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The Indianapolis Star from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 32

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Indianapolis, Indiana
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PAGE 32- -THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR- WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1985 2 news blockbusters tonight; Livestock CBS unveils its new lineup counseling and other assorted medical ailments. All the regulars return, except Ed Flanders as Westphall who, in the first show resigns to go to Ethiopia. (Advertisement) 9:00 PM, CH. 13 Dramatic new Season Premiere of Emmy winner St. Elsewhere! Highlights By PAUL HENNINGER L.

A. Timps Syndicate debut Flip does an about-face when he's called upon to speak on careers before his son's high school class. -f Feeder bull calves small and medium frame 1 400-550 lbs. 630-700 lbs. $43-48 Feeder heifers medium frame 1 300-500 lbs.

$50-56; 500-600 lbs. $51-54 50, 600-770 lbs. $50 50-53 25. Stock cows small frame 1, 3-6 years old, Hogs 450. Barrows and gilts 75 cents to $1 higher; S.

2-3 235-255 lbs. 85; U.S. 3-4 212-240 lbs. a few 300-315 lbs. 60.

Sows steady; S. 1-3 350-400 lbs. 400450 lbs. 450-500 lbs. $35-36; 500650 lbs.

$36-37 50, a few $38; U.S. medium and wet 350-595 lbs. Boars and stags over 300 lbs. Sheep not tested. Joliet, III.

(AP) (USDA) Estimated hog receipts 500 Tuesday, but actual receipts 100. Barrows and gilts 75 cents higher under early; U.S. 1-3 230-240 lbs. $41; S. 2-3 220-270 lbs.

$37-38, U.S. 2-4 270-300 lbs. $34 50-37. Sows steady; U.S. 1-2 350-500 lbs.

$32, over 500 lbs. Boars over 300 lbs. $31. Cattle 50. Not enough of any class to fully test the market.

CARLOT DRESSED MEAT Des Moines, Iowa (USDA) Central United States carlot dressed beet and pork report with prices FOB Omaha; sales area Includes maior production areas In the Midwest and the Texas Panhandle. Carlot dressed beef trading, demand and supplies moderate as of 11:15 a.m. Tuesday. Sales confirmed on 20 loads of steer and 26 loads of heifer; no sales of cow reported. Compared with Monday's close, steer and heifer steady, except Y.G.

4 steady to $1 higher. Choice steer Y.G. 3 600-700 lbs. $80; 700-900 lbs. $79, choice Y.G.

4 600-900 lbs. $64-65, mostly $64; good Y.G. 2-3 600-900 lbs. $75; Holstein-type choice Y.G. 2-3 600-900 lbs.

$73-75; good Y.G. 2-3 600-900 lbs. Choice heifer Y.G. 3 550-700 lbs. $79; choice Y.G.

4 500-700 lbs. $64-65, mostly $64; good Y.G. 2-3 550-700 lbs. $70. Fresh pork cut trading slow to moderate; demand and offerings moderate.

Sales confirmed on 19 loads of pork cut items. Compared with Monday's close, fresh loins 14-18 lbs. steady to $1 lower; skinned hams steady to $2 higher, with most advance on 17-20 seedless bellies $1 higher; picnics steady to firm; no comparison on boston butts. Fresh loins 14-18 lbs. $8546, part load $89; 18-22 lbs.

part load $87. Skinned hams 14-17 lbs. $63; 17- 20 lbs. $58-60; 20-26 lbs. 157.

Seedless bellies 12-14 lbs. and 14-16 lbs. $56; froten 10-12 lbs. $42.50. Boston butts 4-8 lbs.

$57. Picnics 4-8 lbs. $42. SLAUGHTER BULLS Y.G. 1-1 lbs.

$43 high-dressing Individual $49.75. SHEEP Slaughter lambs not well tested; no comparison on slaughter ewes or feeder lambs. Slaughter lambs cho ce 90-102 lbs. one package of good 84 ids. $65.50.

Slaughter ewes utility and good $21-24. Feeder lambs choice 73 lbs. $67. DETAILED QUOTATIONS (USOA) Slaughter Steers Choice Y.G. 2-4 lbs.

Choice Y.G. 2-4 1, lbs. 52.00-53.25 Slaughter Heifers Choice Y.G. 2-4 700-900 lbs. $49 Choice Y.G.

2-4 lbs. S0.75-51.75 Slaughter Cows Commercial G. 2-4 $34 00-41 00 Utility Y.G. 2-3 33.25-41.00 Cutter Y.G. 1-2 31.50-36.25 LIVESTOCK BY WIRE Louisville, Ky.

(AP) (USDA) Estimated receipts of cattle and calves Tuesday 1,300. Slaughter steers and heifers steady in a limited test; slaughter cows, bulls, calves and vealers steady; feeders $1 higher than Monday's late advance of 50 cents to $1. Slaughter steers choice Y.G. 2-3 lbs. a few mixed good and choice Y.G.

2-3 lbs. dairybreds a few mixed good and choice Y.G. 2-3 lbs. Slaughter heifers a few mixed good and choice Y.G. 2-3 lbs.

$49-51. Slaughter cows breaking utility and commercial Y.G. 3-5 $30-38 25, a few high-dressing individuals and heiferettes high cutter and boning utility Y.G. Y.G. 1-3 low and average cutter Y.G.

1-2 canner and cutter under 800 lbs. Slaughter bulls G. 1-2 lbs. lbs. Slaughter vealers good and choice 185-330 lbs.

Slaughter calves good and choice 325-440 lbs, $46-56. Feeder steers medium frame 1 300-400 lbs. individual 400-500 lbs. 500-600 lbs. 600-700 lbs.

$50-57; 700400 lbs. including IV, loads 700-784 lbs. a few 800435 lbs. $52-53; small frame 1 300-400 lbs. medium frame 2 550-700 lbs.

$48-58; Holsteins large frame 2 725-900 lbs. lbs. Including one load 978 lbs. $40 60 and a half load 917 lbs. lbs.

$39.5042, including one load lbs. $41.4042. Other features 9:00 A.M, Channel 32 (Amerf- can Cable vision) Classic Mov- le. "Behave Yourself" (1951), with; Shelley Winters and Farley Granger. 5 JO P.M., Channel 32 (American Cablevision) Classic Movie.

"Run for Your Money" 11949), with Alec Guinness. 12 MID. ABC Nightline. Ted Koppel and Peter Jennings offer a special 90-minute edition, a followup to the network's histori- cal review, aired earlier in the evening. (Advertisement) 8:30 PM, CH.

8 He Hosts a New Comedy Every Week! GEORGE BURNS COMEDY WEEK! fcOO P.M. (S St. Elsewhere. Premiere. Returning for a fourth season is this well-produced, well-acted series in what will be a highly competitive time slot this season.

And getting right into the hospital's typical day, the clipboard has cases involving a gregarious mental patient with amnesia, a childless couple gets expert OPEN 19 00 8-4 ClOSEO SAT. SUN. wont to but my wifo OFF on GOLD CHAINS, give 'am away won't let mo." OW I. or 24 Per Giom large to make money. selection to want to make mends choose EXAMINATION behind the average pace in some other maior producing states.

Livestock and meat prices were mostly higher on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. Much of the rally was stimulated by higher cash Quotes for live hogs on wholesale markets, said Robin Fuller, a livestock analyst In Chicago with Agrl Analysis. Ms. Fuller said the price in Peoria, a maior hog-marketing center, advanced by as much as 1 cent a pound, while many analysts were expecting prices to remain steady at best. Further, she said, the slaughter level has been running well below the level of a year ago.

A report to be released next week by the Agriculture Department is expected to show declining numbers of hogs, which stimulated buying in hogs and in the pork bellies, which were sharply higher. Trends on price charts also were a strong incentive for buyers, Ms. Fuller said. Bond Prices New York (AP) Bond prices finished slightly lower Tuesday as market participants awaited new evidence on the strength of the economy. Traders are keenly interested in the results of Friday's scheduled release of the government's first estimate of third-quarter economic growth.

Prices rebounded from their lows of the session In the late afternoon after the Treasury Department announced It was postponing the three-part mini-refunding which normally would have been held next week. The Treasury cited a lack of action by Congress to raise the federal debt limit. Analysts said the Treasury had planned to auction four-year notes, seven-year notes and 20-year bonds. The package is expected to amount to nearly $18 billion when It Is finally announced. The Treasury also announced It is scaling back Its regular ottering of Treasury bills for next week.

The total will be only $9 billion instead of more than $14 billion as in the past several months. The weekly auction of three-month and six-month bills was trimmed tor the same reason, to prolong the time before government pierces the current $1.8 trillion debt limit. In secondery trading, yields on three-month Treasury bills tell 4 basis points to 7 14 percent. Six-month bills fell 3 basis points to 7 31 percent and one-year bills were off 2 basis points at 7.51 I don'l want Compare our I just Prices. FREE SPINAL CONTOUR ANALYSIS PHOTO mm Ml iliSI ViUffl 1.

2. 3- 'Free not Warning Signals of Pinched Nerves: Hcsdichet 4. Difficult Breaming Neck Pain S. Lower Back Pain, Shoulder Pain Hip Pain, Pain Down Leg examination includes case history, consultation with the doctor, a free contour analysis posture scan. X-rays, treatment and clinical laboratory tests are included, but if indicated, are normally covered by most insurance policies.

Maddox Chiropractic Clinic 1140 Suite AB N. State Rd. 135 Greenwood Inditnapolit USD Tuesday 1,033 783 30 Week Ago 1,101 480 107 Veer Ago 970 982 62 Cattle Hogt Sheep HOGS Supply Included U.S. 1-3 215-20 lb. barrowt and gilti and 12 percent sows.

Good clearance. Barrows and gilts active, higher; sows moderately active, 11 to $2 higher in a limited comparison. BARROWS AND GILTS U.S. 1-3 220-255 lbs. Ml 50-41 75, S.

2-3 250-215 lbs. U.S. 3-4 2B5-310 lbs. $37-39. SOWS U.S.

1-3 350-575 lbs. U4-37. BOARS Weights over 275 lbs. S2S-29. INDIANA DIRECT HOGS Demand very good; some corn harvesting started.

Barrows and gilts 50 cents to mostly tl higher; U.S. 1-2 220-250 lbs. 540.25-41, some, mostly plant delivered, S41. U.S. 1-3 210-250 lbs.

U.S. 2-3 250-260 lbs. $39 50-40 75. Sows steady to $1 higher; S. 1-3 300-500 lbs.

$31-34; 50(650 lbs. $32-37, a few $31. Receipts at 70 yards and packing plants outside Indianapolis Tuesday estimated a week earlier actual a yeer earlier week to date same period last week 35, 00; last year 37,400. CATTLE Supply Included good and choice slaughter steers, 35 percent slaughter heifers, 10 percent slaughter cows and an estimated 50 head of feeders. Slaughter steers 50 cents to 75 cents higher; slaughter heifers firm to mostly 50 cents higher; slaughter cows $1 to $1.50 higher; slaughter bulls weak; feeders not tested.

SLAUGHTER STEERS Choice Y.G. 2-4 lbs. one lot and two packages lbs. Y.G. 3-4 lbs.

$50-51; mixed good and choice Y.G. 2-4 1,325 lbs. two lots of Y.G. 1-2 $52. Holsteins choice Y.G.

3 lbs. mined good and choice Y.G. 2-3 lbs. SLAUGHTER HEIFERS Choice Y.G. 2-4 lbs.

725-900 lbs. $50-51; Y.G. 3-4 875-975 lbs. $48-51; one package of Y.G. 4-5 1,150 lbs.

mixed good and choice Y.G. 2-4 lbs. SLAUGHTER COWS Breaking utility and commercial Y.G. 3-4 high dressing boning utility Y.G. 2-3 a few cutter Y.G.

1-2 Commodities ASSOCIATED PRESS Grain and soybean futures prices finished mostly higher Tuesday on the Chicago Board of Trade. Wheat and soybeans rallied for the second straight session, prompting some traders to talk of a turnaround in the market. Bob Lekberg, a grain analyst with Shearson Lehman Brothers, said professionally managed speculative accounts were among the buyers. The rally appeared to be triggered, however, by exporters and processors, analysts said. The American Soybean Processors Association reported that processors' inventories were relatively, low and stocks of soybean oil declined during August.

Sales of grains and soybeans by farmers, meanwhile, remained low, Lekberg said. Weekly, state-by-state crop reports released Monday also indicated that most of the croos were ne longer ahead of average in maturity because of cooler conditions recently. The report also said that, while planting of winter wheat for next year's harvest is right on schedule in Kansas, the leading producer, it is lagging PORTERFIELD By JOE MARTIN TfeRE wnwur M0CM TO CO- wiu. iHt omta or a BWB BUIOT LICENSE NUMBES GF2S24- PLEASE COME TO THE AE2IAL fS SENT" MICRO RENTAL PLUS RENT: IBM COMPAQ (317) 299-6298 7128 ZIONSVILLE RD. TOM O'BRIEN CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1101 N.

KIVSTONI INOI.NAPOtll 25a-1 12 1 CIIINWOOO 7SO U.S. 11 NOITH ClflNWOOD (1-6791 1985 MO. NO MONEY DOWN Over 25 to choose from 48 me. Gold Key Lease 15,000 mile per year lit mo. Iai and security deposit required.

Oft (NMItMKUIMkM, IMS 881-6013 MOST INSURANCE ACCEPTED EarningsDividends SUPER PREMIUM Lindner French Ice Cream Cattle prices were mostly higher, with support from a reduced slaughter this week and from higher cash prices, Ms. Fuller said. Feeder cattle were sharply higher. Petroleum futures were higher on the New York Mercantile Exchange despite talk of price pressure resulting from stepped-up production by Saudi Arabia. Analysts said the highest consumption period of the year is approaching, and demand from suppliers appears to be supporting the market because they have been filling their needs on a hand-to-mouth basis.

The outlook for lower oil prices prompted selling that pushed precious metals prices lower on the Commodity Exchange in New York, analysts said. Silver fell below $6 a troy ounce for the first time since March. A basis point one-hundredth of a percentage point. In the secondary market for Treasury bonds, prices of short-term governments tell 1-32 point. Intermediate maturities were off 5-32 point and long-term issues were down Vt point, according to the investment firm of Salomon Brothers Inc.

The movement of a point Is equivalent to a change of $10 in the price of a bond with a $1,000 face value. The Merrill Lynch Daily Treasury Index, which measures price movements on all outstanding Treasury Issues with maturities of a year or longer, fell 0.16 to 105.57 from Monday's late level. The Shearson Lehman Daily Treasury Bond Index, which makes a similar measurement, fell 0.82 to 1,108.75. In corporate trading, industrials and utilities were off point in moderate trading, Salomon Brothers said. Among tax-exempt municipal bonds, general obligations were unchanged and dollar bonds fell point in moderate activity.

Yields on 30-year Treesury bonds rose to 10.61 percent from 10.58 percent late Monday. The federal funds rate, the Interest on overnight loans between banks, traded at 7 percent, compared with 7 15 16 percent late Monday. share. The new dividend is payable Nov. 1 to stockholders of record Oct.

3. FROM STAR WIRE SERVICES First tine Is sales; second line Is net Income (per-share figures in parentheses). Figures on the left are for the latest period, figures on the right are tor the year-earlier period. ConAgra Inc. (1st 0115) 51,575,794.000 $22,551,000 (.65) $1,466,450,000 119,317,000 (.56) R.H.

Macy Co. (4th 1)) $947,106,000 $24,855,000 (.48) $911,918,000 $44,794,000 81) Credit Hates New York (UPI) Credit rates Tuesday as provided by Telerate Systems Inc. Prime Rate: 50 Discount Rate: SO Broker Call Loan Rate: 1 50-9 00 Federal Funds- High 1 1316, Low 7 1116, Close 7V Bankers Acceptance: 30 to 59 days i 60 to 89 days 7 '3 90 to 119 days 7 93 120 to 149 days 7 97 150 to 179 days 7 97 180 to 270 days 7.97 Commercial Paper (range): Dealer's 30 to 180 days 7.95-7 98 Issuers 30 days 7 90 Issuers 90 days 7.75 Issuers 270 days 7.61 EccP RICES Egg prices Tuesday In central Indiana Included: A lerge 51-60 cents; A medium 47-51 cents; A small 15-40 cents. Chicago (AP) Egg prices were steady Tuesday: A extra large 72-74 cents; A large 69-72 cents; A medium 60-61 cents. New York (UPI) Carton egg final prices delivered to New York retailers, store door, steady Tuesday: A extra large 74-76 cents; A large 72-75 cents, A medium 62-65 cents.

Midwest Exchange Ciirajo (P) FoUowme a list el selected Iransactmns on the Miiionl Slock Eicnenee vtsiroav Sakn Sleek Hi Law Oasa Che, M0 Bomark lf, 12 700 FllM.rn 1 1 00 24 26 100 P'PrJalf I) 164 17 MIDWEST STOCK SALES Total siocts sales 4419.000 BUTTER PRICES Chicago (UPI) Butter prices higher Tuesday: 93 score AA 41, 92 A ll.19Vi-l.40w. 2.99 SAVE 70 The following are previews of today's top shows: 7:00 P.M. Stir Crazy. CBS and Columbia TV are hopeful that this Richard Pryor movie will do for them what "M'A'S'H" did for Alan Alda all those glorious years. But Joe Guzaldo and Larry Riley, who star, are no Pryor and Gene Wilder.

The first show follows the plot of the 1980 movie, with Riley and Guzaldo as two pals who are convicted of a murder they didn't commit. And off they go on a wild and crazy (the movie proved that) cross-country adventure trying to clear themselves of the they started out to do was" open an ice cream business in a small Texas town. After an elaborate escape from prison, Capt. Betty (Polly Holliday) starts her pursuit of the boys, and presumably she'll never quite catch up. And that's where the problem lies: dreaming up narrow escapes week-after-week like the old "Fugitive" series, albeit with humor.

(Advertisement) 7:00 PM, CH. 8 STIR CRAZY More Fun Than The Movie! Series Premiere! 7:00 P.M. CD Highway to Heaven. Season premiere. For its second season premiere, that man called Jonathan and his ever faithful Mark (Michael Landon and Victor French) embark on a do-gooder excursion that will last two episodes.

Break out a couple of hankies for this one. There's this boys camp, see. And three of the lads have cancer. And one set of parents doesn't want to be bothered. Take it from there.

7:00 P.M. 4585. Special. ABC pre-empts all prime time programming again for a three-hour program focusing on the people, events and ramifications of the years between 1945 and 1985. And rather than go to file footage for highlights of those decades, co-anchors Peter Jennings and Ted Koppell will preside over live discussion and debate punctuated with tape inserts.

Figures who helped reach historical decisions, mere observers and those caught in the outcome of decisions will recount their experiences. World leaders and opinion makers will participate in a live forum to eva-lute and debate the significance of these events for the coming decades. Some of the headlines explored: The Iron Curtain Comes Down, McCarthyism Begins At Home, Russia Gets the Bomb; The Fifties: The Eisenhower Years, Era of Television, Elvis Becomes King, Stalemate in Korea; The Sixties: JFK, Vietnam, Haight-Ash-bury and LSD; The Seventies: Vietnam Ends, Gas Ration, America's 200th Birthday, Jimmy Carter, Hostages in Iran; The Eighties: Reagan Elected, Falkland War, Isreal Invades Lebanon, First Artificial Heart Transplant, U.S. Marines Die In Lebanon; The Future: What It Holds for Our Children, Ourselves and Our Planet. And as that great, late narrator Westbrook Van Voorhis with the stentorian voice used to say, IME! Marches On!" 7:00 P.M.

The Abortion Battle. Special. PBS presents a three-hour program on a vital issue, but unfortunately scheduled it at the same time as ABC's major production. The controversy surrounding abortion issues is explored by KQED (San Francisco) reporter Stephen Talbot, using footage from several documentaries which represent pro-life and pro-choice viewpoints. 8:00 P.M.

Charlie Company. Premiere. A new half-hour comedy, sort of CBS's answer to Bill Cosby. Flip Wilson returns to TV in the role of an administrative assistant with the Dept. of Highways.

Gladys Knight is his wife, a school teacher and mother of their three kids (Fran Robinson, Kristoff St John and Jaleel White. They comprise a middle class family living on the south side of Chicago, trying to keep in step with the '80s. In secondary roles are Ray Girardin as Flip's boss, Richard Karron, Kip King. Terence McGovern and Eddie Velez as Flip's co workers. Everybody in the family is outspoken and opinionated, but in this Movies 7:00 P.M.

"Studs Lonlgan" (1979), last of three parts. Charles Durn-ing and Colleen Dewhurst star. Set during the Depression. 8:00 P.M. (3 "Marco Polo" (1982), third of five parts, continuing Thursday and Friday.

Marco (Ken Marshall) is awarded an Imperial appointment by the Kublal Khan. 11:00 P.M. "I Take These Men" (1982), with Susan Saint James and John Rubinstein. A suburbanite Is bored by what she feels Is a stale marriage. 11:30 P.M.

"The Convention" (1979), with Randolph Mantooth, Kevin Tighe and Patty McCormack. "Emer-gency!" feature. 3:30 A.M. "The Missing Are Deadly" (1974), with Ed Nelson, Leon, ard Nimoy and Jose Ferrer, HALF GALLON THRU SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1985 LINDNER Thin Ice Midwest Commerce Corp. Elkhart, Ind (AP) Directors of Midwest Commerce Corp declared a Quarterly common stock dividend of 25 cents per share, payable Oct.

21 to stockholders of record Sept. 30. Texscan Corp. STAR SPECIAL REPORT Phoenix, Arit, Texscan Corp announced a loss in its fiscal first Quarter of $3.5 million compared with a profit of $19,364, or I cent per share, in the same Quarter of the previous year. Revenues in the three months ended July 31 decreased to $167 million from $17.9 million a year earlier.

U.S. Shoe Corp. Cincinnati, Ohio (UPI) The board of Shoe Corp increased the company's Quarterly common stock dividend to 23 cents per share from cents per share. Tne new dividend is payable Oct. 15 to stockholders of record Oct.

1. Upjohn Co. Kelamaroo, Mich. (AP) Directors of Upiohn Co. raised the company's Quarterly common stock dividend to 70 cents per share from 64 cents per Gold Prices ASSOCIATED PRESS Selected world gold prices Tuesday Republic National Bank late bid $3)6 50 per troy ounce, otf $7 75.

London morning fixing $311 70, off 60 cents; afternoon fixing $317 60, oft $1 70; late bid $317, oft $3 Zurich late afternoon bid $317.25, otf $317.75 asked Handy Herman (only daily quote) $31715, off SI 70 Engelhard (only daily Quotes) 1311, off 11.70; fabricated $113 90, off II 79. Metal Prices New York (AP) Soot metel prices Tuesday: Copper 66)9-69 cents per S. destinations Lead ll i-JO cents per lb. Zinc '1 cents per delivered Tin $6 0869 Metels Week composite lb. Silver $5 96 per troy or.

Handy 8 Herman Mercury 1370-130 nominal per 76-lb tlesk, Y. Platinum per merchant troy oi. Scrap steel 170-71 Pitt No. 1 heavy (Iron Age). U.S.

Debt nasntngign inn ner. it in. w.9. ir.Mury figure on the government debt. The government's fiscel year runs from Oct.

1 through Sot 30 Natlenal debt (Sept. II) ODD LOTS New York (AP) The New York Stork Exchange reported these odd lot transactions Monday by principal dealers through NYSE facilities: Purchases of 113,395 shores; sales of 123,646 shares, Including 1,042 sold short. BUY ONE HALF GALLON AT. REGULAR PRICE, GET THE SECOND FOR ANY FLAVOR NO LIMIT THRU SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1985 Trim Milk 1.00 SEPTEMBER 29, 1985 Coke, Caffeine Free Coke, Diet Coke, Caffeine Free Diet Coke, Tab, Sprite, MelloYello 1.99 PLUS DEPOSIT Coke, Caffeine Free Coke, Diet Coke, Caffeine Free Diet Coke, Sprite, Tab, Mello Yello, and New Cherry Coke 3.49 THRU SUNDAY Doritos brand Tortilla Chips ANY FLAVOR 1.29 Reg. $1.49 THRU SUNDAY, 16 Oz.

Returnable 8-Pack THRU SUNDAY 12-Pack Cans Put It Together: NETWORKS HOW? Learn about local area networking from our experienced ComputerLand staff and Novell representatives at our free network seminar. This seminar is offered at no charge. However, enrollments are limited, so reserve your seat nowl Call 298-7434 to enroll. Networking: connecting personal computers in the same or nearby location to share information or equipment. Network Seminar Date: Thursday, Sept.

26 Times: a.m. p.m. Place: Sheraton Meridian 2820 N. Meridian St. Indianapolis DOWNTOWN ANDERSON Two Market Square Downtown 251- East Ohio St.

1003 Meridian Plaza 634-8383 649-1122 LAFAYETTE SHOPPES (near Lafayette Sq. Mall) 4740 West 38th St. 298-7434 CASTLETON SHOPPES (near Castlcton Sq. Mall) 6010 E. 82nd St.

849-8811 The one iliinyto know aboul compuluia,".

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