Daily Reflector, November 21, 1983


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Couple Marries On Sunday In Double Ring Ceremony

Candlelight Wedding Vows Said

OXFORD - Caroline Rebecs Blackwell and George frim Saleeby were united in marriage Sunday afternoon at two oclock in the Mountain Creek Baptist Church. The Rev. J. Lemar Wheeler and the Rev. Terry Cagle performed the double ring ceremony.

Presenting a program of piano music was Charles Kraig McBroom of Durham. Mike Merritt of Durham was soloist.

Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Reuben T. Blackwell of Route 4, Oxford and Mrs. Dorothy Kerin of Elizabeth City and Eli Saleeby Sr. of Washington.

The bride was given in marriage by her father. She wore a formal gown of white

satin over peau de soie designed with a Queen Anne neckline outlined in scallop^ silk Venise lace beaded with pearls. Beaded alencon lace enhanced the fitted bodice. The long fitted sleeves were fashioned of satin and finished in calla points overlaid in re^mbroidered alencon lace. Matching lace encircled the modified waistline. The A-line skirt and attached chapel length train were edged at the hemline with silk Venise lace. Appliques of alencon lace accented the skirt and train. Her matching bridal hat featured appliques of alencon lace flowers and a fingertip illusion veil. She carried a cascade of white roses, orchids, miniature

V

MRS. GEORGE KARIM SALEEBY

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By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor

About 25 years ago, if I remember correctly, one of the large magazines devoted to home interests began using recipes in each of their Christmas editions, featuring gifts to make at home to give as holiday gifts.

Several years after that a book called "Gifts from Your Kitchen" appeared Although it went out of print, other books on the subject cropped up, and they still do. Now there are eight of them on my cookbook shelves. When recently I looked through them, 1 noticed that every one of the authors gave recipes for jam or preserves.

That was my cue. 1 decided to offer you a winter-style Strawberry Jam, one made with frozen fruit. One that could be stored in the freezer until gift-giving time came around. No sooner decided, than tested, and the following recipe is the result.

This Strawberry Jam has good flavor and color and is not so thick that it could not be called a

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Sandra Godwin of Durham was honor attendant for her sister and bridesmaids included Ellen Hill of Greenville, Melinda Stovall of Greensboro and Michelle Packard of Clinton,

The brother of the bridegroom, Eli Nasef Saleeby Jr. of Washington, was best man and ushers were Jimmie Hill of Greenville, Kenneth Cratch and Terry Sawyer of Washington and Franklin Boyd of Greenwood, S.C,

The honor attendant wore a formal gown of lipstick red satin styled sleeveless with rolled fabric straps with a fitted bodice. A corded tie of ' satin enhanced the modified natural waistline. The gown was complemented by a matching satin jacket designed with a ruffled regal collar. The long fitted sleeves had ruffled satin at the wrist. She carried miniature cream and rose carnations and gypsophila in a colonial nosegay. The other attendants were dressed like the honor attendant.

A reception was held in the fellowship hall of the church.

The brides table was covered with a white cloth edged with lace and centered with an arrangement of white gladioli, rose carnations and white pom pons with silver candelaora. Friends and family assisted in serving.

The couple will live in Greenville after a wedding trip to the mountains.

The bride graduated from East Carolina University and works at WNCT. The bridegroom is a graduate of Pitt Community College and works at J.C. Penney as security director.

A rehearsal dinner was given by the bridegrooms mother at the Holiday Inn in Oxford

preserve

STRAWBERRY JAM

Two lOounce packages frozen halved strawberries in syrup 3 cups sugar    .4

2 tablespoons orange-flavor liqueur ^4 cup water P4-ounce box fruit pectin

Thaw, strawberries according to package directions. In a medium bowl stir together the strawberries, sugar and liqueur. Let stand for 10 minutes. Reselle.

In a 1-quart saucepan stir together the water and fruit pectin. Stirring constantly, bring to a full boil and boil l minute. Stir into reserved strawberry mixture; continue stirring for 3 minutes - a few crvstals will remain.

Quickly ladle into scalded '-pint preserving jars or similar containers. Cover at once with the jar lids or with tight-fitting container covers. Let stand at room temperature for 24 hours; store in the freezer.

Makes four -pint jars chock-full of strawberries and syrup. You will have >2 to 1 cup extra syrup that may be stored in the refrigerator up to 3 weeks and served as a dessert sauce.

Donna Christy Little and Steven Wayne Mullis exchanged wedding vows Sunday afternoon at three oclock in the Unity Free Will Baptist Church. The double ring, candlelight ceremony was performed by Edward . M. Walker assisted by Ronnie Williamson, brother-in-law of the bride.

Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Glenn Little Sr. of Greenville and Mr. and Mrs. James William Mullis Sr. of Roanoke Rapids.

TTie bride was given in marriage by her parents and escorted by her father. Her sister, Terry Williamson of Burlington, Vt was honor attendant. Bridesmaids included Anita Little of Greenville, cousin of the bride, and Renee Paramore of Wilmington, cousin of the bride. Rebekah Williamson of Burlington, Vt., niece of the bride, was flower girl and the ring bearer was Matthew Little of Greeenville, nephew of the bride.

The father of the bride

groom was best man and ushers were Benny Hopkins of WiUiamston, cousin of the bride, Tommy Little of Greenville, brother of the bride. Chuck Mullis, brother of the brid^oom. Butch and Keith Oliver and Brent Roberson, cousin of the brid^oom, all of Roanoke R^ids.

Eloise Jackson played the or^n and vocalists were the Unity Trio, David McGowan, Becky McGowan and Arlene Gurganus. Selections include The Wedding Song, The Wedding Prayer and One In a Million "You.

The bride wore a formal gown of white knit with Chantilly lace overlay. The fitted empire bodice was accented with simulated pearls and sequins and featured a modified Queen Anne neckline and tapered lace sleeves. The back lace flounces extended into a chapel train. She wore a fingertip length veil of Chantilly lace motifs attached to a Juliette cap with matching lace and sequin trim. The

bride 'carried a cascade of white silk sweetheart roses and miniature carnations with mauve, wine and pink entwined with lace and satin ribbons.

The attendants were dressed alike in formal gowns of wine sheer polyester over a taffeta lining fashioned with a ruffled neckline, bow trim and capelet sleeves. The flared skirt had a bustle effect with a flounced hem. Each wore a matching picture hat and carried a bouquet of miniature carnations in shades of mauve, wine and pink with babys breath, tied with matching streamers.

The flower girl w'ore a gown like that of the honor attendant and carried a woven basket filled with miniature carnations in shades of mauve, wine and pink tied with a wine bow.

The mother of the bride wore a formal gown of frost rose knit with Venise lace trim and the mother of the bridegroom wore an aqua formal gown. Both wore carnation corsages. The grandmother of the bridegroom was remembered with a carnation corsage.

Carolyn Crew, cousin of

The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N C

the bridegroom, presided at the guest register and Faye Barefoot directed the wedding.

The bride's parents entertained at a reception at the American Legion Hall Mr and Mrs. Mitch Turner greeted guests. Wedding cake was served by Norma Coggins and Mary Elizabeth Coggins. Punch was poured by Barbara Little and goodbyes were said by Mr. and Mrs. Larry Paramore.

An after-rehearsal party was given by the bridegrooms parents Saturday evening and a bridesmaids

Monday, November 21,1963 3

breakfast was given by the bride's mother Saturday morning.

The couple will live in Greenville after a wedding trip to Florida,

'The bride is a graduate of Rose High School and at tended East Carolina University, She graduated from Pitt Community College. The bridegroom graduated from Roanoke Rapids High School. Halifax Community College -and attended ECU. She works at First State Bank and the bridegroom is employed by Winn Dixie of Greenville.

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LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two recent sculptures and three large linocuts dating from 1977 by German artist Georg Baselitz will be exhibited through Jan. l at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

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INSIDE TODAYRED INK

INSIDE TODAY

The 98th Congress responded to the federal torrent of red ink with rhetoric and gestures! Surprising to some, it failed to prove the answer. (Page 16)SPORTS TODAYNATIONAL ROAD

Born of a congressional move to cement the new union of states in 1805, the National Road reeks with history, A surprising stretch exists today. (Page 15)

BOWL MYSTERY

Notre Dames players voted Sunday to decide whether the Irish will accept an invitation to the Liberty Bowl. (Page 11)THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NDYEAR NO. 260TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION

GREENVILLE, N.C, MONDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 21, 1983

20 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTSArafat's Foes Blasting Way Into Tripoli

By SCHEHEREZADE FARAMARZI Associated Press Writer TRIPOLI, Lebanon (AP) - Palestinian rebels with Syrian tanks blasted their way into northern Tripoli today, battled to within 1,000 yards of PLO chairman Yasser Arafats headquarters and proclaimed a cease-fire. But Arafat said it was merely a rest for the fighters

Mahmoud Labadi, spokesman of the Syrian-backed Palestine Liberation Organization mutineers, said in a statement issued, in Damascus, Syria, that we have declared a cease-fire. The situation in Tripoli is how quiet

Labadi said the truce was ordered by breakaway PLO Col.. Saeed Mousa in response to appeals from political and religious leaders in Tripoli, which has been enduring the '' bloaly PLO war for 18 days.

The statement called on the people and leaders,, of Lebanons second largest city to get Arafat and his clique out.

The rebels overnight push, accompanied by heavy artillery bombardment on central areas of Tripoli, severed Arafats supply lines with loyalists fighting the rebels at the southern edge of the Baddawi refugee camp just north of the city of a half-million people.

It was hell, Arafat told reporters He said the rebel forces for the first time had crossed into areas of the city that had been controlled by Lebanese authorities.

Asked about the rebel-proclaimed cease-fire, Arafat said; No, no no. This is what they call a rest of the fighters, nothing more.

As the rebels closed in on Tripoli from the north and east, residents were fleeing toward Beirut, 50 miles to the south. Cars packed with suitcases, plastic bags and mattresses sped out of the port city.

The rebels pushed into the Mallouleh traffic circle that forms the northern entrance to Tripoli in T-54 and T-55 tanks. They erected mortars and multiple rocket launchers on roofs of highrise apartments.

Mallouleh is about 1,000 yards from Arafats headquarters in Tripolis Zahrieh neighborhood. Lebanons state radio said the rebels mounted hit-and-run grenade attacks on Arafats defense line in and around Zahrieh,

Fighting was fierce, said Arafat. "They used all their artillery and cannons and pushed some tanks to these areas, trying to advance to the city.

Arafat has said he would not leave Tripoli unless he receives guarantees for the safety of his loyalists and his local Lebanese militia allies.

In Israel, the government warned it was prepared to make more retaliatory raids like the air strike Sunday on Syrian-held mountains east of Beirut.

State radio said as many as 18 warplanes struck a half-dozen villages in the attack, the third Israeli strike this

ByRONSIRAK

Associated Press Writer

A potentially dangerous storm dropped up to 2 feet of snow today in the mountains of the West and blasted Arizona with 70 mph winds, while the South was reeling from tornadoes and lightning-laced thunderstorms that left at least three people dead.

In Pennsylvania, six other people died when their twin-engine plane lost power and slammed into a hillside during a rainstorm Sunday night, officials said. The cause of the crash had not been determined.

Winter storm warnings were posted today in much of Wyoming, Colorado, Utah Nevada and Arizona as heavy snow fell across the Rockies. It was coming down as fast as an inch and hour in Ca^r, Wyo.

The Alta and Snowbird ski resorts in Utah reported 16 inches of new snow Sunday, and more fell today.

Up to 2 feet of snow was

measured in the Sierba Nevadas around Lake Tahoe, Nev., the National Weather Service reported.

Another foot or more of snow was expected in many places by tonight.

As the storm pressed eastward into the Midwest, winter storm watches went up in northeast Nebraska. Kansas, northwest Iowa, South Dakota and southwest Minnesota.

In the central mountains of Arizona, the state Department of Public Safety on Sunday reported winds gusting up to 70 mph, ice-slick roads and visibility reduced by blowing snow.

In Southern California, stiff winds Sunday snapped power lines leaving about 5,000 homes and businesses temporarily without power.

The South and Midwest were battered Sunday by twisters, high winds and drenching thunderstorms that demolished homes and knocked out power to thousands of residents.

One person died when he was hit by a bolt of lightning, another was electrocuted by a downed power line and a Boy Scout trying to clear a road died when he was hit by a truck.

In Florida on Sifcday, more than 15 mobile homes were damaged and several carports destroyed when a tornado touched down at an Ormond Beach trailer park, scattering debris for a quarter-mile, officials said.

Another tornado damaged six houses and downed power lines and trees in northwestern Bay County, about 15 miles north of Panama City Beach, causing at least $15,000 in damage, said sheriffs Lt, John Davis.

The National Weather Service said a tornado also touched down in Putnam County, in northeastern Florida. Officials said Anthony Neese, 23. of Cantonment, was electrocuted when he touched a metal fence on which a power line had fallen during a storm in Escambia County.

A 15-year-old Boy Scout

was killed near Calhoun. Ga., when he was hit by a trucK while trying to clear an interstate highway of construction barriers blown down by high winds.

High wind, hail and twisters also moved across Louisiana over the weekend, and authorities in Lincoln Parish said a home near Dubach was demolished by a tornado, leaving 12 occupants huddled safely in the rain.

It was hard to look at that house and believe they all got out safe," said Lincoln Parish Sheriff Wayne Houck.

A sheriffs office spokesman in East Carroll Parish, La., said a man was killed near Lake Providence when lightning struck him as hestep^out of a truck.

Officials said the Federal Aviation Administration would investigate the crash of a small plane in western Pennsylvania during a rainstorm Sunday night. The plane was en route from Plattsburgh, N.Y., to Youngstown, Ohio, said officials in Franklin, Pa.

Imelda Marcos Resigns Office

Hotline gets things done. Write and tell us about the iroblem or issue into which youd like for Hotline to look. Snclose photostatic copies of any pertinent information. Our address is The Daily Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834. Because of the large numbers received. Hotline cannot answer or publish every item we receive, but we deal with all of those for which we have staff time. Names must be given, but only initials will be published.

Editors note: Hotline has, on a trial basis, discontinued its telephone answering service. Please mail us your items. Thank you.

MOTHERS MARCH VOLUNTEERS ASKED Hotline has been asked to appeal for volunteers to assist in conducting the Mothers March to raise money for the support of research, medical service and education on birth defects. Anyone wishing to volunteer is invited to call the March of Dimes office, 758-2542, or Red Carpet Realtors, 355-2727.

FREE DINNER The needy and the elderly who have no one with whom to spend Thanksgiving will be able to get a Thanksgiving dinner Thanksgiving Day in the St. Gabriels School Auditorium.

Transportation will be provided if need be. This open feast is being sponsored by St. Gabriels Catholic Church and the Tabernacle of Prayer for All People Church. For more information, call 756-7435.

MANILA, Philippines (AP) - Imelda Marcos resigned today from the powerful Executive Committee and )ublicly renounced any am-)itions to succeed her husband. President Ferdinand E. Marcos, at anytime.

The 54-year-old first lady, in a rare speech in the National Assembly which was broadcast on government television, announced she will leave government when Marcos does.

Mrs. Marcos, a powerful politician whom the opposition has accused of nursing ambitions to rule the Philippines, read during her speech a letter she wrote to the ruling New Society Party formally tendering her resignation from the committee.

The Executive Committee is a 10-member body empowered by the constitution to assume the powers of the presidency and act as government caretaker if Marcos, 66, dies or leafes office.

Mrs. Marcos first broke the news of her decision to resign during a caucus of the governing New Society Party which was discussing the

controversial issue of presidential succession.

Earlier, the party approved a resolution seeking to restore the vice presidency abolished by Marcos when he declared martial law in 1972, and calling for an election to the post in 1987, when Marcos present term expires.

The resolution would amend the constitutional section which provides that the Executive Committee would take over the powers of president and act as government caretaker if Marcos dies or leaves office.

The proposed amendment, to be submitted for approval in a plebiscite early next year, would designate the speaker of the National Assembly as acting president if Marcos becomes incapacitated before the vice presidential election in 1987.

Crimestoppers

If you have information on any crime committed in Pitt County.'^call Crimestoppers, 758-7777. You do not have to identify yourself and can be paid for the information you supply.

month against targets in Syrian-held parts of Lebanon

At least one plane was dow.ied, reportedly by a Syriaw ground-to-air missile, but the pilot parachuted safely into an area held by the Lebanese army and was later picked up by an Israeli air force helicopter, the Israeli military command said.

Reporters in Beirut said light arms fire was directed at the pilot as he was parachuting, but the Israelis said he was in

good health.

Syria claimed two Israeli planes were downed, but the Israeli command in Tel Aviv denied it.

The plane crashed about a half-mile from the Beirut airport, headquarters for the l.800-man US. Marine contingent of the multinational force patrolling the capital. Marine spokesman Capt. Wayne Jones said U S forces in Beirut and offshore did not know of Sundays Israeli raid in advance.

Gillam Announces He Will Seek First District Seat

Western States Blasted By Wind And Heavy Snow

State Rep. John Gillam of Windsor announced here today that he will seek the Democratic nomination for the 1st District seat in the U.S. House of Representatives in the May 8 primary.

Gillam. a two-t'erin member of the N.C. House of Representatives, made his announcement at noon on the Town Common, one of seven stops planned for today in the sprawling 21-county congressional district.

Its time for a new generation of leadership," Gillam told supporters in Greenville. "Its time to find new solutions for the problems we continually face. Its time eastern North Carolina had a

new and strong voice in Washington. D.C.. to deal with our special economic problems and direct economic growth with a new hope and a new faith in our future.

Gillam outline a program to identify specific problems facing the eastern part of the state such as health care, economic development, tourism, high unemp oyment and seasonal joblessness, education, the financial solvency of agriculture and ecological dilemmas.

Pledging that issues will be well-researched and longterm solutions to problems identified. Gillam said, It will mean that eastern North Carolina wont be standing at

JOHN GILLAM

the end of a line any more with our hands held out.

He said. I see so many eastern North Carolinians who suffer greatly from our nations ills: economic recession. unemployment, burdensome taxes, bureaucracy and waste in government. The old ways of dealing with these problems have not worked. Instead, thousands of our farmers are facing financial disaster. Our young people are unable to find jobs to support their families. Our children are not fully prepared to live in a world of rapidly changing technology.

Gillam kid. The old ways

(Please turn to Page 10)

R.L. Martin Announces He Will Run For N.C. Senate

R.L. Bob Martin of Bethel this morning announced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for the North Carolina Senate seat now held by Sen. Vernon White of Winten'ille. The District 9 seat represents all of Pitt County and parts of Martin and Beaufort Counties.

Martin, who is vice-chairman of the Pitt County Board of Commissioners, was born on a tobacco farm anil presently owns one.

I have maintained a farming interest all my life and have had a business interest in Pitt County most of my adult life. he said. I understand the problems facing agriculture and the busi-

R.L. MARTIN

ness community of the district. and by working together we can do something about them

As an elected official, including three terms as mayor of Bethel and six terms as a county commissioner. Martin kid "I understand the needs of our people. I have a lengthy track record and that record in town and county governments speaks for itself. It is one that I am very proud of. as I have devoted my years of service to good government.

According to Martin, we have good county government. and I am very proud that it has been my privilege to serve people and

to have been a part of the leadership that has made District 9 one of the major medical centers of North Carolina, with a unique working agreement with the State that has been most beneficial for the district and the state.

Good leadership has also made the district "the agricultural. industrial and educational center of Eastern North Carolina. Martin said.

I believe I can contribute a great deal to the continued growth of the district in the North Carolina State Senate. Martin said, because of his background in

(Please turn to Page 10)

Local Spokesmen Are Pleased Over Planning For U.S. 264

By JERRY RAYNOR

Rdlector Staff Writer Feeling pleased that positive plans are being made for road improvements to U.S. 264 in and near Greenville is the basic response from several local leaders contacted this morning.

The N. C. Department of Transportation on Friday announced an update of highway construction plans.

Projects approved by the transportation board for construction at dates in the future the late 1980s and early 1990s - encompass three major bypasses in eastern North Carolina including a 7.3 mile bypass northwest of Greenville and a 264-bypass at Wilson.

Im excited about it, was State Rep, Ed Warrens initial comment. Ive been working with the transportation board, served on the committee. Weve needed these improvements in our area for a long time. Theres been a lot of good input to create more highway funds.

Gov. Hunt and Secretary Roberson have both been very positive and helpful in w'orking for these projects. Warren said that looking at the timing, its generally what we expected. The main thing is to get in on the plan. Now its a matter of creating funds, thats the next stage, something Ill be working on to the best of my ability. We can also pursue the goal of maybe getting earlier action down the road.

Chairman of Pitt County Commissioners Charles Gaskins remarked I think its mighty good news, the approval of any road plans, construction, widening or improvement in our area. It will be a real assistance to Pitt County and the entire area. I hope now work can go right along on widening the road to Bethel. I was pleasantly surprised on the timing of the northwest Greenville bypass. This board, the county commissioners, plans to keep abreast of road plans, to actively pursue

developments, to encourage these future plans and developments. Gaskins added he feels action is as good as expected on these road actions. Id like to see what can be done now to prevent any drawback to these plans in the future.

State Rep. Walter B. Jones. Jr. said he feels it's a positive sign, getting into the program. Its a hopeful sign we will get what we need to have for eastern North Carolina. On the timing of the major part of the program several years in the future. Jones remarked. Knowing the way highway irojects are planned and unded, I was not totally surprised at the projected dates. 1 was pleaseii that the projects are included in the recent plans. My big hope is that the next administration will see that the projects can be moved along. The main thing now is that it's good to be in the approved program.

(Please turn to Page 10)

WEATHER

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Looking Ahecd

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Inside Reading

I ilow lopav'

Iaoe T In unilonii Pa<;t1(( Obituarios Page 20 Area items





<10 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Monday, November 21,1983

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FOR SALE; 1981 Suzuki GSSSOT, runs excellent, needs minor work. Call 752 2078, ask tor Frank.

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PUBLIC NOTICES

NOTICE    ^    ,

Having qualified as Executor s of the estate of W R Tyson late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executor's on or before May 7, 1984 or this notice or same wilt be pleaded in bar ot their recovery All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.

This 3rd day of November 1983 Vernon Tyson 224 Churchill Drive Greenville, N C. 27834 Ralph L. Tyson 1409 Greenville Blvd.

Greenville, North Carolina 27834

Executor's of the estate ot W R Tyson, deceased November 7, 14, 21, 28, 1983

1979 XL75 Honda. Excellent condi tion. Callafterp.m., 757 1137

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1979 Z28 T top Limited Edition. Call after 5 p.m. 758-5779.

1981 CHEVROLET CITATION

hatchback, silver with blue interior, automatic, V 4, air, cruise control, tilt wheel, AM/FM, 1 careful owner 28,000 miles. New car on order. 29 miles per gallon $4900 or $500 and take over payments Call 757 10)8 from4p m. to9p m

1981 CHEVEROLET CORVETTE.

Beige, loaded, glass top, cruise control, AM/FM cassette, power steering, windows, and brakes $15,700. Call 758 7247 after 8 p.m.

1982 MONTE CARLO, T top, lots ot extras, low mileage Call after 6 p.m. 752 4557

017

Dodge

1973 DODGE 4 door. Clean inside and out, new tires. Runs good. $850 Calt744 2326

1981 DODGE COLT, 25,000 miles, air, 4 speed. Loaded with extras Sporty economy car. Reduced 355 2840.

018

Ford

1964 THUNOERBIRD. Good condi tion. $1200. Phone 758 9441,

1949 FAIRLANE 4 door, nice look Ing, blue and white, one owner Outstanding mechanical condition. $550.752 2763

1974 CAPRICE. I owner, air condi tion, AM/FM, new radials. Must see to appreciate. Call 758 4761.

1975 FORD GRANADA. Automatic transmission, air condition Phone 758 4024 after 5 p.m

1974 FORD ELITE, 64,000 miles Very good condition. $1600 Call 752 5759 weekdays 9 to 6, Saturday 8 to 5.

1982 FORD ESCORT, with air, like new. Assume payments. Call 756 9884after6p m

021

Oldsmobile

1972 OLDS CUTLASS, white with black top. Keystones. Automatic in console, 350 cubic engine, 4 barrel Call after 6 p m, 756 6983

022

Plymouth

CUDA, 1974, 1 owner, automatic, power steering, power brakes, headers. Crane Cam, aluminum high riser intake, shift kit, key stones, good condition, $2,000 752 2251.

1983 PLYMOUTH SAPPORO luxury sports car for sale. Call 946 0539 after 6 pm

023

Pontiac

1971 PONTIAC LeMans convertible. Black/white interior, air, automatic, AM FM, power steering and brakes, very good condition. 754 1980 after 7 30.

1973 PONTIAC LeMans $895. Can be seen at Malpass Muffler, 10th Street 756 9339

1979 FIREBIRD ESPRIT. One

owner Excellent condition. $5300. Call 756 1888 from 9 5 weekdays.

1982 PONTIAC 4000 LE 4 door, 27,600 miles, excellent condition. $5(X) and assume loan or will take older car at same value Can be seen Monday Friday 9 to 5 at Prepshirt No phone calls please

024

Foreign

1972 OATSUN 240Z, 13,000 miles on rebuilt engine. 4 speed, prismic red with black interior AM/FM cassette stereo $3250 negotiable. Serious inquiries only. 758 5683

1974 AUDI 100LS. $1300 or best offer. Runs good. Very good paint job. 754 7807.

1980 MAZDA RX7. Anniversary Edition with all options. New radi als, Alpine cassette. Like new. Best offer. Call 754 0238 after 12 Noon.

1980 TOYOTA TERCEL - 2 door liflback. Air, automatic, radio. $3990. Phone 752 0406

1982 HONDA PRELUDE. Air, cruise, sunroof. 758 2712 or 754 6625.

1982 TOYOTA Corolla. 4 door sedan deluxe. Low mileage, great car. $4800 negotiable. 757-3414

034 Campers For Sale

DELUXE TRUCK CAMPER top. standard size. Call 756-1050.

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors. Leer Fiberglass and ^rtsman tops. 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N.C.834 2774.

1974 TERRY Travel Trailer, 25'. Full rear bath, double bed, front sofa bed, air, power jack, sleeps 7. Like new. 752 3434

AKC FEMALE BOXER. 4 months old, $100 Phone 758 3276 or 758 0041

BOXER BULLDOG puppies Call 746 3971 after 5 weekdays, anytime weekends

COCK A POO,

754 1592.

white male. Call

HIMALAYAN CAT - flame point, female, 2 years old. Registered Moving, must sell Call 754 8784 after 7 p m., anytime Saturday or Sunday

5 MONTH OLD registered miniature Pomeranian for sale. $150.752 7512.

051

Help Wanted

ARE YOU READY for success? The person we are looking for is already employed and probably earned $15,000 520,000 last year, but feels like they are in a rut We are the Number One company in our industry and the person we choose can expect to earn over $35.000 the first year. We offer the best training in our industry and you earn while you learn If you are truly ready for success, send resume to Success. PO, Box 1967, Greenville. N C 27835

ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR,

Wimington Area Health Education Center Applications are being ac cepted for the position of Associate Director of the Wilmington, rea Health Education Centejr in Wilmington. NC Applicants should possess a Graduate Degree in one of the health discipline or education, with educational and ad ministrative experience with the health profession. Send resume to Executive Driector, Area Health Education Center, 2131 South I7th Street, Wilmington, NC 28402 by December 14, 1983. Equal Opportu nity Employer.

AUTOMOTIVE SALESPERSON.

Call for interview 754 1877 or send resume to Grant Buick Inc., P O. Box 2097, Greenville, N.C 27834. Attn: Jack Mewborn

AUTOMOTIVE SALES

Growing Eastern North Carolina dealership has opening in Import Sales for Honda. Volvo, BMW, AMC/Jeep/Renault. Benefits in elude paid hospitalization, life in surance, dental and demonstrator programs. Apply in person at Bob Barbour Honda, 3300 S. Memorial Drive, Greenville, N.C.

AVON CAN MAKE YOUR CHRISTMASMERRIER!

Be an Avon Representative in your neighborhood, earn money and win valuable gifts, too!

Call 752 7006

BOOKKEEPER 10K to 13K DOE

New local business needs experi enced bookkeeper. Call Judy, 355 2020 Heritage Personnel Service

COATING APPLICATORS needed Experience with coating, roofing, painting, and spraying equipment helpful. Good gross potential Call Mr. Anderson at 757 3355

DRY WALL FINISHERS,

electrician, and plumber report to work Monday morning at 7:30 at 601 Skinner Street with tools

EARN EXTRA MONEY for

Christmas Sell Avon!!! Call 758 3159

ELDERLY LADY to live in Room and board included. Care for small child occasionally at night. Light housework. Nice neighborhood Work 752-0151; home 758 0471 or 756 8233.

ELECTRONICS/COMPUTERIZED

Systems Engineer or Consultant Electronic System trouble shooting experience required Electrical/Instrumentation main tenace background desired Salary commensurate with experience. Send resume to Electronics. PO Box 138, Greenville, NC 27834.

EXECUTIVE MANAGEMENT

Position and/or Owner/Operator potential tor an expanding weight control service. The Weigh Station Inc. is now opening in this area Program offers excellent potential for financial and personal growth In competition with Diet Center Inc. at lower prices. Call Expansion Director at 919 243 6567 or 919 291 3438 for an appointment in your area or send resume to PO Box 923, Wilson, NC 27893 All inquiries are confidiental Call or write today!

EXPERIENCED 3RD SHIFT

cashier 48 hours per week 6 days. $190 per week Apply in person at The Dodge Store, South Memorial Drive

EXPERIENCED OR CERTIFIED

Dental Assistant for growing practice Excellent benefits Send resume to Dental Assistant, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.

HEATING AND AIR Conditioning Service Personnel wanted. At least 1 year of experience required Call 754 4624 or apply in person at Larmar Mechanical Contractors.

I AAA SEEKING AN INDIVIDUAL TO LEARN AAY BUSINESS

Busy executive of national company is seeking an Individual who has strong desires to learn the workings of a successful organization. The individual selected must be willing to accept sales training and have desire to quickly accept major responsibilities. Past annual earnings must be over $15,(XX). Send resume to Management, PO Box 4(X)7, Greenville, NC 27834.

IMMEDIATE PART TIME

openings Monday-Friday 5 to 9 p.m., Saturday 9:30 to 1:30 in our telephone advertising department. $3.35 per hour plus commission. Ideal job for housewife, retired persons and students. Job requires good conversah'onalist ana

fhuslasm. Apply in person only to LeAnn at Olan Mills Studio, West

End Shopping Center, Monday, November 21 from 1 until 4

LICENSED PHYSICAL Therapy Assistant wanted to join private Physical Therapy Practice, in eludes hospital and home health practice Salary commensurate with experience. For inquiry call Roanoke Therapeutic Services, 792 7908

LPNS NEEDED. Part time and full time 7 to 3 and 3 to 11 shifts are available. Apply in person or call Oak Manor, Inc., Snow Hill, 1 747 2868

MANAGER for children's shop. Experienced. Send resume to Children's Shop Manager, P.O. Box 1967, Greenville, N C. 27835.

MOLDING SUPERINTENDENT

needed. Requirements are: High school graduate, 7 years experience in injection molding, hydraulic and electrical background, knowledge of set up and trouble shooting equipment. Salary negotiable. Only qualified persons apply Send resume to Personnel, P.O Box 1257, RockyMount, N.C 27801.

ONE OF THE COUNTRY'S leading insurance companies Is looking tor an individual in its Greenville office. The candidate must have qn aptitude for selling This is substantial earning opportunity David Haynes or Ron Jevicky, 9 a.m. 10:30 a m or send resume to United Insurance Company, 120 Reade Street, Greenville, NC, 752 3840. EOE.

PHYSICIAN EXTENDER I (Nurse Practitioner) needed for family planning activities. Applicant must meet requirements of the N.C. State Personnel System and qualify for approval as a Family Planning Nurse Practitioner or a Family Nurse Practitioner Contact Robin Warren, R.N at 641 7508 at the Edgecombe County Health De partment, Tarboro, N.C An Equal Opportunity Employer

PLASTER AND TILE setters

wanted. Call 355 2354

PRIOR AIR FORCE If you have been honorably dis charged within the last 5 years, and are qualified with a minimum AFSC Skill Level of 5, the Air Force is looking for you! Openings available for Munitions, Inte grated Electronics, Intellegence, Aircraft Maintenance also, selected Electronics/Weather op portunities from other services Call today! MSgt Ben Grady or TSgt Bruce Barry, 115 Redbanks Suite B. Greenville, NC 27834 (919 ) 754 2194

REAL ESTATE BROKERS We

currently have an opening tor a licensed real estate broker For more information or appointment call Rod Tugwell at CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates, 754 6810

RESUMES WRITTEN to get results ]lus job search programs Call tor jrochure or appointment Cushman Writing Associates, 1 637 2889

RETAIL MANAGER TRAINEE.

Career opportunity to move rapidly into management. Collie pre ferred, but not necessary Excellent benefits Call Judy. 355 2020. Heritage Personnel Service

ROUTE SALES. $I6K plus Due to promotion fortune 500 company needs aggressive person for established territory Must have sales experience and good driving record Excellent benefits Call Judy, 355 2020, Heritage Personnel Service,

SALES ELECTROLUX. Prestige manufacturer ot home cleaning jroducts requires 3 representatives n this area A go getter altitude energy, creativity Earnings based on performance Benefits and in centlves Promotions from within Call 754 67)1

SALES

INDUSTRIAL

CHEMICALS

We are Drummond American Cor poration. one of the fastest growing companies In the industrial chemical field We are a subsidiary I AAAAA 1 raTed, publicly traded, 30 year old corporation looking (or a great salesperson to sell a complete line ot maintenance specialty chemicals directly to in dustrials, institutions and municipalities

This is a career position in a recession proof industry Doors to management are wide open Our company is not affiliated with any other chemical company

We offer a complete tield and classroom training program, a tull benefit package, no overnight Irav el, large territories, and the highest commissions paid in our industry

Whether you're in our field now or would like to be. if you are one ot the great ones, call now for a local confidential interview

Contact Mr Jack Smith TOLL FREE at 8(X) 323 5922 on Monday or Tuesday from 10 (X) AM to 4 00 PM

equal djjportunity employer mif

SALESORGANIZERS S750-S2300 Per Week

Sell name brand Kodak films at 30e

Cer roll tor 100 rolls Certificate ook sells for $30 00, your earnings up to $28 50, limited positions available Call Mr Parker at 7)4 760 1612 or 714 675 8930,675 8931

SALES REPRESENTATIVE

Silver Sprink V.'.iter Purification Company is now looking for quali fied sales reps to market one of the fastest growing products to fight water pollution Highly com missioned paid job Company will set up all appointments For more information and an interview call 756 5477 or write PO Box 1353. Greenville, NC 27834

SALESPERSON with mobile home sales experience willing to earn $25,000 to $30,(X)O year Send resume to Mobile Home Salesperson. PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834

SERVICE MANAGER

Excellent Career Opportunity with growing company Excellent com pany benefits and starting salary Prefer previous Ford experience Reply in writing to East Carolina Lincoln 2201 Dickinson Avenue Greenville, N C 754 4267

WANTED; PERSON to do shingle work on contract basis Call Mr Anderson at 757 3355.

WORD PROCESSING. Experienced person needed immediately Super boss Exciting work atmosphere Call Jamie, Heritage Personnel Service, 355 2020.

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE.

Licensed and fully insured. Trim ming, cutting and removal, stump removal by grinding Free estimates. J P Stancil, 752 6331

BATH AND KITCHEN repairs Plumbing, carpentry, tie board, tops. State License. 752 1920 or 746 2657

CALL ANGE MOBILE Home Re pairs to service heating systems, underpinning, installation, plumb ing and all other repairs to your mobile home. 752 6471 or 752 1503

CARPENTRY REPAIR, remodel ing, room additions. Free

estimates. 758 3693 or 757 3919.

HANDYMAN SERVICE - You

name it. I'll fix it!! No job too small. Reasonable rates! 758-7748.

HOME AND BUSINESS REPAIRS.

We can do it all. Additions built. Specialist in mobile home repairs, sundecks, porches, electrical work, plumbing, etc. Professional sign work. Repairs to furniture. Wood work is our glory, superb quality. We do not gamble our reputation. Reasonable too! Free estimates. Phone 752 0154.

KELLY'S CUSTODIAL SERVICE.

Call 1 944 0609.

NEED HELP to care for one? Call 355 2973.

PAINTING Interior and exterior Free estimates. References, work guaranteed. 13 years experience, 754 6873 after 6 p.m.

PAINTING. 10 years experience. Free estimates. 752 9915.

PAINTING inside or outside. 15 years experience. Free estimates. All work guaranteed. 758' 7815.

RAKING LEAVES, any size yard Reasonable price. 752-5583.

SHIRLEY'S CLEANING SERVICE

Have your home fall cleaned or just

?ieneral cleaned. Weekly or Mon hly. We also do windows and carpet. 753-5908 after 3:30.

WALLPAPERING AND Painting 10 years experience. Local reter enees. 758 7748

060

FOR SALE

061

Antiques

JO-LE'S a SCOTT'S ANTIQUES.

1310 Dickinson Avenue, Greenville, NC. Phone 758 3274. Open 9 to 5, Monday through Friday. Large selection of furniture and gifts!

063 Building Supplies

CECO STEEL BUILDINGS by Riv

erside Iron Works, Inc. Phon,e 433-3121, New Bern, N.C. Since 1920.

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale. J. P. Stancll, 752 633),

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

ALL HARDWOOD. $75 cord. $40 pickup load. 10 days only, l'/> cords $100. Delivered and stacked. 823 5407

OAK FIREWOOD tor sale. Ready to go Call 752 6420 or 752 8847 after 5 p.m.

OAKWOOD FOR SALE. Call 752

3379

074

Miscellaneous

SEARS MICROWAVE, $100. Vinyl reclinar $40. Queen size waterbed mattress $30 7S4 9240.

SEIOLER OIL space heater, $40

744 4394.

SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI

SEASONED OAK, $45 a W cord Seasoned Beech or HIcorky, $50 a '/> cord Delivered and stacked. Call 757 1637

SEASONED OAK firewood. $90 cord, seasoned mixed firewood, $80 cord. Free delivery and stacked Ready to go 754 8358 after 5

SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD. Call us before you buy! 752 1359 758 5590

SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD.

Delivered and stacked Phone 758 6143

WOOD FOR SALE.

Seasoned Oak, $45 anytime ,

Mixed. $35 Catl 752 6284

WOOD HEATING. Complete line of woodsfoves, chimney pipe and ac cessorles Squire Stoves Chimney sweeping service available at Tar Road Antiques. Wintervilie 754 9123, nights 754 1007

065 Farm Equipment

INTERNATIONAL CYCLO corn planter with monitors Excellent condition. Very few hours. 753 5732 or 752 6529

INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER

diesel tractor, 45 HP. low hours good clean condition 1 Powell AAaximizer bulk barn, 150 rack, gas operated, good condition Roanoke primer, 1 row, good condition 3 Roanoke tobacco trucks. 1969 Chevrolet ton truck, 10' steel body, good condition 746 3060 anytime

TOOLS FOR THE FARM or home 25 piece 'z" drive socket set $14 49 (Standard or Metric) 14 piece combination wrench set $14 95 10" adjustable wrench $5 49    7    piece

screwdriver set $6 49 All hand tools come with a life time warranty Agri Supply. Greenville, NC 752 3999

066

FURNITURE

BEDDING&WATERBEDS

LARGEST SELECTION al guaran teed lowest prices Bedding sets. $49 Waterbeds, $149 Factory Mat tress & Waterbeds next to Pitt Plaza 355 2626

SOFA AND CHAIR tor sale Excellent condition Phone 752 4514

PIECE solid wood den suit, 2 lamps tree Take over payments as only $33 63 per month 757 0451, Furniture World We will not be undersold'

072

Livestock

HORSEBACK RIDING

Stables. 752 5237

074

Miscellaneous

APARTMENT SIZE Sears Ken more washer, excellent condition, $140 Lady Ann wood cookstove, good condition 756 4381 after 5

ARTS AND CRAFTS for sale Needlepoint, handpamted wood crafts, and other items Now taking orders for Christmas Buy a unique and one ot a kind gift tor someone special 752 1783

Rent

shampootrs and vacuums at Rental Tool Company

SHARP. SONY B GE closeout sale

now at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at $49.88

SIGNATURE MENU Magic Electric stove (avocado), $125 Best otter. Phone 355 2045

SILK SUIT, size 34 waist. $50 3 nylon wool suits, 34 waist, like new. $25 each. 752 8887

SMITH CORONA TP-) leller quail ty printer 5 months old. Used I month In mint condition $550 752 3980from9a m. toS:30p m

STEREOS AND TVS Close out prices on all systems In stock! Marantz, Sony, Sansul, Furniture World/Stereo City Phone 757 045). 2808 East 10th Street In Store Finance

TRAILER 14 foot tandem axle, tut bed 753 5732 or 752 6529

TRANSITION WARDROBES, the

only consignment shop In NC specializing in women's large sizes, has a iovely collection ot suits, coats, and dresses Call 355 2508

USED GOOD CLOTHES Womens, mens, and childrens Almost all sizes. 752 6974 day or night

WALLPAPER $1 50 $3 00 per single roll Odd lots , and discontinued papers Name brands, values up to $20 a single roll. All sales tinal. Larry's Carpetland, 3010 East 10th Street

WASHER Heavy duty, very good condition $125 Phone 744 2072.

200 AMP

758 5532

SERVICE. $200 Call

3 PIECE BEDROOM suit bed. dresser, and chest ot drawers Good condition $100 Call 752 5484 after 5

Thinking of telling that motorcycle? Now's the time to do It! Call Classfled today 752 4144

8x40 TRACTOR TRAILER truck body. Excellent tor storage $1,000 each Call 757 0451

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

IF YOU NEED A USED mobile home call Calvary Mobile Homes, Chocowinity, I 944 0929

MOVING. MUST SELL) 1979 Brig adier, 12x65, 2 bedrooms, partially furnished, fully electric Call 758 4491 or 355 6483 after 5 p m

NEW 1983 14x70. Total electric, 2 large bedrooms, cathedral ceiling, fully furnished Low down paymeni and payments under $185 per month Only one to sell at this price! Call 754 9874, Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville

NO MONEY DOWN

VA100% Financing

New 1984 Singlewide, 2 bedrooms, I bath, cathedral ceiling Carpeted, appliances, total electric Minimum down payment with payments ot less than $140 per month

CROSSLAND HOMES

630 West Greenville Boulevard 754 0)91

BALI CUSTOM Mini ott I week delivery November only Call place your order

blinds, 40% Throughout 756 3241 to

BE ONE OF THE PEOPLE with Clout! Buy Clout discount cars Phone Allen Hardy, 752 6902

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables inventory clearance sale 4 models Delivery setup 919 763 9734

BUNK BEOS, no mattresses 756 3475

Call

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, tor small loads ot sand, topsoil and stone Also driveway, work

REPO 1983 TIDWELL 14x70 2 bedrooms, 2 baths Really nice! $800 down and take up payments Call 756 9874, Country Squire Mobile Homes. 264 Bypass, (jreenville

USD 12x65. 2 bedrooms. ) bath, cathedral ceiling, washer and dryer, carpet throughout Excellent condition Small down payment and payments under $155 per month Call 754 9874 Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass, (ireenville

USED 12x70, 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths! At a steal Call 754 4822

CSHOW

FOR

Electric typewriters, stereo com ponents, cameras, guitars, old clocks, lamps, portable tape players, bicycles, voilins, dolls, depression glass, carnival glass, china crystal and an tiques anything ot vallue

COIN&RINGMAN

On The Corner

COMPLETE FURNITURE STRIPPING and refinishing at Tar Road Antiques, 1 mile south of Sunshine Garden Center 754 9123

DRESSES, SLACKS, etc Sizes l4 to 16 758 2585

FOR SALE: Wedding gown and veil, $250 Stereo, $75. Call 758 1314.

FOR SALE:    Fisher    Papa    Bear

woodstove, $350firm Call 752 5821

FOR SALE: I dog box tbr small truck and I dog box for large truck Also I camper shell (or small truck Good condition Call 752 5930 after 6

FORMAL GOWN, girl's size 12 Light blue, worn twice Original price, $75 Asking $40 Call 758 0133 after6p m.

FURNACES Central 100,000 BTU and space heaters, 50,000 BTU: All Natural gas. $100 each. Can be seen at 31) Hillcrest Drive

GARAGE DOOR, heavy com mercial duty, in panels 10' wide, all metal Cost over $1200, sell (or $475 Call 754 8737

INSTANT CASH

LOANS ON 8. BUYING TV's, Stereos.cameras, typewriters, gold gi silver, anything else of value Southern Pawn Shop, 752 2444

LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot clearing, backhoe also available 754 4742 after 6 pm. Jim Hudson

LARGEST CHEST SIZE freezer Sears makes, in excellent condition. $250 Call 754 4007

LIQUIDATION SALE; Kerosene Heaters:    We must liquidate 26

kerosene heaters. List price $169 95, sell price $90 Homeplace Antiques, 14 miles east of Greenville, Highway 33. Open every day I to 5.

MADAME ALEXANDER DOLLS, International and girl dolls. Sofa, excellen) condition, $150. 754 8642.

MAYTAG WASHER

6336.

$75, Call 754

CLEARANCE SALE on Snapper Mowers. Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue.

ONE STEP CAR SEAT $15 Twelve 5' treated poles, $10. 1973 Grand Prix, $125. Refrigerator, $50. 2 rolls fence 4x50' each. 754 8202

PUERTO RICAN and Hyman white sweet potatoes $8.00 bushel. Call 825 4821.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

12' X 45' MOBILE home (skirted ) on wooded lot located at Shady Knolls Estates Partially furnished Included range refrigerator, washer dryer, sofa Asking price $5,900 (-all 758 7489 after noons evenings

12X65 Deerbrook, 2 bedroom, bath, furnished, central air, 6458

I'z

752

1973 VOGUE, 12x65 Unfurnished, 3 bedrooms. I'z baths, fully carpeted, washer dryer hook ups. central gas heat, unit air Refrigerator and stove Very good condition $3,300 Williamston, I 792 2859or I 792 6468

1973 12x45. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air Evans Trailer Park $5800 Call 758 4476

1977 CONNER 2

baths Call 756 6745.

bedrooms. I'

1979 CONNER 12x52 Make down payment and assume loan Call 758 7741

1981 CONNER. 14x48, low equity and fake over payments Call 756 6424 from 8 to 5 , 756 9325 after 5 30

1982 14x70 Brigadier 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air, washer/dryer, microwave, partially furnished 758 7320

1983 14' WIDE HOMES. Payments as low as $148 91. At Greenvij.le's volume dealer Thomas Mobile home Sales, North Memorial Drive across from airport Phone 752 6068

1984 FLEETWOOD, 3 bedroom, 1' j bath, total electric, garden tub, frost free refrigerator, plywood floors, fully furnished, payments under $200 month Call Calvary Mobile Homes, Chocowinity, 1 946 0929

076 Mobile Home Insurance

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752 2754

077 Musical Instruments

If you're not utino your exercise equipment, sell It this fall in these columns. Call 752-6144.

COMPLETELY RESTORED an;

tique piano. Must sell. $500 or make otter. 757 3424 after 5 p.m.

LIKE NEW - BUNDY TRUMPET

and case. Used 1 school season. Sells new for $365. A real buy at $225! Phone 756 8274.

OLD UPRIGHT PIANO for sale $200 firm Phone 752 4769.

PIANO a ORGAN DISTRIBUTORS

- Super Sale! Kimball piano, $1,188 Yamaha Organ. 2 keyboard and pedals, $999 Free lesson, bench, and delivery! 329 Arlington Boulevard, 355 6002.

STUDIOD GRAND PIANO, $1,000, worth much more. Call 754 8737

YAMAHA ACOUSTIC GUITAR

with case, $100. Music Man 2)0 HD-130 guitar amp, $200. Infinity POS II stereo speakers. $100. 758 1326 after 5 p.m.

6 UPRIGHT pianos, plus many parts, $400. Call 754 8737.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

She thinks classified is for selling things they don't need.

He thinks

classified

is for

buying

things

they do

need.

They're both right.

So wht'lher vou'rc biivini or spiling, liirn to classifipd, Eilher wav. it's right.

Rflctor Classified 752-6166

IV

012 LOST AND FOUND

l>NO MaLL white kitten, Sadie Saulttr School. Call 7S4 4517.

DON'T THRbW IT awayl Sail It (or

cath with Adi

a faat-actlon ClatsKlad

093

OPPORTUNITY

GROCERY uSiNSi for tala

Only $10.000 down and assume the balance on older established storel Restaurant (or salel Excellent his toryl Pay only $7,500 down and owner will finance the rest. Call HIgnlle Realtors for details, 757 1949

List OR BUY your business with C.J. Harris & Co., Inc. Financial & Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United Stales. Greenville. N.C. 757 0001. nights 753 4015

OWNER/OPERATOR position and/or Executive Management

109

Housbs For Salt

Almost like newi enck veneer

ranch In the country, 2 large bedrooms, spacious den and neat kitchen. Assume FmH 1044% loan to qualified buyer $41,500 Oavis Realty 752 300(1, 754 2904, nights Mary at 754 1997 or Grace 744 M54, 754 4144

^tENTION INVESTORS!I Neat

home, convenient to shopping and schools. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, $18,500.

Oavls Realty 752-3000, 754 2'904, nights AAary at 754 1997 or Grace 744 4454, 754 4144.

BiELVEOERE. New construction. 1500 square foot brick ranch that features large grealroom with fireplace 3 bedroom, 2 full baths.

rcE?-..Call Tipton & Associates, 4M2    "    Tugwell    753

potential for an expanding~weight service. The Weigh Statu

control service, fhe weigh Station Inc Is now opening In this area Program offers excellent potential for financial and personal growth In competition with Diet Center Inc al lower prices. Call Expansion Director at 919 243 4547 or 9)9 291 3438 (or an appointment in your area or send resume to PO Box 923, Wilson, NC 27893 All inquiries are confidiental Call or write today!

ROUTE BUSINESS., no selling In volved as we secure all locations Just collect the profits Replace sold stock Very east to maintain. High profit potential $7760 Minimum Investment Call Mr Davis 317 547 6443

THREE ACRES with 317 foot fron tage Including 2400 square foot building with loading dock, located east of Farmville on Highway 264

Building can easily be adapted to suit your needs All for only $39,900

Estate Realty Company, 752 5058, nights 758 4474 or 752 3447

095

PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman North Carolina's original chimney sweep 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces Call day or night, 753 3503, Farmville.

RIVERSIDE IRON WORKS, Inc

Dial 633 3121, New Bern. N C Certified Welders, precision Machinists, custom fabricators of Steel Aluminum, Stainless A R Plate All types Machine Work Lathes. End Millers, Boring Mill. Iron Workers, Shears. Break. Rolls All types machine shop repairs Tanks, boat shafts, steel steps built to your specifications Specializing in heavy equipment Concrete miX er repairs, & Garbage truck packers

100

REAL ESTATE.

WATER ACCESS 10 miles from Aurora 'a acre with 1974 12x70 mobile home storage building and private boat dock included Prime area tor fishing and hunting $16.500 Call 1 322 4428 days. I 322 4795 evenings

102 Commercial Property

COMMERCIAL LOTS lor sale 2 large lots close to Carolina East Mall Will sell seperately $27,500 each Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 754 1997 or Grace 744 6454. 754 4144

FOR SALE; 5,000 square foot commercial building in the downtown area Currently leases tor $1400 per month Call CEN TURY 21 Tipton 8. Associates 754 6810. nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302

REDUCED $25,000 in this over 35,0<XI square feel in this masonary building with inside railroad load ing and unloading Ample steel storage racks, included in the asking price Located on Dickinson Avenue in Greenville with ample parking space Aldridge & Southerlancl, 756 3500 or Dick Evans, Realtor 758 1 1 19

BY OWNER. New log home near Ayden on quiet country road 1900 square feet, 3. bedrooms. 2 baths, fireplace, lot size negotiable. By

ifPSi''"*"'' **    ^    McLawhorn,

754 2750 or 975 2488

BY OWNER, GREENVILLE loca tion, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, double parage, huge den. Immaculate. Immediate occupancy $44,900 Call 744 2778. No Brokers please

BY OWNER. In Ayden Must sell, owner transferred 11'i% FHA loan assumption Low equity Low mon Ihly payments 744 3040

BY OWNER. 3 bedrooms. I'-z baths, fenced in backyard and sun deck Great location Low$50's 754 7 776

CLIENT WANTS to trade his house

in Kinston for one in or near Greenville Over 1,500 square feet, practically new root, stove and heating plant, pi Iced at $47,500 Call Dick Evans, Realtor Aldridge A Southerland Realty 754 3500, nights 758 1119    *

COUNTRY FARM HOUiSE Needs

love and tender care Vinyl siding, central heat, attractive kitchen, family, room with fireplace. 3 bedrooms About 8 miles from Greenville $30,000 Davis Realty 752 3000, 754 2904, nights Mary at 754 1997 or Grace 744 6454, 756 4144

COUNTRY HOME 6 miles from Greenville 3 bedrooms, I'j baths, large kitchen and breakfast area, utility, carport, large lot $41,500 Davis Realty 752 3000, 754 2904, nights Mary at 754 1997 or Grace 744 6454. 754 4144

FOR PRIVACY - at an affordable price! Large 2 story brick home, 2,856 square feet Approximately 4 miles from hospital 2 3 acres Living room, sunken great room, family room, 4 bedrooms, 2' j baths, carport, patio 1,120 square foot workshop Assumable 8% first mortgage Call 754 7111

GET AWAY FROM IT ALL! Settle

in this country home with over )'j acres land Over 1.800 square feet, 4 bedrooms, family room, garage, large country kitchen Mid $50's Davis Realty 752 3000, 754 2904, nights Mary at 754 1997 or Grace 744 4456, 754 4144

HOW WOULD YOU like to have a brand new home How does no down payment and 9 9% APR sound Build it yourself and save I 848 3220collect

LARGE OLDER HOME 3 or 4

bedrooms, 3 fireplaces, carport and garage Family anxious to sell! Make offer Owner financing possible Call 744 4476

NEW LISTING. Lakewood Pines 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch on large wooded lot that features all formal areas Den with fireplace, garage and over 1800 square feet Call CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates, 754 6810 nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302

375 SQUARE FEET of retail store tront on the mall Available imme diately Rents (or $234 per month Call Clark Branch Management 754 6336

106

Farms For Sale

FARM FOR SALE: 34 acres woods land, 65 acres of cropland, 1983 tobacco allotment 13,824 pounds 1983 peanuts allotment 5,850 pounds Total 101 acres priced at $175,000 Aldridge & Southerland 754 3500 or Dick Evans, Realtor 758 1119

100 ACRES suitable tor (arm or development 4 miles out of Greenville 756 5891 or 752 3318

107

Farms For Lease

WANTED TO RENT tobacco poundage and farm land In Pitt County 754'4434

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NEW LISTING Windy Ridge, 3 bedroom, 2'z bath townhouse Super nice Lots of extras Living room and dining room, and over 1480 square (eel Call CENTURY 21 Tipton A Associates. 756 6810. nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302

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TV Log

For comptoti TV programming information, eonsuit your wMkiy TV SHOWTiME from Sundays Daily Raflaclor.

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Bette Davis And Jimmy Stewart Co-Starring For The First Time

ByFREDROTHENBERG AP Television Writer . NEW YORK (AP) - Bette Davis and Jimmy Stewart star together toni^t for the first time in their long careers, but even these two troupers cant save HBOs boring, humorless made-for-TV movie, Right of Way.

Right of Way is about an elderly couples struggle to make their own decisions about death over the objections of family and government bureaucracy.

Although Home Box Office normally tries for a Sunday splash with its major productions to take advantage of the highest viewership night, this time the pay-caole network has gone a day later to avoid clashing with ABCs heavily publicized The Day After and the beginning of NBCs Kennedy miniseries.

HBOs pragmatic programming points up how the commercial networks have succeeded in reversing the audience fallout to cable by showcasing more big-buildup

specials and miniseries.

At the same time, many subscribers have caught up with HBOs movie inventory, and the services daily viewership has declined by 20 percent, comparing the first nine months of 1982 to the same period in 1983.

Figures from the A.C. Nielsen Co. show that in homes with HBO the service is watched by an average of 4.4 percent of the available audience over 24 hours. Its rating for 1982 was 5.5 percent. In prime time, the dropoff is 17 percent, from a 11.9 rating in 1982 to 9.9 for the first three quarters of 1983.

HBO, which is more concerned with subscriber satisfaction thn the gross numbers cherished by the commercial networks, places less stock in Nielsens numbers. Our subscribers continue to grow, said A1 Levy, HBOs head of corporate public relations. Weve always said that were designed as an occasional use medium.

ON THE STATEN ISLAND FERRY -    woman on the right is a make-up    artist.

Actress Jaclvn Smith, left, relaxes between    Jacklyns husband Tony Richmons is    execu-

takes of her upcoming film Sentimental    tive producer and director of cinematography

Journey" on the Staten Island Ferry. The    of the movie. (APLaserphoto)

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7:30 N.C. People 5:30 3 2 1 8:00 Making of a 6:00 News Hour 9:00 Performances 7 00 Report 10:30 Song of 7:30 Almanac 11:00 Dr. Who 8:00 Nova 11:30 Atonfy Python 9;00 Vietnam 12:00 Sign Off 10:00 Railway

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Say Revised Policy

An Emotional Reaction For Lawrence, Kansas

By BARRY MASSEY

Associated Press Writer

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) - Holding lighted candles beneath a full moon, moie than 500 people gathered in a peace vigil after The Day After" showed the devastation of their college town in nuclear war.

1 do not want this film to be a preview of coming attractions. This is still the day before, Mayor David Longhurst told the crowd Sunday night to cheers and applause. We must not wait until the day after."

Longhurst, a 40-year-old

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businessman, began and ended his remarks by repeating a line spoken by a character in the ABC-TV movie following the nuclear attack; This is Lawrence, Kansas. Is anybody there? Anybody at all"?

After a series of brief speeches, the crowd lighted candles as a brass quartet played and a soloist sang America the Beautiful.

Sunday nights ceremony took place at a flagpole on a hillside just below the Memorial Campanile, a 120-foot-tall bell tower on the University of Kansas campus that honors alumni who died in World War II. At the base of the hill lies the universi-. tys football stadium, which was shown in the film with missiles lifting off in the background.

A pro-nuclear group planned a march through the university campus today, and a local peace group was holding a town meeting.

A few people staged a counterdemonstration Sunday night in favor of nuclear deterrence. Among more than a dozen placards was one reading "Peace Through Strength," and another pro

claiming, The Soviet Union Needs You. Support A U.S. Nuclear Freeze.

"Were here just to show that the program of deterrence has worked, said Scott Ramsey, president of the College Republicans at the University of Missouri-Columbia. There is no reason to lay down our arms."

At one point, the pro-nuclear protesters burned a Soviet flag and sang God Bless America. Occasionally hecklers interrupted the speakers, but there was no violence.

Allan Hanson, leader of Let Lawrence Live, the peace group which organized the vigil, said he was overwhelmed and elated by the turnout.

Most of those who attended the candlelight ceremony said they came out of curiosity or as a show of support for disarmament.

We have three children sleeping at home and my wife said, Why dont you go and represent all of us. said Paul Berry, a 47-year-old Lawrence resident. I guess we have a sense of hopefulness, not futility.

Consider UNC For Film Site

DURHAM. N.C. (AP) -Revised government policy for allocating funds for the elderly tends to lower the quality of care nursing home patients receive, according to a Duke University professor and member of a national task force on nursing homes.

Catherine Hawes said nursing home operators are receiving less government money since federal and state reimbursement money began to be paid according to set cost standards. She said that may prompt cost cuts by private homes that may hurt the elderly.

Owners are best able to cut labor and food costs, she said. Thus, when government funds decline, so does the quality of nursing home health care and food.

Officials are worrying about the long-term problems connected with government payments for nursing home treatment, Ms. Hawes said, especially since 20 percent of the nations people are expected to be age 65 or older by the year 2000. Of those people, 20 percent are expected to need nursing home care.

Federal spending on nursing homes is expected to exceed $40 billion this year. Fifty percent of the Medicaid budget supports nursing home patients, Ms. Hawes said.

Officials believe containing nursing home costs may stem the rise in overall

government health care spending, she said. But balancing the needs of the sick and elderly with the need to cut spending is not easy, she added.

Ms. Hawes said the Reagan administration has tried to cut costs by deregulating the nursing home industry. But deregulation is based on the assumption that nursing home patients are able to make sound choides and that the homes are competing, which isnt necessarily true, she said.

That use has become a bit more occasional, while the networks are not faring any worse.

The rate of erosion of network audiences is slowing, asserted Jeremy Handelman, director of sales and sports research for CBS.

According to Nielsen, the percentage of audience watching the networks stations dropped 4 percent in

1980-81, fell 3 percent in

1981-82 but declined by just 1 percent in 1982-83.

The bottom line for

1982-83 is that theyre not turning us in any less, said Handelman.

But HBO hasnt become the largest pay-cable service by sitting on its past glories, and its response to viewer defection is to do more original productions, casting )ig names, mostly from theatrical films, rather than from TV.

Already this season, HBO has played star matchmaker with Sir Laurence Olivier and Jackie Gleason in Mr. Halpem and Mr. Johnson ana Carol Burnett and Elizabeth Taylor in Between Friends.

Right of Way takes the same tack, teaming Miss Davis and Stewart, both 75, who never worked together in their early years in Hollywood when they were under contract to different studios.

'Their casting in Right of Way also has the inspiration of "On Golden Pond, which proved that audiences would nock to the theaters to see Henry Fonda and Katharine Hepburn deal with dying. When HBO showed On Golden Pond last December, it was, at the time, the services highest-rated film ever.

But On Golden Pond also was about life, revealinjg with warmth and ^t wit the devotion of its old couple. Right of Way has no such life to it,,offering two eccentrics who, mainly because of a dull script, touch but never seem to feel. While we might sympathize with their cause, we dont really care about them.

Miss Davis plays Mini Dwyer, a miniature-doll maker, with her usual feistiness and haughty inflections. Stewart is her husband Teddy, who enjoys poetry and stray cats.

Mini is dying of a blood disease, and she wants to commit suicide before the pain and hospitals. Teddy wants to die with her. We lived as one, we want to die as one, he says. We just want to be together. Whats so hard to understand?

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RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The University of .North Carolina at Chapel Hill is being considered as a site for filming a $13 million movie called Everybodys All-American, director Michael Apted says.

Apted said his production team is also scouting sites in South Carolina and Virginia to assure a March starting

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date for the film, which will star Tommy Lee Jones and Jessica Lange.

I dont want to suggest that we're in trouble with UNC. he added. They need time to sort it out. Its all very nice having a film company come in. and we bring in a lot of money. But filming distrubs the [wttern of life, and this is a big film with a huge number of crowd scenes."

Rollie Tillman Jr., vice chancellor for university relations, said the school would have to consider several factors, including the impact filming would have on the academic schedule.

We dont mind having the occasional television commercial on campus, but a major film could disrupt things during a maior part of the academic year," he said. And educating students has always been our No. 1 priority.

The film, adapted from a novel by Frank Deford, shows a Carolina football player whose life comes apart after he fails to make a successful transition to professional football.

Apted said local people would be used in numerous roles.

I used local people in Coal Miners Daughter, he said, "It gives a film an authenticity, a sense of place.

He said some scenes would also be filmed at Duke University and Wake Forest University.





'Day After' Scenario Endorsed

By SUE HINSON Reflector Staff Writer Local public and professional comments on ABCs movie The Day After - aired Sunday night on Channel 12, New Bern -depicting the immediate effects of nuclear war, ranged from Nielsen rating-getting hype to terror provoking. However, the comments of an ECU student best summed up the responses of those questioned for this story. The existence ot nuclear weapons and the possjblity of a nuclear war is

an ugly reality that we must address.

For years and years weve known of the threat of nuclear cataclysm, but accepted it as part of our daily lives. Regardless of the fact that we have accepted this for so long as part of our normal way of life, it is still a crisis and should be thought of as such and demands to be treated as such, the student said.

Maybe people will do something about it, he said, and then maybe some wl

Some Returning By Thanksgiving

FALL FLOWERS AND COOL WEATHER... are enjoyed by Hilary Brown, 18 months, and her mother, Jane Brown, as they don warmer

clothing for cooler temperatures. Photo By Carol Tyer)

(Reflector

'Light Whiskey' May Be Goina To Markets

By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Calorie-conscious Amel-icans are downing light beer by the barrel and light wine by the case, so why not light whiskey?

The federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, which regulates whiskey, is considering a request for new rules making it easier to market and promote low-prcof whiskey.

The diet-related food and beverage market neared $1 billion last year, and some distillers want part of the action.

Under current rules, distillers can sell whiskey at just about any strength, but if it is less than certain minimum levels the bottle must be labeled diluted. Gerald R. Linkovich of Heublein Spirits Group said the term diluted puts whiskey at a disadvantage when competing with light beer and light wine. Linkovich, whose firm

Tile Finns Opening Set

Ribbon cutting ceremonies marking the grand opening of URO Tile, a Greenville firm offering a new concept in tile materials and installations, are planned for Tuesday at 10 a.m..

The business, located on N.C. 11 across from Pitt Community College, is owned by Johnny and Pat Foote, who moved here recently from Florida.

They said the concept of URO Tile involves the actual manufacture of the material at the installation site, rather than putting in pre-constructed tiles that are shipped in. Materials for the new tile, which are suitable for interior and exterior locations, are mixed and hand crafted at the site, then cut to provide the look of various materials, such as brick, stone, slate or Mexican tile.

The owners said that, unlike ceramic coverings, the new materials offer colors that go all the way through the tiles. They said the mixed material is harder than concrete.

The concept of URO Tile was discovered and patented by Henry Schiffer of Florida. The Footes hold the patent for the product in this area.

proposed the rule change, saia in a letter to the bureau that diluted has a negative connotation to consumers. Heublein wants to be able to use the term mild instead of diluted to designate a lower-alcohol product.

But agreement isnt unanimous within the whiskey industry. Paul A. Lux, president of David Sherman Corp., a St. Louis distiller, said selling lower proof whiskey would raise costs to the consumer, the producer and the wholesaler.

If the consumer wants to use the product at a lower proof, he can just add water or mixer and less of the alcoholic beverage, Lux said in a letter to the bureau.

And Mike Hardy, vice president of Christian Brothers in Reedley, Calif., said the proposed changes could hurt smaller firms. He said it would allow large distillers to, in effect, double their product lines by adding low-afcohol versions of each brand, increasing their share of shelf space in stores and driving out smaller firms.

If such beverages are to be sold. Hardy said they should be labeled low strength or under strength.

Ernest Smith of Independent Stave Co., in Lebanon, Mo., said calling a diluted bourbon such terms as mild, light or reduced proof is merely a form of consumer deception which should not be allowed.

Heublein had support, however. L.H. Cramer, vice president of Consolidated Distilled Products in Chicago, favored the terms light or mild for the low-proof beverages marketed by his firm.

Whiskeys are generally sold at 80,86,90 or 100 proof, but here are the current minimum standards to avoid the term diluted:

-80 proof (40 percent

Female Police Found 'Cynical'

DALLAS (AP) Female police officers are more conscientious than their male counterparts, but they are more cynical about why people obey the law, according to a study of officers in Texas and Oklahoma.

Women officers also feel more danger than men do, said James A. Davis, assistant professor of political science at Oklahoma State University. Davis surveyed 2,300 police officers in Texas and Oklahoma fr his study.

alcohol) for neutral spirits, alcohol, vodka, grain spirits, whiskey, gin, brandy, blended applejack, rum and tequila.

-70 proof (35 percent alcohol) for flavored brandy, flavored gin, flavored rum, flavored vodka and flavored whiskey.

-60 proof (30 percent alcohol) for rye iqueur, bourbon liqueur, rum liqueur, gin liqueur and brandy liqueur.

-48 proof (24 percent alcohol) for rock and rye, rock and bourbon, rock and brandy, and rock and rum.

The bureau is considering whether to set lower minimums for the so-called mild products, or call for a specific percentage reduction in the basic standards.

By DAN SEWELL Associated Press Writer

ST. GEORGES, Grenada (AP) - Some of the U.S. troops on Grenada may be home for Thanksgiving and those remaining will have turkeys airlifted to them for the traditional holiday dinner, U.S. military officials say.

Army spokesman Maj. Douglas Frey said Sunday he was aware of plans for withdrawal of more U.S. troops to get them back to their Fort Bragg, N.C., base for Thanksgiving. He did not elaborate.

Meanwhile, the private medical school whose operations on Grenada were a factor in the U.S.-led invasion is planning to resume classes here in January, Chancellor Charles Mdica said.

President Reagan, in ordering the Oct. 25 invasion, said he feared for the safety of some 1,000 Americans on Grenada, including 631 students at the St. Georges University Medical School.

U.S. military officials said plans were being made to fly turkeys to the Port Silinas airstrip for the troops that will be still on the island

Thursday.

Frey said about 2,300 combat troops remain on the island, along with 2,000 support troops. Pentagon officials in Washington said last week that tte troops would be withdrawn in two or three weeks.

The invasion came the week after Marxist Prime Minister Maurice Bishop was slain in a bloody power struggle within his pro-Cuban leftist government.

If the country continues the direction its going in -very peaceful, very few incidents - in about three or four weeks we will announce that classes will begin here at the beginning of the semester, Mdica told The Associated Press.

Mdica, who established the medical school in 1977, said he didnt have an estimate on the its losses from fighting during the invasion. He said the dormitories apd classrooms suffered no major damage, but the schools two campuses had been looted.

just say its a shame and turn on Laverne and Shirley and politicians who were afraid they were going to have to actually do something will breathe a sigh of relief.

ECU Political Science Associate Professor Herbert R. Carlton, who teaches courses on national security policy, said he was glad the movie was aired.

I feel ABC and the journalists and others who addressed and will be addressing this issue in follow-up articles should be commended on their efforts to bring about a better awareness of whats going on.

Carlton said he felt the movie, although it was mostly accurate, did not adequately represent the damage that would be done to human, animal and plant life, not to mention the earths atmosphere.

A large group of scientists, with Carl ^gan being the most prominent, argue that we are too concerned with the immediate results of a nuclear war and have not looked far enough into other things such as the tremendous change that will occur in the earths temperature, the reduction or annihilation of the photosynthesis process and damage to the earths ozone layer. These are just a few of the concerns that this group discussed in its study.

A story about the study was published in the Nov. 7, 1983, edition of Newsweek.

Asked how he felt about the contention that the Kremlin would never use its nuclear weapons because it, too, would be destroyed, Carlton said that a deliberate launching does seem unlikely. However, he said he is worried about possible error in the launch-on-warning policy.

Each side, of course, has a great fear that its nuclear weapons, intercontinental ballistic missies, w(Hild be destroyed in their silos. This is the basis for launch-on-warning, he said.

In a launch-on-warning situation, one side would receive a warning, perhaps through spy satellites, that the other side had launched its missies.

In that case, they wouldnt have the time to positively verify all the information. They would only have between 20 and 30 minutes to get the missiles out of the ground before they were destroyed in their silos, he said.

Should something like the scenario Carlton described happen, Pitt County Memorial Hospital would be hard >ressed to handle the patient oad that would ensue, ac-cording to Dr. Joe Williamson, associate chairman of the PCMH Department of Emergency Medicine and chairman of the PCMH Diaster Committee.

Williamson said he thought the movie was very accurate from a medical point of view and that he could see the same thing, going on at PCMH as did in the fictional hospital in the movie.

If there was a nuclear attack on Seymour Johnson Air Force Base in Goldsboro

like we saw in the movie, wed have thousands of people, Im talking about having

5.000 to 10,000 people showing up at the emergency room door, needing medical care within 12 to 24 hours - that is, theyd show up if the hospital were stil here, Williamson said.

We could possibly be without water, without power, we might hadenurses and doctors who were injured or dead and there would still be those 5,000 to

10.000 people needing assistance.

There would be a certain number of people we jqst couldnt do anything for, their problems would be so severe that there would be nothing we could do except make them comfortable. Then there would be the people we could help - those injured by flying objects, with broken bones - that is, if we had the surgeons to do it.

We would help everybody that we could, but where would we get the supplies to take care of that many people? We just dont keep those amounts of things on hand, he said.

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Stock And Market Reports

By The Associated Press Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was 75 higher. Kinston 39.75, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadbourn, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 39.75, Wilson 39.75, Salisbury 37.50, Rowland

39.00, Spiveys Corner 39.75. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 33.00, Fayetteville

33.00, Whiteville unreported, Wallace 33.50, Spiveys Corner 33.50, Rowland 34.00, Durham 31.00.

Poultry

RALEIGH, .C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b, dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 54 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2>2 to 3 pound birds. 95 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed with a final weighted average of 54.19 cents f.o.b. dock or equivalent. The market is steady and the live supply is light to barely adequate for a seasonally to good demand. Weights desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Monday was

1.507.000, compared to 1,342,000 last Monday.

NEW YORK (AP) -Stocks were mostly higher today as shares of the new American Telephone & Telegraph and the seven regional companies to be created by AT&Ts breakup made their debut.

The "new AT&T, representing the slimmed-down version of the company after the breakup, was quoted at 18U. Its appearance on the New York Stock Exchange came in a massive 1.6 million-share block traded at 19, and 4.6 million shares changed hands by noon.

The stock of the old AT&T will continue to trade through mid-February, and it was unchanged at 62/8, also in heavy volume.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials climbed 8.84 to 1,259.86 after managing a 0.71-point gain last week. Gainers held a 7-5 edge over losers on the NYSE, whose composite index rose 0.18 to 95.64.

Total Big Board volume was about 4 million shares ahead of Fridays pace at noon, or 44.45 million against 40.47 million.

The new regional telephone holding companies were quoted at the following prices: Ameritech 63^8, Bell Atlantic 67^4, BellSouth 88^s, Nynex 61>8, Pacific Telesis 54. Southwestern Bell 61b andUSWest57>8.

Elsewhere. McDonnell Douglas fell 1*4 to 54'4 and Tymshare lost 1>2 to 26*4. McDonnell Douglas said Friday it was negotiating the possible purchase of Tymshare for between $30 and $35 a share.

At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index rose 0.58 to 220.04.

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Death Probed

The Pitt County Sheriffs Department is continuing its investigation of an apparent accidental shooting Friday night that resulted in the death of a 21-year-old Bell Arthur man. Sheriff Ralph Tyson said.

Tyson said that Brady E. Nichols died Saturday afternoon at tt County Memorial Hospital after being struck in the forehead by a blast from a .12 gauge sawed-off shotgun at the home of Melvin Stocks, 16, of Bell Arthur. He said Stocks told officers he removed the gun from under his bed, but then tripped over a tackle box and fell to the floor, with the shotgun discharging and striking Nichols.

The victim was transported to the hospital by the Greenville rescue unit following the 10:53 p.m. incident, said Tyson.

The sheriff said Stocks and Nichols, who were good friends, had returned to the Stocks house a short time before the shooting took place.

Obituary Column

Martin...

(Continued from Pagel)

farming, business and county government, and because of a willingness on my part to make things happen.

A Bethel native, Martin was educated at Oxford Orphanage, graduating with honors in the fields of electricity and telegraphy.

Martin, a retired railroad employee, served as president of the N.C. Association of County Commissioners from 1971 to 1972, and was recognized by the association as fie Outstanding County Commissioner of the Year in 1981.

He is presently serving as a member of the board of directors of the N.C. Association of County Commissioners and as a member of the board of directors of the National Association of Counties, as well as a director of the N.C. Association of Social Services Board Members and as chairman of the local Board of Social Services. Martin is also serving his second term as a director of the North (trotina Telecommunications Board, having recently been recommended for reappointment by House Speaker Liston B. Ramsey.

The candidate is a member of the Bethel Baptist Church, where he is a Sunday School teacher, past chairman of the Board of Deacons, and served as Sunday School superintendent for several years.

Mrtin is a 32nd Degree Mason, a member of the York Rite and Scottish Rite bodies, a past master of Bethel Lodge 589, past district deputy grand master of the Fifth Masonic District, a Gideon, and a member of the Golden K Kiwanis Club which he served as president in 1981.

Following are selected 11 a.m. stock

Burroughs............................................47

Carolina Power A Light......................244

Conner..............................................164

Duke.................................................254

Eaton...............................................504

Eckerds...........................................29'4

Exxon...............................................37',

Fieldcrest........................ 38,

Halteras...........................................154

Hilton...............................................544

Jefferson...........................................39"4

Deere................................................364

Lowe's..............................................23,

McDonald's.......................................72',

McGraw............................................374

Collins A Aikman...............................384

Piedmont..........................................35'j

Pizza Inn.................<.........................154

PAG................................................574

TRW, Inc..........................................744

DS^Uurces:::::::::;::    fities    were    not    jmm^iately

Wachovia..........................................444

OV-ER THE COUNTER

Aviation.....................................17'/j-174

Branch.......................................25',-254

Little Mint........................................4-4

Planters Bank..............................I8'i-I9

MONDAY

6:30 p.m. - Rotary Club meets 6:30 p.m. Host Lions Club meets at Tom's Restaurant 6:30 p.m. - Optimist Club meets at Three Steers 7:30 p.m. - Sweet Adelines, Eastern Chapter meets at The Memorial Baptist Church 7:30 p.m. - Woodmen of the World, Simpson Lodge meets at community bldg.

7:30 p m - Greenville Barber Shop Chorus meets at Jaycee Park Bldg 8:00 p.m. -Order of the Moose

HOME BY CHRISTMAS LIVERPOOL, England (AP) - The worlds newest sextuplets and their mother are doing fine, and could be home for Christmas their doctors say.

k

HARGRAVE MILITARY ACADEMY

Chatham, Virginia 24531 (804) 432-2481 Grades 6 -12 and Post Graduates

A representative will

Lodge No 885 Uyai ,4 be in this area Monday )ose 1    ^    and Tuesday evenings,

November 21 and 22, L 1983.

For further inform-

TIESDAY

7:00 a.m. - Greenville Breakfast Lions Club meets at Three Steers 10:00 a m - Kiwanis Golden K Club meets at Masonic Hail 7:00 , p m - Family Support Group at Family Practice Center 7:30 pm. - Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptist Church 7:30 p m Toughlove rarents support group at St. Pauls Episcopal Church 7:30 p.m - Vernon Howard Success Without Stress study group at HON. Warren St.

8:00 p.m. - Withia Council, Degree of Pocahontas meets at Rotary Club 8:00 p.m. Pitt Co. Alcoholics Anonymous meets at AA Bldg., Farmvillehwy.

8:00 p.m. - The Big Book Group of AA has closed meeting at St. James United Methodist Church 8:00 p.m. Narcotics Anonymous meets at Piney Grove Free Will Baptist Church

Ration, please call ^ Richard Lar

^ niciittru Liunkford at the Holiday Inn on US 13 (919/758-3401) between

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Hargraves personnel, study conditions and activities enable boys to gain the objectives that produce successful young men,

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Gillam.

(Continued from Pagel) just have not been effective. And most of us here are the victims. The harder we work, liie less we have to show for it. Unemployment and economic recession have cut across every single part of our lives. And they have cut deeply.

My campaign is about sending an eastern North Carolinian to Washington with the energy, spirit, compassion and youth to provide new solutions to the problems we face, he said. My campaign is about faith in the people of eastern North Carolina.

First elected to the state House in 1980 to represent the 5th District, Gillam was re-elected in 1982 to serve the new 6th District. A farmer and businessman, he resides in Windsor with his wife, Bobbie, and their two children.

Gillam received a bachelors degree from the University of Georgia and his masters in education from the University of Virginia.

roi I

BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Police said Sunday the collapse of a doll factory killed at least 30 people, and indicated excessive weight from a new level under construction may have caused the disaster.

Braddy

MACCLESFIELD - Mrs. Dora Braddy died in Beverly Health Care Nursing Home, Tarboro, Sunday. She was the mother of Mrs. Mary Davis of Macclesfield. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Flanagan Funeral Home, Greenville.

Chandler

Mrs. Grace Smith Chandler, 70, of Rt, 2, Walstonburg, died Sunday.

Her funeral service will be conducted Tuesday at 11 a.m. in the chapel of the Farmville Funeral Home by the Rev. Fred Dillion and the Rev. Hawley Owens. Burial will be in Hollywood Cemetery here.

Mrs. Chandler was a member of Walstonburg United Methodist Church.

Surviving her are a daughter, Miss Betsy Chandler of the home and a sister, Mrs. Lucy Smith Lewis of Farmville.

The family will receive friends at the Farmville Funeral Home tonight from 7:30 to 9 oclock.

Faulkner

ROXBORO - Mr. Felix

U.S. 264.

(Continued from Pagel)

Thats a very hopeful sign. Greenville mayor-elect Janice Buck said she "feels hopefully that new roads will do much to bring unity to eastern North Carolina. As highways continue to develop, it will bring our people c oser together. I think these larticular road projects are ong overdue, and I want to see action taken on them at the earliest possible date.

AREALB.ARGAIN GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) - The 239.38-carat diamond Mahjal was sold by Cliristies to an unknown buyer for $600,000. The auctioneers called it a real bargain.

Faulkner died Sunday in Roxboro Hospital. He was the brother of Mrs. Myrtle F. Wilson of Greenville.

Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Cunningham and Nelson Funeral Home of Roxboro.

Nichols

Mr. Brady Earl Nichols, 21, died at Pitt Memorial Hospital Saturday. The funeral service will be conducted Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Ben James and the Rev, E. Linwood Kilpatrick. Burial will follow in Pinewood Memorial Park,

Mr. Nichols spent all his life in Bell Arthur and graduated from Farmville High School in 1982. He was a member of the Bell Arthur Christian Church.

Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Nichols; two brothers, Guy Ronald Nichols of Bethel and Steven Joab Nichols of the home; his paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Bernard Nichols of Bell Arthur; his maternal grandmother, Mrs. Mamie Brady of Bell Arthur.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home today from 7-9 p.m.

Wharton

Mrs. Ray Anderson Wharton, 74, died at Craven

County Hospital Saturday. The funeral service will be conducted Tuesday at 10 a.m. at St. Pauls Episcopal Church by the Rev. Lawrence P. Houston Jr. Burial will be in Maplewood Cemetery, Wilson.

Mrs. Wharton was born and reared in Wilson and attended Salem Academy and Salem College in Winston-Salem. She was married to John B. Lane Jr. and he died in 1944. She was later married to John A, Wharton and he died in 1983. A resident of Greenville since 1956, she pad made her home in Chapel Hill, North Hollywood, Ca. and Washington, N.C. in earlier

years. She was a member of the St. Pauls Episcopal Church.

Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Ray Lane Kohler of Florence, S.C.; two brothers, Hobb Anderson of Del Ray Beach, Fla. and Tom Anderson of Redondo Beach, Ca.; and two grandchildren.

The family will receive friends at the Wilkerson Funeral Home from 7-9 p.m. today.

Obituary

Tripp

In the obituary of Mrs. Lucille Baker Tripp, published Sunday, the residence of her sister, Mrs. Jessie B. Little, was given as Raleigh. Mrs. Little is a Greenville resident.

Paid Obituary

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The family ol Ms Lula Mae Patrick gratefully acknowledge with sincere thanks and appreciation all acts of love and kindness expressed during her Illness in Pitt Memorial Hospital and at home Our sincere prayers are that God will reward you with His love when it is needed most The Family

Card Of Thanks

The family of the late Mr. Heber Stepp wishes to thank each and everyone for every kind deed shown or given during his sickness and their bereavement. We would especially, like to thank the doctors and nurses at Pitt County Memorial Hospital and every one from Black Jack Free Will Baptist Church and Rev. Cedric Pierce.

May God's richest blessings be yours.

Ruby Stepp & Family

Obituary

Hines

Mr, A.A. Hines, 79, died Saturday afternoon at his home. He was a resident of 209 Pineview Drive, Greenville. The funeral service will be conducted at 11:00 A.M. Tuesday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by Rev. Hugh Burlington, his pastor. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park. Mr. Hines, a native of Monroe County, West Virginia, attended Athens College in Athens, West Virginia. He lived in Ashland, Kentucky for 25 years where he was associated with Ashland Oil & Refining Company. He moved to Greenville in 1954 and established the A.A. Hines Insurance Agency, retiring in 1971. He was a memW of the Greenville Host Lions Club and the Immanuel Baptist Church where he had served as chairman of the Board of Trustees. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Anna Louise Singleton Hines; a great niece, Mrs. Susan Willis Sikes of Louisburg formerly of Raleigh; two great great nephews: Todd Ashley Felton and Ethan Alderson Sikes both of Louisburg; and one great great niece, Leslie Hines Felton of Louisburg. The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7 - 9 P.M Monday, The family su^ests that anyone d^ siring to make a memorial contribution consider fie Brotherhood Scholarship Fund of Immanuel Baptist Church,

Paid Obituary

All Four Aboard Plane Killed

BOULDER, Colo. (AP) -, . - .    A single-engine plane that

Mhland|prC  ................................    crashed and burst into

flames while tiding to land at Boulder Municipal Airport, killing all four people aboard, had made three or four passes at the runway before touching down and flipping, officials said.

Three men and a woman, believed to be from the Denver area, were burned beyond recognition in Sundays crash and their iden-

known, Boulder County Sheriff Brad Leach said.

Leach said witnesses told him the rented Grumman Tiger appeared totally out of control as it made passes at the runway before its final landing attempt.

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1g The Dally Reflector, Greenville. N.C. Monday. November 21,1983      ^

Rhetoric And Gestures Fail To Solve The Deficit

By CUFF HAAS Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - The first session of the 98th Congress responded to the federal governments trrent of

red ink with rhetoric and gestures, but not action.

"We are excellent at making speeches, said Sen. John Q. Danforth, R-Mo. We make speeches on the floor of the Senate, and we make speeches back home to our constituent about what a terrible thing the deficit is, and yet... when it comes to taking concrete steps to deal with the deficit, we are reduced to a catatonic state. We are immobile. We are unable to 3Ct

Congress attempt to confront the federal budget deficit sputtered all year and was dying when Danforth stood up to scold his colleagues on the Senate floor last Wednesday. It was shortly before midnight and the Senate was atout to approve another increase in the national debt, which is

expected to hit $1.49 trillion by spring.

By Friday, Congress had adjourned for the year.

Left behind was only one major piece of legislation related to the budget shortfall: a $101 billion increase in the governments line of credit, which is necessary to finance deficits that have reached a projected annual rate of $200

Everybody was waiting on everybody. Nobody would lead, lamented Sen. Lawton Chiles of Florida, the senior Democrat on the Senate Budget Committee.

In June, Congress adopted a budget mandating tax increases of $73 billion and spending cuts of $12.3 billion over three years to help combat rising deficits. But President Reagan flatly ruled out any tax increases and House Speaker Thomas P. ONeill Jr., D-Mass., remained just as firmly opposed to further domestic spending cuts.

No one wanted to get caught in the cross fire, especially

Congressional Increase Of Sum For The IMF May Stir Others

with presidential and congressional elections less than a year away.

It doesnt accomplish much to be one of the dead bodies on the battlefield after the smc^e has cleared," said Sen. Russell B. Long of Louisiana, seniw Democrat on the tax-writing Senate Finance Committee, expressing the view shared by many that it was senseless for Congress to go out on a limb on a tax increase when Reagan has repeatedly vowed to veto such action.

ONeill, meanwhile, has made it an issue of Democratic philosophy to restore many of the d(nestic spending cuts Reagan urged on Congress during the first two years of his presidency.

He acknowledged that under the current circumstances neither he nor ^gan alone can lead the chaise for the politically unpleasant steps necessary to shrink deficits.

Deficit-cutting is always hard. Without strong bipartisan support it is impossible," ONeill said.

%les added that in addition to the reluctance of Congress to act while there is a standoff between Reagan and ONeill, there is just no pressure to act now. The ecmiomy continues to be relatively robust and legislators are hearing few

complaints from back home.

By SUS.ANNE.M. SCHAFER Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Congressional approval last week of an $8.5 billion increase for the International Monetary Fund is expected to spark similar billion-dollar contributions from other major industrialized nations.

The new boost in resources will allow the fund, the worlds key lending agency, to move forward in dealing with the staggering $750 billion foreign debt accumulated by developing nations.

Approval of the larger U.S. contribution represents a very big step forward for the IMF, and West Germany and France are expected to provide their assessed contributions within short order, according to monetary officials familiar with the workings of the fund.

Once the funds 146 member nations have made their contributions, some movement may also be anticipated on a separate, $6 bi lion loan to the fund from a group of nations that includes Saudi Arabia, Japan and several major Western European industrialized nations, the sources said.

It took nearly a year of lobbying by. President Reagan and Treasury Secretary Donald T. Regan, who is the U.S. representative to the ' d. to get the mammoth a.se through a balking

. "I'.S.S,

e House voted Friday to giant the presidents wish, alter a compromise on a housing bill demanded by

Democrats was worked out in the final hours of the 1983 session.

Reagan backed the hike as vital to the health of the international financial system and the continued progress in the U.S. recovery.

The IMF makes short-term loans to governments, particularly those with balance of payments problems. It has helped keep major debtors like Brazil and Mexico from default by providing the loans and by requiring major economic reforms in their domestic

Creationist Is Loser In Voting

economies.

Last year, the 146 member nations of the fund decided to increase each members contribution and add $32 billion to its main lending program.

The U.S. decision to go along with the hike was a key one for the fund, since many nations said they would wait to see what the Americans did before they made their move.

Earlier this year, when the approval of the Congress seemed in doubt, IMF bankers said that they could not accept any new applications for loans from poor debtor nations because the IMF was running out of

lendable cash.

Within hours after Congress gave its approval, Regan telegraphed the finance ministers of key industrial nations to advise them of the vote.

Regan urged the other nations to join the United States in taking this crucial step, so last years agreement to increase the funds resources will go into effect Nov. 30 as planned.

After the United States, West Germany and France add their money to the more than 80 nations that have chipped in their share, the fund will have gotten about 70 percent of its contributions, the source said.

..le economy is not helping us (to act), Chiles said. There is not an imperative coming from the folks."

The evidence was all too apparent last week as Congress rushed to begin a two-month vacation:

-The Senate decided 65-33 that it did not want to consider

an $88 billion package of tax increases and spending cuts to reduce deficits over the next three years that had been irpposed by Sens. Pete V. Domenici, R-N.M., chairman of the 3uaget Committee, and Chiles.

-The Senate did not even try to complete work on a modest $28 billion, three-year package that included $13 billion in tax increases and reductions in the growth of federal health programs.

-The Senate Finance Committee abandoned efforts to write a deficit-reduction package that would have included about $150 billion in tax increases and spending cuts over three years. When it became obvious that the pacxage would not be approved, the panel instead voted 16-1 to direct its staff to prepare a new bill by Feb. 15.

-The House decided, on a 214-204 vote, gainst even considering a modest package of tax increases. Tnat decision was attributable partly to lobbying against a provision in the bill restricting use of tax-exempt bonds for private projects. But Republicans were upset also by Democrats proposed ground rules for debating the measure, which would have allowed the House to vote on limiting the third step of Reagan's individual tax cuts enacted in 1981.

Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D-Ill., chairman of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee, summed up the efforts to reduce the deficit: As we leave Washington, word of our impotence will precede us. ... We have confessed to an already doubting nation that we are ruled by political fear, rather than economic courage. '    

Five Die In

NX. Traffic

NEW ORLEANS (AP)-A black civil rights activist whose police mug shot was featured in his opponents campaign ads has defeated the white author of Louisianas creationism law in a runoff for a state Senate seat.

Shreveport City Councilman Greg Tarver defeated state Sen. Bill Keith 15,338 to 11,285, or 59 percent to 41 percent, on Saturday.

Keiths television ads, which showed a police mug shot of Tarver taken more than a decade ago after his arrest during civil rights protests, asked voters if they wanted to supprt a. lawbreaker or a lawmaker. Tarver called the tactic cheap gutter politics.

GOREN BRIDGE

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

C1963 TribufM Company Syndtcata, Inc

ANSWERS TO BRIDGE QUIZ

Q.l-Both vulnerable, as South you hold:

62 ^987 0AK8 A8643 The bidding has proceeded: East    South    West    North

1    Pass    1    NT    Pass

2 4    Pass    3    4    Pass

3 4    Pass    4    4    Pass

Pass    ?

What action do you take?

A.-You are about to get rich. Double. From the auction you know that your part ner cannot have more than one club, and is probably void. You intend leading the ace of clubs and giving your partner a ruff, getting back with the king of diamonds and giving partner another ruff. On a good day, the ace of diamonds will be an entry for a third club ruff.

better idea of the trick-taking potential of the hand.

Q.2-As South, vulnerable, you hold:

98742 ^10653 0 J98 47

The bidding has proceeded: North    East    South    West

1 4    Pass    Pass    1 0

2 0    Pass    ?

What do you bid now?

A. With his cue-bid of the enemy suit, partner has shown a hand just about good enough for game. Actually, you have a pretty fair hand for him - it is only a question of which major to bid. Why guess? Cue bid three diamonds and let partner make the choice.

Q.3Both vulnerable, as South you hold:

Q98 ^AK872 0 853 4K6 The bidding has proceeded: North East South West 1 4 Pass 2 <7 Pass Pass ?

What do you bid now?

Q.4-.As South, vulnerable, vou hold:

'AQ10762 OAK85 4AJ10 The bidding has proceeded: South West North East 14    2 ^ Dble Pass

7

What action do you take?

A.-There are times when, with a six card major, a void in the enemy suit and a good hand, we will be inclined to override partners low level penalty double. This is not one of those occasions. Partner is probably short in spades, and our suit is not good enough to play in game opposite a possible singleton or void. We have considerable defensive strength so, despite our void in the enemy suit, we pass.

Q.5-Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:

K107 ^8 0AK72 4AQJ62 The bidding has proceeded: West    .North    East    South

4    Puss    Pass    Dble

Pass    4 4    Pass    ?

W'hat action do you take? A.-It is tempting to look for slam, but that course is fraught with danger. Partner had other options he could have exercised with a good hand. It is quite likely that he has a long spade suit and little else. At best, slam will depend on a finesse. At worst, you will have no play for five spades. Pass.

By The Associated Press

Five people, including a Jacksonville mother and her 2-year-old daughter, have died on North Carolina roads this weekend, the state Highway Patrol reported.

Glenda R. Bailey, 21, and her daughter Shaunna Bailey, did when the car in .which they were riding crossed the center line of U.S. 17 and struck a second vehicle head-on. The accident occurred Saturday nitt just south of Jacksonville, the patrol said.

John Marsh Cameron, 78, of Vass, was struck and killed Saturday afternoon as he walked on a rural road in Moore County.

Harvey Cleveland Barnes, 63, of Winston-Salem, died Sunday shortly after midnight when the car he was driving 3 miles north of Winston-Salem ran off a rural road and down an embankment.

Peggy Gilbert Sizemore, 26, of Stoneville, died Sunday afternoon when the car she was driving crossed the center line of a rural road in Rockingham County and struck another vehicle head-on.

Jerry Michael Coley, 32, of Sanford, died Sunday ni^t when the car he was driving was struck on U.S. 15 in Lee County by a vehicle that ran a stop sign.

The deaths brought the years traffic death toll to 1,077, compared with 1,158 on the same date in 1982.

PENGUIN PORTRAIT - The Kid. left, and KO, two Emperor penguin chicks recently hatched in captivity, are shown here at Sea World in San Diego. KO hatched on Sept. 20

and the Kid on Oct. 10. Both are gaining weight on a diet of formula which simulates parents' regurgitated food, and small whole fish.(APLaserphoto)

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CELEBRATION MEXICO CITY (AP) -President Miguel de la Madrid and about 20,000 other .Mexicans watched 15,000 athletes parade past the National Palace as the nation celebrated the anniversary of the 1910 Revolution.

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A.-You have a hand worth an opening bid facing a part nqr who has opened and then jumped. Ergo, you are in slam territory. It is a close decision between a bid of five hearts or four spades. We slightly prefer the latter, since it will give partner a

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Q.6-Both vulnerable, as South you hold:

K9':AQ OAKJ93 4 10762 Your right hand opponent opens the bidding with one heart. W'hat action do you take?

A.-You have a perfectly normal one no trump overcall, so go ahead and make it. You can't double because of your spade shortage, and to overcall two diamonds does not do justice to your fine hand.

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With The

Armed Services

Seaman Apprentice James H (-hristian. son ot Dr. and Mrs. L.S. Christian ot Williamston. complel(*d re cruit training at the Recruit Training Command, San Diego, Calif, where he studied general military subjects

Pvt Donald ,\1 .Moore, son of Annie L Howard ot Route T Williamston. completed a food specialist course at Port Dix. N'.J . where she learned to prepare and serve fiKxJ in large and small quantities.

Pic Kric C Staton, grandson of Maggie Slaton ot Greenville, was awarded an achievement medal at Fort Campbell, K y . lor meritorious .service and acts ot courage. He is a decontamination specialist with the (i;ird Chemical Co and a 19H2 graduate of J.H Rose High Sch(M)l

Pfc RicharfI H fJixon. son 01 Ann L Dixon ot Route 4. Snow Hill, departed on a dipiovment to Western Pa-ciiic Deployment, where he will spend six months \tr eas He is a mernlier of Isi Haiialion. 2nd .Marines. :ni(i Niarine Division. Camp l<ejeune

National Guard Pfc Jimmy .M Dixon Jr son ot Ml and .Mrs Jimmy .M Dixon of Route 2. Grwmville. completed basic training at Fort .McClellan. Ala . where he received instruction in drill and ceremonies, weapons, map reading, tactics and first aid He is a 197H graduate of D ll. Conley High School

Pvt. RoIktI W Cobb, son ot Mr. and Mrs William II

Cobb of Route 1. Bethel, completed a wheeled-vehicle mechanic course at the Army Training Center. Fort Leonard Wood. Mo

Pvt Jonathan G William.son, son of .Mr and .Mrs Joseph G. Williamson of Williamston. completed basic training at Fort Jackson, SC. where he re ceived instruction in drill and ceremonies, weapons, map reading, tactics and first aid.

Cap! Teddy R. Spain, husband ol the former Jan Paige ol Greenville, was awarded a meritorious service medal at Fort Bragg for outstanding non-combat achievement. He is a military pijlice officer with the Ifith .Military Police Brigade

Pvt Ronald R Blount, nephew ol Mr and Mrs Gorisline Blount of Ayden. completed basic traning at Fort Jackson, S.C.. where he received instruction in drill and ceremonies, weaixms. map reading, tactics and first aid. He is a 19lt:l gradu ate ol .Ayden-Grilton High .Schwjl.

S|)ec 4 James T Joyner, son ol Mr and .Mrs James R. Joyner ol Farmville. was involved in a .NATO sponsored excercise by participating m the Arniy s return ot torces to (iermany iRFFORGFRi and the Air Force s Crested Cap excercises He is a w heeled veh ic le mecha me with the Jrd Support Command in Darmstadt, West Germany and a 1979 gradu ale of Farmville Central lligh.SchtH)!

Pvt William C llantm'k.

RF.\I)V FOR \( TION Two I S. Miuiicn lake up new positions at dawn near Iteirni Inlenialioiial \irpoil. the Marines are part of the .2ii(l Marine Ainlipliibionv I ml that replaced the 21th M VI in I.elianoii on Frida\. ' \P l.aserpholoi

Mental

Health

Perspectives

Managing Stress by Lou Gilbert Adult Services, Psychologist

You can't escape all the stiesses of life, or completely turn off youi innate "fight or flight' response to threat but you can learn to count eracl your habitual reaction to stress by learning to relax The same centers of the brain that speed up your biochemical pro cesses when you are alarmed can be called upon to sloce these pro cesses down The relaxation re sponse is the opposite of the alarm response and it returns your body to its natural balanced slate Your expanded pupils, hearing, blood pressure heart beat, circulation and respiration return to normal and your muscles relax The relaxation re sponse allows your body to reCu perate by providing a respite from external stress Relaxation tech niques keep you from becoming overwhelmed and using up .ill

your energy in reaction to the stresses in your lifu When you feel stress building you may want to try this brief relaxation exer cise

1 Sit or lie down in a comforla ble position Close your eves

2 Think of the stress, hut then consciously relax your face, law. and neck, -lower your shoulders

d Take a deep slow breath think Relax", then exhale slowly and feel your body sink hack into the chair or bed Repeal, -concentrating on re laxing your whole body and calming your thoughts

For more information on stress management conlait l.ou Gillrerl at the Mental fleallh Center 7.S2 71.S1

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<1 Mental Health Mental Reiardalioii iv Substance Abuse Center

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Airman .Sean M Collins lalxivei. sonol Mr and Mrs. Don F Collins ol Greenville, completed basic training at l.ackland AFB. Tex., where he studied the Air Force mis.sion, organizations, customs and human relations He is remaining at the ba.se lor specialized training 111 the security police held Collins IS a 198;! graduate ol J H. Rose High .Sch(H)l

Spec, .9 Trma F .Norlleel, daughter ol Mr and Mrs Roscoe C. Norfleet ot Greenville, was mvol\d m a N A T() -s pt 111 so ri'd ex c e rc i se !)> participating in the Army's return ol torces to German> 'RFFoRCiFR and the ,\ir Force s Crested Cap excercises She is an e(|uipnient rirords and parts specialist with the ;Jrd Armored Division in Hanau. West Germany, and a' 1973 graduate ol J 11 Rose High SchiMil

Army Reserve 2nd Lt Donald R, .Move, son ol Ola H .Move ot Ayden, completed a signal olliccr liasic course at Army Signal .School, Fort Gordon, Ga., where he received instruction in military leadership and tactics, tactical radio communications systems and communications center operations

son of Melba J. Hancock of Greenville, completed a food specialist course at Fort Dix. N.J. He is ii 19:} graduate of J H. Rose High School.

Ernest G. Hodges, son of .Mr. and Mrs, Ernest L. Hodges of Route 3, Greenville, was promoted to the rank of sergeant He is a cannon crewman at Fort Bragg with the XVIII Airborne Corps, and a 1979 graduate of D H Conley High School,

Marine Ife Reylon B Eastwood, son of .Mr and Mrs, Peyton B Eastwoorl ol Williamston, participated m ' C 0 m b i n e d Arms Excercise" 9-83 in the Calilornta desert He is a memtier of 2nd Battalion. 7th .Marines, Camp Pendleton. Calif

Pvt Terry L Eillis. grandson of Beulah M Ellis and swi of Johnnie R Keys, both ol A\den. completed basic training at Fort Dix. N.J.. where he received instruction in drill and ceremonies, weapons, map reading, tactics and first ai( He IS a 19:{ graduate of Ayden-Grilton High Schwl,

Kenneth R Whiehard, son ol William D Whichard of Route 1. Williamston. was promoted to the rank of specialist tour He is an equipment records and parts specialist at Fort Ho(kI. Texas. with the i;5th Support Command

.Sgt. Driandus L .Maye, .son ol .Mr and .Mrs, Lmwrjod E. Maye ol Route 7. Griflon. was involved in a NATO-sponsored excercise by participating in the .Army's return ol torces to Germany 'REFORfiERi and the Air Force's (rested Cap excerci.se He is a vehicle mechanic with the 3rd Armored Sivision in Hanau. West (iermans

.Stall Sgt. Isaac L Prayer, son ol Fannie Prayer ol Route 1 Ayden. was awarded an achievement medal in Heidelberg. West (iermany, for meritorious service and acts of courage He is a communications station controller with the .Mh Signal Comma.nd and a 1972 graduate of Ayden-Grilton HighSchixjI.

Airman Derwm L Little I above I, son of Mr and .Mrs Carl K l.ittle ot Greenville, completed, basic training at lackland AFB. Tex , where he studied Itie Air Force mission, organization, customs and human relations. He IS remaining at the base tor s|Kcialized training' in the .security police held Little IS a 1982 graduate of J H Rose High .School,

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Views On Dental Health

Kenneth T. Perkins, D.D.S.PA

HALF A TOOTH BETTER THAN NONE

Sometimes the dentist can' save only part of a tooth (usually a molar) because of extreme bone loss or a vertical fracture involving half the tooth. Half a tooth, however, is better than none The dentist can divide the molar in half vertically and surgically remove the one or two dam aged roots of the weak half and save the undamaged, strong half with root canal therapy. This i^ called a hemiseclion Occasionally, an infected root is surgically remove ed without damaging the crown part of the tooth. This is particularly advan

tageous when there is a cap on the tooth and hemi-secting it would involve cutting through or destroying an otherwise good restoration, or if the tooth is healthy and in good contact with the adjacent teeth In those situations, rather than hemisect, the tissue along side the roots is bisected (lifted and turned). and the infected root IS found and removed. Root canal therapy is always done on the remaining root or roots. If there is ever a choice of saving a tooth (even half a tooth), by all means, save it!

Prepared ax a public xetvife tr' pumuite tviier lieiilal liealth |-ioni ihe rrffices of Kenneth T Perkinx 1) 1) S P A Lxanx Si . Phone 792 5126

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C

Monday. November 21,1983    5Grappling With Payments For Organ Transplants

By DONNAANDERSON AMOciited Preti Writer SALT LAKE CITY (AP)-With the survival rate for organ transplants rising with improved methods and drugs, the federal government and insurance companies are grappling with the question of who will pay the staggering cost of the procedures.

In the past. liver, heart and heart-lung transplants were considered experimental, and Medicare and many insurance plans - the so-called third-party payers -were thus unwiUing to pay the bills.

But with the advent of the anti-rejection drug cyclosporine, the survival rate for liver transplant patients has soared from 32 percent to 70 percent -making the surgery less risky than some other procedures considered routine.

Meantime, the comparable success of heart transplants has prompted a growing number of hospitals to offer them.

But the question as to how and who is going to pay for them is wide open. Theres a movement among dhe third-party payers to pay for more of these, types of procedures, said John Dwan, spokesman for the University of Utah Medical Center.

The center performed the first permanent artificial heart implant last Dec. 2 on Barney Clark, who died 112 days later.

There are thousands of people out there who need (transplants) but who can't afford them, Dwan said. Will these operations only be available to the rich? Or should the federal government be expected to pick up these huge costs?

The cost for a liver transplant is about $60,000-$90,000. A heart transplant costs $75,000 to $125,000.

Under Medicare, pancreas, heart, liver and heart-lung transplants are still considered experimental and the surgery is not covered. But that could change The federal Health Care

Finance Administration has initiated an 18-m(mth study on the cost, survival rate and impact of heart transplants to determine whether they should be covered under Medicare, said spdtesman John Kitrell. The Public HealTh Service is doing a similar assessment of liver transplants.

Kitrell said the decision whether to cover the procedures under Medicare probably will be made by Congress, where interest in organ transplants has been heightened by pleas for organ donors from several congressmen and President Reagan.

Bills have been introduced to establish a national clearinghouse to match donors with recipients. On Thursday, the House Commerce Comittee approved a bill creating such a national center.

None of the bills deal with the issue of financing, but Rep. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., has introduced legislation that would require the U.S. Health and Human Services

Average Prices Of Gasoline Fell

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Despite tax hikes, average nationwide gas prices fell nearly 4 cents from a year ago and dropped a half-cent during the past two weeks, but pump prices under $1 on the West Coast are disappearing, says oil industry analyst Dan Lundberg.

The average price for gasoline nationally was nearly $1,215, down a half-cent since Nov. 4. Lundberg said over the weekend in his biweekly survey of 17,600 stations in all 50 states. At this time last year, the average price was slightly below $1,252.

Prices were lowest at self-service stations, which averaged almost $1,109 for regular leaded, about $1,183 for regular unleaded, nearly $1,351 for premium leaded and just over $1,302 for premium unleaded.

By Abigail Van Buren

1963 by UnivrMl Pratt Syndictlt

DEAR ABBY: I am enclosing your column of Nov. 17, 1981, with a request that you please run it again. It changed our lives.

ALSO GRATEFUL IN ILUNOIS

DEAR ALSO: With pleasure:

DEAR ABBY. Our problem daughter, not quite 17, ran away from home 14 months ago. She had been giving us a rough time for about a yearskipping school. Staying out late and lying to us constantly. After a noisy scene, she stormed out of the house with only the clothes on her back. We didnt have a clue as to where she went.

Only a parent who has lived through this kind of nightmare can realize what we went through. After a year of heartaches and sleepless nights, we were told by the police to give up and assume she was dead. But parents never give up. We continued to search and hope and pray that shed return to us one day.

Well, our prayers were answered when, out of the blue, we received a telephone call from someone who said he was a volunteer with Runaway Hotline (formerly Operation Peace of Mind) in Houston. (We live in Michigan.) We were told that our daughter had read of the toll-free number in Dear Abby and she wanted to let us know that she was well and happy in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.! The volunteer said our daughter would call him again on the following morning in case we had a message for her.

We told him we would welcome a collect call from her. Sure enough, she called us the next day! She sounded wonderful and said she was working and was going to night school to finish her education. This story has a happy ending. Our daughter is coming for Christmas!

Abby, will you please publish that toll-free number again so other runaway lds can establish communications with their families? Our daughter said that she had seen your column with the nuipber posted near telephones where runaways hang out.

We will never be able to thank you enough for giving us the happiest holiday weve ever had!

GRATEFUL IN MICHIGAN

DEAR GRATEFUL: With pleasure. Runaways, call this toll-free number: 1-800-231-6946. If in Texas, use this number: 1-800-392-33S2.

An operator will take your call and telephone your parents anywhere in the United States with a message from you. There will be no lecturing or recriminations. Your call will not be traced. And only one question will be asked: Do you need anything? If you do, you will be told where you can get it, free. I repeat, no attempt will be made to contact you or bring you back homeregardless of your age.

If you are a runaway, I beg yon to forget the past and send a message to your parents now. They will sleep better tonight and so will you. And you will all have the best holiday season youve had in years. God bless you.-ABBY

P.8. Runaway Hotline was established 10 years ago by a handfhl of public-spirited volunteers with the support of the governor of Texas. To date it has plaMd over 600,000 calls from runaways, assuring their families that they are OK. Beantifhl!

Department to produce an annual study on transplant survival rates.

Gore hopes the updates will spur the government and insurance companies to pay for transplants.

But dpite growing interest in organ transplants, Jo Cratin, contracting specialist with the HCFAs Denver office, is not optimistic.

She points out that Congress approved financing for kidney transplants in 1973, but it has been so expensive, I doubt that anything like it will ever happen again. The move has been away from adding more things that Medicare will pay for.

Medicare does pay costs not directly associated with a transplant, but which can amount to a significant share of a recipient's bill, said HCFA spokeswoman JoAnn Lorenz.

In Clarks case, for instance, Medicare officials refused to pay for the surgery, but determined that $197,489 of the $254,680 bill was allowable, said Medicare spokeswoman Jeri McGeahan.

Of that, Clarks private insurance paid $5,928 and Medicare picked up $57,762.

At Stanford University Medical Center, where the $7,500 cost of heart-transplant surgery is waived.

attendant bills still can reach $125,000 and the recipient must guarantee payment. Some hospitals require a deposit of up to $60,000.

Most of the people that come here have an insurance or third-party commitment, said Mdie Goodkind, Stanford spokesman. 1 havent seen anybody thats been turned away because of money.

The 10 percent of patients in a real financial bind turn to public fund-raising, (ioodkind said. "Thats not the most desirable, but that seems to be necessary at this time.

Of 33 major insurance companies surveyed in June,

82 percent said they would be wi ling to pay for liver transplants and 85 percent said they would pay for heart transplants, said Jennifer Stockdale, spokeswoman for the Health Insurance Association of America Nearly all routinely covered kidney transplants Blue Cross-Blue Shield of Massachusetts began offering a plan in August that specifically covert heart, heart-lung and liver transplants, said spokesman Ed Whittaker.

Were the bellwether on this. he said.

A supplement to standard coverage, the plan covers from five days before to up to

a year after a transplant at a monthly cost of $2 for a family, 55 cents for individuals and five cents for senior citizens.

It is in the area of private insurance that a change in the federal governments policy would have the largest impact, since many companies pattern their'policies after Medicare, Goodkind said.

If Medicare began cover

ing heart transplants as routine procedures, "were hoping the remaining resistant third-party payers will declare it eligible,he said However. Ms. Stockdale believes it is the companies willingness to pay tlwt has influenced the government to consider coverage A companys decision to pay the cost, she said, is "almost putting a Good Housekeeping seal of approval on it

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville N C Monday. November 21.1983 -13

College Teams Set For (Most) Bowls

ByHERSCHELNISSENSON AP Sports WriterWait, waitonofdNotreDame;

See if they 'IIplay in the Liberty game. Will the Irish stay at home Safe and secure 'neath the Golden Dome?

Or did they vote to play B.C.

Ai^go to Memphis, Tennessee?

Will they deem a is-5 record worthy of Fausts first bowl?

Personally, I would like to go (to the Liberty Bowl)," (^ch Gerry Faust said Saturday after Notre Dame ended its

regular season on another sour note by losing to Air Force 23-22,

The Irish led 22-10 after three periods, but Marty Louthan threw a 48-yard touchdown pass to Mike Kirby, John Kershner scored from a yard out with 1:35 left to play and Sean Pavlich, given a second chance by a Notre Dame penalty, kicked the winning point. Then, Chris Funk, who blocked a 37-yard field goal try by Notre Dames Mike Johnston in the first quarter, blocked a 31-yarder with four seconds remaining.

The Liberty Bowl and executive director A.F. Bud Dudley (Notre Dame 42) had decided to invite the Irish to the 25th anniversary game - win, lose or draw. Unfortunately, Notre Dame wound up lose, lose and lose, bowing to Pitt, Penn State and Air Force on the heels of a five-game winning streak, longest in Fausts three-year tenure.

Before Saturdays game, athletic director Gene Corrigan had said the Irish would accept a invitation to play 18th-ranked Boston College, although, he described the season as "tremendously

disappointing and said he had been discouraging Dudley from proffering the bid.

Later, a Notre Dame spokesman said it was an offer the Irish most certainly could refuse, explaining, Were not sure were worthy of a bowl date, being 6-5.

The players voted Sunday on whether they wanted to go, but their desires were not made public - The ballots were sent over to the administration building, said sports information director R<^er Valdiserri - and school officials said a decision would not be made at least until today.

If they offer it, well go, said tailback Allen Pinkett, who rushed for 197 yards in a losing cause. Well go in there smcAing and use that game as a stepping stone for next year - then well play some ball.

A Liberty Bowl spokesman said other teams under consideration were Oklahoma, Arizona State and Washington State. But Mike Treps, Oklahomas sports information director, said, I still dont think we are interested in going to a bowl at this time. Coach (Barry) Switzer has been adamant in saying we will be going only to Hawaii (for the regular-season finale Dec. 3).

Although every bowl spot with the exception of Notre Dames unguaranteed reservation in Memphis was filled over the weekend, the Liberty Bowl has plenty of candidates should the Irish back out Virginia Tech (9-2) and East Carolina (8-3) have the records but not the prestige of an Oklahoma or an Arizona State.

And Washington State suddenly became attractive with a 7-4 record and a

five-game winning streak following a 17-6 victory over I5th-ranked Washington that knocked the Huskies out of the Rose Bowl and into the Aloha Bowl for the second year in a row, this time against Penn State. Coach Jim Walden called his Cougars the best team in the (Pacific-10) Conference right now.

If there was no joy in Seattle, it was just the opposite in Los Angeles where UCLA, 6-4-1 ^ter an 0-3-1 start, knocked off Southern Cal 27-17 and made it to the Rose Bowl for the second straight year, a first for the Bruins.

UCLA will meet fourth-ranked Illinois, which trounced Northwestern 56-24 and clinched its first Big Ten title in 20 years.

The rest of the bowl lineup looks like this: Orange - No. 1 Nebrasb vs. No. 5 Miami; Cotton - No. 2 Texas vs. No. 7 Georgia; Sugar - No, 3 Auburn vs. No. 8 Michigan; Sun - No. 6 Southern Methodist vs. No. 16 Alabama; Holiday - No. 9 Brigham Young vs. No. 19 Missouri; Fiesta - No. 10 Ohio State vs. No. 17 Pitt; Gator - No. 11 Iowa vs. No. 12 Florida; Hall of Fame - No. 14 West Virginia vs. Kentucky; Florida Citrus -No. 20 Maryland vs, Tennessee; Bluebonnet - Baylor vs. Oklahoma State; Peach - Florida State vs. North Carolina; Independence - Air Force vs. Mississippi; California - Northern Illinois (Mid-American champ) vs. Fullerton State (Pacific Coast Athletic Association).

In other games involving bowl-bound teams, Texas edged Baylor 24-21, SMU handed Arkansas its first shutout in 125 games 17-0, Michigan shaded Ohio State 24-21, BYU swamped Utah 55-7, Iowa trampled Minnesota 61-10, Syracuse up

set West Virginia 27-16, Pitt and Penn State tied 24-24, Boston College whipped Holy Cross 47-7, Kansas shocked Missouri 37-27, Maryland downed North Carolina State 29-6, Tennessee blanked Kentucky lO-Of Ole Miss nipped Mississippi State 24-23, North Carolina held off Duke 34-27, Oklahoma State trimmed Iowa State 30-7 and Northern Illinois drubbed Ohio U. 41-17.

Nebraska, Auburn, Miami, Georgia, Florida and Alabama were not scheduled. All except Miami have at least one regular-season game remaining

Washington State got two short second-period touchdown runs from freshman Richard Calvin, while sophomore Kerry Porter rushed for 170 yards against Washington.

UCLA erased a 10-6 halftime deficit against Southern Cal by scoring three touchdowns in six minutes of the third quarter - Rick Neuheisels 7-yard pass to Karl Dorrell and runs of 12 yards by Kevin Nelsonand 17 by Bryan Wiley.

Rob Moerschell scored on a l-yard run and threw a 6-yard TD pass to Mike Chapman as Texas opened a 24-7 lead and then withstood a fourth-quarter Baylor rally.

Jack Trudeau fired four touchdown passes, including a pair of short ones to Tim Brewster and a 47-yarder to David Williams, as Illinois routed .Northwestern.

SMUs Reggie Dupard. the leading rusher in the Southwest Conference, ran for 175 yards and two touchdowns - one a 60-yarder - to lead the Mustangs over Arkansas.

Steve Smith passed for two TDs and ran for another as Michiga blew a 10-0

lead and then rallied to defeat Ohio State.

BYUs Steve Young completed 22 of 25 passes for 268 yards and six touchdowns against Utah. He set or tied nine NCAA records, including 395,1 yards per game in total offense, a 71,3 completion percentage for the season. 306 completions in one year and 22 consecutive games with at least one TD pass.

Eddie Phillips scampered 80 yards for a touchdown on the games first play and finished with three TDs and 172 yards, while wingback Ronnie Harmon also scored three times in Iowas rout of Minnesota. Phillips became the Ilawkeyes career rushing leader with 2,144 yards.

Bob Paulling's three field goals led No 13 Clemson, on probation and ineligible for a bowl trip, over South Carolina 22-13 in a game that ended in a midfield scuffle between the teams.

Harold Gayden rushed for two short touchdowns and put Syracuse in position for two more scores with a 57-yard run and a 58-yard pass reception as the Orangemen defeated West Virginia.

Nick Gancitano kicked a 32-yard field goal on the final play to give Penn State a tie after Pitt had gone ahead 24-21 with 1:15 left on John Congemis third touchdown pass to Sill Wallace.

Troy Stradford rushed for 165 yards and two touchdowns as Boston College pummeled Holy Cross. Frank Seurer threw two scoring passes against Missouri and set a Big Eight career record of 6.410 passing yards, 354 in the Jayhawks upset of ol Mizzou. Boomer Esiason passed for 215 yards and a TD as Maryland beat N.C. State.

Elsewhere:

Duke's Ben Bennett became the most prolific passer in major-college historv when he threw for 323 yards and two TDs against North Carolina. Bennett wound up his career with 9,614 yards, bettering the mark of 9.536 by BYU's Jim .McMahon.

Arizona State junior Luis Zendejas kicked four field goals in the Sun Devils' 24-17 triumph over San Jose State That gave him 62 for his career, erasing the mark of 60 set by Clemsons Obed Ariri and equaling the Pac-10 record of 25 in a season by Washington s Chuck nelson.

And Oregon and Oregon State battled to the first scoreless tie in Division I-A since Northern Illinois and Eastern Michigan did it Oct 6,1979.Martina Locks Claim On #1

By The Associated Press .Martina Navratilova is making doubly sure that nobody disputes her claim to the top of women's tennis world.

Navratilova beat Chris Evert Lloyd on for the sixth time in six starts this vear, outclassing her 6-2, 6-2 in Tokv'o on Sunday to capture the $200.000 Lion Ladies Cup tournament.

"Playing her and winning gives me more satisfaction than beating anyone in the world." Navratilova said afterwards Navratilova was rarely in trouble against Evert, but when she was, she bailed herself out with precision strokes.

"As soon It was deuce. .Martina buckled down and I got a little tentative Lloyd said, "That's the story of this yearSCOREBOARD

NFL Standings

Bv Thr AuarialH Prm .Xmrrkia I onlrrrncr . Kitl

W I. T Pel PK

Miami

8 4

0

667 262

181

Buffalo

7 5

0

583 za

247

Baltimore

6 6

0

90U 196

272

New EngUnd

6

8

0 500 2T

2

3

2

N Y Jet*

4 7

0

:I64.22S

226

Cratril

PilUburgh

Cleveland

9 3

u

750 291

198

7 5

0

981 252

241

Cincinnati

5 7

0

417 278

225

Houtlon

1 II West

0

081 203

356

LA Raider*

9 3

0

750 319

268

Denver

7 5

0

581 230

223

Seattle

0

500 301

296

KanalTly .

u

0

417 243

244

San Diego

0

333 262

345

NltiMtl Conference

Eavt

Dalla*

10 2

0

833 .382

260

Waihingion

10 2

0

833 414

255

SI 16UIS

5 6

1

458 282

X96

Philadelphia

4 8

0

333 172

236

N Y Gianu

3 8

I

292 215

'262

(entral

Minnesou

7 5

0

581 265

285

Detroit

6 6

0

500 257

244

Green Bay

6 4

0

500 324

X

Chicago

5 7

0

417 228

233

Tampa Ray

1

II

0 083

1.98

2

8

West

6

L A Rams

7 5

0

583 278

269

.San Francisco

7

5

0 583 329

2

3

2

.New Orleans

6

5

0 945 230

2

4

0

Atlanta

5 7

0

417 247

266

SuiHlayi (iimn

Droil 23. Grwn Bay 20, OT St Lauu 44. San Diego 14 Cincinnati 38. Houston 10

Minnesota 17. Pittsburgh 14 s23. Philade

AriMli Miamin. BaltimoreU

New York Giants 23. PKiladelj^ia 0 Los Angeles Raiders 27. Buflaio 24

Philadelphia

8 3

727

-

Boston

9 4

692

New York

7 5

583

I'-j

New Jersey

6 5

545

2

Washington

3 6

455

3

Central Division

AllanU

6 9

545

Milwaukee

7 6

538

Detroit

6 6

500

'z

Chicago

4 6

400

I'z

Indiana

3 8

273

3

Cleveland

2 10

167

4'z

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Midwest Div isioa

Dallas

7 4

.636

Denver

6 5

545

1

San Antonio

5 7

417

2'z

UUh

5 7

417

2'z

Houston

4 7

364

3

Kansas City

4 7

364

3

Pacific DivUion

Lo* Angeles

9 2

.818

Portland

8 4

667

1'j

Seattle

7 6

538

3

Golden State

6 6

500

3',

San Diego

5 7

417

4,'2

Phoenix

4 7

364

5

Saturday's Game*

Washington 126, L'Uh 113 Fliiladetphia 92, Boston 91 New York 104. Detroll 101, OT

Atlanta 104. Seattle 02 Chicago 110, Indiana 109 Dallas 118. Phoenix 107 Houston 129. Golden State 109 San Antonio 109. New Jersey 100 Denver 133, Milwaukee 126 Los Angeles 117. Portland 110 .Sunday's Game San Diego 99. Cleveland 97 Moodav's Games No games scheduled

Tuesday 's Games Boatonat .New York, (ni DetroiiatPhiladelphia.ini Golden State at Washington. i n i Indiana at Atlanta, ini SanAntonioatDallas.ini PhoenixatHouston.ini San Diego at Kansas City, ini UUhatuisAngeIes.ini Denverat Portland. (ni

NHL Standings

By Hie Associated Press Wales Conference Patrick INvislou

W L

T PU

GF

GA

NY Rangers

14 5

3

31

97

<76

.NY Ules

13 8

0

26

91

76

Philadelphia

Waihii^on

Pituburgh

12 7 9 12 5 13

2

0

3

26

18

13

88

69

63

72

80

83

New Jersey

2 18

0

4

54

102

Adams Divitii

Boalon

13 4

2

28

96

58

Buffalo

11 7

3

25

7

76

Moatreal

10 10 9 to

3

1

23

19

112

85

88

81

Hartford

6 9

2

18

69

75

CamabellCeaferenee

NerrUDIvlilM

MiiweMiU

10 8

2

22

94

06

Chicago

Taranto

10 10 9 10

1

2

21

20

82

86

87

98

Detroit

7 10

2

16

60

80

St Louis

7 II

2

18

71

06

Smvthe Division

Edmonton    17    3    1    39    132

Calgary    8    9    3    19

Los Angeles    7    9    5    19

Vancouver    9    11    1    19

Winnipeg    6    13    2    14

Satnrdav's (iames NY Islanders 6. Washington 2 N Y Rangers 6, Boston6. tie Hartford 4, Quebec 4, tie Buffalo 9. Calgary 2 Wmonlon 13, New Jersey 4 SI I/Mis 4. Pittsburgh 4 Toronto 9. Detroil 4 Chicago 9. Mwitreal 9. lie Minnesota 8. Winnipeg 7. OT .Sundai's (>ame<i Philadelphia 5, Pittsburgh 4, OT N Y Rangers 6 Quebec 5 (iT Minnesota 4. Chicago 3 Vancouver 8, Los Angeles 3 .Monday's Games Winnipeg at Edmonton. i n i laia Angeles at Ca

8;i 69    82

88    92

91    94

m 1(8)

algary. ini IS s (lamet

Tuesdass Games

Boatonat Montreal, tni Quebec at N Y Islanders, (ni Toronto at SI Uhiis. <n i

AP Top Twenty

By The Associated Press How the Top Twenty teams in The Associated Press college football poll fared this weekend No 1 Nebraska (ll^HH was idle .No 2Texas 1104iH)i beat Baylor 24 21 No 3 Auburn 19-14) i was idle No 4 Illinois (9-14)1 beat .Northwestern 9624

..No 9Miami. Ela 110-14)1 was idle No 6 So Methodist '9 10- beat Arkansas 174t

I No 7Georgia-8 1 11 was idle < No 8 Michigan -924Ji beat t)hio ^

Chicago 27. Tampa Bay 0 Cleveuind 30, New England 0 Denver 38, Seattle 27 Dallas 41. Kansas CTly 21 Atlanta 28. San Francisco 24 Washington 42. Los Angeles Rams 20 Mondav'ifiamr New York Jets at New Orleans mi Thursdas. Nos. 24 PilUburgh at Detroit Si Louis at Dallas

Sunday, Nov. 27 Minnesota at .New' Orleans San Francuico at Chicago New England at New Y ork Jets Houston at Tampa Bav Philadelphia at Washington Baltimore at Cleveland Buffalo at Los Angeles Rams New York Giants at l>os Angeles Raiders Denver at San Diego Kansas City at .Seattle Green Bay at Atlanta

Monday . Nov . 28 Cincinnati at Miami mi

NBA Standings

By The Associated Press E A.STERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division

W L Pci. GB

Stale

24-21

No 9 Brigham Young 110-I4H heal l.'lah

I No, 10 Ohio Slate i8-34)i lost to Michigan I4-2I

No 11 Iowa 1924)) beat M innesda 61 It) No 12 Florida 17-2-1) was idle No 13 Clemson (91-1) beat South Carolina 22-13

.No 14 West Virglma i8 34)i lost to Syracuse 27 16 No 15 Washington i8 3 0- lost lo Washington .State 1/6 No 16 Alabama (7-24)i was idle No 17 Pittsburgh (8-2-1) tied Penn State 24-24

No 18 Boston College 8-2-0- beat Holv Cross 47 7

No 19 Missouri >7-44) I lost to Kansas 37-27

No 20 .Maryland i8 34)i beat .North Carolina SUle 26-6

College Football

Bv Thr Associated Press EAST

Boston College 47, Holy Cross 7 Penn .St 24, PilLsburgh 24. tie iWracuseTT W Virginia 16 'remple24, RuigersM tlTH

Arkansas St. 14, Memphis St 14, tie Clemson 22. S Carolina 13 Maryland 29, N Carolina .St 6 Miss'issippi 24. Mississippi Si 23 N Carolina 34. Duke 27 Tennessee 10, Kentucky 0 Virginia Tech 48. Virginia 0 MIDWEST Air Force 23, Notre Dame 22 Bow ling Green 38, Kent St 3 Cent \richigan34.Toledo6 Illinois 96. Northwestern 24 Iowa 61. Minnesota 10 Kansas .37, .Mi.s,souri 27 .Miami. Dhio 14. Cincinnati 10 Michigan 24. Ohio St 21 N Illinois 41. Ohm L' 17 Oklahoma St 30. Iowa St 7 Purdue3l. Indiana 30 Wisconsin 32. Michigan .Si 0 SDl'THWEST Houston 43, Texas Tech 41 Southern .Meth 17. Arkansas 0 Texas 24. Bavlor 21 Texas El Paso 40. Weber St 34 Texas A4M 20, Texas Christian 10 FAR WEST Arizona St 24. San Jose St 17 Brigham Young 95, UUh7 California 27. Slamord 18 Colorado38. Kansas St 21 FresnoSI 30, N Arizona 22

MIYAZAKI. Japan tcurei hi the Miyazaki Sunday:

ChenTzeMing TomWaUon Johnnv Miller Fred Couple*

Scott Simpson Greg Norman Tsuneyuki Nakaiima Bobby Wadkim ItaoAoki

l.arr> Nelson Hulmrt Green Grais Stadler .Mark .Mccumber Bernard Unger Rex Caldwell Sandy Lyle Gary Koch Andy Bean

indy

.\r,,

\mg*uninapayo

71 75 70-77- 293 796973-73- 294

79 78 73-68 294 76-7I-74-79--296 74-76-76-70- 296 77 79 72-73- 297 74-74 77-73 - 298

80 73 74 71 298 76 72 78-74 .tOO

PONTE VERDE, Ha ( APi - Scores after Saturday's fourth round of the 1983 PtiA tfualifving Tournament on the par-72, 6.897-yard Tournament Plaverv I luh rourve at .Sawgrass:

Jav Cudd Willie Wood Brett fpper Griff Moody Bill Sander Mark Brcxiks Mike Smith Ken Kelley Gary Krueger Jodie Mudd .Michael Putnam Tommy Valentine Tom lihman Jim Kane CIvdeRego BobTwav Imren Roberts Brad Faxon Chuck Thorpe Paul Azinger BobE Smith Joey Sindelar Prank Puhrer (javin Levenson Steve Hart David Peoples Robert Thompson Jon Chaffee Tony Farmer Sieve Liebler Corey Pavin Ken Brown Mark Wietie Jack FerenZ Bobbv Walzel Mick'Soli Kennv Knox Gregi'arrow Randy Wadkin-s Bill Glasson Rick Dalpos Jamie Howell Mike .Morley K C Liao Rafael Alarron Mike Bright MikePetlc Rick Hartman Ue Rmker Bill Brillon Jim Gallagher Scotl Wadkias

69 72 73-67 281

71-70 70 71 282

72 7.9 74-69 286 70-73-6979 287 73-73-70-71 287 77-6972-69 287 77-72-7.0-69 288 79-73 72-70- 290 77 79-66-72 290

73 74 73 70- 290

7.9-70-74 71 290

72-74-71 73 290

76-72-79-67 - 290 72 73-71 79 291

71 75-70-79- '291

74 7 9 71 71 291

77-73-71 71- 292

73-7976 73 - 292

7.9-74-74-69 292

74-79 77-71 292

73-79-73-72 293 T7-69-72-79 293 767079-72 291 77 74-73-69- 293

78-66-74-75- 293 76-71-7769- '293 78-73 73 70 294 76-76-7171 294

72 72 79-71 '294 77 74-73 70 2W

78-72 76-68 29t

7.9-70 78-71 29t

76-79-73 71 72-81-71 71-

79-70 76 74 806974 I 7678-7971 77 71 73 71 72 79 72 72 299 79-69 77 70 299 79-75-7:i-72 299

77-717869 299 83-72-72-68 - 299

77 77 72-70- 296

78 74 76-68 296 79-73-71 73 296

74-81 7368 2% 79-68-76-77 - 296 79-74-79-72 296 77 70-79 74 296 77 72-73 74 296

7.9-7968-75- 297

295

295

299

-295

299

299

Steven Jones Adam Adams Lynlmlt .Mike Cunning Bill Kokotl Jack .Spradlin Robert Imhr Ron Com mans Bill Israelson Tom Umore Bobby Roble Kurl Cox

Lance Ten Broeck Dennis Tnxler Grier Jones James Blair Jeff Grvgiel Gary .Marlowe Tom' Costello Bill) Pierol .Mark Coward John Hamank Urry Rmker Steve Uwery Mike Gove Jeff Roth

MarkCalcavecchia Eddie Mudd Thomas Woodard Mike Hulberl Erie Batten David0 Kelly T<xld Smith Blaine McCallister Lindy Miller Bobb\ Pancratz Gene'Sauers Rick Cramer Ifod .Nuckolls Rod Curl Curl livrum Mark Ralen Gary Pinns Doug Brow n Jeff Thomsen Rocky Thompson Jerry Minor John McGough Dana Quigley Rick .Sialfings Don Reese Darrell Keslner

Joe Hager K W ESks Terrv Snodgrass Duke Delcher Greg Twiggs BillWrobbel Urrx Reniz Bob Bvman Jeff .Sanders Donald Kalode Bill Buttner Michael Harmon Tommv Armour III Mike Eiodney Tonv Grimes

67 73-81-76 297 77-74 73-73- 297

77 71 77-72 297 80-74 72-71-297

78 72-7^71-297

73-76-71-77- 297 T7-72-75-73- 297 76 76-71-75- 298 79-73-79-71-298 T9-72-73-74-- 298

74-77-70-77 - 298

77-r3-73-75- 298

78-73-74-73 - 29H

79-76-74 73- 298 79-74-74-71- 298 77-73-73-7S-298 77-77 72-72 - 298 79-73-72 74 298 79-77 77-7(t- 299 82 78-7168 299 81 73-74-71-299 76 79-71-73- 299 76-79-74-70- 299

76-78 73-72- 299

77-76-73-73- 299 74 77-76-73- ,300 76-75-75-74-31)0 74-74-76-76--J 76-74-76-74-3U). 79-81-72-73- 301 78 74-71 78- 301 76-71-81-73- 301

TANK DFMMAKA

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

VO iOO Wai i5UP5efA3arr 8eii& voronvi gQocp. ^

APPARENTLY,    ME

JUeiT It WtTM Mi5> BARE MAJOP&.

78-77 70-76- 301

One Roe

77-T4-78-77

.(06

7178-78-72-301

Paul Perini

82 70-74 0

1 ):; 72 71-.301

Jack Kiefer

:6-79-76,7f)

:to7

77-74-76-74- 301

Rick Pearson

7.978-79-79-

:ot

75-78-76-72- 301

Ken .Malliace

, 7679-79-7T

:or7

79-74-75-73- 301

Barry Willardson

' 7.9-78 74-81

308.

79-74 72 76- 301

Storm Gleim

79-79 79 7,')

.(08

82-76-70-73- 301

Ivan Smith

.8 79-79 79

:08

76-79-75-71-30I

Kent Kluha

T7-78-79-78

308,

74-77 72 79- 302

David Allen

77 78 77 -77

;(09

73-76 78 75 - 302

Keith Clearwater

88 7673-73

310

81-77-72-72- 302

Terry McPartland

79-79-77 79-

310

80-77-74-71-302

John Graham

870-76-82

111

74-7675-78- 303

Jeff Duncan

82-77.79 73

311

81 7675-71-303

Brian Slaveley

79 78-78 78

313

' 74-80-75-74- 303

Richie Adhani

78-80 79-77

-314

75-73-78-77 - 303

Michael West

79-78 78-81

316

79^1 72-71 303

Mark McCann

80 79-79 81

.119

79-77 72 75- :)03

Jeff Kern

81 8t)7T9

321)

8lF75-7673- 30:i

Greg^Whisman

DanStrimple

90-76 74 81

321

81-8)-Ki-79-

328

ualifv

81-77 73-73-:t04

Eric Johnson

93-87 79 72

01

Jack Kelly

87 80 84-81

:2

80-80-74-70- 304

Charley Calloway

82 84 78

WI)

79-76-79-74-:304

80-76-73 79- 304 79-80-71 74 :)4

81-78-75-70- 301

75-75-76^78 - 304

76-76-77-75 - 304

78-76-7'3-78-305 76 79-74-76-;5 76-77-78-74- 305

71-83-79-76- 305

72-80-77 76- 305

79-79-77 70 - 305 76-7S-74 77-:i05

Transactions

Bv The Asswialed Press FtKiTBAI.I.

I niled Slates Pnulball League ARIZONA WRANGLERS Named Bof) Ixtrd as specialty teams coach

( anadian Football League

BRITISH COU MBIA lIoNS Activated Glen Jack.son linebacker and

Ned Armour wide receiver Placed Tvrone Crews. Imetiacker. on the injured list and Joe Kukin wide receiver, on the reserve lisl

(tll.l.Pt.E M.AKSHALl. Fired I'lmo "Sonny " ILindle. he.id fioibail coach RI TGEK.S Fired Frank Burns head football coach TKANS AMF.KU A ATHLETIC CONFF.HKM F. Named David Uncer Sports inlormalion director

All-ACC Football

KAI.EK.H, N ( I API - The 21 man XssiK-iated Press alFAIIantic ( oast ( on-lerence loothall team as selected bv a seven-member panel of sportswrilers Irom within the conference region.

OFFENSt Wide Keceivers

"'.Mark .Mililello Duke .Sr , 6-3. 195. St laHJis. .Mo Mark .Smith N Carolina, Sr . 6-0 180. Fayetteville, N C

linemen

Brian Blados. N Carolina. Sr . 66 29), \rlmgIon \a .Ine Milinichik N Caro lina .SI , Soph , 6-5. 279. Macungie, Pa Hon Soil. .Maryland. Sr 6:) 269, Wilkes Barre Pa James Farr Clemson Sr . 6-4, 23(i. Thom,son, la fhilifi Ebmger Duke. Sr . 6 3 (    296.

Atlanta (la

Uuart(;rback ,

Ben Bennett Duke Sr 6 2    199

Sunnyvale, Calif

Running Hacks Ethan Horton. N Carolina. Jr 6 4 22b. Kannapolis N C Mike Grayson Duke; Sr . 96,178, Falls Church. \a PIncekicker Jess Atkin.son, .Maryland. .99, 160 Camp Springs. Md

DEFENSE

Linemen

Pete Koch Maryland. Sr 6-5. 2.59 New Hvde Park N Y William Perrv CfemsOn Jr. 6 3r .!2U Aiken. SI' William Fuller, N Carolina Sr, 64 290 Chesapeake. Va James Robinson Clemson. Sr. 6-5.279 Charlifston, S C Linebackers Eric Wilson. Maryland. Jr. 6-2. 239. Charlottesville V'a . Henrv Walls Clemson Fr 6 2 210. Southmont. N C Vaughan Johnson, N Carolina St Sr 6-3.226, Morehead City, N C Racks

C'-irence Baldwin. Maryland .Sr 511 185 HvalLsville Md Willie Harris, N Carolina, .Sr, 6-2. 190, Wilson NC la)Ster Lvies. Virginia. Jr. 6 3, 219. Washingion. D C Rod McSwain. Clemson, .Sr 6-2.190, faroleen. N C Punier

Harrv Newsome, Wake Forest, Jr. 66. I76.cberaw SC

HDNtlK AKI F MKNTION

(iiienve

Ryan Wake Forest Hill Maryland B Smith Virginia Franklin. N f'arolin? W'hisenhunl. Georgia Tech Dunn Clemson

Conwell N Carolina Dombrowski Virginia Gwmn, Gcxirgia Tech, Ingle Clemson Steele N Carolina St Waters Georgia Tech Epplev Clemson Uvelle. Georgia Tech McIntosh. N Carolina .St Pauli ing. Clemson

Defense

Gross Maryland Pickett Clemson Furman Maryland Devane Clemson. Mattes Virginia Hoof (lenrgia Tech McDaniel Virginia .Shcppard, N Carolina Horton. Georgia Tech Buoniconti Duke Black N Carolina. Lantz, Georgia Tech Westbrook Georgia Tech McCummings Wake Forest McRorie. N Carolina St Jones .MarvTand, Burgess Maryland Hatcher (Temson

N.C.Scoreboard

Bv The \vviH latrd Press Men s(6llegr Basketball

Hampton Insiilute 6:! Elizabeth Citv St

46

N Carolina Central 86. District of Columbia 79

Men's (ollegr Soccer N( A \ Soccer Aiatiama A4M.3,f)uke2 *

100%

Rluminum Siding

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Qretnvllla, N.C. 27834

Nanw.

Addrau.

peifna-sidB,iK

SPECIAL PMCES

I City.

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Greenvilla, N.C.

Introductory offer for home owners buying from this ad We believe | Number (

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m

20 The Daily Reflector, Greenvilla. N.C. Monday, November 21,1983

In The AreaTheft Reported From Hotel RoomSilverware Is Taken

Greenville police are continuing their investigation of the re from an apartment at 17

theft of $17,900 in silverware Palmetto Place Saturday.

Officer R.L. Gorhan said the theft was reported by Bruce Koonce at 10:15 a.m.

Lt. D.R. Bullock said in addition to the silver, which included flatware, bowls and various other pieces, a set of gold cufflinks, valued at $100, was also taken.Review Committee To Meet

The citys Subdivision Review Committee will hold its regular meeting Wednesday at 2 p.m. in the third floor conference room of the community building at the corner of Fourth and Greene Streets.Burroughs Wellcome Gift Presented

A $5,000 corporate gift by the Burroughs Wellcome Co. will be used, to establish the Burroughs Wellcome ^earch Fellowship in Biotechnology at East Carolina University.

The pharmaceutical firm presented the unrestricted gift to the ECU Department of Biology to support a relatively new program in biotechnology which now is offered as an area of concentration in the biology curriculum. ECU officials immediately proposed, to use the gift for scholarship purposes.

It will be presented annually to an outstanding graduate student who is doing research related to biotechnology. Dr. Charles E. Bland, chairman of the department of biology, said.Cars Involved In Collision

Cars driven by Donald Worthington Pulliam of Route 5, Greenville, and Joyce Smith Carle of Charlotte, collided about 5:12 p.m. Saturday on Greenville Boulevard, a tenth of a mile west of the Memorial Drive intersection.

Damage was estimated by police at $200 to the Pulliam car and $1,500 to the Carle vehicle.Break-In Is Investigated

Greenville police are investigating a break-in at East Carolina Lincoln Mercury on Dickinson Avenue that was reported about 2:20 p.m. Sunday.

Officer E.M. Haddock said about $45 worth of cigarettes and $5 in change was reported taken from a coin operated cigarette machine,

Two Collisions Investigated

An estimated $5,300 damage resulted from two collisions investigated by Greenville police Friday. i ;

Officers said heaviest damage resulted when vehicles driven by Daniel Webster Ward of 2127 South Village Drive and Lester Gay Cox of Route 1, Ayden collided about ,12:05 p.m. on Greene Street, 20 feet north of the Martin Street intersection.

Damage was estimated at $2,700 to the Ward car and $800 to the truck driven by Cox.

Cars driven by Thomas Melvin Harrison Jr. of Camp Lejeune and Timothy Clay Branch of Winterville, collided about 8:50 p.m. on Reade Street, 135 feet north of the Fifth Street intersection, causing $1,500 damage to the Harrison car and $300 damage to the Branch car.

Licenses Are Awarded

Two Greenville men have been issued licenses to engage in the business of heating contracting (Group 3, Class I), while

two others have been issued air conditioning contracting

and

licenses by the State Board of Examiners of Plumbing ar Heating Contractors.

Wesley R. Banks and James C. Clark II, were issued air conditioning contracting licenses, while J. Timothy Bryant and Gary L. Tripp were issued heating contracting licenses following their successful completion of state board examinations Oct. 3 -Octi 5 in Raleigh.

Serves As Page

Wanda Kay Daughtry of 615 McKinley Ave., Greenville, is serving as a member of the 1983 varsity cheerleading squad at Western Carolina University for fall semester.

Miss Daughtry is a 1982 graduate of J.H. Rose High School.

Author Discusses Book

Dr. Charles Coble, acting dean of the East Carolina University School of Education, spoke to students at Wellcome Middle School recently on his book A Look Inside Nuclear Energy.

Dr. Coble spoke about the writing and publishing process.

Loyalty Fund Head Announced

John Johnson of Greenville has been appointed to head the North Carolina State University Associations 1983-84 Loyalty Fund campaign in Pitt County.

Johnson and staff members will be calling on the over 495 N.C. State alumni in Pitt County seeking support.

Herschel Among Well-Wishers

SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) -Football star Herschel Walker was among well-wishers welcoming home a unit of Army Rangers that was in the first wave of the U.S. invasion of Grenada, and true to form, the Heisman trophy winner didnt fumble his words of admiration.

Id love you to be on my team because youre the best defense, Walker told the Rangers of the 1st Battalion, 7th Infantry, at a hometown salute on Saturday.

Walker, the University of Georgia great who now plays for the United States Football Leagues New Jersey Generals, joined Secretary of the Army John Marsh and other elected officials for

Ranger Appreciation Day. The day featured speeches, food, entertainment and an overflight by two C-130 aircraft - the type of plane from which the Rangers leaped into Grenada. Five men from the battalion, based at Hunter Army Airfield, died in the invasion.

Have You Missed Your Daily Reflector?

First Call Your Independent Carrier. If You Are Unable To Reach Him Call The Daily Reflector

752-3952

Between 6:00 And 6:30 P.M. Weekdays And 8 Til 9 A. M. On Sundays.

LHome Theft Is Probed

Officer H.D. Hines said Greenville police are investigating the theft of a watch and gold chain from a 310 Conley St. home Saturday.

Hines said the thief gained entrance to the house through an unlocked front door.

Clothes and luggage valued at $1,020 were reported taken from a first floor room at the Ramada Inn on Greenville Boulevard Saturday.

Officer R.S. Sawyer said the clothing and luggage belonged to David A. Jobson of Daluth, Ga.Purse Taken From Car

A purse containing $100 in cash was reported taken from a car parked at the Pitt County ABC Store on Memorial Drive Saturday.

Officer D.R. Wyrick said the pocketbook belonged to Sheila Stancil Hanchett of 37 Shady Knoll Trailer ParkOpen House Is Planned

Junior Achievement(JA) of Greenville-Pitt County will hold open house on tonight and Tuesday at the Procter and Gamble construction building from 7-9 p.m.

The sponsoring companies of JA this year are Eaton, Procter and Gamble, Burroughs Wellcome, and Collins & Aikman. Highlights of the open house will include the awarding of JA charters to each of these firms and the transfer of authority from JA Advisors to the Achievers themselves.    '

Junior Achievement is the nations oldest economic education program for young people and involves approximately 125 Pitt County high school students. Parents of Achievers and other interested individuals are invited to attend the open house.Home Burns At Fountain

FOUNTAIN - The home of Mrs. Kay Baker and her children was destroyed by fire early Saturday morning.

Someone in the house apparently woke to find the house on fire and the family got out safely and went to a neighbors house to call firefighters. The blaze, which apparently began shortly shortly about 2 a.m., was fought all night by fire departments from Fountain, Falkland, Farmville and Sharp Point.

According to the Pitt County Fire Marshal, there is no indication of cause at this time and no estimate of total loss, though it is reported that the dwelling was gutted and Mrs. Baker and her children lost the entire contents of the house.

TOY RIDE Area cyclists from five eastern North Carolina counties raljied Saturday in Greenville for a Salvation Army Toy Ride. The police-escorted cyclists rode from sponsor J-E Harley Davidson shop's on Dickinson Avenue, down lOth Street, South Evans Street to Greenville

Boulevard and on to Carolina East Mall. At the mall, the collected toys were presented to representative of the the Salvation Army, which will distribute them to needy children in the area. (Reflector photo by Chris Bennett)

c 1983 R J Reynolds Tobacco Co

Introducing

CENTURY

2^ more cigarettes

to the carton

Regularlntroductory^5OFFa carton of New CENTURY Filters or Lights

LIGHTS: 10 mg,"tar" 0.8 mg. nicotine, FILTER: 15 mg."tar", 1.1 mg. nicotine, av. per cigarette by FTC method.

Warning; The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

$15bqfF

a carton of New CENTURY Filters or Lights

TERMS OF COUPON OFFER CONSUMER Caution' Coupon good only when biand slyleisi specified puichesed It cannot be traos-toned 01 eictianged toi oitiei coupons Any other use consliiuies liaud You inusi pay applicable sales laies Pariicipaiion in this piomotion is at the discfeiionol the leiaiief IIMIT ONE COUPON PFH CONSUMER AND tO SMOKERS 21 YEARS OF AGE OR OLDER RETAILER R J Reynolds Tobacco Company mill pay lace value ol coupon plus TC handling and actual postage incurred provided you accepted the coupon Irom a consumer as partial payment on specilied brand style'st Any other use constitutes fraud and could bring prosecution under U S mail fraud statutes it is non assignable and may not be lepioduced Adequate proof ol purchase must be submitted on request SbipiMnii considered at a wliole. no piittal paymenti. CMliicatlen rigbii

Nil paytMDti

reserved Coupon must be submitted by retailer who redeemed n or a cfeainghouse hoidir^ a valid

RJR contract ino other assu sti months Irom eiplritlrw dite manutacturer Gooii only in WlnstmSlldn.NC27f02

!nis' Coupoflt mvtl N rdCilvMl at i

Ilian

 tiersbh Cash value 1 20 ol it All promotional costs paid h

only in U S A Ship CoupMS To: CtMpoD fladiaiptlrNi Cinlar. P 0 B 3000

Not available in all areas.

COUPON EXPIRATION DATE: DECEMBER 31,1983

f

I

L





109 HoufM For Salo

wmrrm ^oTynrtcrSroT

lad. About S 2/to mllM from Groonvillt. Custom built brick vtnoor ranch. Largo front porch, doublo car garagt with door, hugt dock, abova around swimming pool, 3 badrooms, 3 baths, baautlfuf graat room, spacious and gracious (flraplaca, gun rack, bookshalvas), tastafully and chaartully dacorated, larga country kitchan and dining room combination Only $83,000 Davis Raalty 733 3000, 736 2904,

n^hts k^ry at 736 1997 or Grace

1-6656, 736 4144

HirTi$Tiii5

Farm house in country. Cream puff on one acre About 4 miles from Greenville 2 outside storage buildings, central heat and air, 3 badrooms, large kitchen, cozy den, living room and dining room combination, fireplace $47,300. Davis Realty 752 3000, 736 3904, nights Mary at 736 1997 or Grace 746 6636, 736 4144.

NtW LISTING

6 E M t

Immaculate country. Over '/y acre lot. Beautiful Custom Built brick veneer ranch, almost like new About 2 years old. 3 bedrooms, beautiful fanrlly room, beautiful country kitchen crown molding, chair rail waili-----

chair rail wallpaper, celling fans, heat pump, patio, outside storage, neat and well groomed lawn All of

the extras! Decorated beautifully and cheerfullyl Only $33,000 Davis Realty 732 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 736 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 736 4144.

NEW LISTING

dominium llvlngl Close to schools

Enjoy con to s

and shopping Neat Immaculate, itlfullv do

beautifully decorated, cozy family room, cheerful kitchen area, 2 bedrooms, baths, extra storage

Only $33,000 Davis Realty 733 736^, nights Mary i Grace 746 6636, 736 4144

nights Mary

earty 7 at 756

1997 or

6WNRS ARE MOVING frpm USA and must sell. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, den, fireplace, fenced backyard and atlo. 11W% assumable mortgage 281 or 752

107 Azalea Drive 736 8281

Payments are based on your Income! Almost new three and two bedroom ranchesi Pay as little as $330 down Call HIgnite Realtors anytime 757 1969

UIEt, PEACEFUL Split Level country home. Situated on 12 acres of land (8 wooded, 4 cleared) Enjoy the out doorsi Blueberry bushes, apple, peach, and pear trees Rich fertile land for gardening 3 badrooms, 3 baths, country kitchen and breakfast area, family room.

multiple purpose room. I car garage Davis Realty 732 3000. 736 2904. nights Mary at 736 1997 or

Grace 746 6636, 736 4144

REDUCED $3,0001 Doll house in th country. Assume FmHA 10^<% loan to qualified buyer Almost like hew Tastefully decorated in earth, tones. 3 bedrooms, \ '/i baths, tamily room, large country kitchen and breakfast room combination, utility, outside

storage. Davis Realty 732 3000. 736 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or

Grace 746 6656, 736 4144

REDUCED ALMOST M.OoO: Mid $30's 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, den with fireplace, kitchen with all extras, attic tan, heat pump, and electric baseboard heat Assume FHA loan

plus equity Payments $446 77 PIT I port, fei

Carport, fenced in backyard. Win terville School district Davis Real

ty 732 3000 736 2904. nights Mary at 736 1997 or Grace 746 66M. 756 4144

REDUCED TO $31,300. Immaculate

1 story home Fenced In yard, rt    

carport Assume 9'?% loan, pay ments $428 60 PITI 3 bedrooms cozy den with fireplace, cheerful kitchen, formal areas, living room and dining room Only $58.500 Davis Realty 752 3000 . 756 2904. nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6636. 756 4144

REDUCED TO $33,900. Brick veneer ranch Well established neighborhod. newly painted mside 3 bedrooms. 1'j baths, central heat and air, woodstove. beautiful wooded lot, WInterville School dis trict No city taxes Davis Realty 732 3000. 756 2904, nights Mary at 736 1997 or Grace 746 6656. 756 4144

SPECIAL FINANCING As Low As9'/2%

/cAVAILABLE FOR

NEWCONSTRUCTION HOMES, CONDOS, TOWNHOUSES

Call Joe Bowen

East Carolina Builders, Inc.

752-7194 Anytime

TAKE OVER 9% ANNUAL per

i centage rate loan Attractive 3 bedroom, I'-j bath brick ranch with carport Located on woodsy lot near university Living room/dining room, eat in kitchen, custom storm windows and doors, new furnace, (no air conditioning). Hardwood floors, approximately 1350 square feet heated area Take over approx Imately $33.3(X) for 25 years re malning with principal and interest payment of $280.82 month (This loan would cost you $388 month at todays rate of 13%). Pay equity of $16,400 or owner may consider some

financing for part of equity Very di

low closing cost and no discount points to buyer Lease/purchase also possible Immediate possession Priced at $49,900 Call Owner Agent, Louise Hodge, 804 794 1532 evenings. No agents.

UNIVERSITY DISTRICT. i'i

blocks from ECU Nice older home Completely redecorated inside. 3 or 4 bedrooms, living room with

fireplace, dining room, large eat in kitcnen Garage and attic storage

Metal siding, windows, and root less than 6 years old Central heat and air. $50,500 Telephone 752 2488 or Washington. 946 9471.

2509 JEFFERSON. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, large landscaped lot, workshop 16x36 plus shed and shelter. 1677 square feet of living area. Bill Williams Real Estate. 752 2615

111 Investment Property

INVESTMENT PROPERTY.

Front/back brick duplex. Double garage. 2 washer dryer hookups. 2 stoves and 2 refrigerators, also convey. Possible partial owner ti nancing 417 419 East 3rd Street Call Winston Kobe, 756 9507, Aldridge & Southerland 756 3300.

113 Land For Sale

30 ACRE FARM south of Ayden in the St. John's Community. Road frontage on SR 110 and SR 1753. 51 acres cleared, 7 acres wooded. Tobacco allotment, pond, excellent road frontage and rental house. Call for full details. Moseley Marcus Realty. 746 2166

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

DOMINOS

PIZZA

MANAGERS

We are Dominos Pizza, the largest pizza delivery company In the country, and we otter you the opportunity to realize your full potential for a sue-ceasful career. It you are success oriented, have plenty of energy, are able to hustle, and are self motivated, our Managers position Is the Job dt your dreams. Please send your resume to:

EAST CAROLINA

PIZZA INC.

P.O. Box 5087 QrMnvlllo,N.C. 27834 EOE

Its

Lott For Sale

MCGREGOR DOWNS 2 38 acres, park test. 758 2712 or 756 6625

PEaRL drive, Red Oak Sub

division, water and sewer, 100' frontage, $7,300 Financing availa ble Call 758 6702, nights 756 2512,

J.l WOODED ACRE lot 8 miles East of Greenville. State Road 1338. Asking, $12,000. Must sell! Will negotiate. Phone 752 1915

117 Resort Property For Sale

121 Apartments For Rent

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden

apartments. Carpeted, range,

frigerator, dishwasher, disp____

ana cable TV Conveniently located

to shopping center and schools Located just off lOth Street.

Call 752-3519

BAYVIEW Buy now at off season

Crice, four bedroom trailer with l'/4 aths. Including lot only $14,900 Esiate Realty Company, 732 W38; nights 738 4476or 732 3647.

RIVER COTTAGE on wooded water front lot on the Pamlico River. I mile from Washington, NC Quiet, established neighborhood. Call 758 0702 days, 752 0310 nights

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call 758 4413 between 8 and 3.

NEED STORAGE? We have anv size to meet your storage need Call Arlington Self Storage, Open Mon day Friday 9 5 Call 756 9933

HERE'S ALL YOU have to dp. Cell the classified department with your

^ for a sUII-gdbd Item and V^'Jj

make some extra cash I 732 6166

WAREHOUSE STORAGE and sales space Excellent location Up to 55,000 square leet Adjacent office available Price negotiable 752 4295/756 7417

2 STORES, 1,125 square feet each or 1 store 2,250 square feet Main Street, Robersonvllie Contact H H Pope at 795 4686

121 Apartments For Rent

ALMOST NEW TOWNHOUSE 2

bedrooms. I'/i baths Convenient location Call 736 7314 days. 756 4980 nights

AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY 1

and 2 bedroom apartments and a 3 bedroom house 752 3311

AZALEA GARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished ^ne bedroom apartments All energy efficient designed Queen size beds and studio couches Washers and dryers optional Free water and sewer and yard maintenance

All apartments on ground floor with porches

Frost tree retrigeralors

Located in A/alea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club Shown by appointment only Couples or singles No pets

Contact J T or Tommy Williams 756 7815

LARGE NICE 2 bedroom duplex Shenandoah $290 756 5389

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50 per cent less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV.wall to wall carpel, thermopane windows, extra Insula tion

Office Open 9 5 Weekdays

9 3 Saturday    1-5    Sunday

Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd

756 5067

NEW WILLIAMSBURG Manor Townhome 2 bedrooms, extra storage 756 9006 after 6 p. m.

NICE QUIET DUPLEX, appll anees, carpet, electric heat, wood heater 756 2671 or 758 1543.

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apart merits 1212 Redbanks Road Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included. We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.

7564151

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent Contact J T or Tommy Williams, lit 78)5

ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT

West 4th Street $tlO per month 757 0688

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live -ETV

Olticehours 10a m to5p m Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-4800

BRAND NW tastefully decorated townhouse near hospital and mall 2 bedrooms, t'a baths, washer dryer hook ups, ellicieni No pets $315 per month 756 8904 or 752 2040

BRICK TC^NHOiJSE. 2 bedroom, end unit, storage, near Nichols, 756 9006 alter 4pm

CEDAR LANE APARTMENTS. )

bedroom, $175 756 3611 or 756 3936

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with I'-; baths Also I bedroom apartments Carpel, dishwashers.

compactors, patio tree cable TV, wasner dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, cluD

house and POOL. 752 1557

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN

APARTMENTS

327 one. two and three bedrpom

?iarden and townhouse apartments, eaturing Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heal and air condi Honing, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools

Oltice 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

Trnmicmrnmrs

Dial direct phones 25 channel color tv

Maid Service

Furnished

All Utilities

Weekly'Monthly Rates

756 5555

HERITAGE INN MOTEL

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club 756 6869

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

PRIME

LOCATION

200 Arlington Blvd.

1236 Sq. Ft. PROFESSIONAL or BUSINESS OFFICE Call 756-6295

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, club house, playground, Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex "

1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm 8. Willow

752 4225

TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT

carpeted, central air and heat, appliances, washer dryer hookup Brylon Hills $275 758 3311

TWO BEDROOM DUPLEX

apartment available alter first week of December No pets Call 756 1821 atter 4p m

WEDGEWOODARMS

2 bedroom, t'j bath townhouses Excellent location Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer dryer hookups, pool, tennis court Immediate occupancy

756 0987

Classified way Call 752 6166

121 Apartments For Ront

ENERGY EFFICIENT 2 bdroom townhouse, woodad area, $310 month 756 6295 after 6,

YOU'LL BE THANKFUL

You called us Limited number of units left at low prices. Why pay

rent when vou can own wlth_ pay

ments less man monthly rent? Call Iris Cannon at 746 2639 or 758 6050, Owen Norvell at 756 1498 or 758 6050, WII Reid at 756 0446 or 758 6050 or Jane Warren at 758 7029 or 758 6050

MOORE &SAUTER

no South Evans 758-6050

i BEDROOM apartment, appli

           I,    te    -    -

anees furnished. Tenth Street, $100 per month. Call after 6 p m., 1 524 5042.

2 BeDROOMS, refrigerator, stove, dishwasher, washer/dryer hook ups. No pets. 752 0180 before 5 p m., 756 2766 after 5 p m.

2 BEDROOM energy efficient duplex. Carpeted, appliances, washer/dryer hookups, fireplace, extra storage. Located Brookwood Drive. 756 2879.

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSES. near

hospital. Call 355 2628 days. 756 3217 hts.

nig

2006 CHESTNUT ST. Duplex, I bedroom, stove, refrigerator $125 per month. Call 752 4639 after 5

3 ROOM FURNISHED apartment with private bath and entrance Prefer married couple without children 413 West 4th Street

It's still th# garoga tala season and people are really buyir>g this year! Get yours together soon and adver tise It with a Classified Ad. Call 752 6166

12S Condominiums For Rent

TWO TOWNHOUSES available in Quail Ridge 12 .month leases or less. One rents for $500 per month, other tor $570 per month 2 and 3 bedrooms, 2'j baths. Near recre ational facilities Call Clark Branch Management 756 6336    ,

Looking tor an apartment? You'll find a wide range of available units listed in the Classified columns of to day's paper _

127

Houses For Rent

3 BEDROOM. I'-3 baths in Elmhurst Available January 1st, $350 Smith Insurance Realty, 752 2754

3 BEDROOM HOUSE,

approximately 3 to 4 miles from Greenville Available January 1 Call 746 2182 alter 6 30 p m

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

IBM SYSTEMS 34 COMPUTER

Local company hat a Systamt 34 (96K) computer available lor immediate time tharing. 1 CRT diiplay station and 1 5224 Printer is available for immediate remote hook-up using telephone com-municatlont. Programs rtady for general butinass usa include general ledger, accounts recaivabla, inventory/billing, accounts payabla and payroll.

Contact: Presidant P.O. Box 8068 Greenville, NC or 758-1215

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

C.l. Lupton Co.

FOR LEASE

2500 SQ. FT.

PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE

On Arlington Blvd.

CALL 756-8111

WANTED

INDUSTRIAL

MECHANIC

Knowledge of three phase circuitry, hydraulics, pneumatics, arc and acetylene welding, machine shop background. Knowledge of electronics helpful. 3 to 5 years experience. Please send resume to P.O. Box 548, Greenville, N. C. 27834.

Famous Chicken n Biscuits

MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITIES

Opportunity to grow from the ground floor with a national restaurant chain. The oniy iimits on your advancement are those yoUiSet for yourself. Fast food experience not required. Send

resume to TANDS, INC P.O. BOX 277 Kinston, NC 28501 Attn: Cam McRae

Opportunities Available In Kinston-Qreenvllle-Hevelock-Goldsboro Aree

127 Houses For Rent

ayden country club. Ranch

style home with 3 bedrooms, game room with bar, 4/i baths Over 3000 square feet Available immediately $600 per month Cad Loreiie at 756 6336

BRICK VENEER RANCH for rent Carport. Excellent neighborhood. 3 bedrooms, family room, fireplace, kitchen with stove and refrigeraior, furnished, central heat and air Call Lyle Davis at Davis Realty 752 3000 or nights 756 2904

COLONIAL HEIGHTS, 3 bedroom brick, $350 Lease and deposit 756 5772after Ip m

FOR REnT: 2 bedroom house in Ayden Appliances furnished. Call 746 3674

HOUSE IN TOWN and house in country Call 746 3284 or 524 3180

NEAR UNIVERSITY. 3 bedroom. 1 '/J baths, living room/dining room, eat in kitchen, carport Fresh paint and wallpaper Hardwood floors Approximately 1350 square feet, new furnace/no air conditioning Married couple or smalt family only No pets Immediate possession $375 p>er month. Call Owner Agent, Louise Hodge, 804 794 1532 No agents

NEAR UNIVERSITY. 3 bedrooms No pets. I 726 7615.

NEW HOUSE FOR RENT with option to buy 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, $550 per month Call 752 1232 or 756 5097

2 STORy, 3 bedroom house Re cently completely renovated with wall to wall carpet, new kitchen and blinds I mile from Farmville

near schools 15 minutes to hospital la

or ECU $300 per month Available December 1. Call 753 3101 days, 753 4785 nights

200 PINE ST. 2 or 3 bedrooms, fenced yard $315 per month Call 758 202 5Ine oaiiy Hetiecior. ufeenvme, tx.G. Moiiuay, Novemper^t, iubj

133 Atebile Homes For Rent

12X60, 3 bedrooms, washer and

dryer, $165 No pets, no children. 758

2 BEDROOMS, furnished, washer, air No pets, No children Phone 758 4857

2 BEDROOM trailer, no pets, no

children Call 756 6005

2 BEDROOM trailer $150 per month, $75 deposit. 756-8367 or 355 2928 after 5

2 BEDROOMS, central air, 12x60 2 miles from Pitt Plaza on Highway 43 $185 plus deposit. 758 0174

2 BEDROOMS. Nice location Mar

ried couple preferred No pets

   -    ifh

752 6051 after 6 p m

135 Office Space For Rent

Available in December.. Off 264 By pass, 2100 square feet of prime office space Well decorated 12

month lease or longer, private i^ $12(X)per month

Call Clark-Branch

Management

756 6336

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815.

1-200 SQUARE FOOT (3 offices) on Evans Street Price negoitable 752 4295/756 74)7.

5,000 SQUARE FEET office build mg on 264 Bypass. Plenty of park ing Call 758 2300days.

137 Resort Property For Rent

WINTERGREEN SKI RESORT 2

bedroom fully equipped con dominium For more information, call 355 2341 alter 30p m

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

LONG DISTANCE DRIVER NEEDED

Must be DOT certified and have at least 3 years driving tractor trailer experience. Will be traveling Northeastern states. Responsibilities include helping unload trailers from carrier.

COX TRAILERS

GRIFTON, N. C.

148

WANTED

142 Roommate Wanted

RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE

needed for 3 bedroom duplex $75 a month, $75 deposit plus '3 of utilities and phone (/all 752 5977 before 2 30 p m

' 3 of

ROOMMATE WANTED TO share 2 bedroom duplex, pay ''7 utilities and rent Professional person preferred and graduate student considered 752 4810

ROOMMATE WANTED. 2 bedroom furnished apartment Available end of November Rent $132 per month Call 752 5828 before 9 a m and atter 10pm

ROOMMATE Bryton Hills $83 plus ' 3 utilities Phone 757 1964

2 FEMALE ROOMMATES wanted

3 bedroom house $86 60 a piece plus utilities Call 355 6385

Shopping for a new car? The most complete listings in town are found in the Classified ads every day.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

S^ORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNJNGS

C.L. Lupton. Co.

71/ bl it,

144 Wanted To Buy

WANT TO BUY pine and hardwood

timber Pamlico Timber Company, Inc 756 8615

WANTED SILVER DOLLARS.

746 6394.

t^ULD LIKE to buy Wood that's

--......    IVIOT    

Dn logged, laying down trees and free fops Call 758 2840 or 756 9193

WOULD LIKE TO buy size 24> or 26' j wedding gown Call 756 7869 or 756 6)76between 4p m andp m.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SPECIAL Executive Desks

Special Price

Reg. Price $259.00    J*!    YQOO

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 Evans St.    752-2175

STRIP-EASE

A Better Way To Take It Off Residential - Commercial Industrial

The STRIP-EASE process is a completely new method for removing finishes from WOOD. METAL, PLASTIC or GLASS. It has been developed and perfected over a number of years by a professional antique refimsher who was dissatisfied with the results of stripping processes on todays market. Sfripease is not like conventional dip processes which may damage wooden furniture It employes a UNIQUE JET SPRAY ACTION which quickly removes finish from cracks, spindles, carvings and hard to get places to restore wood to its original warm look. GRAND OPENING SPECIAL

Will Strip Any Chair For Only $7.00 Offer Good Thru December 31 Call Or Stop In To Inquire About Other Low Prices

Striplase Of Greenville

I COD C DM Ce /AM

628 S. Pitt St. (Off Dickinson Ave)

(jreenviile, N.C.

Phone (919) 752-1009

HOMES FOR SALE

221 Country Club Drive

Two Story brick home with slate roof, copper gutters, beautiful landscaped yard, large entrance hall, big living room with fireplace,, dmmg room, large kitchen with eating area, cathedral type ceiling in den with fireplace, utility room, bedroom or office. 2 car garage all on first floor Second floor has 4 bedrooms and 2 baths, disappearing stairway to attic Must see to appreciate 264 By-pass West Living room, large kitchen with eating area, den. 2 bedrooms, t'/rbaths, screened porch, utility room, garage Lot 125 x 210 $50.000

1024 Fleming St.

3 bedrooms, living room, kitchen and bath Across from Sadie Sautter School $15 000 Land For Sale 14 acres behind Imperial Estates on Bethel Highway about 4 miles north of Greenville Priced to sett $14,000

LOT FOR SALE

82x130' lot on comer of 13th and Gteene Streets $7500.

LOT FOR SALE 111 E. 11th Street. 75x85 Price $8000.00.

NEED HOUSES AND FARMS TO SALE

TURNAGE

REAL ESTATE ANB

INSURANCE AGENCY

Get More With Les Home 756-1179

m

REALTOR*

752-2715

or

752-3459

30 Years Experience

^\e Corner

UJ

APARTMENT

DWELLERS

Your Opportunity To Move Out Of That Apartment And Have Us Build You A New Home. N.C. Housing Finance Mortgage Money Is Available For New Homes To Be Constructed, For Qualified Buyers, At An Interest Rate Of Only 10.35% APR. Call For Details.

DUFFUS REALTY, INC.

756-5395

Beautiful Waterfront Lot. Located on Chicod Creek Estates. Financing Available. Call 758-3761.

NEW OFFERING

COMMERCIAL LOT

OWNER FINANCING. 20% Down at 9V2% interest rate. Priced to sell at $38,800...150'x146'. A good buy. Call Carl Darden at Darden Realty 758-1983...Nights & weekends 758-2230.

RESTAURANT FOR

SALE OR LEASE

Fully Equipped - NC 903. Stokes, N. C.

Contact:

xMOORE & SAUTER

110 S. Evans

752-1010

Holly Ridye

COUNTRY LIVING - FIRST CLASS

Restrictions (Horses and Barn Permitted)

Paved Streets

Holly Ridge Property Owners Assoc. Some Tracts May Be Subdivided

We are offering 2Vk to 5 acre tracts. One S acre tract on the Tar River. Partiaily wooded aad cleared. Cail Carl at Darden Realty for detatfa.

DARDEN REALTY

Nights-Weekends

758-2230

758-1983

DOWNTOWN

Modern Office Space. Over 1500 square feet. Below market price.

DARDEN REALTY

758-1983 nIGHTS-WEEKENDS 758-2230

FOR SALE

SEVERAL NICE LOTS A TRACTS OP LAND

2,500. Vi Acre lot locatod In Arthur TMMwaq* aM? VOJL

5.000. 2 Lots, Emorywood Subdivision oft 264, East of GrMnvMa

12.000. Dwelling, 1706 S. Pitt St. Cement BIk. In need of repair.

6.000. Lot 75X105 Vance St., Greenville, N.C.

7.000. Lot 64x118 Memorial Drive & 3rd St.

10.000. Lot 100x132,621 Albemarle Ave., Greenville, some owner Finance.

20.000. Four Lots, Ayden.

20,000. 3 Bedroom Dwelling, 1 bath, aluminum siding, fenced in.. 1504 Allen St, Greenville.

45.000. 3 BediR Dwelling, 1.5 Bath, Cant Air, 1,429 square feat 303 King St Ayden.

70.000. 5 BedlRm. PteiBtefc I MM, M* MW jW.fJ

acres, aaede f?N imee, . ImIS

Between SR 1794 A 1B41.

90,000.4 B/R Dwelling, 1.5 bath, Rt 3 Bee 4t SSmWWWM

1, East of Shnpeon,

Sub. Greenville, N.C. Between SR 1764 & 1841,

Cent. Heat, 2 Car Garage, 2200 Square feet. Wooded, 2 Acres, sailer will pay some closing cost & points.

99.000.33 acres of land 7 cleared 26 wooded. 4 miles N. of Greenville abutted SR 1415 & Crosses Hwy. 11/13, Reduced from 148,500.

750.000. A Complete Church facility, 400 Wataugh, A vs.. Greenville, N.C. Sanctuary seats 700/1000, Youth & Adult Christian Ed. Buildings, Kitchen,' 'X>ts, pans, dishes. Gymnasium.

To Buy

D.$eiff[nff(on

752-4476

752-7756    752-1764

2





The Daily Retlectof. Greenville, N C Monday. November 21.1983 -|5The Notional Rood' Was Built To Cement A Union

To make the crooked ways straight and the rough ways smooth, in effect, remove the intervening mountains and by facilitating the intercourse of our Western brethren with those on the Atlantic, substantially unite them in interest, which, the committee believe, is the most effectual cement of union applicable to the human race. .

Report of a Senate committee, Dec. 19,1805.

By BORIS WEINTRAUB Natl Geographic News Service

UNIONTOWN, Pa. -Climbing to the top of Laurel Hill about six miles east of hear, a 1980s automobile has to struggle and wheeze. How

much harder it must have been for mail ponies and stagecoaches, Conestoga wagons, and pioneer settlers of the first half of the 19th century.

They all made their way up the mountain, a twisting, arduous ascent on their way between Baltimore and Cumberland, Md., on the east side of the Alleghenies; and WheeliM, Columbus, Indianapolis, Terre Haut, and Vandalia, 111., on the west.

Their route was the National Road.

A Different Age

In this age of instant communication and rapid travel, it is hard to imagine the importance of the National Road to a young and growing America. But a drive along the road that

the West brings it

opene( alive.

A surprising amount of the old road, the first federal highway, can still be seen by a traveler who bypasses its modem successor. Interstate 70. Most common, perhaps, are the mileposts that precisely mark the distance between Cumberland and Wheeling, the 131-mile stretch that was the route of the original road.

In Maryland and in Pennsylvania are old tollhouses with windows on all sides so the gatekeeper could see traffic in every direction; the tollhouse in Searights, Pa., is open to the public. Mount Washington Tavern, restored by the National Park Service, shows what a 19lh century version of a hotel looked like.

Many other old structures remain. The Century Inn in Scenery Hill, Pa., still serves assers-by hearty meals in ront of a roaring fire as it has since 1794. The sprawling Clarysville Hotel is a Marylnd landmark today as it has been since 1807. And so is the Jesse Tomlinson stone house near Grantsvilie, Md., dating to 1815. The Rush House in Farmington, Pa., built in 1837, can be seen from the road.

For The Adventurous

A shunpiker can also see some of the S-shaped bridges, built to provide the simplest crossing of streams and rivers. One can be seen far below todays highway in Blaine, Ohio. For the military history buff in Pennsylvania, a visit to re-

Rates of Toll

on the Cumberland Road in Penntylvania

Every score of sheep 64 Ho,, 6i

......Citiu

" Horse ad Rider 4^

Every led or drove Horse Mule of Ass " SUd or sictgh drawn by one horse or pair of osen Dearborn, Sulky Chair or Chats* vrth on* horse ' Horse in addition

a

Every Chariot. Coach. Coachec, Sta9e * " Phaeton or Chaise with two horses and four wheels " Horse in addition

Every cart or waMn whose wheels do

not escrcd three inches ut breadth drawn by one horse or pair of

, a

" Horse in addition

1 Every cart or,wa^ whose wheels

eicced three inches and does not etcced four inches in breadth for every horse or pair of oien drawing the same

4<,

Every cart or wagon whose wheels eicecd

four inches, and do not eicecd su Inches m breadth for every horse Of pair of oien drawing the ume

Every cart or wagon whose wheels etcecd su inches and do not eicecd eight inches in breadth, for every horse drawing the saoie

K

Ail carts or wagons whose wheels eiceed eight inches in breadth

FREE

Any person refusing or neglecting to pay toU a fine of $9.00

Some Bugged Teachers Asking For Transfers

TROY, N.C. (AP) - Several teachers have asked for transfers after discovering that an elementary school )rincipal had secretly )ugged the 'faculty lounge two years ago, a newspaper reports.

A teacher who asked not to

be identified for fear of retribution told The Charlotte Observer the microphone was installed in 1981 and was found by four Troy Elementary School teachers on Nov, 1.

The teacher said she found out about the discovery at a

Little Effect Due 'Foreclosure Ban'

By The Associated Press A federal judges temporary ban on Farmers Home Administration loan foreclosures will have little effect in North Carolina, state FmHA administrator Larry Godwin said.

U.S. District Judge Bruce Van Sickle last week ordered the FmHA not to foreclose on any farm until a Jan. 9 hearing. The order came in a suit filed by nine North Dakota farmers.

Charles W. Shuman, national FmHA administrator, said state officials were told to immediately cease taking any of the actions prohibited" by the ruling.

The North Carolina FmHA division foreclosed on 32

vear

farms in the fiscal ending Sept. 30 and on 88 farms in the previous fiscal year, Godwin said.

We would have less than 100 foreclosures among our borrowers next year without the moratorium. he said. Our procedures allow us latitude to work with people in trouble through no fault of their own who have been honest with us."

Godwinsaid FmHA will continue making loans in the state, but because of the ruling, well have to be more cautious than usual."

In North Carolina, 250 farmers or 2.2 percent of the 11.300 with FmHA loans went out of business in the last fiscal year, he said.

Nov, 8 faculty meeting during which Principal Charles E. Russell apologized.

Harriet Caligan of Southern Pines. District 8 teacher's representative of the N.C, Association of Educators, said several teachers have asked for transfers since the incident. She said the issue signals an underlying lack of harmony.

"If teachers are so concerned that they are looking for a bug, there'cant be a lot of harmony between the staff and administration." Ms. Caligan said.

Ms. Caligan said she knows of no reason that could justify the listening device.

"I would hate to try to justify the legality of it," she said. If it is not illegal, it is certainly despicable."

The teachers took the bug

to Superintendent Larry Ivey on .Nov. 2. Ms. Caligan said. An executive session of the county Board of Education was held Nov. 7. and an undisclosed disciplinary action was taken against Russell, she said.

Ivey confirmed Sunday that Russell, principal of the 700-student school for about 15 years, was disciplined. But hfe would give no details,

Ivey said he called a special meeting Monday to talk with the teachers." He said the meeting will be closed to reporters and the public.

At this point in time, there's nothing I can say," Russell said Sunday night,'

The teacher, one of the 30 at the school, said her colleagues have not asked that Russell be fired or resign

"We feel the school board has to make that decision.' she said. "He said he placed it there because of some events that took place that year. 1 was shocked. I can't look the man in the face, 1 have no confidence in the man's ability."

constructed Fort Necessity, site of the opening skirmish of the French and Indian War, is a fine way to spend a crisp fail afternoon.

Todays drive is a far cry from the roads earliest days, and even later, when travelers on the Indiana and Illinois portions were forced to detour around stumps.

But the road permitted farmers in the West to ship livestock and produce to markets in the East, and fledgling industries in the East to ship manufactured goods west. Politicians, businessmen, and even European tourists traveled back and forth along the road, and newspapers, presidential pessages, and mail were carried over it.

"It looks as if,the whole earth was traveling this way, an adventurous Virginian wrote to his lady friend back home.

A friendly Indian named Nemacolin first blazed a path from Cumberland over the mountains. George Washington surveyed it and then, in 1754, returned with a small force to tell the French to clear out of the region. He was defeated at the hastily constructed palisade aptly named Fort Necessity.

Washington returnied again in 1755 with the ill-fated English army of Gen. Edward Braddock, pushing up from Virginia to confront the French near F^ort Du-quesne, now Pittsburgh. Soldiers slashed a wider path along the road, but the French routed them and killed Braddock, Washington came away convinced of the value of a good road over the mountains.

By tghe end of the Revolutionary War, historian Archer Hulbert wrote, travelers still spoke of 'going into and coming out of the West as though it were a mammoth cave." The need for a road linking east and west, and the Potomac with the Ohio River, grew with the admission of western states to the Union.

Following the Path Congress authorized the road in 1806, and President Thomas Jefferson appointed commissioners to survey the route. A road between Cumberland and Baltimore had been privately built, so the government stuck to the path of Nemacolin and Braddock. The first 10 miles were completed by 1811, the 131 miles to Wheeling by 1818. Columbus Was reached by 1833, Indianapolis by 1850. The road eventually cost the federal government $6.824,919.33.

Constitutional questions arose when repairs were needed. In the 1830s, the government began to turn the road over to the states, which levied tolls; Pennsylvania charged six

ECONOmiCflL GIFT

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Buffet

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Get even more of the things you love In fact, get all you can eat!

PIZZA SPAGHETn SOUP AND SAIAD BAR

NOON BUFFET-

Monday-Friday 11:30 a.ns.-2 p.m.

Adults 2.79 Children Under 12*1.89

MONDAY & TUESDAY NIGHT BUFFET-

6-8 P.M.

Adults *2.99 Children Under 12-'1.89

Bzzaiim

For pizza out its Pizza Inn.

264 By4>ass East

Greenville, N.C.

Phone

758-6266

cents for every score of sheep or hogs, 12 cents for, a score of cattle. 12 cents for a stagecoach with two horses. 18 centgs for a coach with four horses.

The road had its hazards, including a western Maryland area known as the Shades of Death because of the many holdups and murders there. But taverns and inns were located at every mile, offering food and lodging for wagoners, drovers, and other travelers.

Yes. it was primitive. Wagoners slept on the floor in common rooms, their feet to the fire, their animals penned outside. Travelers slept two or more to a bed. There were compensations, however,

Whisky was the leading beverage," wrote Thomas B, Searight, an early chronicler of the road. "The price of a drink of whisky was three cents, except at the stage houses, were, by by reason of an assumption of aristocracy, the price was five cents The real aristocrats were the innkeepers and the stage owners and drivers, Land admirals like James Reeside and L.W. Stockton hired famed drivers like Redding Bunting and Old Mount -- 4-pound .Montgomery Demming - to carry as many as 10 passengers.

Eclipse 6i Decline But the road was doomed by the coming of the railroad, which could carry cargo and passengers faster and cheaper. When the trains reached Wheeling in 1852. the .National Road went into a long decline, not to revive until the coming of the automobile in the 20th cen

tury,

A'utomobile travel led to demands for road repairs. Bridges were rebuilt, liew pavement was laid, and in 1925. the road became part of U.S. Highway 40. It became once more a vital link between east and west, thou^ it now reached the Pacific Gcean

In Norwich, Ohio, a museum is dedicated to the National Road, with a diorama depicting the vibrant life along the 600 miles between Baltimore and Vandalia from the early days to today. It shows clearly how the National Road provided the cement of union" toa young nation

A10 ounce U.S.D.A. choice Sirloin Strip Steak, charbroiled to your order (with bone in for extra taste)

Weuto toasted grecian bread Golden french fries (or baked potato after 5PM)

All the hot homem^e soup and garden fresh

salad you care to eat Featuring Shoneys own delicious Cabbage Beef Soup

SHOXE)^

Amencas

Diner'IUe

264 By Pass GreenvilleI.





Crosamford By Eugnu Sheffer

9 Outmoded institution

10 Slough; var.

11 Slippery (mes 17 Big -California

19 Olive genus 22 Famous theater

24 Comedian Abbott

25 Once called Clay

26 Renovates

27 Hones

29 Tennis stroke

30 WWII area 33 Jasons ship 36 Fix shoes 38 Aft 40 Peg for

Palmer

42 Retired

43 Pedestal part

44 Move quickly, as clouds

46 Awry

47 African lake

48 Fragrance 50 Swiss

canton

ACROSS 1 Short footrace 5 - and downs 8 Church part

12 Prefix for graph or mobile

13 Meadow sound

14 Flatfish 15-bag

(party item) 16 Pub feature 18 Janet or Mitzi

20 Pack animals

21 Designer Cassini

23 Brit, air , arm

24 Exercise aids

28 New Haven college

31 Rubber tree

32 Luau greeting

34 Decompose

35 Circular plate

37 An African people

39 Toddler

41 Work units

42 Pueblo struc tures

45 Vichyssoise ingredient

49 Outdoor feast

51 Minced oath

52 Noble, in Bonn

53 Footed vase

54 Western city

55 Prescribed amount

56 Prefix for annormay

57 Close

DOWN

1 Old pistol; var,

2 Halo

3 Command to Fido

4 Associate familiarly

5 Bumbershoot

6 Kentucky bluegrass

7 Rowan tree

8 Mistaken

Avg. solution time; 27 min. "00TEPEF;U.E.L

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11-21

Answer to Saturdays puzzle.

FOCUS

To Klv

The first men in history to llv ascended in a hot air balloon 200 years ago today This lirst free flight lasted about 2 minutes and took thi* men over the city (d' Paris at a height of almost ;{()() feet. Arna/.irigly, the flight < ame only one year after the Montgolfier brothers first experimented with smoke filled paper and fahru halloons. Among the spectators at the first flight Benjamin Franklin

DO YOl' KNOW What is the enclosed basket beneath a balloon ( ailed'.'

FRIDAYS ANSWER "Snow White became the lirst full-length animated feature.

11 _/| ,    -    liH    I'l'    

PEANUTS

TtME OUT RE^OPlN AUAM

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WFl ZV OEFVZSFUIZTH 1 Z C M F E.

Saturday's Cryptoquip IS AN EXAl.TEI) TEXAS SERVANT A RED RIVER VAIr

Todays Cryptoquip clue; H equals b.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by Inal and error.

IWJKingFeaturfsSyndKdl IfK

J.B/s Island Seafood

New Lite Lunch Menu

Serving Mon.-Fri. 11:30*2:00

Luncheon Happy Hour

12:00-2:00 .

Mon.-Sal Dinner 5: tO lO OO

Monday Special! Special!.

All You Can Eat Night. Shrimp, Oysters, Fish

>3^ V    Located    In

^    Rivergate    Shopping    Center

I TLEEE i

JO/Air-5.

BLONDIE

I've PLANfJEO A 1

pamilv trip POR this

SATURDAY

I    .

T

But, hONEV,

TuDBURV'S IS ^ having THElR

OfJE-OAV SALE ON SATURDAY

IP I GO ON The TRlP,CAN I still mAi<e The t-rOiy ^SALE?

(p VOu CAN, then I HAVErV PLANfJEO ^ ,iT right rCc^C

/ XM

BEETLE BAILEY

Shop-Eze Foodland West End Shopping Center (Only) Double Savings Days With

Double Coupon Value

Tuesday November 22,1983

Clip The Manufacturers Cents Off Coupons From The Mail, Magazines Or Newspaper Then Bring Them To Shop-Eze Foodland

Double Savings With

Double Coupons

Value

Example

FRANK & ERNEST

MOVIf

'TONITE

Y.

PONT UT YOuP Hopf/ t/P THe weegLY movie If ALvvAYV 'TowEPiNS iNpEPNo':

On Tuesday. November 22, 1983 only. Shop-Eze Foodland, West End Shopping Center, Greenville. N.C. will redeem National Manufacturers Cents Off Coupons up to 50C only, for double their value with purchase of the product in size specified. (Foodland or other food retailer coupons not accepted.) Expired coupons will not be accepted. Coupons for free merchandise excluded from this offer. When the coupon value exceeds 50C, this offer limited to S1.00. If double the value of a coupon exceeds the retail amount of the item, this offer is limited to retail value. Limit one coffee or cigarette coupon per customer. Limit one double value coupon tor any particular item. All others at face value. With every S10 purchase, we will double 5 manufacturer's coupons. Example;

S10 purchase-5 coupons S20 purchase-10 coupons $50 purchase-25 coupons

CDuponC Coupon D

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Sports xfR DAILY REFLECTOR Classified

MONDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 21, 1983Lady Pirates Survive Rally, 64-57

By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor

East Carolinas Lady Pirates, using good defense against George Washington, built up a 20-point lead, then

survived a Co

onial comeback

Sunday afternoon for a 64-57 victory.

The contest, played in ECUs Minges Coliseum, was the opening game of the year for both squads.

East Carolina never trailed in the game, and were tied only once, at 2-2. After that, ECU ran off a 15-5 advantage to built up a 17-7 lead just over six minutes into the game. It never fell below four after that.

The Lady Pirates, starting four members of last years squad, along with junior college transfer Annette Phillips, used only seven players in all. They played the usual sticky defense Coach Cathy Andruzzi has come to demand of her )layers and it made a difference in the contest.

The only time the Lary Pirates really seemed to be in trouble was in the late stages of the game when George Washington put on the press and outscored ECU, 15-2 over the final six minutes of play.

At the time, Andruzzi explained afterwards, we didnt have our starters in there. We were using a couple of freshmen, and had a few girls out of position, and it showed. But I think we maintained our poise well. Well get better at breaking the press. Im sure.

For the first game, with a relatively inexperienced team, Anmiizzi was pleased.

The only Lady Colonial able to do anything against them was Kas Allen, who pumped in a game-high 37 points. However, she got little help from her teammates. She was the only one in double figures, and one of just three who scored as many as six points.

Allen seemed almost unstoppable in the contest, hitting 16 of 28 from the floor and five of eight from the line. She was also the games leading rebounder with 11.

East Carolina, however, held a conclusive 43-31 advantage on the boards, led by Darlene Hedges 10 and Lisa Squirewells nine.

It seems like one of their players always has a good game on us. L^st time, it was. (Kelly) Ballentine, with 40 points. But we put a net over her tonight. It just seems like when you work hard on one another does the job

Ballentine was held to just three of 13 shots from the floor and two of two at the line, a total of eight points.

I have to give Allen credit. She did a good job and she got a lot of her points from out on the perimeter.

Andruzzi said she didnt really know what to expect from her players in their first effort of the year. "I just didnt know how they would react. Its a new blend, but I thought that Delphine (Mabry) showed great leadership out there. And Darlene (Hedges) played what was probably her best game

ever. Hedges is the lone senior on the squad.

Andruzzi was also pleased with the play of freshman Lynn Nance, playing with a face-mask because of a broken nose sustained in practice. Nance, in 23 minutes of play, scored seven points and snatched away six rebounds.

All of the girls came in and fullfilled their assignments, the coach said.

We did make a number of mistakes that well have to work on correcting. We still have a long way to go. But I think that winning a game like

this against a team that had everyone back,, and that beat us last year, will give us a lot of confidence. We hustled, and that pleased me. We just have to look at the films and see where we made our mistakes and correct them.

East Carolina took the initial lead on a pair of free throws by Phillips, but Allen hit a 15-footer to tie it up. Squirewell then hit a layup, and from the 4-2 lead, the Pirates steadily pulled out to as much as a ten point lead in the first ten minutes.

The Lady Colonials rallied back to within four on a

three-point play by Allen at 8:37, 22-18, but East Carolina got two free throws from Bragg when a pair of technicals were called on the GW bench. Phillips followed that with a layup, and then got a three-point play over a span of a minute to push the Pirates back out by 11,31-20. Over the final five minutes of the half, they inched out to as much as a 14-point lead at 39-25. the

halftime margin.

In the second half, the Lady Pirates continued to ease away, finally reaching 20 points at 59-39 with 7:32 left as Hedges hit both ends of a one-and-one.

Then, in the final six minutes, the Colonials went to the press and. led by six points from Allen, rallied to pull within seven at the end of the contest.

Phillips and Sylvia Bragg both finished with 15 points for the Pirates, while Hedges added ten.

The Lady Pirates take to the road this coming weekend, playing at St. Peters on Saturday and at Iona on Sun-, day. Following another road game at Fayetteville State, they return home on December 4, hosting INC Charlotte.

.Voses

Allen

Feeney

Ballenline

.Marshall

Mitchell

.Messick

Winter

Kinghom

Kline

Team

Total

Squirewell

Phillips

Hedges

Maliy

Bragg

.Nance

Anderson

Team

TotaK

(ieorgeWasbingUmijii

MP FG FT Rb F A P

19 1^ 1 1 4 3 0 3 40 16-28 S-8 11 4 0 37

16    0-2    0-1

39    3-13    2-2

39    (M)    1-    2

13 10 115 8 4    5    5    1

U 0    0    0

10    0    0

4 3 16 2 0    0    2

0 3    0    0

3

2U 24-4O 9-15 31 22    12    57

Fast Carolina <64i

29    4-7    (M)    9    4    1    8

40    3-5    9-11    4    4    I    15

r    :i-10    4-4    10    2    2    10

1 (M) 3 041 21 3-6 17 1-5 5 0-2

32    3-9    1-3    4    4    2    7

31    6-12    3-6    5    4    1    15

23    3-7    1-1    6    1    0    7

8    1-2    041    2    2    0    2

3

21 23-52 tH-25 43 21 i 61

George Wasbingtun .......25    32    -    57

FatKarolina .........39    25    -    64

Turnovers GWL' 18. ECU 23 Technical fouls GW Bench 2 Officials Overacre. Pritchard Attendance 350

Practice Pays Off For Clippers, 99-97

SAN DIEGO (AP) - Practice makes perfect, at least for center Bill Walton of the San Diego Clippers.

Walton lobbed an alley-oop pass to teammate Terry Cummings, who left his feet to catch the ball and, without coming down, slammed in a dunk as time ran out to give the Clippers a 99-97 victory over Cleveland in the only National Basketball Association game scheduled Sunday night.

The Clippers had called a timeout with one second remaining after Walton rebounded a missed shot by Clevelands Jeff Cook.

On the ensuing out-of-bounds play from halfcourt, Walton made his perfect pass and Cummings scored.

The game was played before a season-low crowd of 4,056 at the San Diego Sports Arena.

Liberty Bowl, Pirates Await Irish Decision

Premier Showing

Lady Pirate freshman forward Lynn .Nance goes up for a shot over George Washingtons Anne Feeney in ECUs 64-57 season opening victory Sunday

at Minges Coliseum. Helping out on defense for GWU is Kas Alien (25) and Kelly Ballentine (14). (Reflector photo by Katie Zernhelt)

Elliott Wins; Allison Take Title

RIVERSIDE. Calif. (AP) -Bobby Allison, frustrated so often in his quest for a Grand National championship, appeared headed for more of the same in the Winston Western 500 - the years last major stock car race.

But his fortunes changed Sunday, to the degreethat not even a series of deflating tires and a fuel pressure problem could not keep him from winning his first title in 22 years on the top stock car circuit.

Allisons cautious, controlled ninth-place finish in the Winston Western overshadowed the first Grand National victory by Bill Elliott, who slipped into the lead just five laps from the end of the season-ending, rain-punctuated race.

Im telling you its great, said Allison, somewhat breathless with emotion after a brief round of hugging and celebrating with car owners Bill and Jim Gardner and the jubilant members of his Miller High Life-DiGard Team crew.

The little things kept happening and happening, Allison added. I said, Man, this cant be real. But the guys (in the crew) responded every time.

Allison went into the 500-kilometer (312-mile) race on Riverside International Raceways 2.62-mile, nine-turn road circuit leading

Rose-Chargers Set Scrimmage

The Rose High School Rampants will ti%t Ayden-Grifton in a pre-season basketball scrimmage Tuesday ni^t at 7 p.m.

, Admission to the game is one dollar.

The Lady Chargers will play the Rampettes Tuesday at Ayden-Grifton.

two-time defending season champion Darrell Waltrip by 64 points.

His finish, combined with a sixth-place finish by Waltrip, gave Allison the championship by 47 points.

But, following several unscheduled pit stops early in the race due to the tire i)roblems on his Buick, Allison ound himself a lap down and running 27th in the 42-car field.

I still had just a certain confidence, he said, a smile lighting the face of the 15-year-old driver from Hueytown. Ala. I was worried. but I still had an inner feeling it would be okay at the end.

Allison knew Waltrip, who had overtaken him each of the past two years with spectacular late-season rushes, would be going hard for the victory, just hoping that Allison would run into the kind of problems that kept cropping up.

But the point leader stuck to

Quarterback Club Meeting

The East Carolina University Quarterback Club will have its final meeting Tuesday at 5 p.m. in the Pirate Club Building. Coaches Ed Emory and Charlie Harrison will be the speakers.

the teams conservative race plan, even after he managed to get back onto the lead lap with a short spurt of harc-running midway in the race.

"I wanted to lead that race so bad I couldn't stand it. Allison said. But those guys (on the crew) stood by me all' year and I owed it to them to stand by the game plan.

"When I got a lap behind.

who had four second-place finishes this year and eight in his career, may wind up being worth even more than that.

Not only did he pick up $26,380 for the victory, he also passed lOth-place finisher Richard Pettvtowin $76.000.

Charlie Harrison

ECU head basketball coach Charlie Harrison will be the guest speaker of the Greenville Sports Club 'Tuesday at noon at the Ramada Inn. Members and guests are urged to attend.

Gary (crew chief Gary Nelson) said. Go ahead and get back the lap if you can. After I did. we went right back to the game plan.

The championship, besides adding to the lustre of a career that has seen him win 79 Grand National races -third on the all-time list - is worth at least $250,000 in season prize money to AHison and the team.

The race victory for Elliott,

Randle Fired At Marshall

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) - Marshall University football coach Ulmo "Sonny Randle was fired Sunday. Marshall Athletic Director Lynn Snyder said.

Snyder said Randle was dismissed because school officials felt that a change in leadership was needed in order for Marshall to continue to develop a competitive football program.

Randle posted 22-10 record as the head coach at East Carolina University from 1971-73.

DELCO FREEDOM BATTERIES

From Staff and W ire Reports

While East Carolina University players, coaches and fans anxiously await the announcement about Notre Dames team vote to decide the fate of the final Liberty Bowl opening, the bowls selection committee indicates a number of teams would be considered for the vacancy.

Notre Dame Director of Athletics Gene Corrigan asked the Liberty Bowl committee Saturday to try to find a replacement for the Irish, and said that if none were acceptable Notre Dame would reconsider.

If the 6-5 Irish reject the bid. Liberty Bowl selection committee member Bill .McElroy told United Press International several teams were under consideration as a replacement.

"Anything 7-4 or above would' be under consideration. McElroy said. Obvious teams would be Virginia Tech, East Carolina, Wisconsin and perhaps Oklahoma, if they beat Nebraska, and Arizona State and Washington State.

However. Tim Treadwell, chairman of the bowl selection committee, said Monday the first choice to face Boston College on Dec. 29 is still Notre Dame despite its 6-5 record.

"We hope to hear something from them this morning. Treadwell said.

If .Notre Dame declines. Oklahoma would be considered if they can beat top-ranked Nebraska in their next game. Treadwell said.

"Oklahoma would be the front runner, but VPI (Virginia Tech) is out there and some others, Treadwell said. "Weve been talking to the people. There's a strong feeling for Oklahoma first, but they've got two more games to play. Notre Dame players, who lost their third straight game Saturday to Air Force, voted Sunday on whether to take the bid. but the results of the balloting were not revealed.

The Rev. Edmund Joyce, executive vice president of the university and chairman of the faculty committee on athletics, at first was unavailable to count the ballots because of a commitment to lead a Mass. Later, he returned to his office but declined to comment on the vote.

Liberty Bowl officials, who thought 'they had a steadfast commitment from the Fighting Irish a week ago. still want Notre Dame to come to Memphis. They planned to stay in close contact with the team throughout the day today.

Were going to wait and see what .Notre Dame wants to do, said selection committee spokesman Reggie Barnes, Theres no urgency at this point to make another decision. All the bowl slots have been filled. Teams that are available tonight will be

available Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday

Boston College did not hesitate to accept when its invitation was issued following the Eagles resounding 47-7 win over Holy Cross Saturday. The Eagles, 8-2. have one regular-season game left at home against Alabama:

The Pirates of East Carolina finished the season with a 10-6 victory over SOuthern Mississippi Saturday to post an 8-3 mark ECU had been in the running for a berth in the Independence Bowl, but Ole Miss and Air Force held on to win and preserve their invitations.

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Miss McGuirt, Mr. Gooding Marry Double Ring Ceremony Performed Sunday

Karen I.vnn Mnriiiirf and Kanh wnro emerald areen .   i    o____i... .r._____ m        _________

Karen Lynn McGuirt and ' William Edsel Gooding were united in marriage Sunday at 5 p.m. at The Memorial Baptist Church here. The double ring ceremony was performed by the Rev. E.T. Vinson.

The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Gwen Gordon of Greenville and Larry McGuirt of Charlotte. The bridegroom is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Wesley Gooding of Ayden.

The bride was escorted by her brother, William McGuirt and wore a formal gown of white matte taffeta over peau de soie. The gown was fashioned with a high neckline encircled with a band of schiffli lace. The fitted bodice featured a sheer yoke of English net embroidered in a floral motif beaded in pearls and iridescent sequins and outlined in silk Venise lace. The elbow length princess sleeves were styled with a double ruffle of taffeta and chantilly lace centered by a tailored bow of white satin ribbon. The full skirt and attached chapel length trpin were bordered at the hemline in wide flounced featuring miniature tiers of ruffled Chantilly lace adorned with white satin bows. She wore a fingertip illusion veil edged in lace and held in place by a Juliet headpiece trimmed in lace and pearls. The bride carried a cascade of red roses with a center white orchid.

The honor attendant was Windy Bowen of Greenville and bridesmaids included Karen Gordon of Greenville and Lori Gibbs of Ayden.

Each wore emerald green satin formal gowns featuring a V-neckline and fitted long sleeves with a natural waistline. Their bouquets were of fall flowers and babys breath adorned their hair.

Candlebearers were David Gordon Jr., stepbrother of the bride, and Wesley MacKenzie, nephew of the bridegroom. Flower girls were Atheria Lynch, cousin of the bride, and Christie Jacobson, niece of the bridegroom. Each wore matching formal length light green taffeta gowns with an angel wing chiffon overlay and carried a bouquet of fall flowers.

The father of the bridegroom was bst man and ushers included R.W. MacKenzie, Dr. R.W. Ridgeway and Doug Jacobson, brothers-in-law of the bridegroom. Todd MacKenzie, nephew of the bridegroom, served as ring bearer.

Karen Smith presided at the guest register and the wedding was directed by Trish Byrum of Greenville.

The mother, of the bride wore a street length dove gray suit and the mother of the bridegroom selected a street length dress of amethyst chiffon with a matching coat. Both wore orchid corsages. The grandmothers were also remembered with corsages.

A program of wedding music was provided by Joe Goodwin and soloist Oliva Kay Clyde.

A reception followed the

On Sunday afternoon at three oclock in the Landmark Baptist Church, Rita Darlene Glisson and Robert Joseph Staton Jr. were united in marriage. Pastor John T. Woodley officiated at the double ring ceremony.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Donald Glisson of Stokes. The bridegroom is the son of

MRS. WILLIAM EDSEL GOODING

ceremony and guests were greeted by Beth Heeter and Sandy Woolard.

A wedding breakfast was held Sunday morning at the Greenville Country Club. On Friday evening a buffet dance was given by the bridegrooms parents at the

country club and an afterrehearsal dinner was given by the bridegrooms sisters, Mrs. Mac MacKenzie Jr., Mrs. Doug Jacobson and Mrs. Robert Ridgeway.

A kitchen show was held at the home of Mrs. Jack Dail honoring the bride-elect.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Joseph Staton Sr. of Route 1, Bethel . A prerecorded program of nuptial music was presented by the bride preening the ceremony. Louise Wainright was pianist and Judy Bowen sang The Wedding Song, Each for the Other and Both for the Lord and The Wedding Prayer.

The bride was escorted and given in marriage by her father. Her white formal gown of sheer organza and Venise lace was designed with a fitted bodice, modified Queen Anne neckline with Venise lace and bridal pearls and full bishop sleeves enhanced with lace motifs, closed with lace appliqued cuffs. The A-line skirt flowed into a cathedral train and adorned with motifs of lace was joined to a scalloped bias flounce with a border of lace, edged with matching lace. Her waltz length veil of silkened bridal illusion had motifs of schiffli lace and was bordered with lace. It was attached to a Juliet cap of schiffli lace and pearls. She wore her mothers pearls and carried a colonial bouquet of white roses, stephanotis and babys breath with lace streamers.

Terry Elaine Pollard Becomes Bride Of W.B. Shingleton Sunday

Terry Elaine Pollard and William Bruce Shingleton were married in a candlelight ceremony in Jarvis United Methodist Church Sunday at 2:00 p.m.

The single-ring ceremony was performed by the Rev. James H. Bailey.

Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Norman R. Pollard of Greenville and Dr. and Mrs. William Shingleton of Durham.

The bride wore a Victorian-style formal gown of ivory organza over peau de soie designed with a high neckline encircled with Chantilly lace and satin ribbon. It was enhanced with a sheer yoke of illusion accented with a silk venise motif and bordered in ruffled Chantilly lace. The fitted bodice was overlaid in French Nottingham lace and tucked organza. ''The modified A-line skirt and attached chapel train were accented with a flounce of matching lace edged with ribobn. She wore an ivory

Victorian hat covered in point despint netting with Chantilly lace rouching covering the brim. The hat was edged in cluny lace and complemented with silk flowers and a chapel-length illusion train. She carried a cascade of;_ ivory spider mums and roises tied with stain and lace ribbons.

The maid of honor was Miss Debbie Pollard, sister of the bride. Bridesmaids were Miss Susan Davis of Williamston, Miss Soyna Daniels of Greenville, Miss Leigh Beamon of Henderson, Miss Susan Shingleton of Fort Pierce, Fla. and Miss Betty Shingleton of Lum-berton.

They wore identical formal-length gowns of violet taffeta designed with open necklines featuring off-shoulder bodices and selffabric tie sashes. They carried arm bouquets of ivory Jack Frost and cushion pompons, babys breath, and bakers fern tied with pink satin and lace ribbons.

B.vCECILVBROH.\STO.NE .\ssocia*H Press Food Editor When one oi lu.told me that his mother was known in her neighborhood for making "the best" Banana Cream Re - that favorite .American dessert - I asked whether 1 might have the recipe.

My tasters tested it in my kitchen and highly approved it. I hope if you try the recipe you

have as good luck with it as I did. BANANA CREAM PIE Pastry for a l-crust 9-inch pie shell 2-3rds cup sugar 2 tablespoons cornstarch 2 cups milk 2 large egg yolks

1 tablespoon butter

2 large bananas, sliced 1 cupheavycream

Confectioners' sugar Vanilla

Make up and roil out the pastry; fit it into a 9-inch pie plate or pan so there is a high fluted edge. Bake and cool.

In a 2-quart saucepan stir together the sugar and cornstarch. Gradually stir in the milk, keeping smooth. With a wire whisk or a fork, beat in the egg yolks until blended.

Over medium heat, stirring constantly, cook until mixture comes to a boil, boils 1 minute and is as thick as heavy cream. Off heat, stir in the butter until blended.'Tum into a bowl; cover the surface of this filling with saran without pressing down -this way the saran will not adhere to the filling. Refrigerate until filling is cool - about 1 hour.

Arrange bananas over the bottom of the pastry shell; pour the filling over the bananas. Cover pie plate with saran:

4

refrigerate for 6 hours or overnight to allow filling to set.

At serving time, whip the cream: sweeten with confectioners sugar and flavor with vanilla to taste. Spread the whipped cream over the entire surface of the filling and garnish with extra banana slices. Or with a pastry tube make a ring of whipped-cream rosettes in the center of the pie.

Bridal

Policy

The flower girl was Miss Brandee McLawhorn of Ayden. She wore a lavender and white silk formal gown and carried a white basket of rose petals with pink satin and lace ribbons.

The mother of the bride wore a lavender taffeta Victorian gown and a corsage of off-white roses; the mother of the bridegroom, a plum-colored chiffon gown and a corsage of off-white roses. Grandmothers of the couple wre honored with white carnation corsages.

The bridegrooms father served as best man. Ushers were Frank Murphy of Charleston. S.C., Richard Strowd of Chapel Hill, Brad Branch of Atlanta, Ga.; Brad Shingleton of Raleigh and Wesley Ray of Raleigh.

Music was provided by Mark Gansor, organist, and Neil Arrington; soloist. Vocal selections were "The Wedding Song and "The Wedding Prayer. Miss Myra Clark of Greenville presided at the guest register and greeted guests as they entered the church.

The reception was held at the Holiday Inn here; the rehearsal dinner at the Greenville Country Club by the bridegrooms parents. A wedding brunch was given by friends of the bridegrooms parents; a shower by Mrs. Betty McLawhorn.

After a wedding trip ,to Nassau and the Bahamas, the couple will live in Greenville.

The bride attended Pitt Community College and'East Carolina University and is employed by the Nelson Clinic here. The bridegroom is a graduate of N.C. .State

Sharon Dpnnell Glisson of Stokes, sister of the bride, was maid of honor. Her formal gown of copper chiffon was styled with a shawl collar on a scoop^ neckline with a fitted waistline and A-line skirt. It was tied with a narrow satin belt. She wore a halo of white stephanotis and copper colorea babys breath m her hair and carried a cascade bouquet of daisies and copper colored babys breath.

Bridesmaids were Mrs. Lanie Whitehurst and Mrs. Charles Landen of Stokes, sisters of the bride, Mrs. James Rose of Beaufort and Mrs. Kenneth Braxton of Greenville. They wore gowns identical to that of the honor attendant.

London Hayes of Farmville was flower girl and wore a floor length white cotton country creation gown by Vee. She carried a basket of daisies and copper colored babys breath. Chad Landen of Stokes, nephew of the bride, was ring bearer and carried a white satin pillow with a spray of flowers tied with white satin.

Earl Brown of Route 5, Greenville was best man and ushers included J.L. Taylor, Keith Briley of Bethel, Charles Landen of Stokes, brother-in-law of the bride, and Joey Nelson of Greenville,

The mother of the bride wore a formal gown of burgundy chiffon over satin with a matching chiffon cape. The mother of the bridegroom selected a navy and white polyes'ter dress. Both wore white cym-bidiums.

Treva Woodley of Lynchburg, Va. presided at the register and Charles and James Landen of Stokes, nephews of the bride, distributed rice bags.

Parents of the bride, relatives and friends entertained at a reception and guests were greeted by Mr. and Mrs. Ted Mills.

Mrs. Lennie Troiano of Winterville served cake and Betty Shinn of Greenville poured punch. Hostesses included Mrs. John Kelly, Mrs. Willis Crawford, Mrs, Donald Cope and Mrs. Richard Rodebaugh. Junior hostesses were Rae Troiano of Winterville, Jennifer Cope of Greenville and Kathy Rodebaugh of Ayden. Goodbyes were said by Mr. and Mrs. Mike Brown.

Hazel Fields of Farmville directed the wedding assisted by Gigi Fields and

MRS. ROBERT JOSEPH STATON JR.

Betty Woodley of Greenville.

The bride graduated from North Pitt High School and East Carolina University. She teaches at Greenville Christian Academy. The bridegroom graduated from North Pitt and attended ECU and Pitt Community College. He works at ECU.

On Saturday evening after the rehearsal, the ladies of the Landmark Church honored the wedding' party and guests with a buffet dinner in the fellowship hall. A bridemaids dinner was held Tuesday evening at the Dixie Queen Restaurant. A miscellaneous shower and lingerie shower honored the bride prior to the wedding.

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A black and white glossy five by seven photograph is requested for engagement announcements in The Daily Reflector. For publication in a Sunday edition, the information must he 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 w'ritten neatly.

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EditorialsIt's Clean-Up Time

Just as in the John F. Kennedy assassination, it now appears there will be no rest in that November 1979 shootout in Greensboro between a group of Ku Klux Klansmen and American Nazis and demonstrators for the Communist Workers Party.

Murder trials that exonerated the Klansmen-Nazi group arrested after the shootings, civil suits filed since the street fight and widespread rumors generated by the CWP have done nothing to ease the situation. It has been studied, probed, investigated, reported.

Now comes one more telling bit of possible evidence that a great deal of the blame, at least circumstantially, perhaps should be placed on federal and local authorities.

A Greensboro newspaper has obtained documents filed by an undercover agent for .the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms who infiltrated the Nazis and was present at planning meetings leading up to the street confrontation. The agent, Bernard Butkovich, states in those documents he knew two days in advance that the Klan-Nazi coalition planned to be at the communist demonstration. He did not report the information to Greensboro police, but did tell his superiors, who also did nothing. Greensboro police, who had their own informers, also did nothing.

The result: a street battle that left five CWP members dead and a smear on Greensboros reputation that is far from being erased.

These incidents only tend to bolster that skepticism that some have come to express in the last two decades: whose side are the feds on? Such situations as the documented involvement of the BAFT in the Greensboro case only add fuel to rumors and contentions that the FBI was involved in the Kennedy and Martin Luther King deaths.

It really is time that the feds cleaned up their act. We hope that they have.No-Win Situation

The most recent flare-up of Greek-Turkish animosity is not purely a problem for Athens and Ankara alone. Its a thorn to most Western capitals, including Washington.

The island of Cyprus has long been a flashpoint for crises, with both Greeks and Turks claiming citizenship on the island ... Greeks in the majority ... and hence in a position to govern in a manner not always satisfactory to the Turks. Nine years ago Greece and Turkey came dangerously close to war, and the secession of an area of northern Cyprus (dominated by Turks) is a reminder that old feuds do not soon die.

Its a matter for concern to the United States because Greece and Turkey are important military allies and their divisiveness weakens NATO defenses in the eastern Mediterranean.

Both friends are extremely sensitive to any trace of favoritism, real or imagined; and their pride is such that an incautious word or gesture can inspire angry retaliation.

Dealing with two such prickly allies is something of a no-win situation that is all too familiar to our country.

James Kilpatrick

Predicting Is A Difficult Art

John Cunniff

Transfer Of Wealth

NEW YORK (API - A vast transfer of wealth has been occurring during the past year or so, and judging from the economic evidence at hand it is likely to continue well into next year as well.

Even so. it has only begun the process of returning money to those who were victimized by what is sometimes called the great heist oi the 1970s. when the transfer of wealth went in the opposite direction:

Back then it was the transfer of assets from savers to borrowers, from the haves to the haveiiots. Today, the haves are having their way agaiii; they are getting their money back and they intend to keep things going that way,

The process is simple: The haves are lending their savings - directly or through the institutions in which they keep their money - at interest rates that far exceed the rate of inflation.

Consider the contrast:

In the late 1960s to the mid-1970s it paid to borrow. Interest rates hadn't risen into

The Daily Reflector

INCORPORATED

nt Colincha SUM. OrMnville. N C 27834

EstibUshed 1882

PuMlihad Mondiy Through Friday Afternoon and Sunday Morning

DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD Chairman of the Board

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Second Clast Postage Paid at Greenville. N.C.

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SUBSCRIPTION RATES Payable In Advance Home DeHvary By Carrier or Motor Route Monthly $4.00 MAIL RATES IPrlcai Includa ta> whra applictbta)

PItl And Adlolning Counllet $4 00 Par Month Elsewhere in North Carolina $4.3S Per Month Oulaide North Carolina SS SO Per Month MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PHESS The Aaaoclaled Press It eicluafvely entitled to use for publication all news dispatchss credited to It or not othenwlse credited to this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publlcationt of special dispatches hei% are also reserved.

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double digits, but rates of inflation were already there. You could get a home mortgage for 8 percent or 9 percent while inflationwas 11 percent.

.As a result of the disparity, people made money by borrowing. For one thing, they paid back in cheaper dollars.

Adding to the injustice, borrowers further reduced their costs by deducting their interest payments from their taxable income, whie lenders were forced to pay taxes on their non-existent interest 'income,'

If the borrower purchased a house his money grew even faster. Between 1969 and 1979 the consumer price index rose from 19.8 to 217.4, a hefty jump to be sure But home prices rose even faster: from 109.5 to 223.1.

The prices of some homes grew much more swiftly. In some instances, houses bought for $30,000 rose within a few years to S90.000, providing the owner with a huge capital gain when he was ready to sell.

But such investment sometimes paid off in current income, too. That is. in many instances the buyer declined to live in the house himself but rented it out for income instead. .And that rental income rose swiftly, too.

Meanwhile, the same inflation that made the borrower wealthy was making the saver poor. Most savers keep their money in institutions, and institutions lend out their money. And that, of course, makes the saver a lender.

The saver-lender earned little or nothing at. all on his money. It took time for lenders to adjust their rates to the new reality, and in some instances they were hampered from doing so by usury laws, or limits on interest charged*

It was as if borrowers had backed up a truck to the lending institutions. In broad daylight.no less.

Never again, said the saver-lenders. and they could be correct. Not only did they stop lending, they cornered legislators and won changes in borrowing-lending practices.

The variable-rate home mortgage is one such change. Rather than offering money at a fixed rate for 30 years, lenders now offer rates that tend to float with interest rates generally.

And if no such devices exist with which to protect themselves the lenders simply charge higher rates, just to be safe. The roughly 10 percentage point gap between rates in general is about triple the norm.

WASHINGTON - A scholarly little book came in a few weeks ago from Yale University Press: Forecasting Presidential Elections, by Steven J. Rosenstone. I have been having a go at this book - attacking it, so to say - and I know when I am licked. If Rosenstones Greek-lettered formulas are the secret of understanding presidential politics, I have wasted 40 years in the reporters craft.

Rosenstone is an associate professor of political science at Yale. According to the book jacket, the gentleman has formulated a theory that accounts for changes in party performance since 1948. His formula, properly applied to data available prior to the elections of 1976 and 1980, would have accurately forecast their outcomes. His statistical model, it says here, is sensitive to all kinds of shifts in public preferences.

Rosenstone begins his work by telling us how poor a job everyone else does at forecasting elections. A candidates cam- paign advisers, bringing grapevine political intelligence, are thoroughly unreliable. Professional pollsters such as Richard Wirthiin and Pat Caddell often

are far from the mark. Forecasts based upon informal canvasses are quite inaccurate. Bellwether districts, such as Laramie County, Wyoming, and Palo Alto County, Iowa, offer small advantage over the uneducated guess.

What about professional polls of public , opinion] In 1980 the major polsters overestimated the Carter vote by as much as 7.2 percent. One problem was that in order to make deadlines for the Sunday morning before a Tuesday election, the professional pollsters had to quit polling on Thursday or Friday. Thus at least some of the big polling outfits missed the last-minute flood tide to Reagan. According to Rosenstone, about 18 percent of the voters make up their minds in the final two weeks of a campaign, and nearly 10 percent of the voters in 1980 made up their minds on Election Day.

Up to this point, I can follow the professor fairly well. The presidential forecasts of professional pundits are notoriously inaccurate; we are great on the easy states (Georgia will go for Carter in 1976), but we hedge our tets on the tough ones (Ohio is too close to call). One theory concentrates on pop

corn polls at the movies. Another holds that if the National League wins the World Series, the Democratic candidate will win the White House. And then there are woolly bears: The darker they are, the better the prospects for the GOP.

Very well. Let us agree that no previously known method of forecasting a presidential outcome is consistently reliable. Is Rosenstones elaborate formula any better] Not a particle. The professor assigns coefficients and standard error to all manner of factors, and some of these he squares and some he multiplies and some he solemnly divides. He relies upon a Euclidean Preference Function. He employs Greek mathematical symbols large and small. He speaks knowingly of parameters. It is all footnoted and it is all scientific; the book has three appendices, a bibliography and an index; and it is about 92.6 percent baloney.

Prediction is a very difficult art, said physicist Niels Bohr, especially when it involves the future. And prediction is an all but impossible art when it involves the unpredictable human element. Any cub reporter or college freshman could

assemble the same factors that Rosenstone has spread upon his tablet; incumbency, war or peace, state of the economy, importance of social issues, basic demographics of sex, age and race. Any good almanac will provide the historical numbers. Such professional pollsters as Gallup and Harris are generally close to the outcome.

But it is the unknowable human element that often makes all the difference in a presidential campaign. What numerical value would a professor of political science assign to a tear in the eye of Ed Muskie] How do you quantify Jimmy Carters toothy grinl In New Hampshire in February o 1980, Ronald Reagan pop ped the George Bush balloon with a single line: I paid for this microphone, Mr. Green.

This is the fascination of politics, that it cannot be analyzed in an academic lab. Professor Rosenstone can square his chis all night, but no formula ever can estimate the impact of one warm smile and a friendly jibe: There you go again, said Reagan, to Carter in their great debate of 1980. And there went the old ball game.

V w i|ijra&iTT.TD sfSrif owLti WENiwmoF ira-

cwr (SAsws iwaon of asm,it hot stotip owi,.*

Art Buchwald

Harassment Still A Cloudy Area

There seems to be more talk and lawsuits concerning sexual harassment in the office. A recent survey indicated tnat while few women complained of being physically harassed by males, many maintained they were yerbally ahv&e by their male co-workers.

Unfortunately, verbal sexual harassment is still a much cloudier area than anyone wants to admit.

When I go to lunch by myself 1 have the bad habit of listening to conversations at the next table. When two or three girls are lunching together the conversation seems to concern the various men in their office. "Tommy is a teddy bear, but Harry is a dirty old man."

Wanting to know where a man should draw the line when it comes to harassment in the office, i turned to three female office workers sitting next to me at Scholl's Cafeteria the other day and said. *I beg your pardon. I'm doing an article on sexual harassment and I was wondering if you ladies could help me define the difference between verbal harassment and old-fashioned flirting in the office."

One of the girls replied, "If you like the guy and think hes cute, hes flirting with you. If you don't like him, hes harassing you.

A second girl said "If Arnie, whom youve had your eye on, asks to have dinner .with you, tell all the girls in the office. If Charley, whom you cant stand, invites you, tell your boss."

' "Then what youre saying is that verbal harassment in the office is really a judgment call. It isnt whats said but who savs it)

The third lady in the party said Theres a lot more to it than that. Lilly was dating a fellow from our office, and he stayed over in her apartment once or twice a week. Then he dumped her and wouldnt talk to her. His silence was far more harassing than anything he had ever said to her.

Correct me if Im wrong, I continued, but it seems to me in the old office mating game, many men and women who are now married admit they didnt like each other at the beginning, but eventually fell in love. If office harassment had

been as big an issue then as it is now, maybe the couple would have never gotten together, and the guy, instead of cutting the lawn for the girl of his dreams, could be doing five years in the county workhouse..

The difference is that in the past, one of the girls said, a girl had no choice of who harassed her. Now the law says its our decision.

One of the other ladies added, "Its also a question of who holds the power, If your superior implies your position with the

Elisha Dougiass

Strength For Today

There is an old Chinese saying: What do you want? Says Goid, Pay for it and take it. There is a way in which everything in Gods universe is given, but it is equally true that much has to be purchased. AH good things of life have a price tag on them.

For example, happiness is on sale; are we willing to pay the price in disciplined living? Success is on sale; are we willing to give up leisure and accept the

hard discipline which success costs? Love is on sale; are we willing to surrender selfishness and live for another? Honor and reputation are offered to those who wish to buy; are we willing to pay the price by giving up friends or fortune if necessary in order to remain true to our principles?

But even more important than the fact that all these things are on sale is the fact that they are all very good bargains.

firm depends on how nice you are to him, thats harassment of the worst kind. But if you like him, would that still be harassment!

If hes married thats one thing. If hes fun and single, it could be a different story,

Are there cases in your office, I asked. "where women harass men that they are attracted to]

They all laughed, .Were not made of stone. Why are you writing an article on this]

"Because if women can go to court over verbal harassment in an office environment, men may become too frightened to say anything to you girls. It could take all the romance out of your jobs, and no one would look forward to coming to work any more.

"Do you have a solution]" one of the women asked me. "Yes, I do. 1 think when you first apply for a job you should be asked on your personnel questionnaire if you want to be verbally harassed or not. If you say yes, then you must describe the type of guy you want to be harassed by and the type you wouldnt be caught dead with. Your superior could then notify all the males in the office accordingly, and everybody would be spared the consequences.

The girls thou^t this over. Then one of them said, It will never work. We might not want to be harassed by George on Monday, but when the weekend rolls around, and we dont have anything to do, we should have the right to change our minds.

Copyright 1983, Los Angeles Times Syndicate

Maxweii Glen and Cody Shearer

Appointments Leave A Legacy

WASHINGTON - Election-year appointments generally offer presidents the chance to repay political lOUs and collect new chits as well. For Ronald Reagan, however, they may also help to lay a conservative foundation for the future.

That possibility was suggested by two appointments in particular: those of R. Bruce McColm to a seat on the In-terAmerican Human Rights Commission and J. Harvie Wilkinson III to a seat on the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals. Both encountered negligible opposition in receiving confirmation last week.

Critics have questioned the (qualifications of both McColm and Wilkinson for the posts theyve snared. The human rights commission, which functions under thie aegis of the Oi^ganization of American States, normally includes members who

have a deep background in international law; likewise, trial experience is generally a prerequisite for federal judgeships. The appointments of McColm, a staff writer for the conservative group. Freedom House, and Wilkinson, a law professor and former editorialist with no trial background, go against tradition.

Yet the administrations intent behind these appointments may involve more than filling vacancies. Anxious to leave a legacy that will outlast his administration, Reagan will be looking during the next year for vacancies in offices that are immune to the usual quadrennial house-cleaning. He can also be expected to put a premium on youth and ideological commitment.

At the OAS, McColm, only 33. will serve a four-year term, with an opportunity for

re-election. Wilkinson, only 39 himself, can serve for life. If they are an example of what Reagan has in mind for the next year, the president has already begun to sow ideological seeds for the rest of the decade, and perhaps the century.

Filling a vacuum] No single theme has emerged for the 1984 campaign, a fact that plays into the hands of both Ronald Reagan and conservative activists. Much has already been made of Republican Party plans to inundate the airwaves with footage from the presidents heroic efforts in such places as Grenada and South Korea. Meanwhile, independent groups are massing war chests for pro-Reagan hoopla. The National Conservative Political Action Committee (NCPAC), by far the wealthiest independent group, has already produced a 30-minute movie

hailing Reagans record.

It also plans a 200-page book (tentatively titled "Reagan: A President Succeeds) and television commercials involving various celebrities.

The price of deficits; Treasury Department figures for federal spending during the 1983 fiscal year, which ended last month, reveal the drain of debt financing on taxpayers. As listed in a recent departmental report, the top five spending categories were Social Security ($141 billion), interest on the debt ($118 billion). Medicare ($35 billion), unemployment benefits ($27 billion) and Navy operations and maintenance ($20 billion).

The report also noted that spending levels had increased by at least 10 percent in 20 of the t(^ 35 |MX)grams.





3 The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.    Monday.    November21.1983

111C L^qiiy noMowtwi, vjiowi 1^. w.  mCourse Is Heldl The Nation's Pulse Crop Saw Decline

Twenty-two food service management personnel have successfully completed a course on food protection and sanitation sponsored by the Pitt County Agricultural Extension Service and the Pitt County Health Department.

Graduates completed 15 hours of instruction and a required examination.

Successfully completing the program were: Shirley Speight, Mark Wooles, Belinda McKeel, Troy Narron, Denise Coward, Pamela Doyle, Jim Terrell, Bobby Riggs, Kathenne Morris, Ervin Wells, Jessie Jones. Gwendolyn Phillips, Nell Eason. Marie Daniels. Wanda Nobles, Laura Harward. Waid Akeman, Kathy Boseman. James Mayo Jr.. Charles Wall III.

The next course is schedueld for April. For further information call the Pitt Countv Extension Office at 752-2934.

By MITCH SMITH Agricultural Extension Agent Agriculture is Americas success story. When this story was established a little more than 200 years ago, a farmer using mostly handpower and a little horsepower was barely able to feed himself and his family. Since then, the evolution of agriculture has been nothing short of amazing. Today, through mechanical power and the development and advancement of technology of science power, the American farmer is now producing enough to feed himself and 78 others.

An hour of farm work produces 14 times as much as it did in 1919-21. Just in the past 50 years, both crop and

livestock production have more than doubled with close to the same amount of crop land, breeding nimals and total input in use.

While the success of the ,past is worthy of much praise, farmers face various uncertainties about the future. Grain surplus and drought coupled with the introduction of a new farm bill indicates that the future may prove to be as drastically different as the past.

While tractors have provided the muscle necessary for increased productivity on farms since the beginning of this century, their use will become more sophisticated. Controlled traffic across a field lessens the damage due to soil compaction. Tractors

equipped with automatic guidance systems eliminate the requirement for a human overseer.

The tillage used, in a farm program may be subject to alteration. The moldboard )low is expected to be used ess due to the condition in which the soil is left after its use. Despite the vulnerability of the soil to wind exposure and water erosion, the moldboard plow is also the most energy intensive tillage implement. The higher fueld costs projected would not promote this.

Many crop stands are reduced due to diminished seed placement. This problem is related to the inability to precisely control the depth and spacing of the seeds. Computers may play a part

as a future remedy to this problem.

Grain crop planters already have computers that are used to moniter the seeding rates and failures in any planting unit. Future planters will have sensors that will determine the right planting depth for optimal moisture content for seed germination.

Satellites are expected to be more and more useful in the future. Remote sensory satellite data is already used to predict wheat crop yield, to give advanced warning of freeze and to monitor surface water supplies, irrigation practices, soil erosion and vegetative stress from blight, insects or drought.

The automotive industry already utilizes another

By DON KENDALL AP Farm Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) -The nations pulse crop faded but still held on in 1983, the Agriculture Department says. Even so. when there ar fewer pulses the price of bean soup can cost more.

Pulses are the seeds of a group of edible legumes including dry beans, dry peas and lentils. They re grown widely in the world and sometimes, in the Soviet Union, for example, are included in overall grain production figures.

In the United States, beans are the leading pulse crop, and it is down sharply from last year. Dry pea production, on the other hand, is up slightly while lentil output declined.

The 1983 dry bean harvest - which includes the familiar pinto, navy and other varieties is estimated at 15.6 million hundredweight, down 37 percent from last year and less than one-half of the record harvest of 32.2 million hundredweight in 1981.

Prices at the farm have risen accordingly, averaging $23.80 per hundredweight in last month, compared to $13,90 a year ago.

A recent outlook report said this years bean crop is the smallest since 1967, due mainly to a sharp cutback in , plantings to 1.11 million acres, 37 percent below last years 1.76 million acres and 50 percent below 1981.

Production fell in all states, indicating output de-

Charged Firelighting

State wildlife protectors K.J. Dunn and John Waters have arrested seven men on charges of firelighting deer and three others on charges of illegally possessing doe deer in the past few weeks.

Dunn said Horace Smallwood and Donald Ray Smallwood of Route 3, Williamston were arrested Nov. 3, following an incident in the Sheppard Mill Pond area near Stokes.

While investigating the firelighting incident, Dunn said, Thurmond Smallwood of Route 1, Stokes was charged with possessing a doe deer.

Fernando Nwsome of Route 1, Stokes, and James Barnhill, also of Route 1, Stokes, were charged with possessing a doe deer on Nov. 3, also, according to Dunn.

Both Newsome and Barnhill pled guilty to the charge in district court on Nov. 10, and Barnhill was ordered to pay $100 and costs. Newson was sentenced to todays in jail.

James T. Nicholson of Route h Grimesland and Ronald Allen Nicholson of Route 2, Greenville, were arrested on firelighting charges on Nov. 19, following an incident near VGA Site B near Blackjack.

The latest arrests included James Gregory Bland of Grimesland, Raymond Jasper Andrews of Route 2, Grimesland, and Steven Wayne Harrington of Grimesland, who were charged with firelighting on Nov. 20, near VGA SiteB.

CANT REFUSE LGNDGN(AP)-JeaneJ. Kirkpatrick, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, says the United States finds no grounds for refusing to sell weapons to Argentina now that a civilian government has been elected.

dines for all classes except lima beans, which were unchanged from last year, the report said.

Michigan is the largest dry bean producer, along with California, Colorado,Idaho, Nebraska and North Dakota. The crop is also produced to a lesser extent in Kansas. Minnesota, Montana, New York. Utali, Washington and Wyoming.

Lower grower prices for the 1982 crop primarily influenced the huge plantings decline. Producers received an average of $13.80 per hundredweight - the lowest price since 1972 - for the 1982 crop, contrasted with $21 and $27.60 for the 1981 and 1980 harvests, respectively, the report said.

With the smaller 1983 crop, prices at the farm are expected to average $22 to $28 per 100 pounds for the season.

Gne reason for last years bean glut and the lower prices was a sharp decline in export sales, the report said.' And the higher prices will make U.S. beans less attractive to foreign buyers.

In addition to the higher U.S. crop prices, the continued strength of the dollar further inflates the price, the report said.

However, smaller crops are expected in Argentina and Canada, which are competitors in the world bean market, and reduced harvests in South Africa and Venezuela - all pluses in the U.S. export outlook.

But with a larger crop in Mexico, bean sales to that country are expected to be minimal, the report said.

THE FUR FLEW

LGNDGN (AP) - The fur flew at Harrods, the London department store, when about 30 animal rights activists Saturday tried to hold a sit-down in the store to protest the trade in animal pelts.

District Meet

Pitt County hosted the recent fall meeting of the Northeastern District Association of Agricultural Extension Secretaries which features a program on cosmetics presented by Diane Sutton and Glenda Mercer of Belk-Tyler.

Twnety-six members attended the meeting and elected and installed the following officers for 1984: Betty DeCamp of Pamlico County, president; Myrtle^ Rountree of Gates County, first vice president; Betty Cox of Chowan County, second vice president; Tammy Smith of Chowan County,, secretary, and Mary-Sue Wright-Baker of Currituck, treasurer.

The objective fo the organization is to improve and maintain the ideals and professional standards of county extension secretaries. The spring district meeting will be held in Pamlico County. Seventeen counties comprise the northeastern district.

aspect expected to be seen more of in the future. That aspect is robots. Robot-type

Home Town To Hail Astronaut

PHILADELPHIA (API -Lt. Col. Guion R. Bluford, Jr., the first black American astronaut to go into space, is coming home to a heros welcome this week as honor-ary grand marshal of Philadelphia's Thanksgiving Day parade.

Bluford, 41, who blasted off aboard the space shuttle Challenger on Aug. 30., was to kick off a four-day visit today when Gov. Dick Thornburgh and Mayor William Green greet him at City Hall.

center pivot systems alreadv irrigate much cropland each year. Future use of robots is expected to consist of around-the-clock farm operations as bad weather threatens.

Although the future for agricultural technology is still uncertain, more efficient machinery and genetic engineering are inevitable if agriculture is to continue to advance.

The preceding ideas were derived from a one-year study done by the Batelle Institute of Columbus, Ghio.

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Licensed For A New Vaccine

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Agriculture Department has approved licensing for three veterinary companies to make a new vaccine for immunizing poultry against Mareks disease.

Dr. David A. Espeseth. a veterinarian in USDAs Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, said the licenses are being issued to DeKalb AgResearch Inc., De Kalb. 111.; Inter-Continental Biologies Inc., Millsboro, Del.; and Salsbury Laboratories Inc., Charles City, Iowa.

The new vaccine was needed to provide greater protection against a recent highly virulent form of Mareks disease. Espeseth said. It was developed through cooperative efforts of USDAs research facilities and the manufacturers.

Mareks disease is a tumor-producing viral infection that results in a high rate of carcass condemnations in infected poultry flocks.

The manufacturers will continue laboratory and field testing of the vaccine during the coming year. Espeseth said.

St^rchdoea

In 191), IVrcluc l7iniT.slx*g;in cn usshrurclin^ lor a hultuT broiler. vSincc then, the* W hilc Kouk/ (kirni.sli Ixbricl bus grown more mealy and lender through genetics and nutrition. Ibr the growers, lhe.se* and other aeNiineements ba\e meant impro\'eel leed eomersion, liister grow ing lloeks, imel extra pay l()r a better pnKluet. Ibr e.xample, in br3 it took 60 ela\s to proeluee a 4.4 lb. broiler. l()da\' it takes only S2 ela\N.

IVrelue .still .six*nels more than most companies on rese*areh and ejuality control. In the highly competiti\i* poultr\' bu.sine.ss, standing

.still won't keep you ahead Thais w li\ IVrdues wterinarians. nuirilionists, and genelieisis keep working to de\elop a .Su|x*rehieken. In the meantime, the market lor l\*rdue*s siiixrior eiiieken inerea.se*s e\en \ear. In lae l we re planning t() ()ix*n a .se*e( )ixl .shill at ()ur K( )lx*rs( )ii\ ille proee.ssing plant to help us meet this grow ing demand. Asa re.sult ol our expansin, IVrdue needs 1 |S more broiler housc*.s. .So il \ou re a North Carolina farmer who'd like togrow with U.S. gel in touch today (^all eolleel 1-"9S- ilSl or sc*nd in the eouiK)!! below.

The Gtx)wing Company

FORECAST FOR TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22,1983

GENERAL TENDENCIES Don'l lose out on constructive plan by being too fixed in your standpoints Cooperate with others, and you will be able to make leaps and bounds forward. Use self-control ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr, 19) Talk over future partnership affairs, 'y'ou.wdi gam understanding and profit from the views of others Be creative m the evening TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Work at making arrangements that can bring a greater income soon. Listen to co-workers. Be cooperative in the future GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Discuss your plans and policy matters with a prominent person who can give you support. Take a positive attitude.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to Jul 21) Converse with km; plan a brighter future for all concernced Avoid friends seeking your assets. Don't be gullible LEO (Jul. 22 to Aug. 21) Find out how to gam your personal aims more easily and become more socially popular. Do your work well.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Get advice on how to Increase your monetary status. Your own plans are not good. Make sure to return the favor.

LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct. 22) Study some new philosophy that can help you m the future. Stop worrying about bills. Apply yourself seriously.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Study your obligations and handle them cleverly. Show more affection to your mate m order to gam more yourself.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22 to Dec 21) Associates and friends desire to improve relations with you Dont sacrifice something worthwhile for small duties.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan 20) Do your work well; a higher-up could be watching you. Dont jeopardize your position with temporary frivolity AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) You have inspiring ideas; those m the business world can assist with support you need. Be ambitious PISCES (Feb 20 to March 20) Discussing hopes and wishes for days ahead bring good results. Toss aside an annoying message you may get IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY . he or she will be one who thinks it is necessary to fight for whatever is wanted So teach early to be more cooperative and to have good manners. Once this is learned, your progeny can become an excellent salesperson.

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

' 1983, The McNaught Syndicate, Inc





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The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C. , Monday, November 21,1983

Sparkling 'White Shoes'

Atlanta Falcons receiver Billy White Shoes Johonson (81) watches from the ground (top left) as teammates and San Framcisco defenders fight

Clemson, Three Others Place Five On 1983 All-ACC Squad

Bv TOM FOREMAN Jr.

AP Sports W riter

One team is on probation, two are going bowling and the fourth will spend the holidays at home. What they all have in common is that they all have five players on The Associated Press all-Atlantic Coast Conference football team.

Clemson was placed on probation prior to the start of the season, making it ineligible for the ACC title. Four Tiger defensive players and one offensive lineman made the team. Three North Carolina offensive players and two defenders are on the squad. Theyre all headed for the Dec. 30 Peach Bowl against Florida State.

Maryland secured its spot in the Florida Citrus Bowl and held down two

positions on offense and three on defense.

Duke, which lost its first seven games and finished >8. also had five players, most illustrious among them quarterback Ben Bennett.

The 24-man team was chosen by a seven-member panel of sportswriters from throughout the ACC region. North Carolina State had two players while Virginia placed safety Lester Lyles on the defense and Wake Forest placed punter Harry Newsome on the squad.

Player of the year will be announced Tuesday with coach of the year to be named Wednesday.

Bennett is now college footballs greatest passer, throwing for 323 yards against the Tar Heels and raising his career total to 9,614 yards. That beats the mark of 9,536 yards set by Brigham

Youngs Jim McMahon. He also holds 13 ACC records and is being touted by the school for the Heisman Trophy.

"My primary objective was just not to mess him up. Duke first-year coach Steve Sloan said. He really never did play a bad game. He had a bad quarter here or there. Hes one of the most accurate passers of the past few decades.

Joining Bennett on the all-conference squad are three of his favorite receivers - tight end Scott Russell, wide receiver Mark Militello and tailback Mike Grayson. Center Philip Ebinger is the fifth Blue Devil on the team.

Grayson scored 10 touchdowns and is Dukes all-time, all-purpose yardage leader. He led the conference in pass receptions prior to the Carolina game.

Bradshaw ^Bitter' About Noll's Comments; Wants To Help Team

PITTSBURGH (AP) - Injured Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Terry Bradshaw says he wants tb help his team from the sidelines, but no one has asked him, and recent remarks by Coach Chuck Noll make him "bitter.

Noll, asked at a news conference why Bradshaw didnt attend Steelers games, said, If he cant play quarterback for us. hes not much use to us.

Id be lying if I said I did understand Chuck and why some of the things have been said, Bradshaw said. "Ive been bitter about that. Being a competitive athlete and then all of a sudden being placed in a competitive environment and not being able to compete, to me. is very hard to handle.

Since Im not a prt of the football team I act like Im not a part. All I try to do is get' well, he told The Washington (Pa.) Observer-Reporter.

Bradshaw said he was willing to stay on the sidelines or in the press box on Sundays to help call plays or assist starting quarterback Cliff Stoudt, but he says he hasnt been asked.

Bradshaw also asked to travel with the team he quarterbacked to four Super Bowl championships, but they told me no. he said.

All of these years of playing and the experience I have.

.. I was surprised but Cliff has coaches and he has himself so maybe one more voice down there isn't necessary. Bradshaw said. "So I stay away. I dont think it has any reflection on me or my not caring about the football team

The team doesnt care, were out there playing a game, theyre not worried or saying. 'Well. Terrys not here on the sidelines. I was disappointed by the remarks, but who knows why he said them?

Bradshaw hasnt played this

season because of an elbow injury that required off-season surgery. He recently felt he could resume playing - I was throwing bullets 50 yards, I was ready but strained tricep muscles and hasnt thrown in three weeks. He is currently undergoing acupuncture treatments.

Because of his uncomfortable situation, Bradshaw asked to be allowed to go to

his Louisiana home to recuperate.

",iBut) Im not allowed to go home, he said. "Its been very tough but a lot of good friends have called and Ive read a lot of letters. (One night) was really a hard night for some reason and all a sudden Bob Griese calls and we talked for an hour and a half on the phone and he's got me picked back up."

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He has worked the last 20 years in Industry. (General Electric, Celanese Company. Continental Telephone and Burroughs Wellcome Co I, with assignments in Accounting, Data Processing and General Management He began his career with Bur roughs Wellcome Co in June 1971. and his most recent position was Manager of Financial Information Systems Depart ment He is a member of the Eastern Carobna Chapter of the .National Association of Accountants, arid the Greenville Area Chamber of Commerce

Charbe asked Jesus to come into his heart at the age of 9. dunng a family ahar and worship time Through the years he and his family have always been active in their local Church In 1980. he began to seek a closer walk with God Charbe is active in our Greenville Chapter FGBMFI, and is presently serving as our President Glona is active in the Greenville Women's Aglow Chapter, and is currently serving as Recording Seaetary

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Falcons Call On 'Big Ben'

for the ball (top right). Johnson reaches for loose football (bottom left) and catches 47-yard Big Ben pass to score winning touchdown in the last two seconds, 28-24. (AP Laserphoto)

Bradshaw hasnt ruled out returning this season, but because there is only a month left in the regular season, Noll seems content to let Stoudt play the rest of the way. The Steelers. 9-2. are tied for the best record in the National Football League.

"1 doubt (ihuck would play me since Cliff and the teams 9-2 (andI you dont change horses,Bradshaw said.

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By The Associated Press Some have called the play Big Ben. Others have dubbed it Hail Mary. Steve Bartkowski says the Falcons call it the Rocket because the ball goes up and comes down like a rocket.

> Atlanta won a 28-24 National Football League thriller Sunday on the last play of the game with San Francisco on a so-called Big Ben desperation pass by Steve Bartkowski.

Thatplay never works in practice, it only works in games somehow, Bartkowski said following the Falcons latest miracle.

It came on a 47-yard touchdown pass thrown up for grabs. Billy White Shoes Johnson came down with it. Bartkowski lofted a high, long pass down the left sideline into a crowd of players at the 5-yard line. The ball was tipped twice before Johnson, who had slipped down, grabbed it on the 7 and barely reached the goal line for the winning touchdown.

The Miami Dolphins, meanwhile, opened some daylight for themselves in the ' tight American Conference East race with a 37-0 thrashing of the Baltimore Colts in one of four shutouts Sunday.

Along with the whitewashing of the Colts, the Cleveland Browns whipped the New England Patriots 30-0, the Chicago Bears beat the Tampa Bay Bucs 27-0 and the New York Giants blanked the Philadelphia Eagles 23-0.

In other games, the Washington Redskins clobbered the Los Angeles Rams 42-20; the Dallas Cowboys whipped the Kansas City Chiefs 42-21; the Minnesota Vikings upset the Pittsburgh Steelers 17-14; the Los Angeles Raiders edged the Buffalo Bills 27-24; the Detroit Lions defeated the Green Bay Packers 23-20 in overtime; the St. Louis Cardinals bombed the San Diego Chargers 44-14, the Cincinnati Bengals crushed the Houston Oilers 38-10 and the Denver Broncos outscored the Seattle Seahawks 38-27.

The New York Jets play the New Orleans Saints Monday night in the Superdome.

The game-winning play for the Falcons capped a 73-yard drive that started with only 1:04 remaining, six seconds after San Francisco quarterback Joe Montana had given the 49ers a 24-21 lead by scrambling 11 yards for a touchdown.

The desperation pass by Atlanta is getting to be old hat for the Falcons. They beat New Orleans twice on the same play in 1978, each by

20-17 scores, one going for a touchdown and the other drawing an interference call that set up a touchdown.

Johnson said had he not slipped down, he probably would have been in the crowd of players batting at the ball.

I was suprised when the ball came into my hands, Johnson said. I knew I had gotten in.

Dolphins 37, Colts 0 Dan Marinos 85-yard pass to Mark Duper and Mark Claytons 60-yard punt return for Miami touchdowns only 42 seconds apart in the second quarter triggered the Dolphins rout of the Colts. The victory gave the Dolphins an 8-4 record and a one-game lead in the AFC East over the Bills.

Dupers scoring catch, just one yard shy of Miamis longest pass play ever, boosted the Dolphins lead to 17-0 with 1:42 to go in the first half and they were on their way.

Marino said Duper came up, I looked at him and he took off and I just threw it as far as I could. It was a great play by Mark.

Browns 30, Patriots 0 Cleveland exploded for 17 points in less than four minutes, starting with linebacker Chip Banks 65-yard interception return for a touchdown, and the Browns rolled to their second con-secutive shutout. The second-quarter eruption gave the Browns a 20-0 halftime lead. New England was blanked for the first time in 125 regular-season games.

They put us away for good early in the game, said New England offensive guard Ron Wooten. I hate to say it, but we never really recovered from that interception. That had to take something out of us.

Bears 27, Bucs Chicagos Walter Payton ran for 106 yards and two touchdowns in the rain and moved into third place on the NFLs all-time rushing list as the Bears remained in the thick of the Central Division title chase by crushing Tampa Bay.

Payton went over the

I,000-yard mark in a season for the seventh time in nine years on an 8-yard touchdown burst in the second quarter, and zoomed past the retired O.J. Simpson in the career standings with a 3-yard pickup in the third period. The shifty running back put together the 53rd 100-yard day of his career on 22 carries and boosted his nine-season total to 11,257, while Simpson rushed for

II.236in 11 campaigns.

Giants 23, Eagles 0

Butch Woolfolks first 100-yard plus game and a defense that allowd Philadelphia only 79 yards in total offense carried the Giants past the Eagles. Woolfolk gained 159 yards on 43 carries, an NFL record, and scored a touchdown as New York ended a streak of seven games without a victory.

Woolfolk, a second-year running back from Michigan, topped the single-game high of 42 set earlier this season by Tampa Bays James Wilder.

Redskins 42, Rams 20 John Riggins smashed into the end zone on three short touchdown runs as the Redskins overpowered the Rams. The win kept the Redskins in a first-place tie with Dallas in the NFC East with a 10-2 record. The Rams, now 7-5, remain tied for first place in the NFC West with San Francisco.

Riggins three touchdowns ran his 1983 total to 19 and tied him for the league lead in TDs with Rams rookie Eric Dickerson and also equaled an NFL mark for touchdowns rushing in a single season, shared by three other players The Redskins defenders held Dickerson, the NFLs leading rusher, to just 37 yards on 12 carries.

Cowboys 42. Chiefs 21 Tony Dorset! scored two touchdowns and became the ninth player in NFL history to gain more than 8.00 yards^ carrying the Cowboys over the Chiefs.Dorsett dashed 28 and 32 yards for touchdowns as he went over the l.(XK)-yard mark for the sixth time in seven seasons.

Vikings 17. Steelers 14 Steve Oils rifled two TD touchdown passes and Benny Ricardo kicked a 39-yard field goal as Minnesota beat Pittsburgh and ended the Steelers seven-game winning streak.

Raiders 27, Bills 24 Chris Bahr kicked a 36-yard field goal on the games final play as the Raiders withstood a fourth-quarter surge by Buffalo to beat the Bills. Led by quarterback Matt Kofler, filling in for an injured Joe Ferguson, the Bills had rallied from a 24-3 second-quarter deficit to tie at 24.

Lions 23, Packers 20 Eddie Murray kicked a 37-yard field goal with 6:30 left in overtime to lift Detroit over Green Bay. Lynn Dickey, who didnt play m the second half after suffering a mild con

cussion, completed touchdown passes of six yards to John Jefferson and one to Paul Coffman. He set a Packers season TD-passing marii of 26, breaking the mark of 24 set by Cecil Isbell in 1942.

Ive n(tf had a bigger win in my career - even the Super Bowls Ive been involved in, said Detroit Coach Monte Clark, whose team remained in contention in the NFC Central race.It puts us in great shape in the race with Minnesota coming up. Cardinals 44, Chargers 14 Neil Lomax tossed two touchdown passes and ran for two more, leading St. Louis over the Chargers and spoiling the homecoming of former Cardinals Coach Don Coryell. It was Coryells first visit to Busch Stadium since stepping down as coach of the Caros in 1978.

Bengals 38, Oilers 10 Ken Anderson threw three touchdown passes to trigger a 38-point first-half scoring spree that sent Cincinnati past the hapless Oilers.

It was the Oilers second drubbing by the Bengals in three weeks. Cincinnati roared to a 55-14 victory in the Astrodome just two games ago.

Broncos 38, Seahawks 27 Rookie quarterback Gary Kubiak, who had never before taken a snap in an NFL game, passed for one touchdown and ran for another, and Rich Karlis booted five field goals as Denver beat Seattle. Kubiak was forced into a starting rr pn rookie John Elway ca with the flu Sunday mi

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Title
Daily Reflector, November 21, 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.)
Date
November 21, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
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NC Microfilms
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Joyner NC Microforms
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