jfimy. t. cwnwn, i nnM prtvata liwtiwiil ti • i A Ifllflf imi|m nwmvRM w j^mW wwww TtumXZW: Mm U. I. laaata ami Naan af ■Mlkkll uaa ||B Iks IlnllMl Ji*ww^Hwill WH W o^NP iftovti to tftirtrey aparttoM In TaMlablr-Calloway) fi^i_ Congrats deputy inking support In Africa. (Pinto by Headway Made In Wake Schools Building Program The Wake County Public School Syetam made significant headway Ode year in its Long Range Building Program. Eight new multipurpose additions ware completed or are nearing com pletion. These additions offer schools hew space for gymanasiums and auditoriums. Renovations were com pleted at one school, and plans are mnAm (or completion of renovations at another school this summer. Air was added at nine schools, and plans are under way for the MAiHon of air conditioning at six more schools in August. The school system and the com munity mounted this massive con struction program in 1965 to provide a better teaching and learning environ ment. Phase I of this program came to a dose in 1989. Phase II, which is ■«***«uh to be completed in 1994, will allow about 42,000 students to en joy 11 new schools and improvements to 44 BwrfwHng buildings. Listed below are the projects in Phase II completed during the 1969-90 school year and those scheduled to be completed this summer: Baucom Elementary—multipur pure BQOIUUU VWIUJIWM3U/. Brook* Elementary—multipurpose addition (completed). Comb* Elementary—multipurpose addition (Auguat). Coon Elementary—traffic project (completed); media center (August). Green Elementary—multipurpose addition (completed). Joyner Elementary—Structural renovations; multipurpose addition (completed). Lynn Road Elementary—multi purpose addition (completed). Poe Elementary—multipurpose ad dition (July). Vandora Springs Elementary multipurpose addition (June). Washington Elementary—renova tions (first part completed/. This is a two-part, two-year project that is scheduled to be completed in August. Also as a part of the Phase II building program, all existing schools will be air conditioned. Listed below are the schools that had air condition ing projects completed during the 1989-90 school year: Hunter, Kingswood and Olds elementaries; Apex, Martin and North Garner mid dle schools; and Cary, Garner and Wake Forest-Rolesville high schools. BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND III thrillUn Unlimited ProrlHonl M I fmd^Trutnu "No Compromise,, It's not just 0 ptotf •••• it'smtxpamul For Additional Information CALL (919)847-2374 university ui i>ew Mexico Gets Funds For Minorities WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP)-The University of New Mexico will receive more than *715,000 over five years to train members of minority groups for mental health research and treatment careers. The money, awarded by the Department of Health and Human Services, will give participating students tuition, fees, dues for profes sional meetings and an annual $6,500 stipend, Sen. Pete Dominici, R-N.M., said Tuesday. The grants will be targeted to Hispanics, native Americans, blacks and Asians. However, a matching fund agreement will make non minority students eligible for aid, he said. The two-year awards will be of fered to undergraduate honor students, he said. r . V R. J. Reynolds Back With New Menthol Brands GREENSBORO (AP)-Six months after its efforts to test market a men thol cigarette went up in smoke, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. is back at it with two new versions of one of its more famous brands. The Winston-Salem-based tobacco company said the new versions of its Salem menthol line are not aimed at black smokers, who are more likely to smoke menthol cigarettes than white smokers, according to industry research. But Advertising Age, an advertis ing industry trade magaslne, reported Monday that comparisons already are being made between the new Salem Gold brand and Uptown, the brand that was scheduled for testing in Philadelphia last December. RJR snuffed Uptown after numerous proteste spearheaded by Louis Sullivan, U.S. Health and Human Services secretary. Sullivan and other critics complained that RJR was aiming Uptown at blacks, who he said have a higher rate of cancer than other groups. RJR denied the charges. RJR officials said the new Salems are not Uptowns with a new name. “They are not Uptown,” said Maura Payne, an RJR spokesman, last week. “That article led people to believe that they are not different products.” Ms. Payne said Salem Gold and Salem Box are simply two line exten sions of the Salem brand. Salem Gold has been test marketed in Ohio since March. Salem Box has been sold since April in several Nor thern states, including New York, Connecticut and New Jersey. Test markets can last from six months to two years, she said. Advertising Age included a photo of a billboard in Cleveland advertising Salem Gold with the slogan, “Max taste. Less Chill.” Ads for Uptown were themed, “The place. The taste.” • »g> t/thuidxuui—itbou/u, JULY 10, 1000 PAGll Rubin To Be Friends Qf Wake Library Featured Speaker f Featured speaker for the summer quarter program of the Friends of the Wake County Library is Louis D. Rubin, president of Algonquin Books, the Chapel Hill publishing venture that has launched a growing crop of young Southern writers. Dr. Rubin, a professor of English at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, will give the program Ju ly 17 at the Richard B. Harrison Library at ISIS New Bern Avenue, Raleigh, beginning at 7:80 p.m. In 1063 Dr. Rubin formed Algon quin, which has since published more than 80 books, 88 of them by previous ly unpublished writers. Algonquin, in recognition of its on couragement of Southern writer!, was one of four recipiaata j> ■ ,-v : I • 1 fed • v : People who make things happen. “ Heston ng l rad it ional la mils value's is one of our main objeelises tor the !H(s. Ihirolln /. 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