject lock. With defrost drain. Adjustable cold control. Sal ends July 2.

Save 601

319

9.0 cu. ft. chest freezer

Reg. $379.99. Thinwall foam insulation and adjustable cold control helps save energy. Thru July 2.

13098

71141

3W*

7,500 BTUH unit Cools one large room. Fits windows 19 to 38 inches wide. Plugs into standard 115 volt outlet.

13,800 BTUH unit Large unit has adjustable thermostat and runs on 230 voits. Cools large area.

BTUH unit Large-capacity . cools up to 4 rooms. Choice of high or low fan speeds.

Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised

Ask about Sears Credit Plans





Quartz precision elec- Channel Touch reliable One-button cotor adjusts tronic tuner accurately electronic channel selec AFC color, tint, bright-putls in signals    non is quick, silent ness, contrast

Save *50!

89

Upright vacuum

Reg. $139.99. Twin fan suction, 4-heights. Thru June 25.

$20,00, attachment set #3610, thru June 11    $10

Save *50!

299

Toblatop color TV

Reg. $349.00, 19-in. diag. meas, picture. Solid-state chassis Sale ends Sat.

Sears VCR s ate (Jestqned looparxJ opporluntlies ior your personal in home TV viewtr>g and not tor any usage yvhtth might violate the copyright laws

5323

Get Channel Touch tuning on this TV and save *161

Big, 19-in. diag. meas, picture. Super Chromix'^ picture tube for bright, natural color. Full one-year in-home warranty service against defects on parts and labor. Of the 5 best-selling TV brands, only Sears has it. Thru July 2.

Regular $549 99

*200 off I

699^^ 4 Gia( Gift tor Dad IO-day/3-program VHS/VCR

Regular $899.99. Up to 8 hrs. per tape Multi function remote control. Forward/reverse high-speed picture search. Reliable electronic tuner. Thru Sat. only. _

Consol* color TV

Reg. $629.99. 25-in. diag. meas screen. Thru Sat.

Save *1001

169

Compact storoo

Reg. $269.99. Cassette, 8-tracK, AM/FM stereo. Thru June 25.

Your Choic* 2^

Radio VALUES!

A. Reg. $39.99. Radio with AM/FM, TV audio, thru June 25

B. Reg. $59 99. AM/FM clock radio

C. Reg. $39.99. AM/FM portable stereo radio*

'Batteries extra Sale ends July 2Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised.

Ask about Sears credit plans





Racing bike has 12 speeds for easy pedalling, buy one now at Sears and

Save ^60

99

Sleek Free Spirit racer in 27-in. model for men or women. Dual position center-pull brakes, stem-mounted shifter for easy access. Reg. $159.99, 1983 Spring Gen. Catalog. Thru June 18.

10-speed touring bike

ONLY    10099

SAVES40    IwT

10-speed Shimano Positron derailleur that lets you change gears while stopped or in motioa For men and women. Reg. $179.99.

40 oK Boys' BMX bike

139

Reg. $179.99. Track certified frame! 3 BMX pads, red gumwall knobby tires. Not for stunting.

Great Gifts for Dad

^60 off wheel Cycle

99

20-inch. Wheel cycle with caliper braking system lor smooth ride. Speedometer/ odometer and timer. Reg. $159.99 Spring General Catalog. Limited quantities.

Your choke ... Spolding

Shirt or shorts

Reg. $10.99. Cotton and polyester for easy-care. In our sporting goo^s department. Save now.

99

99

Croftsmon 15-lb.

Thrust Motor *30 off

With built-in. night light. Reg. $129.99 Spring General Catalog. While they last.

SAVE *50 8x10-ft. Hillary family-sized tent

119

Reg. $169.99. Polyester and cotton roof and walls. 2 nylon screened windows with inside zippered storm flaps. Tent stakes are included. Save now.

9x11-ft., Reg. $199.99 ..........  149.99

10x13-ft., Reg. ^219.99 .............   169.99

Ask about Sears Credit Plans

SAVE *20 24

Sleeping bag with 4 lb. of ' insulation. Reg. $44.99.

Pok 0 PottI IV

Now *40 off

Reg. $89.99 in Spring General Catalog. 2-pc, fresh water portable flush toilet.

Sovo on your choleo

Gomofishor combos

Reg. sep. prices total $39.49 for spinning, or $35.47 for spincast.





WHmI alignment 10

V with coupon book described below*

$19.99 without coupon

We'll set caster/camber and toe to specs We'll also inspect Iront end. Includes torsion bar adjust-^ ment when required Come to Sears and save

Tun*up diagnosis 099

f with coupon book described below"

$19.99 without coupon

We'll set tlrning, adjust carburetor and perform scope analysis, check of vacuum hoses and lit-lings, wires and clamps, distributor cap. belts and filters. We'll then recommend only the parts and service you need Slop in today!

Disc or drum brako fob

2'Wheel

with coupon book # AOO described below V #

$79.99 Without coupon*

We ll replace shoes or disc pads, brake fluid, brake springs and front oil seals. Turn and true drums or rotors. Rebuild calipers or cylinders and repack front bear mgs Sears may decline to per form 2-wheel brake jobs if more work Is needed to assure proper brake system operation. Replacement of master cylinder, power booster, drum/rotor extra If needed. Semi-metallic linings extra Brake job not In Danville, Shelby, Williamson.

Above services for most American made cars and some imports Not in Shelby, NC and Williamson. W.Va.

Fiber Glass belted tires are now

30% off!

A78-13    ^199

whitewall    ^ I

plus $1.67 F.E.T.

Two fiber glass belts resist impact and tread squirm for strength and long wear. Two polyester plies add a smooth ride.

Sale ends July 2

50% OFF our '83 Spring General Catalog prices^ for Silent Cushion radials

Kevlar araimid belts are stronger than stel yet so flexible- Low rolling resistance helps save gas. Mounting and rotation is included.

While they last.

Sllonl

Cushion

radial

May b

aubsiituiad

lor

19S3 Spring Gan Cat prica

Sale

ptica aa whitawall

plus F E T

aach and old lira

P1550R13

155R13

96.99

48.49

T44

P165/80R13

AR78-13

101.99

50.99

1.67

P175/80R13

BR78-13

106.99

53.49

TM

P185/75R14

CR78-14

122.99

61.49

1.93

P195/75R14

D/ER78-14

127.99

63,99

2.06

P205/75R14

FR78-14

131.99

65^ '

2.31

P215/75R14

GR78-14

135.99

67.99

' 2 AJ

P205/75R15

FR78-15

142.99

71.49

228

P215/75R15

GR78-15

148.99

74 49

2.49

P225/75R15

H/JR78-15

154.99

77J9

2 70

P235/75R15

LR78-15

leo.w"

80 49

2 89

Fedaial f cue Ta

ISearsl CREDIT CARD^

ML4M Mayur* 4NO C

Vau Con Apply la<

on Account

0 00000 00000 0 MUn ITNB

^oH Toll Fro# 1-800-323-2780 Aik for Oporotor 10.

Good Notionwklo - No Annual Ft#

NOW YOU CAN BUY 4-PLY PolyMtar Tiroi

4 for *99

plus $1.60 Federal Excise Tax each and ^Id tires for A78-13 blackwall. Polyester plies Special purchase; while quantities last. You can count on Sears for Auto Values!

*CAR CARE SAViNGS COUPON BOOK

SAVE $88 off regular labor prices    Yours    for    only

of selected services when you    1i\QQ

use all the coupons.    1OW

Good At All Sean Auto Centers Nationwide

Froof wheel alignmenf, front end parts, MacPherson struts or 4 shocks installed 4-wheel electronic balance Engine lune-up Oil liller change lube (2 each) Brake service

Wheel beating repack Transmission fluid litter change or cooling sysfem flush Slarling-charging system check Bonus coupon $5 oil Bonus coupon $10 oil





SUHHR HUES

Auto Contor Opon 8 o.m. Mon-Sot. ,

SteadyRider radial-tuned shocks are now

*8 off!

Comfort valve smooths rk e without giving up performance*. Temperature-compensated for comfort. For most cars, light trucks. Reg. $22.99.

Limited warranty on Steady-Rider* RT shock absorbers lor as long as you own the car, including labor, if shocks bought Installed.

Heavy-duty Shocks 599

For most American-made cars and many imports cars. Shock installation extra.

Save ^21 Seqrs Best, DieHard car battery

54

^T, with trade-in

INSTALUTIN INCLUDED

Americas best-selling replacement battery ... because the DieHard is designed to meet engine starting re-Iquirements under severe conditions. 525 amps cold cranking power. Groups 24/24F/74. For most American-made cars, many imports. Reg. $75.99. Thru June 18.

Ask about Sears Credit Plans

34savE $10

Timing Light

Reg. $44.99. Craftsman. Inductive. Detachable leads. Thru June 18.

SAVE $7

Bkitt*ry Chorgor

Reg. $29.99.4-amps. Helps keep battery at peak power. Thru June 18.

SAVE $20 CroHf mon Anolyaor

Reg. $99.99. Profeesionel type. Thru June 18.

SAVE $50 2-ton. Floor Jack

Reg. $190.99. Heavy-duty. 2-pc. handle removes for easy storage. _

Sooft Munbf Mufflar

o;i9

Fits most American-made cars. AJuminlzed to. naiat rust-causing moisture, hfi-stallaticin extra.

You can count on

Sears

Satisfaction Guarantood or Your Monoy Back

MARS, ROISUCK AND CO.

SHOP YOUR NEAREST SEARS RETAIL STORE

NC: Burlington, Charlotte, Concord, Durham, Fayetteville, Gastonia, Goldsboro, Greensboro, Greenville Hickory, High Point, Jacksonville, Raleigh, Rocky Mount, Wilmington, Winston-Salem SC: Columbia, Florence, Myrtle Beach, Rock Hill VA: Danville, Lynchburg, Roanoke    KY:    Ashland

WV: Barboursville, Beckley, Bluefield, Charleston    '





lOOK INSIDE

Starts Wad., Jun# 1 ands Sat., Jun# 4

Saars Pricing Policy... If an item is not described as reduced or a special purchase, it is at its regular price A special purchase, though not reduced, is an exceptional value.

A Side-discharge 20-In. mower has -1-quart non-rusting gas tank. Quick height ad-iusters. Reg. $249.99.

/

I

B Propelled 22-jn. side discharge mower with single-speed, front-wheel cog drive. Solid-state ignition. Reg. $349.99.

C Propelled 22-In. rear bagger mower with catcher, front-wheel cog drive. Solid-state Ignition. Reg. $379.99.

Mower sale ends June 11

Save *200

on 8-HP Craftsman riding mower with S-speed transmission

799

Thru Saturday.

Recoil start with key lock. In-line gear box. 30-in. floating mower deck helps prevent scalping your lawn. Single-level height adjuster with 7 positions. Reg. $999.99.

6/1/83 IB





Craftsman 10-HP lawn tractor. ^200 offWeedwackei^ nylon trimmer. Save ^20

Convenient electric starting. Transaxle with 3 forward speeds plus reverse. 36-in. mower deck. Reg. $1299.99. Thru June 11.

1099

26354

129

*100 oH coft for addn riding quipmont

10ubic foot capacity hauling cart^fflg. 1229.98.

Heavy-duty Weedwacker for big trimming jobs! 3/8-HP; double-insulated. Semi-automatic line feed. Reg. $59.99. Thru June 18.

Ask about Sears credit plans

39

W Electric ^ trimmer

299

FronMino drain-drivon gardon tillor

3-HP Craftsman engine. Adjust for 11, 15 or 17-In. path. Quick start/ stop tine control. Partially assembled. Reg 29933 $379.99.

19*

Sovo*5

Woodwockor

1/5-HP llght-duty Weedwacker. 10-In. swath. Reg. $24.99.

^9

3 off 50^. gordon hoso

Craftsman. Reinforced plastic. S/8-in. X 50-ft. Reg. $10.99. $7.49 pistol-grip hose nozzle4J9

MoRII-ln.

trlmmf

Craftsman. Bush-wacker* trimmer. Reg. $69.99. Sale ends June 18.

got con

Rugged steel gas can. 5V4-gal. capacity. Reg. $12.99.

82076





HOME IMPROVEMENT SUMMER

Save 50% on Armadillo

11 Va-ga. fence fabric

when you buy fittings plus Armodillo V posts

top rail ot Seors everydoy low prices

Ribbed framework provides improved strength. Tripie-coated with 50% more rust-resistant zinc than that of the ieading nationai manufacturer. Choose from severai heights. Thru Juiy 2.

Ask about Sears Authorized instaiiation for instaiied items on this page. FREE ESTIMATES!

Your choice

Assorted electrical needs

4-in. diameter outlet junction box. IVi -in. deep. Reg. $1.29."

Handy box for mounting recep-iable or switches. Reg. $1.29.

Romex connector for non-metallic wire. 2-screw type. Reg. $1.29.

Screw-on wire connectors. Choice of colors. Reg. $1.29.

Vinyl plastic electrical tape. Reg. $1.09.

Ask about Sears credit plans

14

Pott top lontom

Black polyethylene frame. Post extra. Reg. $19.99.

79212

^99

Wall fixturo

Black polyethylene frame; acrylic panels. Reg. $14.99.

7960

4.

bulb extra

Floodbulb holdor

Plastic holder, stake and mounting plate. Reg. $6.49.

Sovo *371 In got blllt ond $532 In oloctric blllt ovor tho noxt 8 yoort with a Konmoro Powor Mitor* wotor hootor whon comporod to our ttondord modolt*

Save *50 now

10099

m M M 30i)al. natural gas or

4(H)al. electric, Reg. $249.99 Savings calculated in accord with DOE test procedures comparing operating costs of the Power Miser'^ 8 and our standard 40-gal. gas model and 52-gal. electric model, using a gas rate of 54.6* per therm, and electricity rate of 6.75 per kilowatt hour. Your savings may vary.

4673

41

6*volt battery

General-purpose lantern battery. Reg. $2.49.

battery extra Flooting lantern

Raintight polyethylene case with bulb. Reg. S6.99.

47

6442

24-hour timer

Turns lamps and ap pllances on or off. Reg $6.99.

SB





Save ^40 on a 20-in.

vanity in white

59

HOME IMPROVEMENT (

SOMMER ^

Reg. $100. Vanity has 5-coat finish to heip resist moisture and warping. China top and faucet extra. Sale ends June 4.

24-In. size, reg. $110..........69.99

30-in. size, reg. $130 .......... 79.99

36-in. size, reg. $180 ........  129.99

Save *201 Storage

cabinet wHh louvered doora

Regular $109.99. Matching 41191 storage cabinet adds a decorator look to your bath. In white.

k

Sove*30

SavD *30

'/i PincEi

.89eg. $119.99

89*iob 1119.9#

12^^ S2490

Tub wall awrround

2-panal tub door

Tollot aoot

One grab bar, four

Tempered

Padded with

utility shelves, two

glass; open bot

foam for com

soap dishes.

tom track.

fort. In colors.

Sov<3l

17*^. $20.99 40-lbs. Detergent

Use V5-CUP for average family-sized load sale until June 25.

On

reg. $9.99 Hibochl grill

10x17-ln. size, adjustable grid height. On sale until Saturday.

MOBILE

HOME

ROOF-OVERS

34*7eg. $74.96

7-pc. coekwore set

Aluminum set with Silver-Stone* interiors. Thru July 2.

INSTALLED Mobile Horn# Roof*overs

Aluminum construction means you dont have to roof coat. Stops leaks as it beautifies. 2-inches of foam insulation. Free estimates.

InaUHaUon by Saan Auinoftzad InataHara

Helpt fove energy!

Attic or sidewall application. Free estimates. Savings vary. Find out why in sellers fact sheet on R-values. Higher R-values mean greater Insulating power.

InataHatton by Saara Authotizad Inatallafa





Save ^300*^459

on Kenmore Hgh-Effcency central air conditioners for whole-house cooling!

*899

25.000 BTUH unit

Install a new whole house cooling system for lower operating cost now while theyre on sale! Thermostatr refrigerant tubing and installation extra. Thru June 18. Stay cool and comfortable this summer. Regular $1199.00.

BTUH Capacity

Reg. Price

Sale Price

You Save

31,000

1399.00

$999

$400

35,600

1499.00

$1099

$400

42,000

1699.00

$1299

$400

47,500

1799.00

$1399

$400

57.000

2199.00

$1749

$450

Save nS!

Kenmore Thrlft-T thrmottgt

39.

Heat or heat-cool setback thermostat adjusts temperature both day and night automatically. On sale until June 18.

Save a cool *5 on portable electric fans

19

Your choice

20-in. breeze box^

A. Reg. $24.99. Steel housing with plastic grille and blades, 2-speed.

9-in. oscillating fan

B. Reg.$24.99. Measures llVixSVixIZVi-Inches high. High and low switch.

i %

f 01

Save *201

I# # Reg. $89.99

MuKi-purpota fan

Our most powerful fan! 3-speeds; 18-in. diameter.

Sov* MOI

44

Reg. $54.99

16*in. otcilloting fan

Can move over 3 times as much air as 9-in. fan.

Free

out

on

)ean

CONTINUOUS

GUHERING

INSTALLED

Give Mom Kenmore dishwasher convenience and Save *120!

299

70031

Water Miser cycle save 20% on hot water usage by using fewer water changes with extended rinse phase. Pulverizer blade. Built-in. Reg. $419.99. Portable, regular

$469.99, colors extra ..........    349.99

Installation of built-in extra.

white, colors

Savc1001

279*,. $379.99

Konmore compactor

Can be free-standing or built-in. Thru June 25.

Sow *201

39% . $59.99 1/3-HP Disposor

Quick-mount collar for easy installation. Thru June 11.

Sale ends June 11

40% off

PInowood cobinots

Let Sears arrange for installation Sink, faucets, countertop, appliances, hardware extra.

Save *50!

40-in. ceiling fan

7999

24

rag $34 98

Save *70!

52-in. ceiling fan

9999

Reg. $129.99. 2-speed with wood-look polystyrene blades, brown or white* housing. Thru June 11.

Reg. $169.99.3-speed fan has textured wood-look blades in brown or white*. Sale ends Saturday.

/

We'll go fo any length for you I

Made of rust-resistant aluminum in choice of colors. Custom fitted to your home. Free estimates. Installation by Sears Authorized Installers

ALUMINUM

OR

VINYL SIDING INSTALLED

Give your home a new looki

Add long-lasting beauty and protection to your home. Choice of colors, textures and materials. Free estinfates.

Insttlltlion by Snara Authoriud Intlallar

SI





Craftsman bench power tools help get your big jobs done fast! Save M00-M20

249

Reg. $349.99 to $369.99

9-in. tabto saw outfit Capacltor-start */4-HP motor develops IVa-HP. Two table extensions, log set. Reg. $349.99.

12-In. drill prats. Four speed settings from 650 to 4600 rpm. /s-HP motor. Dle-cast aluminum head. Reg. $349.99.

10-In. band saw. DIrect-drlve Vj*HP motor. Cast aluminum worktable tilts for bevel cuts. Reg. $349.99.

12-In. wood lathe outfit Capacitor-start Vi-HP motor. 4 spindle speeds. Takes turnings to 37-In. long. Reg. $369.99.

Bench power tools require some assembly.

Saleends June 11

Ask about Sears credit plans

*20 off I Toblo sow occossory kit

79aS!9Reg $99.99

*2.88 off! Pack of 3 Bond sow blodos

9 #99nag sap prteaa $12.87

*7 off! 4-pc. wood-turn chisol sot

27.99Reg $34 99

*4 offfrs-ploco spur bit sot

lS.99Reg. $19.99 *

Your choice

99.

10357

. _        83    Cat. Reg. sep. prices total $215.93

M15 Off I Craftsmon workbench

sturdy steel 4-drawer, 1-door table with masonite top. Sale ends June 11. Unassembled.

1C099    20^^^

19 # Reg. $199.99 *40 Off Craftsmon ore waldor

Variable heat control; 35 to 230 amp arc we der. Sale ends June 4.

*13

ea.

A. 5-pc. wrench set; $21.95* standard; $17.95* metric

B. $24.97*, 3-pc. locking pliers set

C. $16.47*, wrench and pliers set -

D. $19.99 Stock knife with 3 blades

E. $19.99 Electric security engraver

F. $20.95*, 5-pc. extension bar set

G. $19.99,40-drawer parts cabinet

H. $18.99 Screwball screwdriver

Sale ends June 18

Ragutar taparit* pricaa total

69^^Reg. $79.99

Save MO

on Craftsman 6*gollon slzo wot/dry voc

Rust and dent-resistant, 6-gal. size tank. Includes hose, nozzle, casters. Thru June 11,

5441

189r. .$256.99

*70 Off I Craftsmon

welding outfH

2-stage oxy-acetylene outfit with hoses, goggles. Sale ends June 4





i

HOME IMPROVEMENT SOMMER

Featuring super savings on Craftsman tools

h

33119

Save ^50 on Cvxiftsman 40-piece fool set

Reg. Sep. prices $80.23

29

Craftsman mechanics tooi set in-ciudes quick-release ratchet, V4 and 3/8-in. drive sockets, spinner handle, open-end wrenches, extension bar adapter and more. Thru June 25.

Save *35-^60 on Craftsman power tools

$116.98*, 1-HP router and case $116.98*, 7Vi-in. circular saw and case $95.98*, V4-HP belt sander and case $112.45*, Buffer/polisher with case $119.99, Vj-HP bench grinder

Reg. sep. prices total

Blades and sanding belts not Included_

YOUR CHOICE

59

33113

Save M18 5 Croftsmon 90-pc. tool sot

Includes 2 qulck-release ratchets, sockets In 3 drive sizes, wrenches. Reg. sep. prices total $206.38.

Thru June 25.

33139

Sm'IlM

15-pc. socket sot

Craftsman add-on metric set. Sale ends June 18.

Save *40 on

Craftsman tool chost and cobinot

Rugged KkJrawer chest with tote tray. 5-drawer cabinet on casters. Thru June 18.

Chest

Reg. $239.99

Cabinet Reg. $259.99

199

219

65257/65055

6501

M99

Reg. $19.99

Save *5 on tool box

Craftsman 16-In. steel box with tote tray. Thru June 18.

7S





.A

6 off Easy Living

1 -coat interior latex

^7 off Weatherbeatei 1-coat exterior latex

Sears Best interior paint is washable, colorfast, spot and stain resistant. In 23 Jecorator colors. Reg. $16.99.

$18.99 Semi gloss  ........gal.    12.99

Sale ends June 11.

in

   m m Satin fla

   brtahtw

Satin flat or bright white ceiling, gal.

You get excellent durability in your choice of 46 colors. Helps protect all exterior surfaces. Reg. $17.99.

$21.99 Gloss..............gal.    14.99

1099

Low-luster I    Mtin,    gal.

For one^oat results, all Sears one-coat paints must be applied as directed.

javo *4 on lotex floor point

Durable 1-coat porch and floor paint In 15 non-yellowing colors. Regular $18.99.

^->-45407 7 5-gal. can

Sava *7 on Drivowoy cooting

Heavy-duty rubberized blacktop seals asphalt. Regular $16.99.

on 6-foot

aluminum

laddor

Light-duty step-ladder. 200-lb. working load. Reg. $49.99.

Ask about Sears credit plans

15529

Craftsman airiost tprayor kit

Our best sprayer with Per-manex* case, suction set, more. Special purchase. While quantities last.

Large items such as appliances and furniture are inventoried in our distribution center and will be scheduled for delivery or pickup.

You can count on

Sears

Satisfaction Guarantood or Your Monoy Back

SIAM, lOfSUCK ANO CO.

199 Reg. $249.99 Sove 50 on 1/2-HP diroct-drivo oir comprossor

Delivers 2.5 SCFM at 40 PSI/100 PSI max. 7Vf-gal. air tank. 15-ft. air hose.

SHOP YOUR NEAREST SEARS RETAIL STORE

NC: Burlington. Charlotte, Concord, Durham. Fayetteville, Gastonia, Goldsboro, Greensboro, Greenville Hickory. High Point. Jacksonville, Raleigh, Rocky Mount, Wilmington, Winston-Salem SC: Columbia, Florence, Myrtle Beach, Rock Hill VA; Danville. Lynchburg, Roanoke    KY:    Ashland

WV; Barboursville, Beckley, Bluefield, Charleston





GOOD orInside This Issue

Solid Wood Stain... S2.88 p?' Socket Set... S4.99 Page 2 Folding Lawn Chair... $5.99 pM Ceiling Fan ... $29.99 page /? Bentwood Rocker.. .$44.99^age Push Mower... $109.99 page ? .. Air Conditioner... $179.99 Page 22 Deck Lumber Package... $369 /H*

VBALdiue'swur Hoiiseheld word





, Ldujes

Your Household word

SSSf 19

Multipurpose tool set in plastic case. Reference Price $2999. #91454

Ihxible Light S/199

With 15' Cord...:H

Regular $599. Insulated guard UL listed light. Save $1.00! #70378

CM

f Keys Made For Auto or Home

Regular 994. A spare key just in case one gets lost! Save 504!

Perfect For Father's Day!    QOC

Workshop Organizer...................99

Great for the man who has almost everything! And you can buy supplies in boxes that double as organizer drawers! Made of durable plastic. Ref. Price $159 6<69i

Flat Head    CAt    Drive Hollow    CQC

WoodScrewe.......AST'    WallAnchors.......

Various sizes. Ref. Price 79. #6oi-32    Various sizes. Ref. Price 79C i(64574-76

Phillips Flat Head    fiAt    ^    CSHC

, Wood Screws.......tRT'    WMAnchoii.......

\ Recessed. Ref. Price 79<t #64496-513    For masonry. Ref. Price 79. #64577-9

^ Nails    l-rK    Picture    CQC

inViriousSizes HangingSet........

2 ounces. Ref Price 79 . #64604-66    Reg. 75S. Wire, hooks, etc. #64592





JPlUlJJiLL-lML TliJLL

I A. Family Size Dual Burner Gas Grili

S15999

Up-front dual controls Easy cleaning porcelain wire grids Reference Price $179 99 #97273

B. Lava Rock

$599 Rgul.

Replacement for hot coals 97306

A. Square Smoker Barbeque Grill

$4499

Rg. $49.99.350 sq in cooking area with adjustable grid Ash removal pan Save! #97292

B. Barbeque Set

vlCiV Fteterence Price:$149 A great buy' 3 pieces #97302

PATIO CROUP

Multi-Color

Umbrella

$3499

Reg. $39.99. Tilting, 6-rib umbrella 968oe

Assembly Required

Wirought Iron Chair

S34

Reg. $39.99. Barrel back Snap together assembly #96832

T Wrought Iron Table

69

Reg. $79.99.42" round table without umbrella holder Save' #96833

Sf/E

no

Complete 48" Park

Reg. $59.99. Cast iron park bench with oak slats For indoors or out Snap together asserttbly Save* #96818

A 3"x 5"x 4'

Landscape

Timber

Resists insects & decay Treated to last Ref Price $2 49 *04576

C. 3"x 5"x 8' Landscape

Treated to resist > rot and insects For borders Ref Price $3 99 *04574

B. 3"x 2/"x 8'

Landscape

Timber

^99

For a manicured look, use as borders, etc Ref Price $2 49 *0458i

D. 6"x 6"x 8' Timber Or Used Cross-Tie

Cross-Ties or limber for rustic walls Ref Price $9 99 #04575,3

the chair

SAVERS

Canvas & Wood Folding Chair

Reg. $24.99. Great looking and easy to carry in its own bag Bring it to the beach, ballgames anywhere' Just unfold and relax A great buy' *96,50^

\ Sae $2.50

Aluminum Lawn Chair

Reg. $8.49. Take anywhere chair Molded arms, polypropylene webbing #96506

Redwood iawn Chair.. * v

Reg?$1%99. Comfortable telling clSair with CaliJornj^edwoDd slats #96550 ;





T

Louie's

Your Household word

IV4 HP _

Router    OaokaOBckar

It routs, grooves and decorates in wood and other materials Depth adjustment is made in Vm" increments Fteterence Price $59 99 (191790

SPBOM.

Si(fL

$4999

2V2"x16"

Belt Sander 7}

Gives you the control ol an orbital sander and the speed & low vibration of a belt sander With 5 belts Reference Price $59 99 ((91720

STOCKUP

Saw Horse Brackets

FS

Just add the 2 x 4s Reference Price $199 ((61725

40-Pound Bag Of Concrete Mix.......

Just add water everything else is in the bag It's the do-it-yourself way to add a new walk or even a patio. Reference Price $2.19 #10388

Heavy-Duty Plastic S/149 26'x 20" TUb........

Regular $4.99. Mix concrete, change the oil or wash the dog Its 6 inches deep, #19251 4

Chain Link Fence Includes All You Need For Do-lt-Yburself Installation At One Low Price

Regular $1.69. Our price includes the 48"-high fencing fabric, the top rail, the line posts, tie wire and 4 loop caps. Gates are sold separately. And the fencing fabric is sold in 50-foot rolls only. Galvanized to resist rust and last for years. Do it yourself and save with Lowes low price. ((92140

$^044

39"x 330' 12V2-Gauge Field Fence

*79^

Smaller mesh at bottom keeps animals out. Reference Price $87.99 #92266

36 "X 50' Vinyl Coated Lawn Fence

S251S

Regular $29.99. No sharp edges And it blends with surroundings #92253

36"x 50' Economy Welded Fence

Roil

Regular $19.99. Galvanized & flexible Low-cost garden fencing #92251

SMEfS

3V^'x3'    SI799

Gard-N-Gate ....

Regular $16.99. Galvanized gate frame lets you add your own fencing. Complete with latch, hinges and mounting screws #92261

18 "X 8' Vinyl Coated Folding Lawn Fence

Regular $2.99. Attractive and effective way to protect your flowers, plants and shrubs from that fun-loving beagle next door. Vinyl-coated for safety and rust resistance #92247

S/WE UP 70^

15/i-Gauge, Zinc- $9C99 Coat Barbed Wire

Regular $29.99. With 4-point barbs & high tensile strength Save! #92050

5-Foot Painted Steel Fence Post

Regular $1.99. With anchor #92064





Build-lt-Yourself Wood

A.V2"x6"x6'Square Edge Pickets

B. V2"x 6"x 6 Dog-Earred Pickets

Fendng

C. Cedar Split Rail Section

$129    $139    $R99

Each    m    Each    Sectk

Each

Treated to resist rot Can be painted after seasoning Reference Price $1 39 #92323

D. 6'x 8' Stockade Fence Panel

Each

Variation of the picket at left Also treated for long life Reference Price $1 59 #92324

E. 6'x 8' Treated Stockade Panel

Section

"Section rndudes two 10' rails and one line post Weathers gray Reference Price $17 99 #92335.6

F. 6'X 8' Basket Weave Panel

23 *29 *29

Real wood panel. 6 feet high Can be painted or stained Reference Price IS $29 99 #92313

Treated to resist rot Can be painted after sasoning Reference Price $39.99 #92326

Has woven texture that looks great when painted or stained Reference Price IS $39 99 #92325

10'X12' Treated Wood Deck

S'x 6' Mobile Home Deck

Complete Materials w Package

Includes the treated lumber, the nails, the stain & more With instructions #00029

$S69

Complete Materials Package

You get the treated lumtHH. ttie QuikreU;. th( ngils. the wood stain all the niaterials you need to huild this great-looking addition to your homo And our strrp try stf'p instructions and detailed hluf'print make it easy It's just one of the many home pro)ects in our Weekender Series Corru' ser; #fXX120

Custom-Cut

Shelving Lumber

1 X4x4' . .

..#00938

.. . .99

1x4x6' ..

..#00939 ..

. $1.59

1x4x8' ...

.. #00940 ..

. $2.09

1x6x4'..,

..#00949 ..

. $1.59

1x6x6' ...

,.#00950 ..

.$2.29

1x6x8'...

,.#00951 ..

. $3.09

1x8x4' ...

,.#00960 ..

. $1.99

1x8x6'...

.#00961 ..

. $2.89

1x8x8' ...

.#00962 ..

. $3.89

1x10x4' ..

.#00971 ..

. $2.59

1 x10x6' ..

.#00972 ..

.$3.79

1x10x8' ..

. #00973 ..

. $4.89

1x12x4' ..

.#00982 ..

. $3.49

1 X 12x6' ..

.#00983 ..

. $5.29

1 x12x8' ..

.#00984 ..

. $6.89

Particleboard Shelving

V8"x 12"x 4

Particieboard ...

Extra-thick Reference Price $139 #01385

% "X 12 "X 8

Particleboard ...

Extra-long Reference Price $2 99 #01386

% "X 12 "X 8 Oak-Print Particleboard.

Extra-nice Reference Price $4 59 #01387

$|I9

I #01385

$249

>99 #01386

Vr "X 12 "X 36-Stair Tread ...

Tmaterf Refemncn Prii **$4 69 #()4f>H2

3-Step Treated Stair Stringer .

Pr(;-cut Rr'femncc PnceS6 99 #045/8

4-Step Treated Stair Stringer .

Pre-cut Reference Price $8 99 #04579

5-Step Treated Stair Stringer .

Ii(cut Rt'fnmnr.i.'Pnct'SlI 49 #04i80

.53^9

.69 M()4f>82

.55^9

99 #045/8

$799

399 #04579

$999

4'x 8' Plywood Panels

V#" Lauan y*" Sanded

2x4 Economy

Bunyan Studs .    ________

99. *8S *I5

In 92'V, 93". or 96" length For light-duty home projects Reference Price $119 #07002

Interior panel Sandrid on one side Referencr; Price $12 99 12201

E xterior panel SaiulerJ on one side R(;ler(>nc(; Price $20 99 12229





Loiue's

Your Household Word

For Safe, Easy Pest Control

3 Different Sizes To Fit Your Backyard Needs

This Summer, The Bug Stops Here!

A. 15-Watt    B. 25-Watt    C. 50-Watt

Electronic    Electronic    Electronic

Bug Killer

Bug Killer

Bug Killer

$4499 $6099 $8099

The special light attracts flying insects; the inner grid zaps em. Reference Price $69 99. #73071

This model clears larger areas of flying insects. No need for sprays. Reference Price $99.99. #73072

Our heavy-duty model. Its great for large backyards. Safe & effective. Reference Price $119.99. #73073

Trigger Action Hose Nozzle$|89

Variable spray & locking button And rust resistant finish Reference Price $2 29 #92356Impulse Lawn Sprinkler

Vb' x 50' Nylon Garden Hose

$099    $799

Regular $8.49. Ckivers full or pari circle and up to 83 feet in diameter. Save now* #93022

Regular $9.99. It's more durable than all-vinyl hoses. Couplings are solid brass #92359

1 Pint Diazinon Insect Spray$599

Regular $6.99. For use on soil and foliage to control aphids, cutworms, lace bugs, etc. #93051 6

$3.00 Off! IVzGal. Galvanized Sprayer

48"x 30' Roll Tomato GuardSjfi99 $999

Regular $19J9. Just pump up the pressure Nozzle adjusts from fine to coarse. #92481

Regular $11.99. Protects and promotes growth; eliminates tying & ground rot. #92249

YOURCHOKE

A. Square-Point Steel Shovel........

This price breaks new ground Reference Price $9 99 #9977

B. Wood-Handle Hedge Shears .....T

A good hedge against inflation. Reference Price $10 99 #9976'

C. standard    $C99

Garden Hoe................^

Youve unearthed a real value. Reference Price $7 99 #99767

5M/EUPT0^2

A.Save20/ol40Lb.    $|99

Bag Organic Top Soil............

Regular $249. Great for planting and re-potting. #92432

B. Save $2.00! 20-3-5    SQ99

Weed & Fed Fertilizer.........TO

Regular $10 J9. Just one bag covers 5,000 square feet! #92438

c. Price Cut! Decorative    S^99

Pine Bark Nuggets.............*

Regular $3.19. They look terrific around shrubs, etc #92119

D. Save 17/ol 50 Lb.    S^9

Bag MaiMe Chips.............

Regular $2.99. Perfect for planters, indoors or out. #92421





Electric Hedge IKmmer

umamarif

SM/EHOO

8 HP, 32" Cut Riding Mower

Reg. $899.99. This model has 3-speed gear drive, Briggs & Stratton engine, molded seat and more' #95188 Lowes Cash Price: $799.99

Lowe's Low Monthly Payment

$35

For 36 Months

Black

a

Decken

WEED EATER

TRADf mark

Gas Powered String Dimmer

$9999

This trimmer has a 26.2 cc. 2-cycle engine for powerful cutting action. 15" cutting path Reference Price $139.99. #91567

No Down Payment

(See Bark Page For Details) DelwTMl Paynwnt Price; $1,279.80 Annual Percentage Rate; 23.96%

SO/E980

8 HP, 30" Cut Riding Mower

Reg. $879.99. This model has 5-speeds forward & 1 reverse, 1 - 4" cutting heights plus many other features #95175 Lowes Cash Price: $799.99

Lowe's Low Monthly Payment

$35$$

For 36 Months

No Down Payment

(Serr Back Page For,Details) Deterred Payment Price; $1,279.80 Annual Percentage Rale; 23.90**

|5-Gallon ^9%^

Steel

Gas Can

4-Cubic>Foot Wheelbarrow.... T.

Reg. $46.99. This heavy-duty wheelbarrow has a steel tray that holds a heaping 4 cu ft Durable enamel finish #92854

10x14 Steel Storage Building.

$24999

A hot dipped galvanized frame and baked-on polyester paint make this building a long-lasting investment Easy to assemble with pre-aligned parts. Ref. Price $269.99. #92736

3 HP, 20" Cut Mower

$10999

this push mower has an easy spin recoil starter Cutting heights can be adjusted to suit your task Variable speed Ref Price $129 99 #95106

Grass Bag For Above Mower... $21.99

Side mount Ref Price $24 99 #95156

tAIHlR

5 HP, 22Cut Push Mower

Reg. $309.99. This high-wheel model is belt-driven 1 'h - 4" cutting heights Ideal for use in fields and other overgrown areas #95125

Lowe's Caah

Low MonMy

$17$9

Price

$29999

No Down PeymenL (See Back Page) Deferred Payment Price: $417.30 Annual Percentage Rale: 23.96S

For

36

Morritw





!SYbur Household word

SAVES2

Your Choice 26"x 8' Green or White Fiberglass Panels

Regutaily $9.89

These commercial grade, tieavy-duty panels offer a 10 year limited warranty. Theyre lightweight yet durable. Will not warp or crack. #12568,9

siscOFF

10' Section White Aluminum Gutter.. .7

Regulw $5.49. This 10' section is made of rust free aluminjjm. Comes pre-painted and ready for immediate installation #11551

Brown 10' Section it585 .. $4.99

Save $1.00    $999

GutterSpiashdown.. dL

Reg. $3.99. Heavy-duty plastic #11629

20' Roil Gutter Guard.

Reg. $2.19. Keeps debris out. #11632

/

1 SECTION

4" Corrugated ^ig^PIpe

Durable! Ref Price 29C #24112

4' Sectional 1' iron Railing

Thick

4' Supreme IA" $999 Iron Raiiino......^. / i420!

H2

Iron Railing

8'2-Scroll Rat Column

Corrugated 2V2x 2'x 8' Galvanized Roofing

$^99

Reou

Regular $5.49

Reflects heat, keeps building cooler. Stands up under adverse weather conditions. Resists corrosion. Needs no painting. #12473

1 Pound Box Galvanized Nails

Regular $1.99

Rust resistant nails with washers. #69195

Save 13%

10 Ft. Long Ridge Cap

$^59

^ ^ Regular $4.99

Fully galvanized StO( ^ up today. #12510

$|79

PRtCeCUT

A

3'x72'Roll SC99 Roofing Flt...:0

Reg. $8.99. Base coated with asphalt Forms vapor barrier. In 2-square roll (200 sq. ft. coverage.) #10310

1'6"to31" Jack Post

Reg

$12.99

4' Section

Regular $5.49. Features extra strong twisted spindles Primed #14215

A. 1 Gal. Aluminum Roof Coating

Regular $8.99. Protects camper tops, mobile home roofs, etc, Bmsh or spray on i032i

B. 5 Gal. Aluminum $^099 Roof Coating.....

Regular $32.99. Renews and insulates roofs. Lowers inside temperature. #10325

C.1 Gal. Plastic Roof Cement..

Regular $4.49. Stops leaks around vents, flashing, etc. Asphalt base #10320

D.SGal. Fibered Roof Coating..

Regular $13.99. Resaturates dried out roofing Asphalt based #10324

$299

10 "X10' White or Brown Aluminum Flashing

$049

Regular $1049

Made of durable rust free aluminum Easy installation. #12541.3





:/i.'im A

PRICES

CUT

Catalog Order In Some Stores

White Wood-Look Solid Vinyl Siding

a?.

Regular $5.49

12' Section

Each 12-foot section looks like two 4-inch-wide wood planks but this thick vinyl siding wont rot, chip or peel like wood. And it never needs painting. In fact, its so tough it carries a 50-year limited warranty. Come see it. #17423

Colon Available at $5.19

SPECIAL PR^

Prefinished Gre^ Random Shakes

Regular $3.19

1'x4' Section

The rustic look of wood shakes, simulated in tough hardboard sections. Prefinished in several great colors #07188-91

AMERICAN PRIDE

Save $4.00! Vinyl Exterior Shutters

$1199^

II Black or WhHe

Priced per pair. These 39" high shutters wont warp like wood. And no paintings needed. #12852.60

%6"x 4'x 8' Woodsman Plank

$1449

Regular

$15.99

PRICES

CUT

Remodel your homes exterior with the look of rustic cedar planks, handsomely styled in durable, easy-to-install hardboard panels. Save now! #15614

All materials to build this home (foundation plate up)

LH-4129

Elevatkm-A

^99

i    m    Fireplace    A    Gan

iLandA ' Labor Extra^

I Garage Optional

1

/TvT

li

11

Our "Country Charm" design above is an energy efficient 3-bedroom home with covered front porch, 2/i baths and plenty of closet space. The fireplace & 2-car garage are optional.

a

Country Charm Has Plenty of Extras

Price indudet carpeting and vinyi flooring throughout

Heat pump with insulated ductwork and registers

Pre-flnlshed kitchen cabinets

llih/shower, lavatories, commodes, vanity cabinets, mirrors, etc.

Interior/exterior paint & stain

Our Low-E^ Package System Takes The Hassle Out Of Home Building

I For one low price, Lowes will supply all the materials to build the Low-E (low-energy) home above from the foundation plate up. And the price is guaranteed for 90 days (which could save you money right there)

2 Once construction begins, well deliver the materials to your lot in building sequence, so there will be less chance of loss due to weather or pilferage In other words, you wont get carpeting when the roofs going up

3 Our Low-E homes exceed normal energy efficient standards. Thafs because they incorporate extra insulation, extensive caulking, insulated doors & windows, attic ventilation system, heat pump and more. So you save year after year.

4 Country Charm" is just one of many home plans. We offer a wide choice of home styles & sizes from large contemporary designs to small vacation cottages. Stop by for complete details and a free, illustrated booklet

Come into our store for more info or mail this coupon for brochure.

Lowes Homestead Department P.O. Box 1111, N. WHketboro, N.C. 28656

Name_______

Address City ..

Telephone__

State

Zip





jBEI!n3pi

PRICE

CUT

In a convenient 2 gallon pail!

Warranted to cover any color in 1 coat.

SME.W

Lowes 8-Yiear Exterior White Latex House Paint

$19.99 2 Gallon Pail

Durable 8-year warranted house paint Resists fading, yellowing & chalking. Also resists blistering and peeling. Fast drying and easy to dean up.

In a convenient 2 gallon pail. #49921

8S<I iias ibi S88 1 III ciAor

Wf 7

Solid Latex Redwood Stain

Regular $4.99

Charge it...

WHITE or COLORS

Ideal for vertical wood surfaces (not decks & steps). Resists fading and cracking. Dries fast! #48659

SME^

Our Best Fiat Exterior Latex House Paint

Regular $17.99

Exterior One Coat

latex Flat *ouse Pair

CONESTOGA

enterprise

Warranted to cover any color in 1 coat!

Warranted for 10 years!

10 Years of nonyellowing, nonchalking, nonfading.

"Our Best 1-coat house paint has a 10 year warranty to back up its durability and bright color. Stock up now and save on a variety of colors. #48514,19-29

Dgik&Cot^

Floor CoatinS

'^WS51(W)1    0n0<*^

Intortor/Exterior

;Oil Gloss , Enai

^ DurW)l^1fc ^ U

SafEfS S/WEf7

Latex Porch & Deck Paint Stock Coiors

Stock Coiors Of Oii Floor Paint

$1199

II Gaik

Regular

$16.99

Gallon

For use on concrete, wood or linoleum surfaces.

Plenty of bright colors to choose from! Warranted to last 4 years of weather when 2 coats are applied. 48260^

$||99

II Galli

Regular

$18.99

Gallon

Formulated for long lasting wear inside and outside!

Durable glossy colors to use on concrete, linoleum or wood. Scuff and water resistant. Save now! #48220 ii

VALUES ON ALL COLORS

Your Choice Of Colors Olympic Solid Coior Acryiic Latex Stain

Stock Colors Of Olympic Overcoat Satin Finish

$1299

IA Gaik

Gallon

You can stain over paint or stain over stain!

Rich, earthtone colors dry fast, plus they cover previous paints and stains. Clean up with soap & water. #46251-84

$14.49

l"V Gaik

Gallon

Tough, acrylic house paint for a protective overcoat.

Smooth, durable paint that withstands weather and protects your home. Easy to clean up too. #46171-76





! a Li a m! M! hj i

Wonder Patch And Underlayment

$^49 sr

A 3Lb.Pil

Quick-setting patch for masonry and floor leveling. Non-shrinking. #41356

Interior Flat Latex Paint

$C99 ^

V Gallon

Interior wall paint available in white and a variety of colors. Warranted to cover in 1 coat and to be stain and fade resistant. Stock up now and save! #47682-95

SME^2

1 Quart Interior Wood Stain

Quality oil wiping stain in a variety of rich colors. Fade proof, 1-coat stain seals & protects. #45682-94

SAVE $3

1 Quart Super Spar Gloss

$g49str

W Quart

High gloss varnish with tung oil. For use on all exterior wood or metal surfaces. Easy to apply. 5773

SPEOAL

OFFBtt

Buy 2 Cans Of Rust-Oleum Products And You Qualify To Purchase A Red Wagon From Rust-Oleum

Soe

Store For Details

MIST-OUUK

SAVES2

A. Protect The Things You Care About With Rust-Oleum In Colors

$199

Quai

Regular

$6.99

Quart

Beautify and protect your metal items from rust and corrosion. Available in a variety of colors that go on smooth and last. #46032-42

B Save $1.20! Rust-Oleum Bar-B-Q Black

$999 jsr

Hi 13 oz. Spray Can

Heat resistant coating designed to protect barbeque grills, fireplace accessories, etc up to 800 F #46024

Acrylic Latex Caulk ClgQ

With SHicone Tl

Reg. $Z69. Especially for latex paint. For inside or out. #43481

V"x 60 Yards

Masking Tape 40045

Economy

Utility Knife 40538 . . .

3-Pack of Brushes

V,1"42"40197 ____

9 x12'.4-Mil 9A( Drop Cloth 40546 .. .99

49c

99

Kutzit Paint And Varnish Remover

$799 Sis'

# Gallon

Easy to use and to clean up Thins paints & varnishes to remove them from brushes and other items Save' >4S6i5

CUT

23'^

Epoxy

Paint

130z.Can Reg. $2.59. In

whiterbrpwn,

Imond and (bronze Save Ww' #46478-81

PRICE CUT fS Complete Refinishing And Care Kit.

$1/199 ftrmbnH

1^ Regular $19.99

Everything you need to re-do furniture Refinisher, tung and lemon oils, plus steel wood pads. Instructions, too 40076

Heavy-Duty Painter Set

Regular $5.69. This set includes a 9-inch roller, frame and tray with ladder hooks #40368

I ffltfll-j

51M 5M 1

U 4t    J

4 Great Ways To Use Your Credit Charge It At Lowes





Your Household Word

42" Antique Brass Ceiling Fan.............T.

With four real teakwood blades & multi-speed, reversible motor that lets you force cool air up during summer and warm air down in winter Reference Price $99.99. #31736

YourChoice

48" White or Brown Finish

Proitige . Series

,    'ft

42" Antique Brass Ceiling Fan.

S|09

Has decorative brass-finish housing and four real teak-wood and cane bladessMulti-speed reversible motor for year-round operation Reference Price $119 99 #31748

Place N Press-12''x12 " Floor Tile

49c

Each

A>mtrong

Just peel off the paper backing and press into place Choose from stock styles Reference Price 70C #16292,4

Vemay" Vinyl No-Wax 12"x12 " Floor Tile

Each

A self-stick, no-wax tile at a low price Choose from our stock styles Reference Price 79C #16311,2

Our Best! Solaran No-Wax 12'x 12" Tile

99^.

Each

It shines far longer without waxing than vinyl no-wax In-stock styles. Reference Price $131 #16428,32-35

Real Oak 12"x12' In Three Tones

Tiles

$259

^ Each

Solid oak tiles in a parquet design With cushioned, self-stick back Reference Price $2.99 #00469,70,71

Ceiling Fan

$6099

36" Brown Ceiling Fan With Brass Trim

Both have brass trim and four real wood blades. And multi-speed reversible motor for year-round operation. Reference Price $79.99. 31711.5

$4099

Most Of These Fans Cai Accept / Light Kit

Smaller model, with four real teakwood blades and multi-speed motor for custom cooling. It's priced right, too. Reference Price $59.99. #31707

Polished Brass or Antique Brass Light Kit

S999

5-Llght Victorian Light Kit

36" White WithThre

$4999

Nostalgic "schoolhouse" design with 8-inch^iameter globe Adds a light touch Reference Price $12.99 <*318(m 14

A stunning reproduction. With "tulip" shades and polished or antique brass finish Reference Price $59.99 3180818

$34!

Regular $39.9$

alKW. With rea control. Perfect

(^m Strong

Styiistik' Vinyl No-Wax 12"x 12"

Floor Tile

Flooring patterns pictured are for illustration only. Actual styles stocked may vary.

_    _ Each

These beautiful self-stick tiles let you create a brand new no-wax floor at an affordable price. All you do is peel off the backing & press into place. Stock styles Reference Price 89C #16321,25-32





36" Ceiling Fan WithMetal Blades And White Finish

$2999

Makes a great addition to the sunroom, screened porch, etc. And it comes with wall-mount contol switch. Not to mention our solid low price Reference Price $34.99. #31704

52" Antique Or Polished Brass Fan

52" Brown and Brass Ceiling Fan

S9999

With four real feakwood blades & multi-speed motor that's reversible for practical operation year-round At Lowe's low price Reference Price $109 99 #31763

^ite Ceiling Fan hree Wood Blades

t|99

39.99. A more decorative version of the model h real wood blades and 4-speed, wall-mount irfect for the sunroom, family room. #30792

52" Ceiling Fan With Antique Brass Finish

SI2999

From our Prestige Series With^ur teak & cane blades, and multi-sp^ reversible motor Reference Price $139^ #31749

I

Green TurT Carpeting In Convenient 6' Width

Accotone" 12-Foot-Wide No-Wax Flooring At Lowes Low Price.

SI79

Linear

Squan

SquareYaid

Roll out a great new floor It's the cushioned comfort and stylish good looks of Accotone no-wax in 12-foot SeamSaver width In-stock styles Reference Price $6 99 #16182,97

Linear Foot Regular $2.49. Perfect for around the pool, on the porch, etc Feels great underfoot And It stands up to rough weather ^1^62

12' Wkte Indoor/

Outdoor Carpet.

Cocoa TurT Carpet $^99 Reg. $3.99. 16258 M Linaar FL

12' Wide Outdoor    $/|99

Green Bent Turf    ,.s<i.Yd.

15278 9

nntjr

$199

. . I Sq. Yd.

Choose antique brass or polished brass finish Both fans have four teakwood blades and multi-speed, reversible motor Perfect for den. bedroom, etc Reference Price $109 99 31745,7

52" White & Brass Ceiiing Fan............

Distinctive good looks, including wfiite & cane blades and brass-finish trim Ffas multi-speed reversible motor so you can operate it all year long Reference Price $139 99 31744

S|29

A Candy Stripe 12'-Wide    ___

Level Loop Carpet.................    sq    Yd

Regular $3.99. General-purpose, cusbiotw'd bar k (,ar(X!f lor thr* playroom, cabin, etc It's multi-colored and mulli functional And at Lowes low price, it s a terrific bargain 15276

$399

. . ^ Sq Y(

B Crystal Coast 12'-Wide Level Loop Carpet  ...............^ sq vd

Made of continuous-filameni 100"/o nylon Witti a custiioned back for comfort And a 5-year limited warranty Quality budget minded carpet from Armstrong Reference Price $6 49 15)016,8,9

SPECIAL PRICE

27 " Wide Vinyl Carpet Runner

Linear Foot Regular 69C. Flas a non-slip safety surface 16096

ij





Your Household Word

WHOLE

HOUSE

COOMO

24" 2-Speed

Attic Fan..........................

Pre-wired for quick and easy installation. Pull chain control with optional wall control. Ea^ to install without cutting the attic joists. Shutter extra. Ref. Price $109.99.

30" Whole House 2-Speed

Attic Fan Easy to Install . 3)254

*3iaS2

?I29

Gable-Mount Attic Ventilator

$3499

Made of galvanized steel Ventilates up to 2.000 sq ft. Ref Price $44 99 #30987

PRCECUT

$|29

2' X 4' X %"

Pegboard .....

Regular $1.79. *is4ee

Save $1.90! 4'x8 <C89 >4"Pegboard

Regnlv$7.7 4M 14

SMEHO

3%"x 96" Turned Porch Post

$1099

v Regular$2^

Unfinished post great for inside or outside. #00586

SM/E HO Folding Attic Stairway

38

Reg. $48.99.

25'/."x54"x8'9'' Clear pine Assembled 15810

sa/Efso

9'x 7' Glazed Wood Garage Door

$13999

Regular $169.99

This 4-section, 4-panel door is sturdy and medium-weight. Its ready to paint or stain. Waist-level handle. Includes glass, mounting hardware and lock. Save! #11030

f 20 OFF

Automatic Garage Door Opener

$0099

S#S#Rgular $119.99

Vd HP motor has beltless gear drive Has automatic courtesy light. Will open doors up to 18' wide and 7/?' high. #11001

SM/EUP

TOS2

Save $2.00! 5 Gallons of Driveway Sealer .

Regular $8.99. Use as sealer and treatment. Made of coal tar emulsion. Adds years of life to blacktop pavements. Seals and protects against oil, gas, and weather. Stock up! #10272

Earty American Table Legs

Great looking, colonial style unfinished furniture legs. Ready to paint, stain or antique. (Other styles also available.)

B Save $1.00! 1 Gallon <799 Driveway Crack Filler ..TO

Regular $4.99. Repairs cracks in asphalt. Weather resistant. Easy to apply. #10273

01636

4" Leg

Reg.

89C

79C

01637

6" Leg

Reg.

99C

89C

01638

12" Leg

Reg. $1.99

$1.79

01639

16" Leg

Reg.

249

2.29

01641

22" Leg

Reg

2.89

2JS9

01640

28" Let

Reg.

2.99

2M

c. 60 Lb. Bag Blacktop Patch .T

Regular $5i9. No heating or mixing. Juslsk"' pour and tamp into place. Save! #10394

$449

D. Save $1.50! 5 Gal.

Driveway Sealer & Filler

Regular $8.99. Seals and protects asphalt Weather resistant Easy to apply. #10271





smfEUP TO ^30

2'8" 6-Panel Exterior Lauan Door

We carry a complete line of exterior doors

Reg. $75.99

Constructed to provide years of lasting service Comes ready to paint or stain. #10580

3' Exterior, 6-Panel Lauan Door

$^99

Regular $79.99.

3' Jailhouse Exterior Lauan Door

S5999

Reg. $89.99. Has

a wrought iron grill 1 1 inch thick 10583

Exterior Lauan Door

$6999

Regular $89.99. This 9-window design unit IS 1 . 'thick Comes unfinished 10584

Check These Savings On Exterior Doors

f to OFF

3' Easy-To-lnstall Elite Insulated Door Unit

$8999

Regular $99 99

This energy effn lent model comes with a moldt'd foam core and IS fully weatherstripped It will not warp split or crack like wood doors And it never needs paintiru) rri36t>3.4

S/WES2!

2'8" Wide Storm Door With Aluminum Frame

Regular $28.99.

Unfinished Other styles, sizes at varying costs '""i

Regular $60.99

It s fully weatherstripiM'il to ket'i the wind ram and snow out t e.ituu" a removable trottorn p.inr'l Itiat lilt-out tor (>asy cleamnri Availatile in either rigtit or left tiand models Easy instailation nit 131.3

3'/2"x 15" Faced R-11 Roll Insulation

lZ99

6"x 15" Unlaced R-19 Batt Insulation

f2S0FF

6-Fool-Wide Insulated Patio Door Unit

$14999

Regular $174.99. Double pane safety glass and handsome mill finish aluminum frame Easy installation 13017

Replacement Patio Screen mi uhk) $23.99

Easy-To-lnstall Storm Door Unit For Patio Door

$1249

IM 48.96:

sa/Ese

Secur-A-Fit steel 3' Replacement Door Unit

$13999

   Unfinished

Regular $145.99. It s completely pre-hung in its own steel frame which then fits^easily into your existing 3-foot door frame So you can install it more easily & get a good, tight seaL15507.8

48.96 Sq. Ft.

Faced roll insulation is great for use in walls. Easy installation just staple to studs Unfaced batt insulatipn is intended primarily tor use in the attic as add-on insulation Sold by the bundle Come to Lowe's for all of your insulation needs #13576,85

The higher the R-value the greater the insulating power. Ask your seller for the fact sheet on R-values.

Interior 2' Lauan Door Unit

$10999    239

Fits easily over yuur ('xistiiu)

6 -wide door to S('al out had weather Has a bronze finish (while some stores) Insulated Reteren(,ePiiceS149 99

2' Flush Bifold Door

$1^

Reg. $21.99. Comes unfinished 10/1?

2' Louvered Bifold Door

$2599

Reg. $31.99. Comes unfinished 105.35

Reg. $27.99. f asy

to install tre-tuiiHj in its own tf.imt' Unfmistit'd (.asiiu) extra

Sm/E^5

32" Vinyl Catalina Folding Door

S|69

Reg $21.99. Witti tiai kandtiardwaif koi laundry room or (rantry 11.3?(i

QmsHHEx





/ Louies

veur Household word

A. %2"x 4'x 8' Toast Brown Room-Warmino Decorative Paneling

Regular $6.49. Easy to install and very attractiv

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mEMYour Household Word

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Bath value

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99,S|34 H9

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D. 72* Hat And Coat Rack............$16.99

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12" Diameter Octagon Table

$799

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Reg. $12.99. Walnut finish Great as plant stand s6i??

15" Diameter Cane Top Stool

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timer With digital display Ref Price $349 95 #54254

Sound value

Cassette Adapter For 8-Track Player

528

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AM/FM Car Radio WHh Cassette Player ^

S4999

4" Flush Mount Car Stereo Speakers .

5999,

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Save $60.00 On a Holiday 10 Cubic Foot Chest Or Upright Model Freezer

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359

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219

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ASHEBORO.NC Phonp 6?S 6171 1312 N rayeilevillp SI BOONE. NC Phooe 264-8a34 Slalp f atm Hd at Hiinlinq I anc BURLINGTON. NC Phone 2?6 .LW 802 (iraham Hopedale Hd CARY. NC Phone 46? .360(1 Hiqhwav 64 CHAPEL HILL. NC Ph(,ne 06 7 2?<t 1 1710 fcasl franklin SI DURHAM. NC Phone .363 2661 :I417 HiHsbfrrouqh Hd FAYETTEVILLE. NC Phone 466 8731 4103Hae(ofdHd GOLDSBORO. NC Phont 776 4l(Xi N Berkley Blvd GREENSBORO. NC Phone 202 4613 2717 Pallervin SI OREENSBORO(NORTH).NC Phor376 4610 3223 Yan( eyviMe Hoad GREENVILLE. NC Phone 766 6660 2726 Sonfh Memorial Dove HIGH POINT. NC Phone 866 6031

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D s Hiqhway 301 Bypass Norih SANFORO. NC Phonr- 776-8431 3122S Induslnal Or (til Wilson Hd^ SPARTA. NC Phone 372-'6631 101 Aiieqhany SI WASHINGTON. NC Phone 946 7 761 1649 Carolina Ave WILSON. NC Phone 237 6211 Hwy 301 South WINSTON-SALEM. NC Phone 767-4960 3740 N Liberly Si larross Irnm Ihe airppili WINSTON-SALEM. NC Phone 722-9112 116 S SlrallordHil ZEBULON. NC Phone 269-6466 Hirihway 97 East

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June (#072)


Title
Daily Reflector, June 1, 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.) - 30468
Date
June 01, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/95388
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