Tail engine blast cut crash plane's control lines Don't take ...

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Saturday 22_ Jyly 1 9�9 T.HE GJTIZF;I":J Page '\ 5

Tail engine blast cut crash plane's

Madonna film clip

withdrawn -SIOUX CITY- - An· apparent explosion in the tail engine of the United Airlines DC-10 .that crashed killing up to 109 of 295 people aboard severed lines 'for the jet's hydraulic controls, aviation safe­ty afficials said this week.

While officials would not draw conclusions as to the cause of Wedpesday's crash, the signs appeared to point to the blown rear, or number two, en­gine. The plane had three engines. •

National Transporta­tion Safety Board mem­ber James Burnett said on Thursday the rear engine "has a whole fan section mtssmg, including the fan. the disc and part of the rotor." The fan helps create jet engine thrust. he added: "This is the first time we've ever seen this."

Officials said Captain

control lines Citizen Reporter

A FILM production, ad­vertising American superstar Madonna's con­troversial new song, Like a Prayer, has been with­drawn from the cinema circuit after numerous complaints.

� Haynes, the pilo._ of Flight 232, struggled oes­perately for 42 minutes to keep his plane in the air after the rear engine sud­denly lost power and cut hydraulic cables that con­trol the jet's wing and tail flaps.

Mr Burnett said that as many as 186 people sur­vived, leaving 109 poss­ible dead. He said 54 sur­vivors were in hospital.

The death toll changed slightly as investigators recovered human remains and examined wreckage from the crash. They were due to talk to Capt Haynes and his three-man crew , all in hospital in In-' tensive ( ·are, later yester-day.

.

· Earlier, United had re­ported 183 survivors and government safety offic-.

jals had said 1 10 people dJ..:d

strument communica­tions, was intact and under study in Washing­ton, Mr Burnett said. -Sapa-Reuter.

DERRICK GREGO­RY . . • hanged for

drug offence The Director of Public­

ati�s. Dr J\ Coetzee ,

Thr number of people aboard the flight quoted hy Mr Burnett was two more than previous r----------� coum� .md included a

c d d fourth pilot riding in the · - on emne man cockpit's jumpseat. Mr Burnett said the

t d d h ' wreckage showed many 'llTafl e aug ter S perforations in the tail T T section. Cables carrying

h h hydraulic fluid had been p otograp severed and no hydraulic fluid remained · in the KAJANG, Malaysia. - Convicted orced him soon after he was sentenced plane's wreckage, he said. British drug trafficker Derrick Gregory t d th · 1 QR7 Th f I I f Losing the hydraulic ·" ea '" · e ma appea or

was hanged yesterday morning after clemency for the man from Middlesex, system cripples the pilot's spending his last hours clutching a England was turned down by the Penang ability to control altitude, photograph of his 7-year-old daughter, State Pardons Board last week. direction and the jet's landing gear. officials said. - - . - Gregory sent messages asking for help

Kajang Prison officials said Gregory fr B · · • 0 El' be h b Mr Burnett, who said om ntam s ueen tza t , ut had requested the photo of his daughter, B · · h H' h Co · · ff' · 1 ·d · conclusions about the ntis tg mmtsston o tcta s sat tt Tara, and it was the only possession they h ·

" h 0 crash would not be re- was not t e practtce .or t e ueen to allowed him to keep before his ex- · d · h leased until the investiga- mterce e '" sue matters. ecution. He had not seen his daughter

tion and interviews were since she was _;t[l infant _ _ Gregory is the first Briton sentenced completed, said the en- Prison Director Jamaluddin Hamid to death and hanged under Malaysia's

---------------------, gine's maintenance re- told reporters Gregory was hanged at strinjZent drug laws.

BOy P I• I t t cord found a problem Kajang Prison, about 20 km south of Officials said Gregory was arrested

0 0 \\-ith its pneumatic system Kuala Lumpur, at 5:45 a.m. He declined with 576 grams of heroin hidden in his the day before the flight. to give details, but said, "There was no boots and underwear at Bayan Lepas

Conti. nue WI. th

The rear engine ex- special treatment gfven to him . . . . The A�Pr in Penang, �OO lcm northwesl or ploded with a loud bang relevant people were present. " Kajang!l in October 1982. He was sen-about an hour after the His body was taken to a state mortu- tenced to death in March 1987 by the

I plane took off from ary two hours later, officials said. Penang High Court, and the Supreme

said although the film had not been banned, its dis­tributor, Tusk �usic, and the marketing company, Cin.:mark, had decided to withdraw it.

The controversial film, which caused a furore in several overseas coun­tries, portrays a dream se­quence set in a church during which a statue comes to life. Madonna is seen kissing the statue and the "live" statue kiss­es Madonna on the fore­head. Religious groups claim this is blasphemous.

The mini-Madonna film, which lasts about five minutes, was brought into the country by Tusk Music to promote the superstar's latest hit Like a Prayer album.

It has been shown at numerous cinemas, but the SABC has decided not to air it for fear of of­fending viewers.

Dr Coetzee said cinema advertisements, unlike films, were generally not subject to censorship. They were only examined by the Directorate if there were complaints.

He said in the case of the Madonna n\m , C\ne­

mark had asked the direc­torate to examine it. Members of the directo­rate had seen it and felt it could be passed. Wor d fll• ght Denver en route to Chica- Gregory was arrested for drug posses- Court rejected his appeal on April 1 9 of

go, the chief flight attend- sion in 1982 and his wife, Carole, div- last year. - Sapa-AP. ant told investigators. ";::==================================:::::====� ANCHORAGE. - Even

though his father crashed the plane being used for his a round-the-world flight, ll-year old piloti Tony Aliengena says he's! going to finish the final leg of his trip in a bor­rowed aircraft.

California, on June 5. The pilot radioed he

"It flies the same as the other plane," he told re­porters in Anchorage on\ Thursday after arriving t'fom Nome, 1 ,062 km away.

Tony, from San Juan Capistrano, California, said he had flown 27 000 km after starting out from Orange County,

But the trip .ran into trouble outside Nome, his father Mr Gary Alienge­na said.

On July 18, Mr Alieng­ena was at the controls when he g-ashed their plane while on a side trip to the arctic village of Go­lovin.

The elder Aliengena said he mistook a taxiway for a runway, and when he ran out room, "I just dropped the nose and flew it into the ground".

They expect to return home on Saturday. Sapa-Reuter.

had lost power in the en-gine. One minute later he said he was losing his hy-draulic controls and after four minutes said he had lost all control, Mr Burn­ett said.

The crew fought for nearly three-quarters of an hour to save the jet, but it crashed just short of a runway and flipped end over end, bursting into flames and skidding side-' ways to settle in a soy­bean field. . The plane's flight re­ocorder, the "black box" that records voice and in-

Don't take nasty head waiters sitting

WASHINGTON. .Nothing - not a soup spill , a burned filet mignon or a cockroach crawling through the sa­lad - turns a restaurant meal into a disaster quite like a nasty head­waiter, says professional diner John Campbell.

His advice: Don't take it sitting down. Complain to the man­ager. Or simply walk out.

"The degree of hu­ntiliation to which ·a re­pulsive maitre d' sub­jects his patrons and their guests can be the most unforgettable part of the dining experi­ence," -says Campbell. "Unfortunately, it hap­pens in some of our bet� ter restaurants."

down Campbell has been

rating lodgings and res­taurants for the Ameri­can Automobile Asso­ciation for the past 15 years. He says restau­TaD\5 in New York doubtless are the worst for sneering, snarling headwaiters.

The bearded, Austra­lian-born Campbell (52) says the hapless victims of sadistic headwaiters "can just get up and leave" if they've been seated next to the kitch­en door, insulted and forgotten.

"You don't have to eat bad food, and you don't have to be stuck suffering this self-pun­ishment," he said in an interview.

When the atmosphere' turns brutish, Campbell takes the offending headwaiter aside and asks, ,'What seems to be going wrong here? What is my problem and what is your problem?"

If the situation can't be resolved through quiet reasoning, he says, "I would leave. " But don't forget t o com­plain to the restaurant's owner or manager.

"He has a desperate interest in the health of his property', and he will listen," Campbell said. "If you tell him you had an unpleasant experi­ence with Monsieur Jac­ques, he's likely to say, 'Really?' and Monsieur

· Jacques ntight not be there next time. "

fur just RlO you could open up a whole new chapter in this child's life

R10. It's not a lot of money, the price of a couple of movie tickets. Yet with it you could improve this child's life immeasurablv!

How? By helping us to buy her a book. You see, the little girl pictured, is one of

the many children in our country trying to learn to read and write in schools that simply do not have enough books!

Books to enrich their school · subjects. Books to promote language skills. Books to introduce them to a wider world.

In short, books which, if read, would provide a solid platform for all further training and alloW- a child to develop into a co.1tributing member of society.

And this is wnel'l: we come in READ was formed to raise funds to

buy these desperately needed books and to train people in their use. Through the help of many concerned, caring people we are succeedi�

In the past 12 months we have been able to equip l 320 school and community libraries _:_ with training courses for 36 000 delegates. '

But we nee<lyour help. Because without the. participation

of people Kke )•ourself, the READ programme cannot be a success. So please, write us a cheque. Or let us debit your credit card. But do it today. Because if you will help us just a little, we can accomplish such a lot!

Post your coupon to: P.O. Box 30994, Braarnfontein 2017.

Ye-s. T \\1>ukl likc'tn "poirticit-..tc in the READ Prt'ltrmnmc. h�rcs my dx:quc n>r R -------­

. Ahcmativd'' !'lease dchit' �' c-R:dit Olfll ntr.

"I)T•: of Cal\(> Masn:r 0 Cn:dit Card

I I I I I I I_ I I I · Visa O Other ___ _

cxpil')"c.la{c: . ...;.-_..__�-- Sil.'llaturc: -------=------'---- Addrcs.' -----.--

Codc: ______ ·ra ____ _ Pfca.lie St.OO me m<m: in f(mnatinn nn hn\1' I Gm help TODAY YOU HIS

Page 1 6 *

�L-.;_,_W_I �- E_KE_N_D-_TV ____ . ___.I dream of riding at the Rand Show, despite the obstacles that she has to overcome first.

TV1 5.00 526

5.57 Moming Masqe 6.00 Edacatioul Televisloo ·

· ·. 6.30 Agrifoi'IUII 7.00 Good Moming Soatb

Africa 9.00 Education Televisioo

11.00 Beyood 2000 12.40 Plaaslike Joeroaalpro-

gram 1.00 Saldde En Thomas 1.05 Amigo Eo Vrlende 1.10 Skateiland 4 1.35 Spoelgoud 2.00 Topaport 5.57 Kompas 6.00 Die Nuus 6.15 Debuut 7.05 Spioeft-Sploeo

(Simulcast in English on Radio 2000)

8.00 News 8.30 Topsport Special: Gold

- British Open 9.00 LA Law III - Barstow

Bound Becker finds himself with problems because of his divorce �deotape; Mc­Kenzie is !Old about his nomination for � judge­ship; and Sifuentes han­dles a wrongful death suit against a construction company.

9.55 Blooclllne Based on a best-seller by popular author Sydney Sheldon, this thriller re­lates the chilling drama of a woman who inherits an international pharma­ceutical empire from her father wlio has been killed. Suddenly she finds herself in a world of greed, intngue and murder, with bee OMill life at risk.

11.50 Late Nipt Uve Host Kevin Savage

12.10 F1yiJia Hlp . 1.00 Epilope

TV4 6.03 Redel Fo:n - High

School Blues Toni tries convincing AI how much it costs hiin to keep her at school. Meanwhile, Diana and company discuss Toni's test paper and come to different unclusions,

6.30 Mr Belvedere - Kevin· Nightingale Takiog a job as an order­ly, Kevin pr.oves that he is serious about nursing by impressing nurse Hawkios 'with his enthu­siasm. Rushing to the

.assistance of a pregnant woman, Kevin passes out at the sight of her giving birth, and worries ,about completing his chores,

9.03 Benson Making Chllnges Benson, Kraus and the governo.r decide to br�ak from 'll'riting a new prO­posal b)' getting some coffee: While sitting arotmd the table, each of them bepns to reflect on their past and the in�i­viduals who pT•yed key roles in lhcir lh '"'· ·

� . .;u l htt•i'c'""m - Intoler­ance A film company wants to hire Harry's building to shoot a film. The shoot­ing of the movie attracts all Harry's C:olleagues, and he has to write the ending for the movie.

9.55 That's Hollywood -· Cops And Robbers

Cops and Robbers wiU take you to the scene of

a crime! We take a look at excerpts from the fol­lowing excerpts: Night­walks; Brubaker: The Laughing Policeman;· Dollars; Robin and the Seven Hoods; .No Way to Treat a Lady and more.

10.20 The Tracey Ullman Show - Kay's Adl>en� ture 1. Kay's Adventure: Kay wins a trip to Atlantic· City in a competition. 2. Tom Noddy: Man per­forms with bubbles. 3.. Customs: Kristie has to lii_ng to get through cus­toms.

10.47 TJ. Hooker (Simulcast in English on Radio 2000)

TV2 l)�:·��R�ely!)lil, 3.00. 1'-opqdrt '

6.00 Golf: British Open (Pre-toria) or TV4

7.00 PubUc Affairs 7.19 News 7.39 Ngomgibelo 8.57 Epllope 9.00 TV4

TV3 11.00 Edacatioual Rondez·

vous 3.00 TOfl� 5.00 Meritin& • 6.00 GGII: British

(PWV) or TV4 7.00 News 7.19 Public Affairs 7.39 Tshntsbumaka&ala 8.26 He's The Mayor 8.57 Epllope 9.00 TV4

BOP-TV

Open

2.00 Statioo Opeaing 2.03 Edatel Propauuues 3.00 Edutel Closing 3.02 Storybook lntematioul 3.20 Muic Special 4.25 Adderly 5.15 Fame 6.05 Family Special 7.00 Dlkgang 7.15 All 7.40 Heartbeat 8.30 News 8.50 Crime Story 9.40 The Other w-

11.10 Alfred Hitchcock Pres· euts

11.35 Sprtnglield Rifle 1.05 Epilope

M-Net 6.30 S.penport: Cycling

Highlights of the pre­vious day's cycling in the

�our de France 1.30 MlsliDg In Acdoa II (2

- 16) An action drama about the nightmare ezPerl· ences of captive and tor­tured American sOldiers in the Vietnamese jun­gle. An American colo­nel (Chuck Norris) heads a difficult escape, and returns to seek re­vc:nge.

3.00 Heroes Made lu The USA: Charlie Sam­pson

��to Welt 57tb: Parking Problems

3.20 PIIUOI'IIIII8: Ten Years Hard Labour A look at the impact of Thatcherism on Britain's Labour Party.

4.00 Sapersport: Horserac­ing Live: The King George V and Queen Elizabeth Diamond Stakes from England.

4.30 Killer!i At The Box Of­nee A lOok- at HoUywood's most famous mobsters.

· 5.30 Beyond 2000 ' •6.15 Hot Hits

•6.55 Five Roses Competitiou •7.00 Anytb� Bot Love: The

Jack Story MMty .Is excited about �eting an oJd friend again. However, his ex.­citemCDt turns to gloom when' his friend is . also one of Hapnah's old

. boyfriends. 7.30 Have Faith

The start of a new com­e(jy series which centres around a contemporary Catholic church in Chr­cago .

8.00 F11111e, Fortune And Ro-mance

8.30 Blazin1: Saddles A Wild West parody in which a railroad worker (Cieavon Little) and an alcoholic ex-gunfighter (Gene Wilder) U>il the plans of a crook;ed attor­ney and his henchmen.

10.00 Sapersport: Cycling Highlights of the • first day's cycling 'of the· Tour de France.

10.30 Alien (2 .:_ 10)

2.30 Aptekenwae 3.00 Topsport: Golf- Brit­

ish Open 6.10 50150 6.50 Build For Life 7.05 Life Style 7.30 Thy Kiqd0111 Come 8.00 Nelwork 9.00 Topsport Golf: British

Open 9.30 Aotooio Stradevari - A

Gala Celebration 11.30 Penpektief 11.55 Topsport: A special

rugby broadcast

TV4 6.03 K.pid 9.04 Hlp-y To Heaveo: -

The People Next Door

9.57 m - Low Moon 10.23 S� Country 10.53 Topsport

TV2 12.00 Ferdy 12.30 Ke Sooa

1.00 Topeport 6.00 TV4 7.00 Public Affairs 7.16 News 7.33 lmlbooo 7.57 Masakbane 8.14 Ukbolo Luje (ZIX)

TV3 . 12.00 Ferdy 12.30 Ke T-

1.00 Topeport 6.00 TV4 7.00 News 7.16 Pablic Affairs 7.33 Le Reac/Lil Ret��! 7 �5 Ho Lla Noto . 8.13 Mablllsedl A 'l'llmelo

BOP-TV 2.03 Sport 4.00 Onudt Senfce 4.20 G01pel Mule 4.35 Jot 5.00 Oob 700 5.30 Celebntion Of Victory 6.30 Rovillg Report 7.00 Diqug 7.15 The Wonder Years 7.40 Thlrtysomethllll 8.50 Kaoe & Abel 9.40 The Alamo: 13 Days .

To Glory 10.30 Jazz

M-Net 6.30 s.penport: Cycling

Highlights of yesterday's Tour de France.

7.31 Indian Tier Opens 10.30 Portuguese Tier Opens 1.30 Supersport: Golf

2.30 Sapersport: Bonus Bo­nanza Highlights from tl:te American boxing world.

3.30 Eric Claptoo CoiiCerl 4.30 Kate 8Mb Live -Ham­

mersmith · Odean. Concei-t in London 1979.

5.25 The Adventvres of Ted­dy Ruxpin

5$ Heathcliff "'·15 Tnpper John: The AI·

batross A nasty deaf-mute girl and an infuriating for­eigner put the·. patience of Trapper John and Go!Wl to the test.

•7.05 Carte Blandle . 8.00 World Of Festivals:

Austria A programme featuring variollS tradional inter­national festivals.

8.26 JSE Competition 8.30 Crimes Of 11te Heart (l·

- 14) A. comedy, b.ased on the award-winnirtg play by Beth 'Henley, about three disaster-prone sis· ,tees. Babe (Sissy Spacek) has just shot her hi'StlaAd, ·r.e��;��y·:(Dia)le Keaton) womes ·about the lack of lore in her life and Meg .(Jessica

A science fiction thriller about a space $hip crew. ' In deep_ SJ)ace .t�ey" un; wittingly pick up an evil , carnivorous and inde- • structible alien, whom they have to outwit. Lange) is' a failed si11ger.

10.10 Actin Birtb (2 - 16)

SUNDAY TV1

1.30 Pioocdlio 1.55 Zet! 2.05 Ridia!: Higb· Futa{

In the ti(St_e¢sD.de 'Qf Ui{s' .!iefif5.t,e;.lli{rc-�·Ji6r

A look at the ntiracle of natural chiidbirth .

J.O� Supersport: Cydinl( 11.30 The Rocky Honor Pic­

tvre Show (2 - 18) A musical spoof on tht" decadent �orality of the 197�:�:, !�PI�.i\10!1 1!y the. Bt*J.-dOt(ot. 'ft�rik.:N Putter� :Cti�)

THE CITIZEN

British a� thor,

reviewer (71) dies

LONDON. - Nigel Den­nis, whose book Cards of Identity with its fantasy and black humour won cult status among disen­chanted young Britons in the 1950s, has died, his family announced yester­day.

The award-winning novelist, playwril,lht and reviewer (77) died on Wednesday after a long illness.

The funeral will take place ·on Monday, with cremation at Golders Green in northwest Lon­don.

From 1940 to 1958 he' was staff book reviewer for Time magazine, work-

.Saturday 22 July 1 989

Weekend TV sport - : THIS • weekend's sports highlights are:

TODAY TVl: 2:03 pm - Motors-. port: Le Mans 24 Hour Endurance Race. 2:34 pm - Rugby: EP U20 v Par­aguay U23 at the Boet Erasmus Stadium. 2:45 pm - Golf: Third round British Open. 2:57 pm - Horseracing: R350 000 Mainstay Inter­national, Clairwood, Durban. 3:29 pm - Rug­by: Springbok trials at the Boet Erasmus Stadium. 8:30 pm - Golf: British Open.

TV2/3: 3:02 pm - Soc­cer: Arcadia v Hellenic. 3:50 pm - Boxing: WBO lightheavy title fight

_fought in April 1989, Mi­chael Moorer v Freddie

Delgado. 3:59 pm -Soc­cer: Arcadia v Hellenic. 4:48 pm - Road Run­ning: Ohlsson's SA Half Marathon in Durban. 6-7 pm - Golf: British Open, TV2 (Pretoria) , TV3 (PWV).

M-Net: 6:30 am - Cyc­ling: Tour de France. 4: 10 pm - Horseracing: King George and Queen Elizabeth Diamond Stakes from Ascot. 10:00 pm Cycling: Tour de France .

Tomorrow

TVl: 3 - 6 pm and 9 -9.30 pm - Golf: British Open . TV4: 10.45 pm - Soccer: SA v Portugal.

.

rate: · SA Kyokushin Championship. 1:40. pm - Basketball: We ·tern Province V"Natalr 1 :54 pm - Cross CoiU,Itry: SA Suger and Pow�r Cham­pionship. 2:07 pm - Sot:­cer: Blackpool v un­downs. 2:58 pm - oc­cer: Swallows v Cosmos. 3:57 pm - Soccer: Swal­lows v Cos!Jlos. 4:48 pm - Boxing: Jan Losper v Lunga Dundu. 5 :18 pro ­Boxing: Jimmy Murray v Prince Tukane.

M-Net: 6:30 am - Cvc­ling: Tour de FranCe. 1 :30 pm - Golf: An­heurser Busch Oassic. 2:30 pm - Boxing: LHF middleweJkht title fight Darrin van Hom and Gianfranco Rosi. 10:20 pm Cycling: Tour de France.

ing in the · magazine's �-��������������=::�=::=::��=�����=��=::���� London office from 1949 to 1958, and later for the Sunday Telegraph.

TV2/3: 1:24 pm Ka-

He established a repu- · tation as one of Britain's. most amusing reviewers, who once described· D H Lawrence's famous 1928 novel Lady Chatterley's Lover as "that mournful, squawking, tedious little book".

Cards of Identity ap­peared in 1955.' - Sapa­,&.P.

LOOKING _IN

By Monica Nicolson WOULDN'T it be great if there were more present­ers of Penny Smythe's ca­libre on television.

Her graceful, intelli­gent approach carries that lively programme, Sun­downer, along into the beginning of a weekend.

Sundowner _is like flip­ping through an up-mar­ket, glossy magazine with interestiqg clips of news, controversial views, scin­tilatlng people and excit­ing events_.

The traumas of South African women were touched on when we zoomed in on the play In­yanga, currently showing at the Warehouse.

"I don't think there have ever been hapP'y little women and happy little homes," Johai)pes" burg musician Jennifer Fergeson remarkoo.

· For those who imagin­ed surfers to be lazy lay­abouts, the interview with Shaun Thomson, a retir� irig _ professional surfer would have' come as a pleasant surprise. Smooth and well spoken, he oozed self-confidence and carried the interview off like a star.

How were those crazy haintyles in the extrava­Rimt hairshow held re­cently in Johannesb!lrg? Not only the mode_ls, but also tbe hairdressers ·spgrted Styl�. or<Unai-y peOple could not have dreamt of.

The interview with British photographer, John Roge-rs, was. fas­cinating; <?specially - l'tis' conCeision.tl,at-in dange!· ous situations he would watch the- reporter go out in frm1t before he decided his line Qf actiOJ\,

A &p�k!ing snow :�t. vibmtes with enthusiasm,

Here is a car which makes everything else look a little tame. This is today's sport. And �ere arejust a few·or today's sports highlights. We'll ignore things like the beautiful scyling and dramatic livery

because they're of you, for you to eyes on: The

. Conquest 16 a lot more than

To broaden parameters Toyota

Saturday 22 July 1 989 THE CITIZEN

SAP probe vehicle . credit deal changes

over the repayment agreements.

for all outstanding debts should contact Lieutenant in terms of the agreement P Welgemoed at John signed. Vorster Square to make a

statement.

Page 1 7

�arked increase in LIQUIDATIONS of both individuals and companies showed a marked increase in May says Paul Edwl\fds, ex­ecutive chairman of In­formation Trust Cor­poration.

" liquidations . .

on the previous month while individual liqui­dations rose by 26 per­cent.

1988 while the number of individual liqui­dations was 21 percent down on the same period last year.

POLICE .have warned· that firms which take over vehicles which are subject to credit agree­ments were making

The financial institu­tions, which are seldom informed of the arrange­ment even though the firms undertake to do so, have l1tw made formal complaints to the polfce.

"Existing hire purchase contracts cannot be r-___:S::a�p:a:.._.

______ !.!!���������� changed without the con­

e"ent of the financial insti-

Company liquidations were up by 2,6 percent Mr Edwards said the

increase was as a result of the slowing down of the economy and higher interest rates.

He is · pessimistic about the balance of 1989. "There is a six month lag after the start of a recessionary phase in the economy. Right now our research indi­cates that more and more businesses and in­dividuals are experi­encing cash-flow prob­lems. We are in a pre­carious stage in our economic cycle".

· themselves guilty of theft in terms of . the Credit Agreements Act.

In a statement yester­day, police advertise­ments appeared in news­papers and magazines da­ily, offering people who could not afford their monthly payments the chance to dispose of their vehicles.

The firms undertake to find oth�r buyers to take

Apart from contraven­ing the Credit Agreement Act, the people who dis­posed of vehicles in this way were making them­selves guilty of theft:

The . police statement said the firms which took over the agreements and supplied them to new

• owners often failed to pay the finarn:Jal mstitutions. which in tum held the original buyer· responsible

tution. ·

"All people who have responded to these ad­vertisements are request­ed to advise their finan­cial institition where they bought the vehicle with­out delay. The police will · arrange that a statement be taken from the person concerned."

Police said people who , had bought or leased cars from firms by taking over existing credit agreements

R2 000 fine for , possessing drugs

DURBAN. - Jan Johannes van de:r Westhuisen (36) of Point Road, Durban, was fined R2 000 (or 12 months imprisonment) in the Durban Magis­trate's Court yesterday for possession of one-and-a­half Mandrax capsules and two grams of dagga.

Van der Westhuisen admitted to having the drugs in his P<>ssession on May 28.

He also admitted four previous convictions for possession of dagga, one for drunken driving and one for drinking in public.

In addition to the fine, Magistrate Mr P H du Plessis sentenced him to 12 moftth's imprisonment suspended for five years. - Sapa.

However, the in­crease was off a low base and that businesses and individuals were in a much sounder position than they were com­pared to the record-level of failures in 1985 and' 1986.

The number of com­pany liquidations in the first five months of this year was four percent down when compared to the same period in

However, Mr Ed­wards does not see bankruptcies reaching their 1985/86 levels. -Sapa.

·

ront "narrow-head". The narrow­head engine· otherwise known as Toyota's 4A-F engine, offers 4 cylinders, 16 valves, twin cams and an innovative narrow cyliriderhead design. Behind the wheel of a 16 Valve

Sport you'll soon discover that combined with Toyota's new ultra-rigid body con­Stn}ction, the narrow-head engine translates all this technical refinement simply into the most fun you can

have sitting down. You had better try and

catch the Conquest 16 Valve . Sport at your Toyota Dealer now. It may be the o�ly chance you ever get.

1300 S, 1300 GS, 1600 LS Automatic, 1600 RS, 16 Valve Sport, RSi TWin Cam 16. .

l!

! Ill � oi � - .

Toyota Conquest Ra�ge: U TOYOTA

or •

i • i z J

Shown with optional extr� alloy wheels and wide low-profile tyrts.

.Page 1 8 THE CITIZEN Saturday �� July 1 989

orton predict�S·' better second-half for JSE Pepkor still

sprinting By Stephen Orpen in the 6 months to end- sponding half last year. The depressed figures Investment Editor June 1988. Norton notes that last reflect soft market senti-

:11-IE relative paucity In parallel, the number year's figures relfect a ment as well as the lower of funds raised via the of new listings fell to 8 large carry-over from the gold price , he says. JSE in the 6 months to (14), valued by the mar- previous year's listings Commenting on the end-June � as report- ket at IU79-m (R287-m), feast. Once companies growing number of back-

seH to an issue price, thus side-stepping a weak en­try to the market.

A stronger gold price · will significantly lift JSE confidence, he says. This will have a corresponding impact on the number of companies willing to raise capital via the stock ex­

past, chairman Christo Wiese said at the annual general meeting yester­day.

while new companies list- had decided to list, they door listings (mainly via ed this week by JSE ed via rights issues raised were virtually obliged to cash shells), he says the president, Tony Nor- R118-m in �e latest 6 go through with their most obvious attraction to ton -is likely to tr�s- months versus more than plans despite the dull the listing company is that late into a substantially R236-m in the corre- market. it can avoid exposing it-higher total in the cu� r-------------�----------�--------------------�--�---------------------L----------------� rent 6 months. he says. Southgo's Knight gallops into profits

change.

DESPITE the measures implemented by the gov­ernment to cool down the economy, the Pepkor Group was maintaining the pace of its financial performance of the recent

"Group turnover for the current year is on tar­get an·d the group is per­forming satisfactorily and as anticipated. Growth in turnover and profit is also satisfactory in comparison with last year."

It is easy to see why'· The effective rise in

market capitalisation like­ly to flow from the vari­ous sharesplit schemes now in the pipeline (one thinks of TML ·and Safi­con), and also from the major rights issues now on the roll at the JSE (for instance, Gencor and Fedmyn), will join the relatively enormous new listings flowing from pri­vatisation (Iscor) in swell­ing the. second-half figure.

SOUTHGO has produc- of the tributing arrange-ed impressive figures in ment with Witwatersrand its June quarterly reports, Nigel, and grade im-with all treatment and proved by 29 percent to mining operations per- 3,63 'l}t due to lower stop-forming strongly. ing widths and more sei-

Thus: ective mi·ning. e with a gold price re- The Goldam operation ceived of R32 409, the increased tonnage treated group's flagship, Knights by 3 percent to 530 000 Gold Mine, has surged to tons at a higher grade of a profit of R2 million 0,26 'l}t. compared with a loss of Knights treated 838 000 R342 000 the previous tons (302 000 tons or quarter; and sands yielding 0,48 'l}t and e Nigel Gold Holdings 536 000 tons of slimes has increased after tax yielding 0.24 g/t) to pro-profit by 116 percent from duce 274,5 kg of gold R576 000 to R1 244 000. 140,34 kg). In unit costs,

ton, giving an operating profit of R3,18 per ton treated.

Total revenue from gold and silver was R8,9-m (R4,37-m) which, less working costs of R6,2-m and royalty and finance charges totalling R644 000, generated a net profit of R2-m.

Capex in the quarter totalled R1 ,57-m, which included final reconciled capital expenditure of R1,2-m on the gold recov­ery plant.

The availability of the sands milling section has

June quarter and an aver­age availability of 95 per­cent is expected - better than budget:

The current shortfall in headgrade from the slimes and sands dumps was compensated for by · an increase in the treat­ment rate of both slimes

· and sands material, as well as a red1,1ction·in the residue grade. It is ex­pected that headgrades will improve as reclama­tion advances to the inner and lower areas of dumps.

At WitNigel the tribut­ing arrangement saw- · milled throughput from underground ore nearly doubled to 55 945 tons at a grade of 3,63 'l}t (2,81 'l}t) to produce 203 kg of gold (84 kg), with a unit working profit of R6,55 per ton milled compared to a loss of R10,74 last quarter.

In the Goldam treat­ment operation , 529 579 tons were treated with a

The store expansion programme of listed sub­sidiaries, Pep Stores and · Shoprite, was ahead of schedule, he said.

Pep Stores and Acker­mans will have opened 43 new shops by the end of July, and signs are that Pep will open more stores this year than originally planned. Shoprite has already opened three new outlets. - Sapa .

yield of 0,26 'l}t to pro- 1-----------­duced 138 kg of gold (130 c apl· tal kg). Working profit per

The JSE's latest figures reflect rights issues worth R229-m. This compares with 16 rights issues e11mping in some R575-m

There was an 87 percent the revenue per ton increased from 69,3 per- f"'""---�-----., ton treated was R4,10. market

increase in undergound treated was Rl0,6 against milled tonnage as a res�a working cost of R7.42 a

cent in the March quarter to 98.3 r rcent in the I Plastics

plant MASERU. - 'Qe Leso­tho National Develop­ment Corporation and the China - Fujian Corpora­tion for International Techno-economic Co-op­eration this week signed a letter of intent to estab­lish a plastic products manufacturing plant in

With a gold price re- CAPITAL market rates ceived of R33 100 a kg, remained softer in sub� total revenue from gold dued end-week trading. and silver was Rl l ,29-m yesterday, as the gold which, less R8,75-m price held firm *-e working costs, gave a $370 amid an easier dollar working profit of R2,54- after US Federal Reserve m. chairman Alan Green­

The royalty payment to Rand Extensions and the tributing payment to Wit­Nigel were R481 000 and R427 000 respectively. After-tax profit was

span's testimony to Con­gress on Thursday.

1 Lesotho on a joint ven­ture basis.

R1 ,24-m (R576 000). Nigel's capex in the

quarter was R307 000 (R1 ,34�m). Capital ex-· penditure at WitNigel came to R226 000, capi­talised by the tributor.

The long bond, Escom 11 percent 2007/9, ended steady at 17,13 versus 17,24 a week ago, with the market now awaiting local money supply and consumer inflation data, expected out on Monday, for fresh direction.

Just the facts It's easy to be misled by startling facts and fan­cy figures. And an advertising decision made with clouded vision could cost you money.

That's why our circulation figures are audited by the Audi Bureau of Circulations •

The ABC audit the exact circulation figures of member publications. So there's no chance of confusion, just the hard facts.

Next time you buy advertising space, keep a clear head. Use ABC.

CITIZEN

AUDIT BUR,AU OF CIRCULATIONS OF SOUTH AFRICA LTD Takes the gae�ation out of medica circulation

LNDC director, Molet­sane Monyake, said the establishment of the plant was �ubject to a feasibility , study. - Sapa.

Volume on Thursday totalled Rl ,02-b . -Reut­er.

BAT en l ists M Ps to fight hosti le bid

-LONDON. - BAT Industries PLC has b�gun seriously lobbying in an ef­fort to kill off the hostile £13-b from an investor group led by Anglo-French fi­nancier, Sir James Goldsmith.

BAT confirmed yesterday that 170 Members of Parliament had signed a motiOn calling for the bid to be refer­red to the Monopolies and Mergers Commission for an investigation on the ground that the offer's highly lever­aged nature was against the public in­terest.

The Goldsmith group is offering 850p a share worth of securities. Launched on July 1 1 , the bid is 80 per­cent debt-financed.

Yesterday morning, BAT's shares were trading at 871 p on the London Stock Exchange, unchanged from Thursday's close.

Meanwhile, the private British mer­chant bank, Baring Brothers, has been trying to muster support among large intistutional investors for an alternate to the Goldsmith bid, the Financial Times reported yesterday.

The bank is acting on its own initiat­ive, the newspaper said.

BAT hasn't been approached by Baring, said BAT spokesman, John Coles.

He added, "We are always happy to talk to our shareholders".

Baring is arguing that the Goldsmith proposal of "unbundling" BAT by sell­ing off all of the company's non-tobac­co interests, could divert perhaps as much as £1-b of BAT's underlying va­lue into the hands of Goldsmith a�d his

backers, rather than to existing share­holders, the newspaper said.

Baring is proposing that one way of maximising BAT's value to its existing holders would be to restructure the group around a single holding com­pany with four classes of shares, one for each of BAT's four businesses -tobacco, retailing, financial services and paper - the newspaper said.

This would resolve the problem that BAT's share price has· failed to reflect its underlying value because the stock market gives BAT's non-tobacco busi­nesses the same low rating .that the market gives its tobacco businesses, the Financial Times wrote.

The man believedto be behind the plan is Andrew Tuckey, the head of Baring's corporate finance depart­ment, the newspaper said.

Tuckey was in a meeting and un­available for comment immediately, a sectetary said.

The Members of Parliament are see­king a preliminary debate on a motion condemning the use of highly lever­aged junk bond financing "to take over major British companies for the ex­press purpose of breaking them up", BAT confirmed.

This principal motion initially intro­duced on Wednesday, said such financ­ing posed "a direct threat to British industry". ·

It wasn't known if the House of Commons' leaders would approve a debate before Parliament adjourns on July 28, for its summer recess, which ends �n October 17. - Sapa-AP.

. � - -Satur'day 22. Jufy 1 989 THE CITtZEN

Caterpillar quarterly sales up by 12pc

Sales o f equipment in­side the US increased by 8 percent over the first quarter last year, while sales outside the US con­tinued to register strong gains.

1HE first quarterly re- ly for factory modemisa- continuing commitment Sales outside the US port for 1989 from Cat- tion and new product in- to invest in the future", totalled $ 1,35-b or 51 per­erpillar shows an in- troduction. and profitability is ex- cent of total sales, and crease in worldwide According to the re- pected to improve once gained 16 percent over sales of $280-m over port, the "current high le- the elements of modemi- the corresponding period the first quarter of last

vel of expenditure for fac- sation are implemented last year. tory modernisation and and factory operations In the developing coun-

year. new product development become more cost effec- tries, higher commodity This represents an in- reflects the company's rive. prices and in certain cases

crease of 12 percent, ,-----------------------. - primarily in the Far while total sales for the N flo. • d a.t h d 1 d East - an upswing in period amounted to ·�erlan eu resc e u e construction activity, re-$2,63-b. Profits for the suited in improved de-first quarter are quoted as LAGOS. - West Germany has signed an agreement to mand for Caterpillar $141-m compared to reschedule DM 1,5-b of Nigerian debt. products. Sales in Africa $1 18-m in the correspond- "Interest payments halted since November should and the Middle East de-ing period last year. recommence in October," Gottfried Evertz, economic dined, largely because of

The increases are attri- counsellor at the West German Embassy, told Reuters. lower sales in Turkey as a buted to higher physical · The debt accounts for about 14 percent of the $5, 7-b result of government cut­sales volumes, although Nigeria owes to 19 foreign government creditors in the backs in investment costs for the company so-called Paris Club, all of which is due for rescheduling spending. were higher than a year under an Qutline agreement signed earlier this year. Caterpillar's share pro­ago. Higher costs resulted An oil-rich nation fallen on hard times, Nigeria if; fit from affiliated com­from material price in- struggling to pay off a total foreign debt of around $30- panies increased by $9-m creases, especially steel, b. over 1988 figures. The im­wage and benefit in- Evertz said the agreement with the West German provemeqt resulted from creases on payrolls, high- agency, Hermes, initialled in Lagos on July 12, meant higher sales by Shin Cat­er interest, and higher repayments on all medium and short�term debt falling erpillar Mitsubishi Ltd, start-up and new pr;o- due before April 1990 would now be spread over four the company's 50 percent­gramme costs, particular- years, starting in April 1995. - Sapa-Reuter. owned affiliate in Japan . .

EXCHANGE RATES MARKET STATISTICS

LONDON CURRENCY US Dollar Sterling Austrian Schilling Australian Dollar Belgian Franc Fin Bel Franc Con Botswana Pula Canadian Dollar Swiss Ftanc Deutsche Mark Danish Krone Spanish Peo;eta finnish Mark French Franc Greek Drachma Hong Kong Dollar Irish Pounds Indian Rupees Italian Lira Japanese Yen Kenya Shillings Lesotho Maloti Mauritian Rupee Malawi Kwacha Dutch Guilders Norwegian Kroner New Zealand Dollar Pakistan Rupee Portuguese Escudo Seychelles Rupee Swedish Kroner Singapore Dollar Swaziland Emalangeni Zambian Kwacha Zimbabwe Dollar

SELL 2,7325 4,451 5 4,8855 0,4860

14,5000 14,5500 0,7400 0,4330 0,5995 0,6945 2,7000

43,6000 1 ,561 0 2,3570

60,0000 2,8490 3,8515 0,0000

501,6000 51 ,7500

7,5790 1 ,0000 5,5660 1 ,0050 0,7840 2,5450 0,6370 7,3775

57,9500 2,0640 2,3680 0,7140 1 ,0000 5,5550 0,7780

90 Da)la liquid BA rate 17,50 - Sapa.

.Commodity prices

Unit Trusts Today'e iiUOtallons for Unit Truste: GENERAL EQUITY FUNDS Guardbaqk Growth Lifegro •

Me !lund NBS Hallmark Norwich NBS Old Mutual Investors Sege San lam Sanlam Index Southern Equity Standard Syfrets Growth UAL SPECIALIST EQUITY FUNDS Guardbank Resources Sage Resources Sanlam Dividend Sanlam Industrial Sanlam Mining Southern Mining Standard Gold UAL Mining and Resources UAL Selected Opportunities Old Mutual Mining INCOME/GILT F1JNDS Cortlank Guardbank Income Old Mutual -Income Senbank High Yield Senbank Gilt Standard Extra Income Syfrets Income UAL GIIt ' '

- Sapa

TT BUY 2,7125 4,3940 4,9475 0.4925

14,7000 14,8000 0,7505 0,4390 0,6075 0,7040 2,7345

44,2000 1 ,5825 2,3870

60,7500 2,8865 3,8015 0,0000

508,3000 52,4500

0,0000 1 ,0000 0,0000 1 ,0185 0,7940 2,5775 0,6450 7,7640

58,7000 0,0000 2,3990 0,7240 1 ,0000 0,0000 (\ 7890

BUYERS 1 595,18

160,43 138,42 694,93 287,52

1 933,57 1 589,72 1 087,52

888,05 134,96 793,30 154,29

1 398,37

132,25 11 3,38 307,41 562,53 281,77 140,24 223,33 330,41

1 145,86 265,96

100,83-104,99 103,81

90,44 90,14 85,61

103,72 1 '079,90 •

Alii BUY 2,6935 4,3520 4,9795 0,5070

14,8000 14,9000 0,7540 0;4430 0,61 10 0,7080 2,7570

44,6500 1 ,5990 2,4025

61 ,6000 2,9060 3,7790 0,0000

512,9000 52,6000

0,0000 0,0000 0,0000 1 ,0250 0,7990 2,6190' 0,6520 7,8340

59,7GM 0,0000 2,4185 0,7275 •

0,0000 0,0000 0 7930

SELi..ERS 1 486,71

149,57 128,87 645,96 267,21

1 796,49 1 476,49 1 01 3,85

825,40 125,10 741,73 143,61

1 303,12

123,26 105,25 286,46 524,00 262,81 1 30,00 208,1 6 307,76

1 064,49 246,73

99,76 103,73 101,67 89,50 89,20 84,62

101 ,63 1'069,1 1'

Sill BUY 2,6765 4,3165 5,0065 0,5120

14,9000 1 5,0000 0,0000 0,4465 0,6140 0,7120 2,7760

45,0500 1 ,6125 2,4160

62,3000 2,9225 3,7605 0,0000

51 6,8000 52,7500

0,0000 0,0000 0,0000 0,0000 0,8035 2,6540 0,6575 7,8940

60,5000 0,0000 2,4355 0,7305 0,0000 0;0000 n oooo

Cop A T01 HG l..elld Zlnc HG Zinc HG ZJnc SHG AJu HG Nickel

"SE 1 00 Index 1 5h00 2 283,0 (2 293,3) - Reu1era Commodity Index -. (1 934,8)

GOLD

am fix: 372,25 (368,80) pm fix: 372,40 (371 ,05) closing: 371 ,50/372,00 (372,20/372,60) PLA TlNUIII: am fix: - (491 ,50) pm fix: 493,65 (489,75) PALLAOIUiot: am fix: -, (148,0) pm fix: 149,50 (148,25)

ZURICH GOLD cloelng: 372,00/372,50 (371 ,01374) SILVER ftx: Dlrs per ounce: 5,2180 (5,2335)

Swiss francs per kilo spot 5,1750 (276.20)

WALL STREET Dow �: Industrial - 2 575,49 �2 584,41 1 Transport - 1 232,37 1 233,34

Utilities 216,55 (217 ,66 Standard a Pocn: Industrial 381 ,96 (384,22)

Composite: 333,5 (335,73) IBM: 1 12o/4 (1 14'\11) Homestake: 13Y4 (13'111) !<SA: 42 (4�)

London Metal Exchange CUh

1 536,00 9570 428,00 1 645,00

3 montlle 15 monilia 1111 •

1 537,00 9580 <430� 1 650,00

1 525,00 1 526,00 9550 9580 .13,00 •t4,00 1 ses.oo 1 570,00

1 340,00 � 350,00 1 537,00 9 400 9 500 9 580 385,00 400,00 4311;eo

1 650,00 8 rnonll1s 1 <1-45,00

1 705,00 1 707,00 1 615,00 1 620,00 1 400,00 1 130,00 1 732,00 1 732,00 1 T.M,OO 1 620,00 12 000 1 2 100 11 400 1 H50 8800

1 465,00 1 �.oo 1 707,00 1 625,00 1 732,00 9000 1 2 100

LME official stg/US dlr exchange rate 1 ,6130. · �Grade A- 925 1Jlnne8 mainly canies cash nij 3 months 1 527,00 26,·

Tin HG - 105 tonnes cash 9 560 3 monlhs 9 550 Lead - 550 tonnes cash 3 monttls 415,00 14,00 13,00 Zinc High Grade - I 750 tonnes mainly carries cash nil 3 months 1 572,00 Special High Grade -2 300 tonnes ma1nly carries cash n� 3 monlhs 1 615,00 Aluminium High Grade - 1 075 tonnes about han carries cash nil 3 months 1 726,00 30,00 Nickel - 1 06 tonnes mainly carries cash \Oil 3 months 11 300 Copper Grade A - Eas* 2 600 (total 3 525) tonnes mainly canies cash 1 537,00 3 months 1 525,00 . ron Hg - Firmer 125 (230) tonnes cash nil 3 months 9 550 9 560 9 550 9 555 Lead -Barely steady 2 650 (3 200) tonnes mainly carries cash 427,00 28,00 3 monlhs 413,00 12,00 13,00. - Reuter.

YIELD 4,41 4,82 6,00 7,67 6,47 4,36 4,37 4,97 3,95 6,47 6,1 5 4,00 4,70

5,57 . 4,85

7,09 5,27 5,97 6,44 5,77 5,37 5,06 5,74

1 5,48 14,98

N/A 1 5,55 1 5,58 14,23 16,28 1 3,72

FINANCIAL FUTURES ­CLOSING PRICES

ALL SHARE INDEX = '2 674

SEPTEMBER DECEMBER MARCH 1990

ALL GOLD INDEX = 1

SEPTEMBER DECEMBER MARCH

BID 2 600 2 600 2 600

597 BID

1 605 1 610 1 645

INDUSTRIAL INDEX = 2 880

SEPTEMBER DECEMBER MARCH

BID 2 592 2 560 2 630

OFFEI'I IIAM·TO-tWIXET 2 610 2606 2 61 5 2 608 2 618 2 809

OFFEI'I IIARK·fO.IWIKET I 614 1 610 1 835 1 622 1 685 1 665

OFFEI'I IIAJI(. 1'0-IWIKET 2 605 2 596 2 598 2 589 2 640 2 835

KRUGERRAND = 1 127

SEPTEMBER DECEMBEA

BID OFFER MARK-TO-MARKET

E168 ESKOM 11 percent 2008 = 17,14 BID OfRII IIAJI(·TO-MAIIKET

AUGUST 17,14 17,12 1 7,13 NOVEMBER 17,16 17,14 17,15

3 MONTH LIQUID BA = 17,1 II)

AUGUST 82,62 NOVEMBER 113,26. ,Interest on Safex Tru� 18,94

OFFER IIAJI(. fO.IWIKET 82,69 62,66 83,37 83,32

JtO.URC.F:t. RANn .\IRRCHANT BANK LlMJTED

West Coast m i neral �ands project

THE new mining business division of Anglo American Corporation is study­ing the feasibility of producing titani­um and zireonium-rich heavy .minerals from sand deposits adjacent to the West Cape coast in Namaqualand.

zite. Technical investigations related to the local upgrading of the titanium mineral, ilmenite, are also underway.

The deposits are located about 50 km north of the Olifants River and are situated between 1 and 15 km in­land. Most of the deposits are located on farms owned by De Beers.

A wet concentration pilot plant is currentl:y up and running near the pro­posed mine site. The deposits, al­though broadly similar to the world's largest in Western Australia, present a variety of technical and infrastructural problems, the detailed solutions to which are now being explored.

The feasibility study is due for com-pletion i11 mid-1990. ,

Annual production targets, starting in early 1992, are 100 000 tons zircon, 25 ()()() tons rutile and 1 ()()() tons mona-

. Effects of the proposed mining on the environment are the subject of ongoing study and experimentation with relevant state and private institu­tions.

CI Group sells Alumet to Plessey for R3_, 8-m

THE Control Instruments Group, has sold its whol­ly-owned subsidiary, Alu­met Circuit Technologies, to Plessey SA.

ments felt that it was in the interest of the other CI Group companies and future strategic develop­ment plans, to relinquish its share of the PCB mar­ket by f;elJing Alumet.

This the CI Group did

to good effect, disposing of Alumet for R3,8 m- a _figure that was substan­tially above the nett asset· value of the company, which at the time of dis­posal was actually making losses for the group.

Although Alumet was a major player in the manu­facture of high quality pril).ted circuit boards, Cl- li�iiiiii�iiiiiiiijiiii�jiiiiiiiiiii�iiiiiiip;iiipjjliiiiiiiip;��ii ��u�a���ags:�t��t !�! J! I]� III I]� I jl jJ [!j =f.., over-capitalised and too fragmented for an inde­pendent; specialist sup­plier like Alumet to be seen as a developing pro­fit centre for the group.

To stay alive, a PCB manufacturer must also continually update its technology. and given the perceived downward trend in the local electro­nics market with SAPT announcing major cut­backs, Control Instru-

Alex Corp 115; Coronation 21; Lonrbo 2'17; Mhanguri 9; Northchart unq; Wankie Coli 18; ZCI 30; AM Gold 71 V4; AA Coal unq; AA Corp 23¥4 XR; Barlow Rand 623; Brack­en 88 XR; B\y'IOOri2 600; Buf-. fels 1lli; Charter Con 558; •

Cons Gold 1 470; Cons Murch 110; De Beers D 141;2; Doom­font 1 030 XR; Driefontein 1()3� XR; Durban 21-3116; E Daggas 4 370 XR; E Rand Prop 2%; E Rand Gold 30 XR; Els­burg 730; Freddies 148; Free­gold 83� XR; Grootvlei 10; Harmony Gold 4¥4; Harties 7 000 XR; Kinross lH� . . XR;

_..__

Kloof 8-15116 XR; Leslie Gd l 050 XR; Libanon 20 XR; Lo­raine 2 280; Ofsil 20'14 XR; Randfontein 461;2; Rust Plats 15 190; Southvaal 34¥4; St He­lena 7-5/16; Stilfontein 3Y4; Gold Fds P 6'1.; Vaal Reefs 79¥4 ; Venters 1¥4 XR; Vogels 105; GFSA 20¥4; Welkom 5\oil XR; W Areas 1 050; W Deep 327�; Rand Mns P 273-0 XR; Winkels 18 XR; Aberoom 43; N Eng lnd 29¥4; Rand Mns Lt 14\oil XR; SA Brews 368; Sasol NPV 200; Std Char Bk 529; USX Corp 2m XR; Unisel Gold 4'/4 XR; Botswana 47; _Minorco 950.

--TOTAL--

VOLUME TRADED­VALUE TRADED­NO.SHRS.LISTED­DO.- ACTIVE­DO.- UP-

TODAY YESTERDAY TOOAY

2846132

�782�� 21184578 �117-YESTERDAY

. .(182827

TOD"-Y YESTERDAY

8306849 62470 U;ecl7�

DO.- DOWN-DO.- UNCHANGED-

. 127 34 33

t l4

38lll!l282,00 228n749;00 181 6115 .127 351

1 7 88 59 61

101i 546

1537tc58.00 695 323 1'3 66

556

.70719511 ,cQ 8711 478 1 22

94 rrn

JSE · ACTUARIES INDICES SECTOR

0\lt.HALL

MINING PROD

COAL

OIAIAONOS ALL GOLD

11AN0&0THERS

EVANDER KLERKSDORP O.F.S. WEST WITS METALS& lAIN

COPPER

MANGANESE PlATINUM TIN OTHER METALS MINING FIN

lAIN HOUSES

lAIN HOLDING Fo'N&INDUST FINANCIAL

BANKS& OTHER

INSURANCE INV TRUSTS PROPERTY PROP TRUST INDUSTRIAL

IND HOI.OING

BEV.HOTLLES BUILD&CONSTR CHElA & OILS CLTli,FOOT.TX ELECTRON, ETC ENGINEERING FISHING FOOD FURN&HSEHOLD lAO TOR PAPER&PACK PHARIA&IAEDICL PRINT&PUBLSH STEEL&ALLIED RETAIL&WHOLE SUGAR TOBACCO& lATCH TRANSPDRT

2736

2161

10831 1597

470

1318 5363

180 2267 191 1

596 3023 42EO

174 185

3669 3695

1 1 90 2916

1470

1194

1041 1!27 335 146 •

2680 2810

4300 1991

972 903

1008 876

1337 2887

254 1992 4503

590 2406 14-41 1799 2615

1 1 732 6815

IRDIC'ES PREV WEEK lliREE

AGO IIONlliS AGO

2737 2700 2701)

2161 2159 2012

10867 10732 1 1 1 13 1596 1576 1507

474

1314 5359

780 2262 1909

596 2988 4272

11� 184

3666 369!\,

1183 2916

1470

1 190

1039 1947 335 146

2680 2196

4299 1992

975 902

i003 889

1337 2901 254

1988 4501

604 2406 1450 1815 2615

1 1681 6838

483

1280 5267

784 2215 1872

590 2812 4216

177 189

3618

3659

1 152 2888

1453

1 1 57

1().13 1943

330 144

2655

2754

4186 2005

958 899

1010 896

1337 2879

254 1971 4525

tiOO 2383 1486 1 753 2690

1 1 681 fi665

533

1 106 51 19

713 2108 2019

596 3445 4397

139 213

3381 3373

1 139 2773

14-42

1214

1023 1878 327 128

2532

2551

4016 2133

919 958

1084 864

1311 2.f49

271 2142 3933

629 2374 1524 1180 2578 9497 C.17n

YEAR AGO

lbb/ 2104

1419

7434 1383

620 1004 4493

723 1829 1230

427

2039 2674

69 11 1

2394

2252

990 1976

1 1 53

917

890 1 1 51 31 1 131

1157

1849

3451 1305

579 £26 830 665 887

1147 231

1392 2890

508 1758 613

1447 1980 5361 4136

YIELDS I.Alm' YEAR AGO

EAIUI DIY EA1U1 DIY

10,2

7,8

13,0 9.6

1!:..4

10.8 8.3

12.0 8.6 8,3

1 1 .�

10.5 7,1

1 1 .2 7,9 9,0 9.8

5,1 9,7

10,2

16.7

7.0 2,8

1 1 ,5 9,0

• 9.6

8.9

7,4 1 1 ,0

7,9 14.5

9.6 12,0 1 1 ,5

7.� 27,0 21.3 10,4

M 21,3 10.4 9.8

12,2 10,0 1 1 ,4

J.tJ 10,8

4,4 10,5

3,6 9,0

3.3 9,9 5,0 1 1 ,1

6.1

5.1 5,6 5.2 �.2 4,6

12,0

4,3 3,8 5,3 3,0 3,2

2,9

4,5 3,6

5.1

5.8

3,8 1.9 9,0 9,0 3,3

2,5

3,5 4,4 3,8 5.3 3.4 4.6 6,3 2.4 9.1 5.5 3,4 3,3 6,2 4,2 3,9 4.1 1,7 3.0

12.0

14,5 9.2

16,7 10,1 9,3

8.1

8,6 9,8 3,6 6,8

10,8

1 1 ,9 7,1

10,9

10,8

11,9

8,1 5,2 7,8 9,1

1 1 ,0 13,2

7,1 1 1 ,5 10,5 17,2 10,1 13,0 14,7 10,9 19,6 25,0 10.5

8,5 25,0 10,4 9,1

12,2 8,8

10.8

4.�

5,0 5,3

2,7 5.8

4.3

7,5 6,3 1,0 5,2 · 5,5

8,0

5,2 5,4 0,0 2,7 4.3

3.9

' 5,7 4,2

5,9

6,7

3.1 4,1 e . • 9, 1 3,8

4,2

3,4 4,7 5,9 6,1 3,1 5,0 7,3 3,3 6,1 5.6 4.0 3,1 6.4 5,4 3,7 4,1 1 , 1 3,3

90 J25 .....

. D D W W W W Buy Sell Last V M HI LO M V

"AMCOAL A T COLL AT COL6%P G F COAL

"TRANS NTL TRNTL12.7 VIERFONTN WANKIE WIT COLLS -TOTALS-

6975 7100 3800

950 975 800 820 800

62 90

6600

MINING

COAL

7000 500 4000

173 950 25- 400 800 4� 800

65 10+ 6000V 90

6600 40 1 1 820

DIAMONDS

ANAMINT 78000 80000 80000 1 0 1 200V BROADACRE �

CARRIGS -SUSPENDED- 30 • DE BEERS 6000 6010 6010

DEBEERS S 6000 4095B TRNSHEX 1375 1400 1 375 -TOTALS- ..

20- 244827

GOLD

300 2463.

7050 7000 50-4000 3600 400+

975 925 25+ �0 7� 20+ 800 780 20+

65 50 15+

6700 6600 100-

80000 79000 80 �

6200 6000

1400 1 365

55+

10+

208 5

129 557

1 9 203

8 1 1 28

16 1 2

9483

220 9731

RAND AND OTHERS

" BABROOK CENGOLD

" MOODER " MOODER S

DBN DEEP "E T CONS "ERGO " ERGO S "E R P M

EERSLNG FALCON GAZGOLD GROOTVLEI KNIGHTS LIN DUM MODBEE NIGEL • OSPREY PRIM G M

"AANDFONTN AD LEASE AOGOLD AOGOLD DF SIMMERS SALLIES SALLIES S

"SOUTHGO STH AODPT ST ADPT S SUB N VILLAGE VLAKS WAVERLEY W A CONS WIT NIGEL -TOTALS-

BRACKEN " KINROSS

LESLIE "WINKELS

-TOTALS-

AFR LEASE BUFFELS

" HAATIES "SOUTHVAAL

STILF1N "VAAL REEF "VAALAFS S

ZANDPAN -TOTALS-

"BEATAIX " FAEGOLD " FREGOLD S

HARMONY "JOEL

LORAINE OFSIL

"ORYX ST HELENA UNISEL WELKOM -TOTALSt-

210 212 28 30 25B

1 70 170 140 1 50 1 40

-SUSPENDED-'1 225 6900 7100 7000

1 300 1300 1 200 1300 1300 1 000 1 1 00 1 1 00

127 130 127 120 145

50 55 53 430 440 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 255 255

25 27 26 45 50 47

60 60 1 1 0 1 1 0

19500 20000 19800 200 2 1 0 205

28 28 140

142 142 340 360 340

350 98 100 100 53 56 55

50 75 78 75

225 230 225 2� 285 280

� 85 80 380 380

60 65 65

3- 70450 1 32800V

5842 5+ 13736A

900V 50- .IJ700V

75- 200 21400

2� 1000V 27673V

20- 8000V 1 - 374900

2900 2+ 1 3352 2+ 2473

1900 14577V

800+ 2420V 5+ 6600A

16700

3+ 88182 1 0000

5- 1 1 600 3600

5+ 2500 1 1 00

300

843805 EVANDER

300 320 4850 4850

510 530 510 7250 7600 7200B

1 0 + 8800V 1 000

25+ 39800

47600 KLERKSDORP

95 4700 2985

14400 1400

33200

470

100 95 4800 4750 3000 2985

14450 14400 1400

33200 27300

475 470

5-50-

100+ 50+

2025V 300

1 6500 1 790 2300V 6445S

22200 51 560

FREE STATE

1 700 1 725 3450 3475

1950 2000 890 895 940 945 8300 8350

775 3000 3025 1950 1975 2150 2200

1 725 3450 2480 1 950

890 945

8300 775

3000 1 975 2 1 50

50+

25-5-

25+ 100+

25-

8867 8131

1 2600A 31300

9700 956

22891V 1200

1 0700V 106345

WEST WITS

220 210 25 20

1 70 155 1 50 125

7400 7000 1375 1300 1300 1300 1 275 1 1 00

130 1 1 5 1 4 7 145

53 5d 460 440 1 12 1 00 255 245

26 24 50 45 65 60

1 15 1 10 20000 19000

2 1 0 195 30 28

145 140 340 330

1 02 93 60 55

85 75 . 225 220 285 270

80 � 3� 370

65 63

3- 2988 5+ 1 488

10+ 526 367

400- 25 1 �

1 1 75- 8

1 7 + 1 459 2- 10

510 15- 123

9+ 1 5344 5+ 120 3+ 310 3- 442

739 5- 587

500+ 57 10- 237

4- 2055

2+ 161 10+ 104

5+ 4316 784

10- 464 5+ 180

10+ 210 200

10+ 164 2+ 145

34304

320 275 45+ 184 4875 4800 50-> 16!)

510 410 100+ 3932 7200 7000 300+ 8

100 90 5000 4750 3015 2900

14600 14200 1400 1300

33800 32700

480 450

5+ 250-1 111+ 300+ 100+ 200+

15+

1 725 1 625 100+ 3525 3350 25-

2025 1 950 40-950 890 10-970 865 80+

8400 8150 50-850 775 55-

3000 2975 25+ 2000 1 900 50+ 2175 2075 50+

4293

38 25

975 243

31 271

2490 4073

314 2147

728 2071

956 67

522 86

182 276

7350

BLYVOOR 1 050 1 1 25 1 1 00 600 1 1 00 1 075 709 DEELKRL 1200 1210 1210 15- 15250 1250 1 1 80 10+ 1 1 83 DOORNS 460 470 465 6800 4� 450 1 5+ 1 793

'DRIES 4325 4350 4325 23872S 4375 4200 125+ 695 ELAN OS 2650 2700 2675 25+ 2600 2675 2550 1 05+ 135 ELANDS S 1 385 ELSBURG 305 305 1 0+ 29100 320 295 10+ 1756

'KLOOF 3575 3600 3600 2402 3675 3575 50- 202 LIBANON 790 790 450 810 790 289 VENTERS 510 515 515 5+ 35400A 530 505 10+ 813 VENTERS D 670 YIES AREAS 460 475 475 15+ 2300 485 460 10+ 655

"WSTN DEEP 1 3600 13800 1 3750 1 50 + 5818 13800 13150 600+ 271 "WDLS DP S 1 1300 10V 1 1 300 1 1 300 0 WSTN DP 0 6500 6500 6800 6500 300- 5 WESWITS -SUSPENDED- 40 -TOTALS- 124602 8505

WIT G M -TOTALS-

BOJREST M C M

" PALAMIN Z C I -TOTALS-

CURTAILED OPERATIONS 120 120

0 METAL AND MINERAL

COPPER

0

300 300 310 300 10- 125 53

5400 5400 5400 5325 159 175 1 75 1 500A 190 175 1 5- 19

1500 302 MANGANESE

ASS MANG 25000 25000 "SAMANCO 2125 2150 2150 25+ 3700 2200 2000 1 50 + 1 1 60

-TOTALS- 3700 1 1 60

BAA PLAT BAPLT BCD

" IMPLATS LEPLAT LEFKO LYD PLAT NORTHAM

' RUSPLAT -TOTALS-

"AOOIBERG UNION TIN ZAAIPLAAT -TOTALS-

AURORA CON MURCH GEFCO

' KEELEY KUDU

" MARLIN MAALN 9CP MSAULI AHOVAN AHOVAN 0 AHOVAN CD

'VANSA VANSA OPT -TOTALS-

'ANGLO AM 'ANGLO S

ANGLOVAAL ANGVAAL A ANGVAL PP ANGVAL LS A-V HOLD CHARTER

1900

4975 825 770

4740 2700

1 50 550

225 740 300

1 0 1 0 330 740 330 730

51 23 60

365

PLATINUM

1 900 2 1 50 2150 5050 5025

2050 220

13590 72895A

5- 59500 1 0- 55500V

2100 25- 27854

233709

830 825 7� 7�

4740 2725 2700 6300 6300

TIN

1 500 1500 170 160 30- 300 600 550

300 OTHER MINERALS

240 �0 305

1025 340 760

740 53 25 65 690

410

230 5+ 520500V 740 1 1 00V 300 5- 54200S

1 025 25+ 3500 330 20- 1 1 000 750 370 730 20- 5200

53 1 9440 23 1 1620 60 21096 690 1 0 - 34700A

410 682356

FINANCIAL

MINING HOUSES

9675 9700 9675 25+ 29076 9675 5617B

46000 46000 45000 45000

21500 20200 3600 3650 3600

5000 3700 3775 3800S

40- 102V 800

2100 1 875 2200 2150 5100 5000 835 8 1 0

875 760 4800 4600 2725 2500 6350 6200

1 525 1500 1 90 1 60 600 500

240 740 330

1050 350 760

760 60 25 63

715 420

225 740 300

1000 330 750

730 50 20 57 685 360

200-50-50-10+ 95-

140+ 200+ 100+

25-30-50-

1 5 -5 -

30-50-20-

5-2-2-

5-30+

9775 9525 175+

46000 46000 45000 45000 20240 20200 40-

3600 3575 so+ 5000 5000 3800 .�75 10(H-

46 78

412 2600 2089 1086

192 890

7392

3 8

43 54

5539 12

1 586 591 128 1 83

155 1 132 1359 2956 1 1 1 9

574 15334

1 836

0 2 1

128 2

191

I THE CITlZEN

vestor's G u ide · CON GOLD FED MYNBO FEDMYNB N FEDMYN8,5 FEDMN12,5

"GENCOR GENCOR N GENCOR8,5 GENCR12,5 GFNAMIB

"GFSA GFSA 5C C JOHNNIES JMF AANDMIN -TOTALS-

'AMGOLD ASSOAE COR SYND DAB I DUIKEAS E DAGGA EGOLI

'GENBEL LONFIN MID WITS MINORCO NEW CENT NEW WITS RAND LON A M PROPS SELEC MIN TWEEFONTN VOGELS WIT CONS WIT DEEP -TOTALS-

BARN EX COAEX DALSIG DIGOCO FAEDDEV LYDEX LYDEX OPT PGA PGA OPT AANDEX AHOEX SOWITS SOWITS OP -TOTALS-

FA KA KA HALF KA DUARTE KA TENTH -TOTALS-

"ALLIED ' BANKOAP

BOE BOE CLS BOLAND COLUMBIA COR BANK FIDBANK FIDBANK L

"FIASTBK FIASTBK P GDM INVSTEC IN HOLD MANSEAV MAST MEAHLD MEAHLD CP MEAHLD CD M&M MIIM CP NBS HOLD NOH

'NEDCOA PRIDE AEICHMN SAAMBOU SAGE LTD SASFIN SEC HOLD SA RES BK

"SBIC SBIC PORD TIME TRUST BNK

'UBS 'VOLKSKAS

-TOTALS-

CUSAF CAULIFE CAUHOLD

'FED SURE GAADIAN HCI I G I IGI10%CCP LIB HOLD LIBVEST

"LIBERTY LIBERTY P MET POL MOMENTUM

"M + F PROSUAE SAfLIFE SF�PAEF C SANTAM

'S A EAGLE "SOTHEAN

-TOTALS-

COM FUND COAWIL

"FIT "IND SELE

ISS & INV " NATSEL

OCEANA PREMCON TEMPOAA TO LUX UNIDEV VESTCOR YABENG -TOTALS-

"AMAPAOP AMAPAP LS AUROCHS

" BARPROP BARPRP LS BESTER

" BOEPROP BOLPAO BRISTOL I CON FED DISA FAIRCAP

"GF PROPS GOUGHCO GAENFLD GAOWALK

"GAOWPNT HIGATE D

" HYPADP MARCDNS MARSHAL NATPROP N KLEINS ozz

' PANPROP PICPAOP PROPGAP PUTPAOP

" RABIE " RET CO

RETPROP AETPAOP D

9900 1 ()()()() 9900 7700 7600

1 200 1225 1 225 7 400 7800 7550 7400 7700 9275 9300 9250B 1 750 1 785 1 785

12513V 200- 1314A

9975 9550 430+ 7800 7600

25+ 22686 1375 1050 150+ 7550 7550 1 00+ 7700 7550 200+

25+ 4427 85+ 7201 7

90V

9650 9175 25+ 2075 1 625 35+

8600 8600 8500 9200

8600 7775 825+ 9200 9050 350+

725 750 725 750 725 8400 8450 8450 8300 9000 8700

74500 74500 -SUSPENDED- 18

100-3700 2599 8750 8450 100-

8700 8700 500+ 645 74500 70500 4000+

9700 9800 90 150059

9�0 9700 200+

MINING HOLDING 29400 30000 29500 1 8000 1 9000 18000

200+ 2100 29600 28500 1 000+ 18000 18000

130 130 130 130 1 950 2000 1 975

1 1 75 1 800 1900 1 800

-SUSPENDED- 75 6000 6050 6025

1 975 1900 91 + 1200 1 1 75 25-

330 345 340 1 0500 1 1 000 1 0500

6485 6500 6485 3875 4000 4000

1550 1 525 30 32 31

1 800 1 825 1 800 1000 1 050 1 000

630

950

650 2000

975

2000 630

2010S 950

50+ 800

25+ 13151V

500- 1381 35+ 1 03000

4284S 3+ 20400V

50- 7300V 1 500V

1800 1 750

6025 5900 345 335

1 1 500 1 0500 6500 6125 4000 3750 1 550 1500

31 28 2000 1800 1 000 1000

630 630

1 1 800V 1000 950 165716

MINING EXPLORATION 430 440 430

-SUSPENDED- 18 1 3 1 5 1 5 1 6 1 8 1 8

975 1 000 975 175 180

65 65 150 160 1 50

48 50 48 250 250 125 130 125

1 1 0 1 1 0 45 46 46

FIN RAND,

3000 430

36000 1 7 1 1 400 1 9

25- 400 1000 56076V 185

4286 65 10- 8400 1 60

2 1 1 500V 50 4960 260

1 1 000 130 1 0700 120 1 8600 55

1 76322 KRUGERRAND

420

1 2 1 8

975 160

50 150

45 245 1 1 0 1 1 0

46

1 1 35 1 130

1 75+ 5+ 500-

410+ 200+

25+ 3+

250-

20-

50-

10+

2+

25-20+ 15+

5 -n 183-

15+ 5-9-

41400 41 900 41400 1 1 30

56500 57000S 30000

1 1 900 12000S 28500

5-500+

384 3 6V 8

57500 56500 1 000-30000 29500 12100 12000 300-

401 BANKS & FIN SERVICES

108 370

430 185

1 525 1600

100 580 275

75 50

155

395 85 860

1 1 0 108 120241 S 375 370 15+ 22300

400 7300V 450

440 ·435 5+ 30000V 190 190 40500 105 105 500A 190 190 5+ 700A 205 205

1550 1 525 3500 1 600 1 050S

1 1 0 100 1 0000A 615 600 300 275 3200

78 78 3+ 6960V 54 55S

210 210 156 275

25 20 96

400 395 1 1 746 85 2+ 1 9300V

870 865 5+ 1 1 897 60 52

1 1 0 97 375 355 400 400

435 425 195 1 75 1 1 5 105 1 90 185

1525 1525 1600 1600

100 100 600 520 275 250

78 70 55 55

210 210

• 25 20

395 375 85 83

865 835

2-10+

10+ 10+ 10-

5+

80+ 25+

3+

5+ 2+

30+

409 34

2761 2

29 317

3057 4

13 206

1318 4

40

24 1 0379

267 3

152 133 152

34

344 137

85 5026

24 172 545 1 12

27

57

175 7446

196

1 9 1 7 2204

47 2470

704 410 405 547

1353 708 206

1 1 167

11 0 0 1

1 3

51 1 0 3881

73

4;ijj 6867

, 291

43 156 1 1 4 130 283

2 7

20

872 299 6 1 2

180 1 00 900

195 195 40040V 1 0 1 1 00 1 - 54242

900 27�A

195 1 90 105 1 00 900 900

930 5- 2151

35 60 60

300 305 3+ 4504 68

2250 2050

98 155 460

1 1 25

70 10000V 2350 2300 1 532

2050 560 1 00 98 2- 77096V

155 1 8729 465 460 82339

1 1 25 3769A 584785

· INSURANCE

200 90

310 1050

1525 200

100 90 310

1050 750 765S

700 800 700 800 850S

3950 3975 3950 300 305 305

1 6800 1 7000 1 6800 1 6500

460 460 175 200 175

1 050 1 100 1050 900 900 180 200 200 375 380 375 240 250 245

2700 3800 2600B 770 770

10-1000

700 1 0 1 63

236

1 60 5+ 35350

5+

200+

3220V

1 709 2260 3501V 1 000

1000 42700V

554V 16100

1 1 9653

305 295 70 68

2300 2100 2050 2000

100 95 160 155

465 440 1 1 50 1 1 25

5+ • 615 2+ 220

200+ 235 50+ 66

3+ 1 487 3404 3043

2s- ·85 31496

1550 200 100 310

1250

1 525 25- 59 103

28 751

170 30+ 90

300 . 10+ 1050 200-

700 700 100-

50-5+

4000 3950 305 300

1 7000 1 6800 1 6500 16500

460 460 1� 1 70

1 050 1050 900 900 205 200 380 375 245 235

2600 2400 770 770

200-

5-

25-5-5-

1 0 + 200+

5

241

43 1 327

46 8

1 1 4 383 35

410 50

730 1 1 43

6 1053 6536

INVESTMENT TRUST 3000

450 1 360

240 1 6000

310

700 1 800

150

205

3000 455

1360 255 250

1 6000 315 315

1 800 1800 50

725 2150

150 1400 1400

220

1 5- 49309V 5- 1 9590V

25-

1 600

4489V

9100

20+ 62000V 146088

PROPERTY 490 500 490 500 520 500 330 550 1 1 0 1 1 0 810 810 135 140 135 500 500 180 185 100 105

1000 30 30

105 1 1 0 108 400

� 80 325

130 130 500 470B

• 440 4� 450 570 570

80 85 80 180 180

-SUSPENDED- 10 450 450

50 55 50 460 475 470 140 145 140 165 165

65 70 185 200 125 125

30 500 wo

1 0...: 1000

700

5+ 400 400

1 7800V 3+ 61 200V

2000

5+ 1 5000V

30- 3100V

41 20V 80

100 3+ 127900V

1 1 400V 5- 4000V

15+ 300 74

5+ 461 800V

455 450 5+ 8 1400 1 340 1359

260 250 10- 326 3 1 5 3 1 5 54

1800 1 625 175+ 51

750 725 25- 58 155 135 s� 458

220 200 20+ 1 008

500 490

1 10 105 810 810 140 135 500 500 185 175 105 100

30 30 108 105 405 400

1 30 120 470 470 4� 450 570 570

� � 1� 1 �

450 450 50 40

470 460 150 1 40 165 1 50

70 68 200 200 130 100

30 30 500 500

10-

5+

5-10+

5+

3+

10+

30-

10+ 10+ 10-15+

25+

3322

59

61 5

1 19 21 50 93

187 693 106

612 1

31 30 42

8

1 2234

126 6() 35

368 55

4744 0

50

SABLE 'SAGEPRP

SGEPRP CP "TOMKOA

-TOTALS-

"CAPITAL 'CBD FUND "CENPROP "FEDFUND

GROPROP METPROP

" PIONEER SANLAND

"STANPAO 'SYCOM "TAMBOTI "TRICOM

UMDONI VETAUST -TOTALS-

AFEX SA ANCHUSA ANCHS12,5

"AMIC "A V I

A A BAN " BAALOWS

BLOKTEC BOLTONS BTADUN CGSMITH CONAFEX CULLINAN CURFIN D & H DUAOS EUREKA EUAEVST FARM AG FED VOLKS FEDVLK CP F S I FSI POAD F S GROUP FS GRP PO GAINCOR HUNTCOR HLH HUNTS HUNTS POA HUNTS CD IMPERIAL IMPHOLD ICH

"INBOARD KLIPTON KNJ LONG M LONAHO LUCEM MCPHAIL

' MALBAK MLBAK13CD MAL HOLD

. MLH15%CD MESSINA METJE & Z MICOR M & R M & R CD NATBOLT NICTUS PICBEL PIC HOLD PLACOA PLATE GL AALE RENTBEL

" RICHE MONT ROYAL ROYAL NPL AU HOLD SABVEST

"SAFREN SINCLAIR S A BIAS SAFCOR SWIMHLD TECHIRE TOCO

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ABI DALYS DISTIL ELSPARK INTELES KAAOS

" KEASAF KWV BEL OAKFLDS PLESUAE

"SA BREWS SABRW ACP SUTHSUN SPUAHLD SPUR SFW SUNCRUSH SUN BOP TRANS UN UNIEWYN UNIWYN10P WOALES WOM -TOTALS-

"ANG ALPHA BASAEAD BSG BSI

" BLUE CIRC "BOUMAT

BOUMAT 12 BUILDCO CONCOR EVHOLD

" EVERITE GOLDSTEIN

"GRINAKER GROUP 5 G5HOLD GYPSUM ILCO ITLTILE L T A LTA 1 0ACP MASONITE OTIS OVBEL POATHLD

'PPC SHOAEDITS SOLID STOCKS SUPREME YORK COR zozo -TOTALS-

"AECI CHEMSERVE OMNIA PHOENIX PAOCHEM

'SASOL SENTACHEM SENCHM PO STALCHEM TREK -TOTALS-

·ABHOLD

Satt'Jtti�y' 22· �_Ul_{ 1 989

260 300 225 235

240 290

77 1 1 2 790 260 675 135

68

450 435 2400V 190 1 1 47V 1 458

420 410 721721

PROPERTY TRUST

255B 305 305

225 240 1 1 250V

300 280 250 240 1800

290 200 � 76B

120 1 1 2 790 200 260 1 1 500V

685 675 31970 140 135 10800

70 68 5275 72995

INDUSTRIAL

410 410

255 250 300 300 <25 225 240 240 280 280 240 235 290 290

76 76 1 1 5 1 12 790 790 260 260 675 665 135 135

68 68

30 1 1

71 10012

5+ 400 5+ 91 5+ 371

1 1 3 10+ 230

5+ 219 10+ 1 528

2- 130 281

5- 336 234

10+ 2314 5463

502 12212

INDUSTRIAL HOLDINGS

620 1 500

9650 4550 4650

26 28 4225 4225

20 600

1400 1450 6350

350

340 380 390 850

25 28

350

390 295

455 465

800

1450

825

390 400 255

800 825 1 100 1 1 00

530 180

5300 48

1 1 00

175 190 140 1 75 � �

2000 2050 75 �

175 180 800 8 1 0 2 �

2025 2050

2525 30Q 400 400 400

2200 2250 1 875

45 46 550 650 675

2025 2100 5250

27 30 450

1690 1 700 170

20 25 85 90

230 250 3200 140 150

520 205 210

72 25 27 46 48

330 340

925 930 105 1 1 5

140 6000 6200 2600 2600

620 1 580 1 555 9700 4600

29S 4225

20 600

1400 6350

350 750 340 390 830B

28 390 200 355 465 825 850 390 380 255

1 475 815

1 1 00 1.100 1075

550 1 758

5300 50

175 140 175

2025 75

175 810 280

2025 260

2525 310 3908

2200 1 875 2200

45 550 650

2050 5250

27 450

1 690 175

20 85

250 3250

140 520 210

70 27 46

340 256 925 1 1 5 140

6000 6500S 2600 2600

45- 100V 972

1 1 500V

25- 10107

25- 1300V 1200

500 200

100 5800

3610

5 1 4Rr 5+ 57510V

5- 5000V 25+ 200 25 13279

200

22 5- 1 1 1 700V 5+ 2000

45- 2631 8500

5- 6900A 5475

50+ 63600V

1 - 3700 500

3100V 25+ 1650 50+ 1 060

1 - 12017 100

30+ 1 74467 5+ 20000A

1 0 + 21 4900V 1 000

50+ 4467

5- 2000

2+ 5000V 21 000

10- 6000

5- 6500V

1 400A

792734

1 600 1 600 9700 4600

29 4260

625 1400 6350

350 760 340 395 850

28

300 370 465 835

400 400 260

1475 825

1 1 00 1 1 00

550 1 75

5300 60

175 140 1 75

2130 80

180 8 1 0 280

2075

1 560 1555 9700 4600

28 4200

600 1350 6300

350 750 340 390 830

28

290 320 460 825

390 � 255

1400 785

1060 1075

520 165

5200 48

165 140 175

1900 70

175 770 280

2025

20-45-

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10-5+

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200+ 10+

100+ 10-1 0+ 10-

125+ 7+

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2600 2525 75-

400 390 10-2200 2000 200+ 1900 1875 25-

46 45 555 550 5-700 650 50-

2050 2000 50+ 5250 5200 100+

30 25 3-450 450

1 705 1 630 55+ 175 160 10+

20 5 10+ 90 85 5-

3250 3000 250+ 140 120 20+

220 210 10-

27 25 2+ 50 46 4-

350 330 1 0 -

9 30 925 120 1 1 5

6000 5700 300+

46 1

65 175

50 2312

40 202

47 2

1 6 90

340 3

449

147 15�1;

210 4

3 1 0

150 85

319 273

3

7 1 2

2250 99

157 6

450 2487

276 529

7 127

199

53 835 71

137 63

135 317

84 666

7 4891 1220 3585

120

138 1 26

788

60 413

60

93 143

51

27225 BEVERAGE,HOTEL & LEISURE

610 610 1050

185 1 95 200S 1 00

1 15 1 20 200 205 200

1 825 1 850 265 270

69 73 70 75 70

2500 2550 2515 2800

550 90

550

90 95 135 135

1 0000 1 1 500 1 0000 1400 1 425 1400

230 235 235 80 80

1 0

85 1 0 1 0 13 11

5+

50-

3+

15+

50+

5+

50+ 5-

8850

3000V

7750 4900 4400

8500A 100

9457 1

600 9100V

500 100

1 255V 13327 49600V

1 - 1 5023A 1 - 2000

138463

610 600 1 050 1 050

200 200 100 100 120 1 1 5 205 200

1925 1 760 275 270

73 70 70 70

2515 2450 2800 2750

550 485 90 90 95 85

135 135 10000 1 0000

1400 1 225 240 215

12 13

1 0 1 1

10+ 786 564

63 1

5+ 221 1 10+ 285 90+ 1092

5- 230 350

6 65+ 871

1 1 9 65+ 1 9

91 5+ 55 5+ 524

13 175+ 394

20+ 1609

2- 370 2- 2184

1 1 837 BUILDING & CONSTRUCTION

2175 290 295 290

50 37 37

1 650 1675 1650 600 610

25 65

900 300 135

370 360 650

460 200 160

1200

65 60

685 25 65

910 310 135

1250 1200 375

370 370 675

145 160S 460

220 200 170

1200 300 290

2325 2350

68 60

2350 195

1 35 72 74S

135 125

2100 2100 -SUSPENDED- 73

1 +

5-

2+

880 328

575 45

2423A

2000

3050V 909

700

1 00 3800A

500

15310

2200 2175 25-290 2�

50 50 37 36 2+

1675 1650 25-650 6 1 0 40-685 685

25 23 65 65

9 1 0 9 1 0 310 3 1 0 1 3 5 135

1200 1 200 375 375 370 370 10+

460 460 200 185 20+

1200 1200 293 290 3-

70 68 2-60 60

2450 2350 100-

135 135 125 125

2100 1875 225+

CHEMICALS AND OILS

71 98

1 20 25 44

1 592 623

50 76

100 7666

60 16

5 410

1 104

1 9 71

5

7 180

1 10250

1 875 1 875 5706 1 875 1 850 25+ 518 2375 2375 2375

340 340 24406V 340 340 90 90

125 150 125 130 125 1 350 1360 1 355 5- 51538 1 370 1 330

690 705 700 1 0+ 23480V 700 685 685 685 686 685

45 50 45 45 45 1 525 1600 1 525 75- 800 1 600 1 525

1 05930 CLOTH, FOOT, TEXTILE

200 240

4 329

5- 57 20+ 3367 10+ 403

1 - 1 7 58

75- 14 4788

47

'

Saturday 22 J��Y 1 9.89 - · o · o -ww w· w 'B.uy Sell L.ut v II HI LO II V

ADONIS AF & OVER AF OVER A AF OVR6PP AM SHOE ARONTEX

'ARWA BOLWEAR BUDGET BURUNGTN COASTAL

'CONSHU 'CONFRAM

CUTRITE 'OA GAMA

DEBNAIR DELSWA ENSIGN FRAME GLOOtNA GUBINGS JADE LHGALL

' LENCO MERITEX MOOIRIVER NINIAN POINTER POINTR CO PROGRESS REX TRUE REX TRU A

'ROMATEX SEARCON SEARCON C

'SEARDEL SEARDEL C

'SILOAK SKIRTS

'SABBM STERLING STREBEL TEX MILLS T E J TRAClO TRIMTEX

'UNISPIN VEKA -TOTALS-

ABEROARE ASS AD PROM AOVTECH AF CABLE

'ALTECH ALTRON ANBEECO AUTODEK AUTOPGE CAFCA CDS C.I.G. C-MATIC CONTROL eMS CAB DARMAG OATAKOR

'DELTA DIDATA

'ELCENlfl E\.GRO ElEX FMCOTEC

'FIN TECH FS-TEAM GBS HJCABLE JASCO KOPP �

'M & PO NUWORLD OHIO DtliO J .al,

'POWTECH PUNCH 0 DATA

'REUNERT SEOUEL

'SILTEK SPES COM SPl. SVPALEK

'TSI TEOELEX TRSERVE VENTRON VIOLAS YELLAND -TOTALS-

' ABERCOM ' AFROX

BEARMAN BERZACK 811.1:C BUFFCOR CEMENCO CEMENCO � CHUBB CLAUDE NE CLYDE OICOR DANECH DANECH CD 0-GLO D-GLO 9%C 'OORBYI.

'ED L BATE FENNER

'ALEXNl.lR FA ALEX GENREC G.I.C.

' HAGGlE 'HUOACO

LANDLOCK LANOLK PO MASTBOR METERS METKOR IIIINe:fEC MYNKAR NATL TROG NTH NEIHOLD

'NEI AFR 'RIH

SAFETEC SMITHMN SONDOR STANDRD TITACO TPN UNIHOLD UNIHOLD15 VALARO -TOTALS-

NAMSEA NATRAWL

'OCFISH SWA FISH WBHOLO <OTALS-

BRENMIL CGS FOOO CAOSWEP CROWN ELANGEN

'FEOFOOO FEOFO 7CP FEOF013CO FUNA GANT'S

'I c s ., & J

KANHYM lfBAKA IIW:MlAM MILIKIP PREM GRP

210 1 1 00 1 1 50 1 200

210 1 1 00 1 1 50

390 107 110 1 1 0

27 30 30 330 330 160 1 60

-SUSPENDED- 58 216

30 31 31 395 390

750 750 55 60 57

880 690 885 80 80

1 900 2000 1950 650

1250 1 225 140 140

1 425 1450 400 425 425

380 195 200 195 120 120

-SUSPENDED--1075 775

38 38 50

450 450 1 300 1250 1 300 1 300

1075 1090 290 300 290 290

65

75

90 1 90

26

314 300 295

260 260 30 27

270 65

200 190 80 75

40 40 105 90

1 90 27 2511

5+ 2000V

5+ 20000V

2+ 5+

3-5+

5-

5625V

3000V 2500A

1000 6600

1 000V

500

2400V

52300V 2500V

1 0 2000V

6500V

I OOOS

4600V

6400V

3107 500

2� 6014 1 32503

210 201

1 1 50 1 1 00

1 1 0 30

330 160

31 390 750

57 665

60 1950

105 30

330 1 60

30 390 750

55 670

60 1950

1250 1250 140 140

425

195 120

450

400 175 1 20

450

1 100 1 090 300 290

300

30 270

65 1 95

80 40 95

205 27

300

25 270

60 1 90

75 35 64

190 25

9+ 53

50+ 25

307 5+ 145

50 1 00

1 + 35 61 22

2+ 49 15+ 449

3+ 59 12

16 5- 40

24

15+ 1013 25

• 15

10- 16 10- 39

1 1 1

3- 50 24

5+ 53 40

5- 64 5+ 274 6+ 198

1 5- 68 1 38

3623 ELECTRONICS, ETC.

1250 1250 40 45 40 90 85B 80 80

385 385 7600 8000 7900 4300 4400 4300

60 62 60 30 35 33

145 155 155 120 1?0

35 35 22 21B 90 100 95 50 20 85

1 1 0 370 175 425 225

50

1600 385

35 135

55

20

55 22 67

1 15 380 440 235

55

47 52 22 85

1 1 0 370 1 80 440 230

55 300

1685 1685 450 375B

60 37 70

370

35 135

55 37 70

370 70 20 .90

220 223 220 1 00 1 10 1 1 0 200 200

2050 2050 -SUSPENDED- 35

600 925 925 1 00 1 05 1 00 270 280 270

720 225 205

75 60

38 38 725

240 240 205

1680 1680 75 60

100+

15+

943A 4400

500 900V

5100V 200 400

IOOOOV 1 6600V

3000

5+ 1 1900V 2+ 7000V

3900

1 400V 6- 14100S

5+ 29909V 15+ 39450V 5+ 22020

25+

5+

20-

1200 2000 51 70A

1 1 5800V sooov

52446 639

1000 1 900V

500

2600

200

10- 2000 364577

ENGINEERING 250

300 700 465

275 275 2700 2700

300 750 660B

480 65 60

600 600 160

1 1 75 1 225 265

30 25 14

1200 265

25

85 1 2

•2000 205 525 330 300

790 90

1 1 0 60

400

50 410 200

,3?50

70 70

100 320

1 30 1 10

80

14 35 35

15 90 15

200 1950

2050 2050 210 525

375 350 300 425

2400 2200 600 795

95 95 90

1 10 60

405 400 30 30

50 410 210

1 900 3750

775 775 73 70

75 1 00 340

65 40 455

130 1 1 0

80

15+

2-

600 900

5355A

1 000A

300 400 4 1 3

1 9750V

3500S

300- 37720V 5+ 10101V

1 0000V

20+

5+ 20+

500

17218

500

7500V 500V

2000V 1 1 6257

FISHING 925

80 2525 1 125

220

3000 1550

60 80

695

675

125 1335

360 50 25 65

4600

975 975 75B

2525 1 1 50 1 1 30

230 220

60

1 600 62

230

52 130

1 350 2250

380 53 90

'4700

57 3000 1600

60 250S 695 600 675

52 130

1335 2250

370 50 25 65

4650

10+

FOOD

20000 200 1 00

1 000 21300

200 220

100- 1 500A 3539

4040

1 1 00 5+ 10000

10+ ' 53600V 1309

tO+ 19160A 2900

16700V

50+ 6140

1250 40 85 60

385 7900 4300

65 35

1 55

36 21 95 47 52 22 85

1 1 6 390 1 80 450 230

55 300

1 750 375

35 135 60 37

20 90

225 1 15 200

2050 925 1 00 275

38 725 240 205

1 725

75

1200 50+ 40 85 60

385 7600 100+ 4300 100-

60 • 2-33 2 -

125 30+

35 1 -20 4-90 5+ 45 2+ 52 22 65

1 10 6-370 20-1 50 30+ 400 10-210

55 300 10+

1685 65-320 55+

35 135

55 5-37 6-

20 90

208 10+ 1 10 5-200

2050

925 1 00 s-270 5-

38 2-700 240 205

1680,. 45-60 15-

2750 2700 50-300 300

480 60

1200 285

27 15

35 90 1 5

1950 2050

210 525 350 300

460 60

1 1 75 265

25 1 4 33 90 1 5

1950 2050

205 510 325 300

30+

25+

1 -1 -2+

,_

25+ 25+

5 + 15+

25+ 5-

2500 2200 300-795 790 5+

95 90 5+

1 1 0

400 30 50

410

1 900 3800

775 70 75

1 00 340

85

385 30 50

410

1 900 3750

775 70 75 95

320

130 125 1 1 0 1 1 0

80 60

975 60

2525 1 1 50

220

950 65

2525 l 1 25

204

• 57 57

25+

1 5+

150-

2+ 20+

50+ 5-

20-16+

3000 2850 150+ 1700 1 600 100-

60 60

695 600 875

55 130

1335 2250

370 53

· 25

670 600 875

52 125

1300 2250

340 50 25

25+

65+ 3-5·-

10+

30+

4650 46(ll'\ 50+

51 267

67 9

10 64

'32 54

300 402

196 1 1 20

497 70 62 25 16

437 20

1364 745 427

53 1017

1 5 137

35 79

1345 94

1 8 1

3659 205

66 31

21 636 105 1 13

92 1 70

23 5

140 14493

1 1 49

218 90

50 1 0 63

121 43

100 1302

245 17 94 18

225 25

377 1 65 241

58

564 20

2 3

4 1 3

1 25 21 91

1 13 1 1

238 50 46

4623

338 24790

22 74 38

25262

1 1 9 1 5 1 5 65

630 5

1 1 30 67

1546 677 193 677

90 246

160

THE CITJZEN market crction summary

......,. '11011 OA111

-TOTAlS-

320 325 ta+ 43500 . 325 - 1 7+ .. 2035 2050 2050 40100V 20!50 2025 25+ 1111 204028 10719

FURN A HOUSEHOLD •A.-EL '.vcol.

IAANfTS MSHAUS

"EllERINE -AIR � F�NTEC -GNtOUl

'.IDOIIOUI' IIORIC!l.S oc-­PICAPU PICAPUID P!lfSTGE PAICEFN R(IOWj()

'IIUSf1M< SAYSTEL TAFUIAG 'fCUW1S -TOTALS-

I>DCIJ � CMtl �s DUICEL

'GEMI'IIIE-A 'GENT'WRE-B -..or ....

'IICCNilHY 'METAIII POIIT QAL._

'WICOOI !WICOOI c -SPAAECO TMHEEL

•TOYOTA VNJ:NI MSCO -TOTALS-

ns l'ID 1075 1100 107'1

40 50 -45 50 45 'D:J(N

I QOO IQOO 145 150 160 2900A ..,

45 50 50 $+ 116301JV 75 15 10+ 1«JJO

100 105 IIID 225 231) 225

10 1'5 72 ... .. t25 tlO tiS s- tooo

180 , .. :10 37 � 1000

10 15 15 .. ..

20 25 2D 1'2277tl 20 22 20 25 •

13>471 MOTOR 1'5

2116 125 ..

1200 1200

105

..

11150

., 210 125

11150 45

11!1118 1200

110 105 .,

1350 . 1 400 1 200 1350

325 1350 1350 325 175 .. 1!0 000

580 7SOD

50 1000

175 1!0 1!0

••• 000 515 66 16

1'5110 16

1125

2+ 3800 5+ 1000

SOD

300 5+ 51100 �· 1000Y

.1211

20+ HJXI

14581

710 115 15+ 20

45 45 711 1000 10DO -

150 150 ll2 150 1 50 1

50 45 173 75 eo 15+ 210

100 100 28 225 zzo S+ 15

75 10 S- V 130 125 5- 10

:10 :10 I 37 37 2+ 211 15 15 42 • 115 373 35 20 15- 210 22 20 2+ ltD 20 20 a

., 11 210 216 130 125

181150 111150 45 45

1200 1 1 50 105 100 ., 511

1350 13150 1350 1350

350 300 175 17$ 1!0 150 110 100 5115 575

7SOD 7500 56 50

1125 1100

s-5+ 5-

10+ 5+ 4+

25-

10+

50-5+

25+

S:IOI

-Ill .. • 2

.. • 10

,,. •• ••

5 3 1

62 •

:10 I I

1D17 PAPER A PACKAGING

AAIICOM NWCOol c -AC ALEXW\'T />LFA ARIES COA CAA\.COR CLEOO COATES

'COHSOl CTP CTP '"" pp OIW't1TEC . -... HORTORS KOHLER lllfTAl Q.O

·-AI( 1'\ASTAl PRESS -

·­_ ,. 8IH'I\j( SUNI/EST 1-.co -tmALS-

145 1<&0 150

130 150 140 65

-SUSPENDED- 55 ..

2350 2400 2375 110 810

28 ...

1300 440 440 250 250

1225 1350 1250 200 200

40 40 UJOO 1125 2000 2000 3825 3050 3825

40 40 290 41125 4000

-SUSPENOE0-1825 180 160 150 110

40 40

25+

25+

1100

7fXN 2200 2100A

....... 18DOV

2$- 12879 5+ 8700

3/XXN 38771

145 140 140 130 16 16

2400 237$

1300 1300 440 440 1250 1250

210 200 40 40

1125 tU) 2000 2000 :1825 3800

45 40 4875 4800

170 1 52

232

02 40

27511 71 7

10- 75 20

25+ !IS i

25+ 1Z1 5- 33

50- 1073

10- 2580

PHARMACEUTICAL A MEDICAL

at 7172

'ADCOCK 'CUH1CS ClleST ca OI'11C -::co fil �IITRAD MEOCUH MEOCLN CO NORISl>l SAfMl) SAFNEO 0

'SA ORUG ·-

UN COLO -TOTALS-

2300 2210 140 145

85 -

105 a 40 45 42

21 2D 113 02

85 17 15 90 ..

.. 225

275 280 215 231) 245 -

,., ,.,.

110- 'l.«N 2400 2290 1 1D-1830()..t. 145 140 15+

85 85

2+ 2000 <&2 40 2'+ 1 - 1900V 21 20 1-

82 62 1+ 10050 fl5 13 2+

90 .. 2000 .. .. 3029 275 275 I 245 235 10+

37414

22 "

210 2<7

.. 1 :10 :ZS1

13

PRINTING A PUBUSHING 1223

·- P£RS •A1101JS CAII10N � LlfHO ""1M ASH _.. PUIIUCO

·r w L VADERlAND -TOTALS-

'CUI 'HMIJ) HNeLO s

12000 ..

:II 85

6400 230

1725

480

740 12000

.., 10 ..

131'5 1375 1U ••

100 100 6400

240 236

3700V

SOD

200DV 250

I liDO 7450

STEEL & ALLIED 1775 1750 1850 11'5

1825 475 -

440

I liDO m- 11345

1 1 ... SOD

740 740 12000 1 1 800 200+

., 1 1

70 10 90 ..

«< «i 100 100

6400 .....

115 7

2«1 236 s-

f7 38 13 07

S3l

1 770 1750 1- 1945

20- 617 20- 662

S+ 2111 10- 407

. IJIII(() USK014� -TO)' AU!- 24445

RETAILERS A WHOLESALERS •m

- 35 34 loX) 35 40 36 AUTOOIP 80 85 .. 8EROERS 120 125 120 BIOCOIIP 875 -8fOCOAP c 1125 125 BOY- 200 :ISO CAS>aL 21111

'CUCKS 710 716 110 'CNAGALO 1025 ICI25 COHTRAV 52 CURNOW 35 37 35 OECI10LD 56 $7S 01ALAIOV 25 ORMI'C M 10 M OAOPIHN 40 40

'EOGMS 2100 a:10D Eoo.tll8 co 2100 -rows eo .. " � 12 ... ... ·� 5300 -RWERS 640 Ml FIIAIER CO • FIIASCOH ' ,., 210 2!110 OAIICOH -SUSI'eCIED- 42D GRESHAM 125 130 H1SCORE 380 ... -HOiriW(EJit • 70 • BJOFF£ 100 1NTHOI.O 000 540 1NTH 7%CP 875 .. 7 IN11-l t3CO 1025 442 JAZZ 140 145 140 KJUET 10 75 _.,,.CP eo KJMET13CO 100 J2B LEFIC 2575 2e25 -� 1 .. MASHOlO 170 170

'IIETAO 435 440 436 ·- IZ75 1325

IIILSTAN 100 100 ·o K t450 tsoo 1soo PEN� 130 1f() 160 PfPGAO 17!i0 teoo tns PEfiGRO """ 115\

-�= 13 3800 = PEPKOR n1o ,_ PEPIC:Ofl 13 '30M PEPSTOR 1250 122'5 - 550 575 ...

"f'IICIOPAY 1185 1200 1115 REOGES 35 :15 SAHUC 45 56 SCOCUK 200 215

'SCOR£ 545 1545 SHIE\.D .. 10 • 9IO'IWT 210 210

=� • ;: = SI'£CTIIUII 40 :10 ll'nZ -llliPEMIED- 110 -TEX 411 40 - co • 115 STEAN$ 170 TARRY 525 550 525 •ttl.....IOY 250 265 256 -.o <16 -.D P 55 "TJlAA()AO l&S 170 185 TIWlGR PP too 100 TftAOGA CP 180 1., TRGA A"'CP 120 1 20 mGR 13CO 115 mGRt30CD 170 165

5+

IQ-

4500V

2300 2200

500A 2200

SOD 27200\1

,2- �= too- 100 2- 2730DV t- 11200

54 5+ 30005

10+ 2000 5+ 108200Y

7918

IS+

20-

5+

1000 SOD

300

9 11805 5344 171XN 4100

500 tiJIN

85 7900

5100

VADEK 31 :n 11XXN WAl..HOL.O 475 495 ..a6 1G:XP/

'WALTOIIS 410 SOD 4115 5- ... 'WOOLTI!U 2<50 2480 664 'WOOLTI!U-A 2450 2500 2450 .flO

-TOTALS- · 11112'11 · 8UCWl

lS 34 36 lS ., 75

120 115 1&5 1&5 230 230 21115 205

t- 155 2+ 1105 5+ 521 5+ tn

15- 62

no 750 10+ 3D 11

507 1025 1021

52 50 ... 7

21 ... aa as �-

25 25 3 70 115 2+

Is: 40 38 ... M:JD 2000 300+ all 2000

1 5 0

•11 JCMt D1

17 t6 8+ • ., 4+

540:) 5200 100-.., 125 15+ m 200 190 10+ 129

uo 125 385 3115 68 ..

5+ I:WO 10- 137

1347 575 540 36-

140 140 245 n 75 2012

2600 2600 50- • 85 Ito 170 435 435

1350 132'5 100 100

1500 ,.., 160 110

1775 tn5

20- 114 015

25- Ill . ..

134 141

4

3600 3575 223

122'5 1225 2 $80 5liO 10+ 74 1200 1t50 35+ ..

:15 35 2114 57 55 117

215 200 5- 149 sea 545 1s- .. 10 .. 2- ... m :no 211 380 .. 13 ns 750 25- ••

50 :10 20- 11 40 40 1013

540 525 15- .. 256 250 5+ 107 48 45 3- .

165 165 943 180 180 52

31 31 515 4815 520 485

2500 2<50 2450 2400

1 - UIO 30- ... 25- 18:1 ..,_ 113 50+ 153

11858

CROOI(fS LOI<SUGR

·rONGM.T -TOTALS-

l25o 3300 3250 3250 3250 13

l.IONMATCH RE .... BEH

'REWGRO TEGKOA 118 Ul1CO �JQTIII.£.

'CARGO LASER

1500 1800 1130 1750 1750 44675 1800 1130 50- 205

4t67 218 TOBACCO A MATCH

231) 230 l160 1106 150

1150 1155. f180S 680 710 700 700 720

220 230 220 350 360 350

10+ 2)9400V 10+ 42100 1G+ 6400 20+ 3000

230 4 810 10- 3491

1100 10+ 2045 670 tO+ 284 700 5- 141

f750 50- 10 -

10- sooov 230 220 10- eo 100 350 345 5+ 858

A B B RE VIATIONS The Johannesburg Stock Ex­

change

going up going down �EVtRSE·UP OVERSOLD LAGGA RDS

MOODEII S 1/l.AKS ELS8URG SAMANCO OAKFLD8 CUT RITE I C S FURNTEC MARK MOT MJM SPARE CO IEM SCOCLIK TEUOY

RAND EX MCP!iAIL SAMSTEL SPECTRUM OPT

VILLAGE ELS8URG VENTERS SAMANCO LEPLAT LEPLAT

changes coming

SAMSTEL SPECTRUM M&M SHERLEY

ION DEA WORLES SOWITS OP UNION TIN

PU WOM CA YELLAND CA E R P M CA HAGGlE CA MASHOLD I'll SUREGRO

INBOARD ORYX SOWITS JASCO MILLYS QUANTUM ANBEECO

42,8-40,0-20.0-20.0-18,8-l&.l-15,1-15.3-14.2-13,7-12,0-10,5-10,0-

9,0-8.8-8.3-8,3-8,0-8.0-7,6-

V ALUE VUL·DENS VOLU�E DE BEERS 4720980 MINORCO 6673435 RICHEMONT 2938905 ANGLO AM 2809789 LYO PLAT 2621300 VAAL REEF 2128425 REMBR BEH 2034900 RU6PLAT 1 757290 M & R 1399200 GENCOR N 1269359 CON GOLD 1242768 AURORA 1 1 96370 DRIES 1029786 HAGGlE 829810 TIGR OATS 81 5600 WSTN DEEP 797945 GENSEL 791576 1 c s 715050 SASOI. 700451 IMPlA T6 6112120

SHR.NAME

GRDOTVLEI FURNTEC LESLIE REI CO MOODER S GAZGOI.O ROYAL NPL VIERFONTN YABENG ou ELS8URG BRACKEN SOUTHGO AD LEASE

-CENGOLD PRIM G M LEPLAT JASCO LYD PLAT

SUPER T AURORA ROYAL NPL REI CO SA RES BK CENGOLD MCP!iAIL FAIRCAP MER�ST KNIGHTS JA$(;0 LYD PLAT GENCOR N ou FURNT'EC UNIDEV T E J LESLIE MANSERV SOWITS OP

3,3708 2,0019 1,6433 1,0495 1 ,0000 0.8972 0,8328 0,6974 0,6969 0,4998 0,4595 0,3854 0,3673 0,3492 0.3282 0.2670 0,2552 0,2487 0,2411 0,2287

highlights

AURORA SUPER T REI CO MERVEST KNIGHTS DE BEERS REMBR BEH ROYAL NPL AICHEMONT CENGOlO ou ALLIED JASCO INBOARD GRESHAM MINOR CO FUflNTEC SOUTHGO U8S TIME

5205C0 480352 461800 41 8000 374900 24482i 239400 214900 1 74467 132800 127900 120241 · 1 15800 1 1 1 700 106200 103000 96300 88182 82339 77096

LE.P MOVE %-MOVE I 0-VOLUME

440 21)- 4.3- -50 ... 1 1 1 + +

510 25+ 5 t + + 125 !.. I + 140 5.; + 53 0 O :J + 20 10+ ' Jtl + 65 10+ 1 t+ +

220 20+ 1011 + !50 3+ � + +

305 tO+ 1· + 320 10+ + 100 3+ .. + 205 5+ 2,5 v 'f30 .... :.'.l v

25 o no v 110 0 u 0 v 825 0 0 0 v

55 0 0.0 4740 10- Cl v

8000 96300 39800

461800 13736 27673

214900 6000

62000 127900

29100 6800

88182 1!600

� 132800

14577 726&5

1 15800 555()0

showing strength

Page ce1

EY: EMnlnga Yield. ·ov: DMdencl Yield. Buy: ...,.,.. Sell: Sellera. &.Mt: LMt s. ... D-11: Dly'a mow In -· DY: Dly'a vol· -· .,....., s .._. 3 ... higher than -.. A doncMa 5 U.... higher than ·-... v denalea 10 ... higher 111M -.. I).HI; Hlg'-1 price for ..., In -a. D-Lo: � price for clay in <:enlo 0-11: Dly'l mo"" In �nil.

OVERRHT REV DOWN �SLIE REI CO GDMMA

QROO�I PGA FIT AMAPRDP PICPROP 80\.TONS T & N SKIRTS PICAPLI SUREGRO

VPT INDEX OVERACTIVE

ROYAl.. NPL + REICO + MERVEST + AURORA + FURNTEC + INBOARD ou + YA8ENG + QUANTUM HAGGlE GRESHAM + GENCOR N + RICHEMONT + KNIGHTS SOUTHGO + REMBR BEH + RAND LON + GOMMA + LESliE + AUTOPGE +

.FAl..CON ANGVAL PP M + F MERITEX HAGGlE MJM ADCOCK SUREGRO MARCONS FURNTEC CONTROL MASH OLD SUNCRUSH REI CO SAGEPRP STERLING TRNPACO FAIRCAP OISA ANCHS12.5

LEADERS ROYAl.. NPL MASTBOR VIERFONTN ou GDMMA MIMEAT THRUPUT REI CO AUTOPGE

' TRACLD · A T COlL FURNTEC RAND LON BRACKEN FS-TEAM ZAAJaMJ YABENG PROPGRP SUTHSUN ELCENffi

100,0+ 29,4+ 25,0+ 25,0+ 25.0+ 25,0+ 20.0+ 18,0+ 14,8+ 14.2+ 1 1 ,1 + 11.1+ 10.7+ 111,3+ 10.2+ tD.D.t 10,0+ 10,0+ 10,0+ 10,0+

102900 96200 34900 21 700 1245C 1 1 695

7068 6471 4900 4644 3460 3233

RPS 30 WKS RP5-5 DAYS RPS-10 DAY RPS-30 DAY GOMMA LESLIE GEFCO CADS WEI' LUCEM SUN 80P MSAULI IHHOI.D YABENG 3HOCRAF AUTOPGE CONTRAV BRISTOL 1 LO�NE Uf!ITRAN METKOR LENCO ELGRO CGS FOOD NATSEL

MASTBOR VIERFONTN

• GOMMA 022 AUTOPGE RET CO RAND LON FS-TEAM SUTHSUN CENGOLD MDDBEE TECHIRE YABENG PROPGRP DIOATA BRACKEN

' OALSIG MJM S A EAGLE STERLING

ll£TCO VIERfONTN MASTBOR GOMMA AUTOI'Gf ou LESliE DALSIG DIDATA CENGOLD FS· TEAM DIGOCO FOCUS SUTHSUN �UllfE RAND LON BRACKEN SUN BOP PROPGRP WOM

l.OOIClRAII. 1oi081LE 25 26 25 1 - 4000 2f.i 24 157 675 JIID .. ....... .... ""' co PRESTO

'PIJTCO RACY SUREGAO SUIIGAO CO

•11lfHCOR 'lMITRAN

-TOTALS-

AOCORP NOA .,_ AN.ET OEF ANJET BAICOIIEN &LOCHS IIOWCALF 8AOICEAS CASHWTH CENIIAG � CitiZEN CtlYHLO CFC DEALE FII.An GIXlOAI.l. HEUCAI. 1NfASI< lNICI£M � LY>ml< 'IIACMEO IIAXMECH MEINEST IIESTOIIE foiMEAT YLl.YS ta..l.Y 11P IIOLYSLP IIUSICA 11US1CA CO PALS POS �0 PIA TillE PO-HOLD PRESIIEO PRSIIEO CO I'!I0.1EC OLWmJII OU1CKCO OUICKCO N CIUCIIIlJW -R001KRL SHEALEY SHOCIW SOLCIEII SI'ICER SOf'ER T THRUPUT TOL UNrTECH WEDGE WITEHEO

175 180 11'5 175 175 ... ..

t40 140 2000 140 135 5+ J83 es ro 85 n 65 10- 343 to 95 90 10- 5001/ tOO vo 10- 5

110 120 2700 2800 2MlO 2800 27'00 100+ 4

380 380 200 380 380 321 1 1800 2153

DEVELOPMENT CAPITAL

13

90 2A 35 35 18

10 25S 33 38S 13 1 1 � •

---- 45 Ill Ill ., .. .. 25 26 115 • eo

:10 115 so

28

11 115

.. 18 ..

19 3D 20 10 25

. . -71 .. • S2 • " 21 20 •• &J ..

o7 a .. 115 .. :f7 " 111 -10 .,

----- IS rr as 55

520

as 35

illl 25 · a· 12 12 I 1 :15

35 -

25 20 · • 45 : ·1 : • :

.. .. 25 ,. 10 12 12 �- �; . ... •. 42

20 1!8S ..

2- 3iooA

I <SOD

2700

1 + 41tiJOIJY

160011

2- 5800011

5- 'D:J(N 53DDV

480352V 22000

'3- 100005

105Cf11

25 25 10

15 13 1 1 1 1 Z1 25

52 45

57 10115

2+ •

5+ 608 28 22 3- 1530 60 ss 10+ 226

115 115 10 511 511 ..

75 75 • 40 40 3S8

3D 211 2- 02 30 26 t- 5044 10 • 25 23 13 1J

2+ 301 2- 14

..

go 80 71 30 25 3- 274 35 35 21

620 15 445+ 22 27 23 1- 11155 12 12 140

1 1 2116

25 20 .. 45 18 15 25 25 12 ·10 1 1 10 45 42

5- 250 3- 145 3+ 20

1112111 2+ 31

IQ 3- 300

-

REI CO GOMMA LESliE VIERFONTN AUTOPGE MASTBOR DIDATA LUCEM FOCUS POWTECH GROWALK LYOEJC CRULifE LAN ClOCK SUTHSUN INHOI.D YABENG BS1 MID WITS BRISTOL

NEWH40HS

S A EAGLE SAFREN SUTHSUN SUN BOP MINORCO RICHE MONT LESliE YABENG AUTOPGE BIVEC RAINBOW GOMMA BOLPRO ADONIS 'IDH TECH!flE

2600 32SC

550 1400 6485 1690

510 220 155 480 325

75 185 210

85 27

NEW LOWS

200i SCi SC i SC + 35 + 30 + 25+ 20+ 15+ 15+ 10i 10< �: 2+ 2+

YEllAND INBOARD SHERLEY WEDGE

60 10-50 5-20 5-42 3-

market act.lon

THIS SECTION of The Citizen lnveatore' Guide Ia a computer ex­tract of shares made on the basis of technical signals. Where a signal Is made In nNipect of a particular shant, this slgnai may be conflnn­ed lf h .._. .....,. elsewhere In this sec­tion.

\

. FOR THE · · . LARGEST

SELECTION OF EXCLUSIVE .

HANDCRAFTED FURNITURE .

. IMPORTED BUREAU • BARS • . . BEDROOMS • DININGROOMS • SIDEBOARDS • MIRRORS •

CASUAL. CABINETS • SHOW CABINETS � · CHAISE LOUNGE • .

!J( � 2( {/�Lan C!ta(t: . 2 LOVEDAY ST SOUTH, EXT SELBY PO BOX 49025 JHB 493-6131, 493-6165, 493·6171 ROSETTENVILLE 2130

VISIT ONE OF THE LARGEST SHOWROOMS IN THE COUNTRY

Saturday 22 July -�9

ACROSS 1 Profit from contact with

outsider.ll' bringing in a little extra? (6,7)

8 Provide information in a . series of notes ( 4) 9 Mount an ongoing com-

plaint (3) . 10 Relatively simple knot-(6) 11 Faint magic diffused

when sung in church (10) 13 Stones falling for a greet­

ing (4)

DOWN l Fortune needed to cover

equipmemt for a vessel {7)

2 Innocent girl at home having a man tum in (7)

3 Go down briefly to do reverence (9)

4 Reserve a container (3) 5 Another thing to keep us

in the dark (5) 6 .Something light seems

quite an achievement to the lady (7)

14 Hard to be always among - 7 It's not at all relaxing the lasj of these (6) when the number is tum-

-16 Later not prepared to be ed on (7) . so broad-minded (8)

19 Firm with member dam-12 Recite nothing untoward

in a group (7) aging true source of pro- 15 Sufferer one caught out cessed data (8) displaying energy (3)

22 Ban rejected according to 17 Fearless king of the cat rule (6)

· ' centre (4-5) 25 Team of oxen crossing a 18 That's everything fin-

river, maybe (4) ished! (3) 26 Rocket man setting the 20 Harry having work and

pace for female and child · stuff (7)

(10) 21 Landing perhaps on a 27 Talk of having to be back particular Tuesday (7)

in time (6) 23 Get rain unusually in 28 Ring off in a hurry to get North Africa (7)

a drink (3) 24 Sufferings inflicted on 29 Bird seen by one church- one during a long period

man not having a dance (7) (4) 26 Bend wood to produce

30 Polite commwlication be- something edible (5) ing possible on them at 28 One that goes round tak-times when Trappist rules ing caps off to see the re-are relaxed? (8,5) suit of expo5ure (3)

SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No 3498 ACROSS: 1 Body and soul. 9 Probate. 10 Satanic. 11 Ass. 12 Endured. 13 Exposer. 14 Din. 1� Mount. 17 Stad. 18 Ditto. 20 Darts. 22 Elf. 24 Counter. 25 Squared. 26 Set. 27 Indulge. 28 Outside. 29 Royal assent. DOWN: 1 Blood-and-thunder. 2 Diag.ram. 3 Ahead..4 Dis­senter. 5 Octopus. 6 I:.andscape artist . 7 Spread. 8 Scored. 16 Underseal. 18 Deceit. 19 Outplay. 21 Shuttle. 23 Fidget. 25 Stops.

I QUICK CROSSWORD No

M:R.OS 1 Common (6) 1 Muse (6) 4 Stick (6) 2 Eleva�e ( 4) 7 Annoying {9) • 3 Produce (6) 9 Obligation (4) 4 Incorporate (6)

10 Way out (4) 5 Hold (4) 11 Begin (5) 6 Excited (6) 13 Revolve (6) 7 Stubborn (9) 14 Supported (6) 8 Performance (9) 15 Cope (6) 11 Platform (5) 17 Teacher (6) 12 Trample (5) 19 Concluded (5) 15 Talisman (6) 20 Location (4) 16 Vigour (6) 22 Bight (4) , 17 Decimal (6) 23 Unfading (9) 18 Mend (6) 24 Score (6) 21 Level (4) 25 Ash (6) "22 Incline (4)

SOLUflON TO QUICK CROSSWORD No 34� ACRO�: 1 Protect; 8 Remote; 9 Adamant; 10 Hinder; 11 Reveal; 12 UJtimate; 16 Affluent.; 20 Travel; 21 Afraid;

• 22 Prosaic; 23 <;:oncur; 24 Adulate. DOWN: 2 Rudder; 3 Temper; 4 Conclude; 5 Gemini; 6 Cordial; 7-. Hearten; 13 TatU:rcd; 14 Balance; 15 Affront; 17 Unique; 18 DaJ_BSCI; 19 Resist.

·

RolE CITIZEN

RADIO SOUTH AFRICA 5.00 Early Birds. 5.30 The News. 5.35 Calling All Farmers. 6.00 The News. 6.05 This New Day. 6. 10 The Gentle Alternative. 7.00 The News. 7.1 1 The Weather. 7.15 The Gentle Alternative. 8.00 The News And Weather. 8.10 Topsport. 8.45 Price Tags. 9.00 Help Yourself. 9.15 Pets Gazette. 9.30 The Sound Of The Cin­ema. 9.45 Wheelbase. 1 0.00 Travellers Check. 1 0. 1 5 In Your Garden. 1 0 .30 Saturday Devo­tion. 10.45 Congratulations. 1 1 .00 News Head­lines. 1 1 .05 Saturday Morning Swop Shop. 12.15 Saturday Swingalong. 1 .00 The News. 1 . 1 5 Weather. 1 .20 Forces' Favourites. 2.30 Topsport. 6.00 The World at Six PM. 6.10 Over The Rainbow. 6.53 The Weather. 6.58 Reflec­tion. 7.00 News Headlines. 7.03 Saturday Night Playhouse. 8.03 My Music. 8.30 Vintage Radio: Round The Home. 9.00 The News/Weather/ Bulletin For Ships. 9.1 2 Stranger Than Action. 9.25 Benediction. 9.28 National Anthem. 9.30 Join Radio Allegro.

RADIO SUID-AFRIKA 5.00 Stasie Opening. 5.05 Saterdagsessie. 5.30 Nuus. 5.35 Landbouradlo. 6.00 Oorden­king. 6.06 Saterdagsessie. 6 .15 Nuus. 7.00 Na­weekjoernaal. 7.1 5 Topsoort. 8.00 Nuus. 8.10 Weer. 8. 1 3 Naweekjoernaal (voortgesit). 9.00 Klop Die Kampioene 9.30 Bekend Maak Be­mind. 1 0.00 Gelukwense Aan Bejaardes. 1 0.04 loof Die Here. 1 0.1 5 Oggendgodsdiens. 1 0.30 En Boplaas Sing Koortaal. 1 1 .00 Nuus. 1 1 .05 KrieketNinkel en Koljander. 1 1 .30 Burg Bur­ger. 12.00 Muslekateljee. 1 2.30 Saterdagsa­luut. 1 .00 Weer. 1 . 1 5 Nuus. 1 .25 Afrikaanse TrefferS. 2.00 Topsport. 6.00 Aanrlnuus. 6.1 0 Topsport. 6.30 Boereorkeskom��isie. 6.55 Die Weer. 7.00 Nu usflitse. 7.03 Boekevat. 7.08 Om Die Kampvu ur. 7.35 Die Stem Van Die See. 8.00 U Eie Keuse. 9.00 Nuus. 9.05 Weer. 9.06 Deuntjies Oor Dekades. 9.30 Na Radio Orion.

ALLEGRO 9.30 Station Opens. 9.32 Music For Everyone. 10.10 Musiek Op Eie Werf. 1 1 .00 News. 1 1 .1 0 Nokturne. 1 2.00 Midnight Oil. 1 .00 Eine Kleine Nachtmusik. 1 .30 Station Clo5es.

RADIO S 5.00 Robin Clark. 6.00 Keith Lindsay. 9.00 Phil Wright. 1 2.00 Mark Stewart. 3.00 Dave Charles. 7.00 Barney Simon. 10.00 Clive Smith.

702· 1 .00 Dave Thomas, Darryl Grant or Alan Mat­thews. 5.00 Andrew Brooks. 6.00 Malcolm Russell. 1 0.00 lan Logan, 2.00 Paul Stephens. 6.00 John Robbie with a Phone-In show on sport. 8.00 Cocky Two Bull.

SUNDAY RADIO SOUTH AFRICA 5.00 Sunrise Serenade. 6.30 Piano Playtime. 6.55 The Heart In Tune. 7.00 The News. 7.03 Weather Forecast. 7.1 0 Yours and Mine. 8.00 The News 8.10 Weather Summary. 8.14 Church Service Announcements. 8.15 Awake My Soul. 8.30 In Touch. 8.45 Short Story. 9.00 Prelude. 9.30 Announcement and Bells Morn- • ing Service. 10.30 Sixty Plus. 1 1 .00 News Headlines. 1 1 .03 Sunday At Home. 12.30 Faith In Focus. 1 .00 The News. 1 .05 Weather. 1 . 1 0 The Silver Lining. 2.30 Talking Of Books. 3.00 French Opera. 4.00 Far from the madding crowd. 4.30 Strictly Speaking. 4.45 Talking About Music. 5.30 Talking Of Nature. 6.00 The World At Six PM. 6.05 Weather. �.09 Church Service Announcements. 6.10 London Letter. 6.20 The Contemporary Muse. 6.50 Classics International. 7.30 Announcement and Bells Evening Service. 8.30 Test The Team. 9.00 The News/ Weather For Sea And Land Areas. 9. 12 World-

HUBERT

WHAT A FIND/ tn; CJtoe IN A MJL.l.K:;IN AND :t SNAPPED IT UP /(f THIS RIPICl.Jt.OlJS �/ IT 1JL8T'

&S A �/

SAM AND SILO

:IA9Efl, POI'IT JUST !.IT I)OIN6 I'IOmiNh WHILE X'M 60HI!! PO &o.W;-1)411'f6 CONSTIZJJCTII/e /

" ��

'+liK'f POH'T "1bLJ 8e Ll/(e mAT I COMIC �TftiP CAT lMitF11!4-P 1 J .I. IZEAP TJ.IAT He MAPE l t--*-'_e_M_JL_J.JO_�_J.MT __ YI_-e_A_ft/

THE BORN LlDSER

BONERS ARK.

ELWOOD

WAAT TIE HECJ( �4-P X PO WJTI.I fJS MIU..ION1

wide. 9.25 Benediction. 9.28 National Anthem. l----------------------------------------9.30 Join Radio Allegro.

RADIO SUID-AFRIKA 5.00 Stasie Opening. 5.01 Sonopserenade. 6.00 Die Lewende Woord. 6.25 lvoor en Pe­daal. 6.45 Ontwaak My Siel. 7.00 Nuus. 7.03 Weer!Temperatuur. 7.08 Koms Van Die Konin­kiyk. 7.55 Erediens- en Programaankondi­gings. 8.00 Nuus. 8.10 Weer. 8.13 Aile Volke Loot Die Here, 9.00 Erediens. 9.45 Tot Eer Van Sy Naam. 10.00 Gelukwense Aan Bejaardes. 10.05 Goeie.Ou Kennisse. 1 1 .00 Nuus. 1 1 .05 Sondagsolis. 1 1 .30 Wat S� Die Bybel. 12.00 Alma! Se Gunstelinge. 1 .00 Weer. 1 . 1 5 Nuus. 1 .20 Wyd En Syd. 2.00 Jong Suid-Afrika. 2.30 Radioteater. Die poedel met maanhare soos 'n leeu. 4.15 Uit Vergange Se Dae. 5.00 Oop Ge-. sprek. 6.00 Nuus. 6.05 Weer. 6.08 Erediens-en Programaankondigings. 6.1 0 Andante. 6.40 Sing Tot Die Heef. 7.00 Eredienste. 7.45 Die Stem En Die Melodie. 8.30 Hoe Verk1aar U Dit? 9.00 Nuus. 9.05 Weer.,9.06 Versalbum. 9.30 Na Radio Orion. •

ALLEGRO 9:30 0 Come Let Us Sing. 10.02 The Organist. 10.50 Die Week op Allegro. 1 1 .00 News. 1 1 .1 0

.Musiek Vir Die Laataand. 1 . 1 0 Elne Kleine Nachtmu'sik. 1 .30 Station Closes.

BRIDGE WITH Rill

THE curious point about the follow­ing deal from the Greece versus Sweden match in the 1 988 bridge Olympiad is that the contract was misplayed at both tables - and then misdefended at both tables so that there was no swing on the board. Dealer North; love atl.

WEST • 0 8 5 2 • A 3

NORTH • 10 9 3 • 8 7 6 5 + K Q J 6 + A 7

EAST • 6 4

+ A 2 + K 0 1 0 5 2

• 0 4 + 1 0 9 8 7 3 + 9 8 6 3

SOUTH • A K J 7 • K J 10 9 2 • 5 4 + J 4

ed +a and exited with his remain­ing trump, but that line of defence was not good enough. Declarer won the second heart in the closed hand and led a diamond to dum­my's king; he then crossed to •A and led a second diamond, and West was endplayed. He had to choose between switching to a spade or conceding a ruff and dis­card; and in either case -5outh's spade loser was destined to <lisap­.pear. ·

Onoe delcarer had blocked the heart suit by running •s on the first round, the defenders at bolh tables

._ ___ R_A_

D_

I_

0_

5 ___ .. SOU111 WEST NORTH No 2NT(1) No

EAST No No No

- had a ctiance of defeating the con­tract After winning with •A and cashing +a . . the winning defence is to exit with +A and another dia­mond. This renders dummy's dia­mond honours completely.useless, for both defenders still have a

5.00 Robin Clark. 6.00 Keith Lindsay. 9.00 Phil 1 H Wright. 12.00 Mali< Stewart. 3.00 Dave 4H Charles. 7.00 Barney Simon. 10.00 �ark Ste­

Dble No

wart.

702 1 .00 Darryl Grant, Dave Thomas or Alan Mat­thews. 6.00 Frank Sanders. 9.00 Gary Ed­wards. 1 .00 Allan Pierce. 5.00 Rick Emdin -"Reelln' In The Years. 8.00 Glen O'Donovan. 1 1 .• 00 Paul Steph�?ns - Starstreams.

(1) Showing a gOOd raise to at 1rump and there is no.way back to least three hearts. dummy if South draws the out-

West led +K. and decla[er won standing trumps first. In the fullness in dummy and made the tempting, of time, therefore, South must con­but incorrect, play of running •s at cede a spade trick to suffer a one­trick two. West won with •A. cash- trick deieat.

..

Page 24

Index

IES�;_

THE CITIZEN Saturday 22 July 1 989 ---------------------------------------------------

402-3120 Miscellaneous & Motors 402-3134 Recruitment Fax 402-7538 001-008 ANNOUNCE­MENTS

03 To Be

Married

W E D D I N G C a r d s . Special Offer From R75 I 1 00 Tel (01 2) 9987855 ALL HAS.

06 Funeral Notice$

BROWN The Cremation service for Wil­liam Richard Windsor tale ol S.AS.SA.R. Retirement Centre Wilfield will be held in St Lawrence Anglican Church Dis· covery Roodepoort. Today Sat­urday at 1 1 h00. No flowers by r e q u e s t . D o n a t i o n s t o S.A.S.SAR Retirement Hospital Fund Box 13165 Wilfield 1467. A V B O B M E S S E L AAR STREET ROODEPOORT TEL (01 1) 760-11 58 AT YOUR SERVICE Reg 05/20069/�

08

AUDREY best wishes, every h a p p in ess. Love Felix.

DADDY Happy Birthday and hope that the Lord Bless you to see Many More ES­SOP & BILKES.

DEAREST Corley. Have a pleasant day on your birthday, and many happy returns. From your loving wife Teresa.

LERATO Ndlovu. We wish you a happy b i rthday a n d we both say grow up little gi r l , because the world is waiting for you. From Mom, Dad, Sarah and Mpho.

PRIN S LOO Chante l . Happy birthday girl. We all love you . From Mommy and Jesica.

P R I N S LOO C h ante l . Many happy returns. Love f ro m Oupa Dudley and Ouma Annie.

YOKO happy birthday. Lots of love Uncle Willie. Aunty Cecilia, Belinda, Marius and Desmond.

BREN D O N WACKS �;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;�....-. Happy Birthday my 009-020 Son may you h�ve PERSONAL many many more I SERVICES Love and Mis$ you :.� ..,._....,.liiiii,__."'-AII My Love Daddy Brian.

BUNNY GRAMS W i s h al l C A N ­CERIANS a happy b i r t h d a y . T e l : 643-4020.

PRIVATE

SALE We will place

your

advertisement

for 4

consecutive

ctays ln The

Citizen

Classlfleds

for only

R15,00 (ext

gat). Tel

402-3120 and place

your ad · now!

PS: Tills rate

appllea to 3

linea of copy ODIJ.

09 Personal

SPmNGBOK PAWN BROKERS CASH NO 637 Ontdekkers Rd

N e w l a n d s / Roodeppoort We buy/ Sell, lend cash against lV's Tools microwaves, jewel-·

lery, g old coins, cameras, toys or almost anything of v a l u e . P h o n e 4 7 7 - 5 4 2 8 ( H 477-8848.

ATHIENIDES Basil, Yvonne and Family would like to thank all Friends & Relatives, for sup­p o r t a n d Love received during our sad loss of our Son ZENON on 22/6/89.

W BALLARD residing PTA area contact Crai� Smith in con­nection with Alfetta. Tel 81 3-3733.

CASH LOANS

We can arrange loans immediately from R1 000 to R10 000. Repaymetb over

2 Years PHONE

RADFIN TRUST 331-fi17 (all howl)

17th FLOOR, .

KINE CENTRE 141 COIIIIISSIONER

STREET JHB

ABE Amazing fortune A BEAUTIFUL therapy t e l l e r . A d -vice.(o1 1 )26-6565 treatment for the ex­

ecutive. 725-6550.

HORSE RACI�G Do · you bet on horse A

racing and are tired of losing? If so con­tact Terrace Racing C l u b P . 0 . BOX

P R O F F E S I O N A L Hygenic Unhurried m a s s a g e . T e l 23-341 8. Ladies Re­quired.

63 4 7 , G r e e n h i l l s -------

1 7 67 o r p h o n e A STI MULATI NG and 693-3448. · relaxing full body

m a s s a g e , jactizzi ,and steam Tel 724-7879/7601 OPEN SUNDAYS.

------ - - - -

1 4 Escort

Agencies

AT PRESTIGE TEL:337-571 4/5

ASTOUNDING PRICES PAID FOR

Gold Jewellery Damaged Jewel­lery, Diamonds, Silver­ware, Coins & Kruger­rands. ( 0 1 1 331 -61 52/3/4/5 34 on Weilligh Str, The G rays Bldg,

PEUGEOT Rapport. As n e w , s h o e s . R650.825-2328

T U R B O R E P A RA­T I O N S done on trucks, Datsun Exa's, Charades, tractors. Misubishi, V.W Golf, etc. 24 Hour service All hrs HENRY (012) 376-2354.

43 Arms and

Ammunition THE BEST

MALE & FEMALE STRIP TEASE

ARTISTS I N TOWN

TEL: 643-221 6

A STIMULATING Full body massage. Tel 9742298.

( N ext to C arlton � Centre). -=: �iii�ii 32

Business Opportunity

1 0 Wanted/

The Collector

A SWEDISH MAS-SAGE

B y A t t r a c t i v e M a u r it ian Ladies S a u n a , S te a m Bath. Free Drinks. 9 a m - 6 p m 61 4-7269/71 40.

24 H r s . C r e d i t Cards. 240 Jeppe str. ·

CHRISTIAN FRIENDS protea Fr iendship Club. Tel (01 2) 21-6158 or 98-3494 or write to: P.O. Box 451 0, Pretoria.

CLOSE CORPORATIONS

F o r m a t i o n 792-1 708

035-046

Used guns bought and sold at USED

GUN EXCHANGE. 86 Noord str, JHB.

(01 1 ) 337-3655. ABOUT COINS

KRUGERRANDS REPUBLIC COINS

Suite 423 The Grays BldQ

34 Von Weilligh Str (01 1 ) 331 -9831/ 2

(01 1 ) 331 -7751 Open Saturdays.

A TOYOKIO EUTE AGENCY MERCHA NDISE B E N 0 N I T E L .l'"m.;;;;IR;.;.· ;;;;;SA;;;;;L;;;;;E_....;;,

44 Building

Materials ·

BRITANNIA 1 987 Gold Proof Set at R3800 Call C h a r m a i n e 447321 2.

CASH PAID FOR All JeweHery Diamonds Watches , Pearls Silverware 884-2693 (4 lines) 1 2 F l . O f f i c e Towers. Sandton

MASSAGE I wi l l ease you r mind with a relaxing s e n s u o u s m as­sage. Don't delay call the massaging experts today! Your place or mine?

Call Yanko 23-1 864.

ACUPULCO HEALTH C e n t r e T r oye & Jeppe, Pan ' African House 209 . Enter our world of para­d i se by Or i ental LadieS. Call LISA 23045 7/8 1 Oam -·spm. ·

City. , CORPORATE CLUB of

Sandton. Attractive

( 0 1 1 ) 4 2 2 - 2 8 9 0/ 54-3535.

.

MONIQUES Alberton 869-81 02 1 4h00 to 21 hOO.

NOW OPEN ATTRACTIVE

ESCORTS BenonV East Rand 54-71 76/7/9 87 C r a n b o u r ne Ave, Benoni DEBBI & JOSE Ladies Required.

PLEASURElAND Tel 23-1 1 38/0905.

PRIVATE collector re­quires following VHS video tapes A Clock work orange, Steam­ing or any other

ladies to spoil you . -------­

- adult videos. Tel (01 31 4)23776.

1 1 Personal Services

A BODY rub by Linda ( T r a v e l o n l y ) 642-9916.

Sauna & Jacuzzi. 803-7028

EXECUTIVE SAUNA & MASSAGE

Open 7 days a week. 887-3333

HAWAIIAN Massage. Be the first to experi­ence o u r exot ic massage. Sauna & S t e a m . T e l 404-1304.

PROTEA Escort Ser­vice. Tel (012) 322-0428 or 322-0352.

ROMANCE ESCORT AGENCY

5 Klein Str, Opp. D i p l o m at H o t e l . 29-3582/ 29-3490. Al l c redit cards. O p e n 1 2 p m t o 2am.

EXCLUSIVE Penthouse SEXY ESCORTS (012) private Body Mas· R E LAXAT I O N M as- 322-0357 322-3770 sage. Tel 402-0253. sage Tel 6429987 all hours, Protea. (Travel Only).

1 2 General

Services

CARPETS & UPHOL­STERY C l eaned. Superior method Tel 4843840 X 632.

' -<II' PANEL BEATING Try us

for a better quota­tion, for cash we are the best in small jobs. 6730289.

1 3 Health and

Beauty

A BEAUTI F U L and relaxing way lo un­w i n d . Exe c u t i v e stress etc (Est 8 yrs) . Nancy 838-7830.

STATUS HEALTH SPA

Massage, Jacuzzi & Sauna. 602 Pan Afr ican Hse. 77 Troye btw Bree & Jeppe Sts. Lovely Ladies wanted. Tel 23-9027.

STUDIO 54 R O X A N N E , CARON, ANNE Tel 725-5808.

TWENTY Lovely ladies to spoil you . COR­PO RATE C L U B . 1 1 a m t o 1 2p m . 803-7028.

1 5 .Jewellery

A BIDER DEAL WE BUY - PAWN J e w e l l e r y a n s Diamond Exchange Tel 725-1 820/1 66 Kotze St. Hillbrow.

ALL CASH WE BUY I PAWN Tel (01 1 ) 23-6524, N o 2 2 4 J e p pe Street c/r Troye. CASH for Gold jewel-

l e r y , c o i n s , diamonds. Up lo R20/gm . MORGOLD 420 G l o u c es t e r House 66 Rissik str' T � (01 �29-4000

35 . �-- Pets for Sale

GERMAN Shepherd p u p s . P e d ..

FOR A L L b u i ld i n g materials. Topsoil, buildingsand, rock­ery stone, copy stone. Tel 795-3074 all hours.

894-6426. :===========::::::; BULL TERRIERS Reg.

R250 Tel 7301 804.

45 Machinery and Tools

ROTTWEILER pups. C O N C R E T E w a l l KUSA. R300 2 fe-. panels. R3 each. male (01 351)74472. . Phone Gordon (012) 800-1402.

S T A F F O R D S H I R E Bullterries. Kusa reg Tel 6806488 o/h.

37 General

Sales

A L E X A N D E R 3 D Eng raving machine. In perfect condition. Pr ice n egot iable. (01 2) 28-7396 all hours.

ALMOST New para-· plegic wheel chair. R350. (01 2) 21 6904

C O M P R E S S O R B a r g a i n s T e l 6 1 5 - 5 0 1 2 o r 61 5-2828.

COPIERS AND FAX New and reconditioned. Fully guaranteed. Servic� ing of all copiers u n d e r - t a k e n . From R595. Tel 887-1 203/440-5945

MATTRESSES Double bed wit h mattress R250. D o m e s t i c b e d s R89. Robettes R75.

50 Re��ls

A.M. TRANSPORT for cheapest r emoval Tel 61 3-3096.

AFRI MOVE For local and republic wide furniture removals P h o n e ( 0 1 2 ) 3370922.

NODDY'S TRANS PORT

Local and long -distance 7 DAYS A W E E K ( 0 1 1 ) 969-3907

CRISPEL REMOVALS For all removals at low r at e s . T e l 7 8 2 3 6 0 3 o r 888-1 052.

51 ' Home Builders/ Repairs

FOR all paint improve­m e n t s . P h o n e : 893-1 792. (all hours)

RE - UPHOLSTERING Free Quotation. Tel 2 9 - 6 628/9, C i ty Upholsterers.

Wardrobes R99. [ � Best brand beds �� � a n d m a t t r e s ses GUIDE

· large range below � factory prices. I 61 1

' ANDAN TRADING .

Caravans _

8 w 0 I h u t e r s t ' ... C_A_S_H_F

_o_

r_

C-ar

-a-va

_n_,

s. Jeppe 614- 1 351 (01 1)8� 4228

.Saturday 22 July 1 989 THE CITIZEN 61

., MA-Z'DA 323 t.3L 1 987. caravans R 1 5 , 0 0 0 . A / H

.... _______ 763-3228. GOLF 6L MANUAL

M E R C E D ES B E N Z 230-4 auto, radio, 1 9 7 9 , S p o t l e s s throughout R1 5-950, terms,irade iRs. Tel Dough 827 -366�. ._...,

1 975 TOURAWAY fold up caravan. Sleeps 7. Very good cond. Extras. R2 600. Tel 27-6281 '

CASH FOR CARAVANS

We pay R200 extra on your best offer. Tel KAS or JAPIE (01 1 ) 826-6241

66 Us..!d Car

Sales

ALFA GTV 2L, immac cond , n ew mags lyres well kept. Car m u s t b e s e e n R20-000 neg. Tel (01 1 ) 81 8 451 7

BMW 3181 1 9 8 6 . u t o m a t i c . R26 500. Phone Bernie (012) 10 1 091 , a/h 26 3786.

MERCEDES 200 1 9 8 3 , e x c e l l e n t condition. Phone Kevin or Joe at 493-3932.

VOLKSWAGEN

R!Tape, Aircon 1 987 model

free Cargo warranty M E R C E D E S B E NZ Tel Deon or Tony 230E. 1 986, A/C ,

Becker Radio, cen-Recondlt10118d Motors 614-2191 O/H tral locking system. All englne uvalllble, A1H Deon 613·2147 Service r e co r d s

1 Year guarantee or Tony 766-4063 avai lable . l m mac cond. Urgent sale.

Tel 873-2277 t R75 000. TEL Albert MERCEDES 380 SEA 825-25 1 8 0/H or November 1 985, ice .-••••••· R i c h a r d o n blue, sunroof and a]l · 827-8549 NH extras, ex c e l l e n t I VW CITY 1: -------condition with R.W.C .-!!'!'1!!�!!!!!!!1---• 1 GOLF's & 1 METEOR GLI and service recor_?_. HONDA 1� ac 4A86-500 neg. Phone� 150 & 1so.

· & , . JmA's I'' 1986 model. R1 6 000 Peter T e m p l eton

160.1 1l A few models to I ����:1 .8ai�nJ:.J�Jf.)

970-21 24. 1 choose from 1 •

FORD HUSKY 2L, L 1988

Low kms, must be seen

Free Cargo warranty

Phone Deon or Tony

614-2191 AIH Deon 613-3147

or Tony 766-4063

A Few models to II Free CARGO warrantee � --------choose from Tel Deon or Tony I NISSAN 1 �oo Bakkie

Free warranty I 0111 614-2191 Ml ·I De lux wt�h canopy Financed arranged ·I Deon 613-3147 or 1 a�d rad t o , 1 982, Trade-ins accepted Tony 766-4063 · Pnce R8 950, terms,

Phone BRIAN I • trade ins.Tel Dough 614-2191 0111 680-8412 Al1l

' •••••• � 827-3663.

, •••••• ,1 ' .BMW 3 SERIESI '

1988 0PEL GLS

NISSAN EXA TURBO 1 987. Model. R21 500. Contact Bernie (012) 10 1 091 , a/h 26 3786.

BMW 528i 1 986, new --------• I 318i, 320i,

323i II 1984 to 1988 11 models

33 000 kms, Co Demo R!Tape,

alarm!imm. NISSAN SENTRA 1 .6

1 988 model. R20 000. Contact Bernie (01 2) 70-1 091 ; a/h 26-3786.

series, sunroof, 5 speed, immaculate,. fiJII house, R38 000 o . n . c . o . T e l 838-7486.

CALLING all damaged cars, get your boss t o phone caren

•• • • • • • • • • MOTOR • : VEHICLES : :wanted For : • CASH •

ONLY R19 750 Rk:lllnl 58-8940 or

55-7009 .....

I A few to choose from I i I Tel Deon or Tony I 1 614-2191 o111 1 1 AIH Deon 613-3147 l j •or Tony 766-4063 -------­

........ .--------.

OPEL KADETT CUB 1 9 8 8 m o d e l , d e o . R1 6 500. Contact Bernie (012) 70 1 091 , a/h 26 3786.

about. ROBERTSHAM Jhb. 3-SIERRA S/W 2.0 GL B 1 r m s , p o o I . 1 987, 5-speed , one R1 1 0,000. 680-2397 Late or telegraphic tenders wi not be considered. C H CORDIER owner. Beautiful condi- 1 _______ _

�in (012) 21-5300/1; aft> 86-5575.

Town Clerk HERTZOOVILLE

----------TOYOTA

CRESSIDA'S 82/86 C ars and S/W , i n stant f i ­nance, dep. neg. RWC. Tel 837-8826/7.

TOYOTA Cressida 2.8i Exec, 1 988, very low m ileage, R40 000 o . n . c . o . T e l 838-7486.

TOYOT A C r e s s i d a G l i 6 , 1 98 4 , ex­cellent c ondit ion. R1 3 500 as is, no of­fers excluding gst P h o n e M r Ell i s 849-3629 after 6pm.

VW BEETLE. R4 500. Phone 660-2603 All hours

67 Commercial

Vehicles

FORD 4 Ton D0607, good runner only R 9 - 0 00 o . n . c . o . Phone 900-2034.

"'RD D14 1 4 flat 8 ton R26 000 with RWC.

J w Foune Town Clerk VILJOENSKROON

79 Stands/Farms

for Sale

BARGAIN Meyerton. Beautiful 1 2ha plot, R1 7 500 cash. Close -to R26 freeway. P h o n e H e i g a n Es tates (01 612) 22303/ 4 or ( a/ h ) ( 0 1 6 1 2 ) 23025.

U6-138 � -1 EMPLOYMENT .1., � �

MEYERTON

1 27 Male/Female

:: INDIAN, Coloured and

N o n -w h i t e m a l e staff. Salary R800 R900 p . m . A d ­minstrative and fig­ure aptitude. Std 1 0 essent ia l . Phone (012) 5�-231 0.

URGENTLY REQUIRED

Wholesalers for the maketing of chalk to the various out­lets. Phone (01 1 ) 52-7404/5

1 31

on'ly 1 5 mins drive from Alrode/ Al­berton . Beautiful 2ha plot. R1 ooo dep, balance of R24 000 over 5 years. Tel Heigan E states ( 0 1 6 1 2) 22303/ 4 or (a/h) (01 612) 23025. I I Technical I Accom

8!.atlon =::::::::::::::::=:::: AANDAG aile huur­

ders! ! ! W/stelle en huise beskikbaar in aile dele van Pta. (012) 322-2985.

MATERIAL CON­TROL MANAGER

R3 300 - R3 600 plus car. 5 years experience in production planning, stock control, purchas­ing and material hand­ling. P R O D U C T I O N ENGINEER 393-1 352 a/hrs. 'e DAVID GEORGE • BANK

REPO$SESSIONS URGENT SALE FROM R995

Tel 868-3332/1 91 2, ----��- - 868-2802 o r A/H SIERRA S/W 2.0 GL tlllr 869-6575.

081·084 il l �E� � R3 300 - R3 600. QU A L I F I E D TOOL­MAKER COMMODORE 2.8 GL : MOTORS :

auto, '\984, with air 'e 54-5879 • 1985 OPEL

1.8 GLX 60 000 kms, all

extras

con. & R/T, new 54-5820 lyres fitted, spotless j _e e e e e e e • condition. R1 3 500. Terms, trade ins. Tel Dough 827-3663.

CRESSIDA GLE 1006 lll®eL R19 000. Contact Bernie (0'\ 2) 70 1 091 , a/h 26 3786.

D A T S U N P U LSAR 1 983 1 . 4 GX R 7 -500 o.n.o. Tel 61 3-3888.

ESCORT XR3 1 988 model. A20 000 Contact Bernie (01 2) 70.1 091 ; a/h 26-3786.

HONDA SALLADE ! 1 300

1 983. H/r, a/c, C/White. Tel. Martin (01 2) 21-5300/1 ; a/h 86-5575.

HONDA SALLADE 1 300

12.����1wc. C/White. 21-5300/1; aft> 86-5575.

JETIA GLS

1987 vw GOLF GTi

46 000 kms, mags, mint condition

ONLY R24 950

Richard 58-8940 or 55-7009 MI

ONLY R1 4 750

Richard 58-8940 or SS·7009 A/H

' ...... , j HONDA's 130, i · 1 150 150" I I ' I ' 1' I J ; 1 160i I �;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;=:;:::=;;;:;;� ; I All models to choose. I 986 i from R/T, Alcon 1 II Free warrantee I

BMW 318f• 11 Tel Deon or Tony I 2 Door, R!Tape, 0111 614-2191 I

white 1 Ml Deon 613-3147 I 48 OOO kms t .or Tony 766-4063 .

. ........ , ONLY R25 950

·-

BMW 3 & 5 SERIES

A Few To Choose From

Free warranty Finance arranged

Trade-ins Accepted

TOYOTA COROLLA

A f�w to choose from, Free warranty,

finance arranged, trade-ins accepted.

Phone BRIAN at 614-2191 or Al1l

680-8412

1 ------·p······ I OPEL MONZA I � 1.8 Gli : I 1 987/8 models lo : I choose from I , 1 Tel Deon or Tony I ! I 0111 614-2191 I

· I Alii Deon 613·3147 I or Tony 766-4063 , .......... . :..::1

DEPOSIT 88 Ford Laser 1 .3 L 87 Cressida 2.4 GL WT 87 Golf CSX

86 Jetta CSL 86 Sierra 2.0 GL SIW 86 Honda 150 86 BMW 316 85 Cressida GLE 84 Nissan Exa Turbo 84 Corolla 1 .3 L

100 others available

MAGNES TRUCK &

CARS TEL 622-250415/6

or a/h 733-3631

HYPER­MOTORS

opp. Pick 'n Pay Boksburg "DEP FROM 15% ONLY"

PM 83 Hi-Ace 30 Bus............... R899 83 Kadett1.6SR................ R285 84 Skyline 2L Gl AIC ........ R420 84 Ascona1.6 GLS............ R360 84 Audi SOO E Auto............ R699 84 Corollt1.3 GLL........... R375 84 Alconi1.8 WB............ R410 84 llazdo626S. ... , ... _,.,,., R415 84 lauzu KB 23 L£ ............ R388 84 kcodes- 230E .. R1 299 84 Mazda626SL ............... R415 85 Gcm 1 1 GTS .................. R515 86 Langley 1.5 Gl ............. R509 86 Clt&slda GLI61fS........ R799 86 Kadett1.3TC.r............ R470 86 NlssonTracl<.,4x4...... R876 87 Niuan 1400 LOY.......... R580 87 Hllux 16 LOV ....... -...... R599 87 Jetta t t GSX AIC ...... ,_ R685 87 BMW3181 Exec............. R855 87 GoHGTI 16V ................. R885 88 CHI GoH........................ R530

INCL 1 YEAR WARRANTY

Rnan� arranged m: 823-224617 ;s

AIH 825-4553/ 892·1207

Steve Potgieter 8 1 , Private sale. R 5 - 4 0 0 . T e l Micheal 484·4072 e x t 2 1 4 7 W . 674-1 401 H.

Phone BRIAN 0/H 614·2191 AIH 680-8412

-------·- ._ ______ . M/BENZ 230

1 980. h/R, A/C, RJT, mags. Tel. Martin (012) 21 -5300/1 ; a/h. 86-5575. -------

M/BENZ 230 }2f!OJ;j,lr��S{{!; .r��O..�

TOYOTA l.ANDCRUISER

4x4 SIW

DO YOU N EED WH EELS

URGENTLY 86-557�--------

MAZDA GLX 1 988, automatic, demo. A23995.

1988 22 000 kms, many extras R1 25 000

Including RWC Phone 71&71251&17

or 805-2471 Alit

Is the deposit your problem TEL: DON (Urgently)

(01 1) 812-1200 EVE 53-8250

1 987, 5-speed, on<>., �•--------

rc-;.er. Beautifil condi-f" ISUZU WFR N3, experience in body, axle, CNC machine pro­gramming. E L E C T R I C A L ENGINEER

Tel M�rtin (012) 21 - (Bus) -1 987, Phone 530011 • a/h 86"5575· Kevin or \toe at

82 Business for

Sale

�_q __ qQ_q? --------------- �- ----· HERMANUS For the buying and sell­i n g of p r o pert i e s , businesses and farms, as well as auctions ar­ranged.

R3 300 - R3 600 N3, maintenance and plan­ning experience. QUALI F I E D E L EC­TRONICS, LEATHER AND PRODUCTION MANAGER

....... I NISSAN I SENTRAS I 11 1.3 & 1.6 I A few models to I

I choose from I I Free Cargo warranty I I Tel Deon or Tony I 1 0111 614-2191 1 .. AIH Deon or Tony • •••••• 1 ---

1988 COROLLA

CONQUEST 40 000 kms, mint

condition choice of two

ONLY R18 750 Richards 58-8940 or

55-7009 alh

MIBENZ 200, 230, 280,

(W1231, (W1241 A few to choose

from, Free warranty,

finance arranged, trade-ins accepted. Phone BRIAN at

614-2191 or Al1l 680-8412

H.P. CAR SALE Opp Pick 1r Par lloksbulx

80 BMW 528i Ex .... 83 Cresida GLX

Auto ................ . 83 Ford 1 .8GL ..... . 84 Bantam 1600 + 84 ��:1t.iiniii05: 84 XRJAir Con ... .

86 Sierra ............ .. 85 Avante Air Con .. 85 Toyola 1.6 GL

Auto ............... .. 86 Hilux 1600 ....•... 87 St81Wagon GLE

PM R400

R425 R310

R365 R390 R41�

R510 R560 RSOO R387

87 Kiideii""·f··c;;; RS60 1.8 Gl .............. R540

All Payments over 42 Mts 2 Year Warranty

Tel 826-3523, 826-4273

Fax 826-6022

NISSAN CW41 rebuilt 1 989 sleeper cab, dubble dift , mechan­ical horse, R95 000 with RWC . Tel 8 6 8 - 3 3 3 2/ 1 9 1 2 , 868-2802 or A/H 869-6575.

P h o n e C a r l t Properties (02831) 2· 3623; 6-1 530 office hours.

R3 300 - R3 600, plus car, Responsible for control l ing , develop­m e n t , i m provement, quality system. Liasing

68 090-124 -� � with suppliers. Motorcycle LEGAL DRAUGHTSMAN

Sales NOI'ICES NS, N2, mechanical =· .:::;.:; .. ;;,.,;:;; .. <;: •• ;::. -::·-===i. I .... ________ .. _V"_ - ��:��

at��:!'in� r:a:f� 1982 KAWASAKI GPZ

1 1 OO,R4,500. A!H 763-3228.

BUMPER 1 1 4

Sale of Business

fice. DIESEL MECHANIC Housing, medical, pen­sion, free. P H O N E (01 2) 55 -2310. EXCHANGE

R e c o n d i t i o n e d plastic or chromed. G uaranteed l i ke new. Save yourself H u n d r e ds o f Rands.

SALE OF BUSINESS

Notice is hereby gNon in terms � ����.�.��������it �! __ '7'" ___ _

Tel . 673-31 28 or 474-871 9.

FC TRANSMISSION Automatic or manual gearboxes repairs or exchanges on all makes. Call 26 C e ntral Aven u e , mayfair, JHB. Tel 839 2856.

lhe inlenlion of l J Fourie (Eiendorns) Bopcrk carryiny on business as a pharmacy under the style ol Kosmos Pharnt/!CV at Chari Cillieras1raat 36, Standerton to dispose of the said busiii&s together wi1h all assets thereof aler the expira­tion of a period of thirty (30) days from date of last publica­lion hereof to Gerhard lganlius Crous who will thereafter carry on the said business, at the same addr9SS, and undef the same style lor his own account and benefit. HACK, SHJPEL & ROSS 2nd Floor Standard Bank Chambers Church Square PRETORIA Ret 354/EG.

VILJOENSKROON AND

HERTZOGVILLE MUNICIPALITIES

NOTICE NU MBER 22/1989

I TENDERS; RECONSTRUC-75 liON/RESURFACING OF

H TENNIS COURTS. OUSeS Tenders are hereby invited for for Sale the reconstruction/resurfacing of 1'---------' six (6) tennis courts at Vil-joensl<roon and four (4) tennis

URGENT SALE IN TRIOMF

courts at Hertzogville. • Inspection of the silas have been arranged as follows: Vitioen;:!f,oon: Wednsday, 2 AJJ-H�F\e�d'fre� :.,�;}�:e: of the Town Clerk, Vil­joenskroon: Hertzogville: Wednesday, 2 Au­QUSI 1969 al 14h00. The poten­tial tenderers meal at lhe office of the Town Clerk, Hertzogville. Full detail/Specifications will be

AUTO ELECmiCIANS S a l . R 2 5 0 0 R3 000. Free hous­ing, medical and poension. 5 por­t i o n s . Qua l i f ied. P h o n e ( 0 1 2 ) 55 231 9.

DIESEL MECHANICS R2 500 - R2 800. F r e e h o u s i n g , medical and pen­sion, 1 4 positions available. Qualified, with expe rience. For interview, come to 4 02 , N o r v i n Building, 466 Gerrit M a r i t z S t . P t a N o r t h . ( 0 1 2 ) 55 231 0.

PETROL MECHANICS Salary R2 500 - R2 700 plus bonus system 4 pOsitions. Qualifi�d with previous expertence. Phone {012) 55 231 0

provided during the inspection 1-------­of I he sites. Tender documents are not pro­vided. Sealed lenders marked "Tender Tennis Courts" must reach the undermenlioned respectively not later than Friday, 11 August 1989 at 12h00: . The Town Clerk Private Bag X02 VILJONSKROON 9520 The Town Clerk PO Box 35 HERTZOOVILLE 2690 T ooders must be valid lor a peri­od of at least 30 days countable from 1 1 August 1969. The lowusl or only tender will not necessarily be accepted and

PARTS ASSISTANT

Required By a fully fledged Ford franchise. Must have Ford experi· ence. ·salary negotiable.

Contact

Phone Bernie (01 2) 70-1 091 ; a/h 26-3786.

I I - · ¥tt'"� 1_, � •--' ------· -· -·--· ..

Owner very negoti­able. Double storey house, 3 beds, 2 baths, diningroom, tounge, study, tv room/ family room, beautiful kitchen, new carpets, dou­b l e g a r a g e , laundry, se rvants quarters with toilet. R 1 2 5 000 owner will consider offers f r o m R 1 05 0 0 0 . Don't <;lelay Phone now to avoid dis­apointment. Phone Johan Nel at oi!B-37192:

J DE BRUIN (01 1) 869-7323 NOVA FORD tt,tttt�RTQN no reason tor the rejection ol a

tllliTIU>r.'<Wilt.llll..!!!iveno ·1ft cot­respondence will be carried on bv the Town CouncilS ,_, .u.-------

Page 26

131 Teclmlcal

INSTRUMENT TECHNICIAN

R27,50 p.h. Repair and maintenance wo rk. Food and single accomoda­tion provided. TEL 834-8552.

MEAT MARKET MANAGER

For George, Pretoria and various rural areas. Salary R2 500 - A3 OQP. Medical aid, pensi�. bonus plus 1 3th che­que. Experience in sales, promotions, with admin. management abilities. Phone (01 2) 55 231 0.

MEAT MARKET MANAGER

For George, Pretoria and various rural areas. Salary R2 500 - R3 000. Medical aid, pension, bonus plu� � 3th che­que. Experience 1 n sales, promotions, with ad m i n . management abilities. Phone (012) 55-231 0.

1 32 Artisan

Male

ARnSANS Urgently required. ( 0 1 2) 5 5 -231 0. 402 Norvin Build­I n g , 4 6 6 Gerrlt M a r ltz St, Pt a . North.

BOilfRMAKERS With pipe develop­i n g exp e r ift n c e . P h o n e ( 0 1 4 2 1 ) 21 996 or 27236.

HYDRAULIC TURNERS &

FnTERS R e q u i r e d f o r S.A.B.S 01 57 ap­proved workshop. Excel lent condi­t ions, rates .neg. plus overtime. All tooling su pplied. C O N TACT P H I L OR KEITH 51 -6502.

QUALIFIED Diesel me­chanics, all popula­t i o n g r o u p s . Q u a l i f i e d b o i l e r m a k e r s , qualified fitters and qualified auto elec­tricians. Firm offers free housing, water and lights, medical and pension. Phone (01 2) 55-2326.

134 General Female

GENERAL CLERK Little dmin, typing. Must be able to work with representatives. Salary R1 1 00. Age 23-30. For 1 Aug. Tel. (01 2) 55-231 0.

1 36 Hotel/Catering

BAKERS REQUI"ED

Must have experi­ence . Telephone 81 3-2462

PRIVA'IE SALE?

We will place your advertisement for 4 consecutive days in

The Citizen Classifieds for only 115,00 (axe gst)

Tet 402-3120 and place your ad now!

PS: This rate applies to 3 lines

of copy only.

SELLING YOUR CAR?

Place your "For Sale" advertisement in Citizen Classified and see the

mults. Tel: Laura, Amanda, Gal or Annie

402•3120 BOILERMAKERS

Required for shut­down work in a Po-wer station. Dura- �===========��� tion � work ap- ;: p r o x i m a t e l y 6 weeks. Applicants should have refe­ren<?es for past ex­penence. Free ac­commodation & overtime is offered. I n t e r e s t e d a p ­p l i c a n t s p lease p h o n e ( 0 1 1 ) 51 -4563 on 22nd �J u I y b e t w e e n 1 5h00 and 1 6h30.

S.A. PLANT AND ENGINEERING COMPANY

PlY LTD BOKSBURG NORTH

Have a vacancy for a qualified and experienced

BOILERMAKER CONTINUOUS STATIONERY

LITHO Coll,uy otren pleasant wodd11g COIICIMions, MACHINE 1 eotipetMIYe salary and normal fringe ben· MINDER

etlts. Required by Exakta No ella� please. Business forms. 7 CONTACT: MR B BRUINETTE or Richard Road In-dustria. Applicants MR f OLCKERS t o P h o n e M R AT VENTER 766-91 1 1 (011) 52 4327 EXT 487 to arrange L-::�-::::====

·=:::::�===-an interview. _

CONTINUOUS STATIONERY

LITHO MACHINE MINDER

Required by E.xakta Business Forms. 7 Richard Road In­dustria. Applicants t o P h o n e M R VENTER 776-91 1 1 EXT 487 to arrange an interview

DIESEL FnTER

We require a Diesel F itter. Truck and Ford tractor experi­e n c e a n a d ­vantaQe. but not essent1al. TEL 786-71 54

WORKSHOP MANAGER

SPRINGS G.C & L.S.

ENGINEERING (PlY) LT� Requires a person with at least 5 years experience as Workshop Man­ager. Exp_erience in heavy engin­eering, platework and structural steel­work. Usual company benefits and excellent �alary.

For interview contact MR H P SMIT

(011) 818-5841

THE CITIZEN Saturday 22 . ��ly � 989 -

� · ,World sport in brief� .� . Easy for Bullets

WITH Bullets having a great ice hockey season so far, they should not experience much difficulty in beating Hawkes at the Carlton Ice Rink tomorrow (6 pm). Bullets are top of the log in Transvaal, and also sport one of the best goal­keepers seen in this country for many years, Nick Colvin of Canada.

Giants run to continue GIANTS unbeaten run in the Transvaal Major baseball League is unlikely to be halted when they meet M-Net Red Sox at the Barnard Stadium at Kempton Park tomorrow. The programme (all matches start at 2.30 pm): M-Net Red­sox ·v Giants (Barn�d Stadium, Keinpton Park); Pirates v Benoni Northerns (Greenside); Roodepoort Tornado's v Wits (Voortrekker Park, Roo(Jepoort). Wanderers have a bye.

Rugby tourists in action PORT ELIZABETH. - The visiting Paraguayan national under-23 rugby team will make their first appearance in South Africa this afternoon against the Eastern Province u-20 team in the main curtain-raiser to the Springbok trials at the Boet Erasmus Stadium here. The visitors are much of an unknown quantity at this stage, but their strengths and weaknesses should be tested by the EP u-20 team. The tourists will play seven matches. The EP side has had two outings this season and their form in the most recent match against Natal was highly encouraging. The match is due to kick off at 2pm. - Sapa.

S Tvl darts team The following players have been selected to represent the 1 Southern Transvaal Darts Association in the forthcoming Currie Cup tournament to be held on August 5 and 6.

A Team: L du Plessis .(capt) D Fish A Chadwick P Wil­lcmse M Smith K Kies R Beck A Pretoriuos F Wilmans (manager).

8 Team: B Trotter (capt) B Sim B Subke H Swancpoel K Kruger N Ryan M Book G du Plessis H Stoop (man· ager).

C 1'-: A Ritchie (capt) V Penz L Boshoff D Goosen A Deysel T Fourie A Steenkamp J vd Walt A Esterluaizen (manager).

UDder :ZS: V Lizamore (capt) R Pretorius B Stande K Smith B Devenhage F Klopper K Koetzer L Sclebusch M Windell (manager).

Chi Chi is happy CLEVELAND. - Chi Chi Rodriguez has pleasant mem· ories of the last time be played competitively at Canterbury Golf Club.

This week be hopes to relive some of the feelings that followed his victory in the 1986 Senior tournament Players Championship in Cleveland.

"I just love the golf course. This has to be one of my favourites," Rodriguez said on Thursday after a tune-up for yesterday's first round of the Ameritech Senior Open on the 6, par· 72 layout.

"This is my type of golf course. It's one that · requires good shots, patience, intelligence and courage. And you have to put them all together. to win." .

Rodriguez shot an S-under-par 208 in the '86 Senior TPC, which was shortened to 54 holes by heavy rains on the first day. Canterbury has not hosted a senior event since.

Rodriguez, 19th on the Senior money list this season, said he didn't think his game was in shape to contend this week until a strong round on Thursday during the pro-am. 1be 53-year-old Rodriguez shot a 3-under 69, one of the lowest rounds of the day. - Sapa-AP.

W Germans dominate OTI A W A. - Undefeated West Germany dominated the United States with a 4-0 victory at the Women's Field Hockey Junior World Cup on Thursday. Franziska Hents· chel scored two a minute apart for top-ranked West Ger­many. Other goal scorers were Melanie Cremer and Christine Fernech. The United States, seeded eighth, suf­fered their second straight loss in the 12-day tournament. On Wednesday, the US lost 3-1 to New Zealand. The Unit· ed States' next opponent is China who edged Canada 1-0 in the opening game of the tournament. Today West Ger­many plays Canada. Twelve countries are competing in the first-ever world junior championship for women, which ends on July 30. - Sapa-AP.

Penny, Kathy in lead DANVERS, Massachusetts. - Penny Hammel stayed hot, Kathy Postlewait kept cool after dunking her first shot in the water and both shot 5-under-par 67s on Thursday for a one-stroke lead after the first round of the LPGA Boston Five Golf Oassic. Cindy Rarick, Amy Alcott, Donna White, Anne-Marie Palli and tour rookie Tina Barrett were tied for second with 68S over the par-72 Tara Fern­croft Country Oub. Of the top seven, only Hammel and Barrett played in the afternoon when conditions worsened as the wind picked up and a light rain began. Hammel has done well in different conditions on various courses. In the past three weeks, she tied for fourth at the Du Maurier Oassic, won the Jamie Farr Toledo Classic and tied for third at the US Women's Open. Those performances earn­ed her 91 500 dollars of her 1989 winnings of 146 346 dol­lars. The Boston Five winner gets 52 500 doDars of a 350 000-dollar purse. "A lot of people are saying, 'What did you do? What's happening with you?'" said Hammel, whose only victory in her other four years on the tour was at Toledo in 1985. "I don't want to figure it out." Hammel started at the lOth hole and was five under par after her first nine. She topk the lead by herself at six under when she bogeyed the fourth hole, her 13th, with a 8 metre putt. Despite bogeying the last two par-3s by �o-putting from 15 feet on the sixth and eighth holes, she was pleased.

Postlewait, winner of the Sara Lee Classic in April and the tour's 17th leading money-Winner, reiJounded from her opening bogey with birdie putts from five meters and 10 meters on the second and third holes. - Sapa·AP.

Defending champ ousted NEWPORT. - Baseliner Laura Gildemeister of Peru toppled third-seeded Lori McNeil 7-5 6-2 on Thursday to advance to the quarterfinals of a women's tennis tourna­ment in Newport. McNeil's exit in the second round was the earliest here by a defending champion since Alycia Molton lost to Anne Minter in the second round in 1984. Seventh-seeded Gretchen Magers of the United States lost to uitseeded Jill Hetherington of Canada 6-3 7-6 (7-5) while Hu Na of the United ·states eliminated Robyn Field of South Africa 6-1 6-4 and sixth-seed Ros Fairbank of South Africa ousted Elizabeth Smylie of Australia 7-6 (7-2) 6-3. After a persistent drizzle delayed play for more than four hours, Gildemeister quickly served notice that McNeil faced a battle. "I think I was playing really well," Gilde­meister said. "I have a good passing shot. If I return serve well, I have a good chance." Gildemeister broke at 4-4 with a cross-court backhand return of serve winner, but McNeil broke back at love to square the set at 5-5. Gilde­meister broke again with a delicate topspin lob and held on for the set as McNeil protested two controversial calls. in ' vain. McNeil never recovered and dropped serve in the third and fifth games to allow Gildemeister to reach the quarterfinals. - Sapa-Reuter.

McCollister in front COAL VALLEY, Illinois. - Defending champion Blaine McCallister shot a 5-under-par 6S on Thursday to take the first-round lead in the Hardee's Golf Classic by one stroke over three golfers, two of whom were making their PGA Tour debut. McCallister, who won this year's Honda Clas­sic for only his second tour victory, had six birdies and one bogey on a windy afternoon ul;llier sunny skies. One stroke behind McCallister were Curt Byrum, a non-winner after 6 and a half years on tour, and two players making their lirst appearance on the PGA Tour, David Toms and Cary Hun­gate, the pro at the American Legion public golf course in Kokomo, Indiana. "Considering the winds - I'd say 4{) kilometres and hour - 6S is one of the best rounds I. could have played," said McCallister, whose middle rounds oi 62 and 63 last year here tied the PGA record for 125 for con­secutive rounds. But McCallister said he is used to windy golf courses. "Growing up in west Texas, this was jmt an average wind out there. But you never get comfortable with it, because it's really tough on your balance and it makes it extremely tough on putting." McCallister li&id.

Lewis in action NEW YORK. - Olympic double champion Carl Lewis

· defends an eight-year long jump winning streak today in '

the New York Games, first major summer invitational meeting in the United States for over 20 years. Five other 1988 Olympic gold medallists and four world record-hold­ers compete in the meeting which organisers hope will land the city a place on the European-dominated Grand Prix circuit. Lewis, Olympic long jump and 100 metres cham­pion at Seoul, is joined by fellow US gold medallists Steve Lewis, Roger Kingdom, Andre Phillips, Jackie Joyner­Kersee and Louise Ritter at New York's Columbia Univer­sity. Carl Lewis, whose last long jump defeat was at an indoor event in New York in 1981, faces two top US chal­lengers - Olympic silver medallist Mike Powell and world indoor triple jump champion Mike Conley - as he bids for a 61st straight win. Steve Lewis lines up in the 400 metres against US Olympic bronze medallist Danny Everett in a strong field which also includes Cuban Roberto Hernan· dez, Nigerian Innocent Egbunike and American Andrew Valmon. Kingdom, twice Olympic champion, competes against world record-holder Renaldo Nehemiah in the 100 metres hurdles. Joyner-Kersee, Olympic gold medallist in the long jump and heptathlon, is concentrating on 400 metres hurdles this year and races against US record-hold· er Sandra Farmer-Patrick. - Sapa-Reuter.

Hiromi charges forward TAKA Y AMAMURA (Japan). - Hiromi Kobayashi of Japan scored five birdies on the front nine Friday, shooting a 7-under-par 65 and taking a three-shot lead in the Junon Women's Open golf tournament. Kobayashi, a four�time winner on the Japan LPGA tour this year, birdied holes three, five, six, seven and nine in a no-bogey front nine. On the back nine of the (5,736-metres), par-72 Jomo Shin­rio Country Club course north of Tokyo, Kobayashi bird­ied the lOth, 12th and 13th holes and had the day's only bogey on the 17th hole. Kasumi Adachi was next at 68. Three strokes farther back at 71 were TU Ai·yu and Wu Ming-yeb of Taiwan, Kim Ae-sook of South Korea and five Japanese - Mild Oda, Ritsu Imabori, Mayumi Hi­rase, Kumiko Hiyoshi and Kazuyo Tatsuoka. A field of 107 players teed off in pursuit of a top prize of 38500 dollars.

Grand Prix lead -tied NEW YORK. - World record-holder Sergey Bubka of the Soviet Union, a two-time winner of the Mobil Grand

. Prix pole vault, has moved into a tie for the men's overall 1 Grartd Prix lead.Sprinter Merlene Ottey of Jamaica and intermedi11te hurdler Sandra Farmer-Patrick of the United States are tied for the women's lead.Bubka won the pole vault at 5,65 metres on Wednesday at the Golden Gala in Pescara, Italy. He is tied with high hurdler Roger Kingdom of the United States and 200-metre runner Robson da Silva of Brazil, who won in 20,24 seconds at Pescara. Each has 45 Grand Prix points. The top three places in the women's overall standings were unchanged. Otley and Farmer­Patrick have 45 points apiece, and high jumper Jan Wohlschlag of the United States is third with 421h points.lbe Grand Prix, conducted by the International Amateur Athletic Federation, is a series of 17 meets in 14 nations. It culminates on September 1 with the Grand Prix final at Monte Carlo, Monaco. The next Grand Prix meet­ing is August 8 at Budapest, Jiuagary. - Sapa-AP.

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Saturday 22 July 1 989 . .

THE CITIZEN

TROON, Scotland. -Their drives may be short, their pace slow and their scores way over par.

But the crowds still flock to see them and

Crowds still flock to see the 'seniors'

their warm waves and he won the Open 27 charming smiles are years ago. greeted with rapturous "It was a nice day and bursts of clapping from I enjoy being here. But the galleries. I don't enjoy playing

The vintage veterans like that," the 59-year-of golf - led by Arnold old American said. Palmer, Gary Player, Palmer, a two-time Jack Nicklaus, Tom winner of the Open, fin-Weiskopf, Lee Trevino ished with bogey, and Tony Jacklin - are • double-bogey on In al-back at the British most windless day. He Open, wooing the fans came off the course at the sport's most ven- �ooking grumpy and dis-erable tournament. consolate.

But for how much "I was putting it to-longer? gether so well in prac-

"It's getting close tise, I just don't under-now," said Palmer after :;tand this," the gray-shooting a first-round haired Palmer said. 10-over-par 82 Thurs- His most disheart-day on a course where ening hole was the third

when, after a reason­able tee shot, he four­putted from just off the green.

"That's very demora­lising," Palmer said. ­"Twenty years ago, you compensated for that sort of thing. Now bad shots turn worse."

· Troon wasn't that much kinder to Jacklin, who shot 80, or Player who fired 79. Nicklaus and Weiskopf fared bet­ter, finishing at 2-over­par on 74.

Trevino, 49, had a brilliant round, ripping up the back nin� in 33 for a 68 and a share of second place.

"To win here at al­most 50, that would be unbelievable," said Tre­vino, a two-time cham­pion but without a tour­nament victory for five years.

Trevino's joy was Player's grief.

"I just played ter­rible," said the South African, playing in a re­cord 35 th straight Brit­ish Open and dressed in his favourite black shirt and black trousers.

"I won three of the four senior majors last year and have been playing beautiful golf this year too. Yesterday I did everything well in

'Fresh' start for Wits, but . . .

practice. Today I did everything poorly," Player said.

Player, Jacklin and Weiskopf, who have won the British Open five times among them, partnered each other around Troon's sun-par­ched links and were given a rousing ovation as they approached each green.

But the cheers they received did not match those reserved for Palm­er.

For his fans, known as "Arnie's Army," the Orlando, Aorida-based veteran's score was im­material. Just to catch a glimpse of the old maes­tro was enough and hundreds craned their necks and stood on tip­toe for a view of the tournament's oldest competitor. - Sapa·-

Page 27:

Defendi ng

champion

back on

the road DEFENDING champion Monica Drogemoller will use the Ford Port Elizabeth Marathon on July 29 as the ideal vehicle to get back on to the road.

The winner of the 1988 Two Oceans Marathon over 56 km in addition to the Ford Marathon, Drogemoller suffered an inexplicable loss of form earlier this year, when she finished a lowly 21st in the SA 42,2 km cham­pionships in February.

Her time then was 3:08:31 compared to her personal best over the distance of 2:40:08, set when running second to Annette Falkson in the 1987 SA cham­pionships in Stellenbosch, and on the advice of coach Len Keating, Drogemoller took a two-month break.

But she's been back in training for six weeks and is ready to test herself in Port Elizabeth, where the pre­race favourite is another Cape athlete, Evelina Tshaba­lala.

"The Ford Marathon has come at the right time for me", said Drogemoller, a 29-year-old pharmacist in Cape Town. "I'll be trying to break three hours".

Ramblers out to keep Drogemoller clocked 2:50:58 in last year's Ford Mar­

athon in the "Friendly City", and while she may not yet be ready for a repeat performance, she would still get into the money on July 29.

The Ford Division of Samcor have increased the prize-money in all categories and the top three women will be chasing a total of Rl 750. Of this, Rl 000 goes to the winner, with second place worth R500 and R250 for third.

By Billy Cooper

MEYERTON Brick 'n Tile Transvaal Football League champions Wits University get back into action after a recent lay­off when they travel to Rhodes Park to · face Ramblers iii what should be one of the top First Division fixtures this afterno_on.

TFL hopes alive The men will be running for a first prize of Rl 500 and the money goes down to lOth place, which pays R50.

Ramblerr. cannot afford another defeat if they

fixtures if we hope to clinch the cham­pionship," said Lake coach Steve Leach.

Easy win

spirit at the club seems to have improved as has the general performance of the team which augers well for a hard fought en­counter.

a stiff away clash against Jumbo Florida at Trezona Park. The beleaguered Pretoria club are ex­pected to_ throw· every­thing at Florida as they simply cannot afford to lose this one.

Wanderers have had their suspension lifted by the TFL after they complied with the ruling of wei!Eing their League's sponsors logo on the back of their jerseys. Wanderers will meet Mondeor Old Parks at home this afternoon.

Drogemoller was at a loss to explain the loss of form which robbed her of a realistic chance of successfully defending her crown .

"I don't know what it was," she said, "I was strug­gling and I had my worst run ever in this year's SA marathon championships.

"But I've done quite a bit of work since my layoff and the Ford Marathon will give me a good indication of what I may be capable of later in the year. I'll just have to see how it goes in Port Elizabeth".

· hope to keep in the chal­lenge for the cham­pionship. They lost a cru­cial game, 2-1 away to Robertsham Callies Unit­ed last weekend and if the students get the better of the Rams today, their title ambitions will all but

Lake scored an easy 4-2 away win over View in the first round. But Leach a former View player will

. be taking nothing for granted: "There is no such thing as an easy game at this stage, but we can do it if our approach is right. "

Lake were given a boost this week with the return from suspension of ace striker Eddie Brid­gens who is expected to make life hot for the View defence.

Doomed Already doomed Berea r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;�;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;::;:;

vanish.

Lake have only lo�t once at home this season and was when Boksburg

Third placed

Park should pose few problems for Mike Ken­ning's Jeppe fresh for their Cup victory over Boksburg when they meet at Quondam Park.

Log leaders scored a 1-0 win in the first round. .

Robertsham who have the title firmly in their sights face a tricky assign­ment today when they travel to Defence Head­quarters to meet relega­tion haunted Defence.

In this afternoon's other fixture Uniao De­sportivo entertain Kemp­ton Park at Turffontein. All matches kick-off at Log leaders Boksburg View are unbeaten in

Another side in relega­tion trouble Arcadia face

3.30 pm. e A Secbnd Division

travel to Northmead to their last nine Cup and play neighbours Benoni League matches and the N6rthern in a local derby. 'l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;wii �sburg who have been I -----

at the top of the table for most of the season have not shown •he consistency that makes champions.

They hold a slender one point lead at the top over eager Zoo Lake and could lose that lead if they lose this afternoon. Northerns are going through a transitional period after losing the majority of the first team strength earlier this sea­son.

Slipped •

Northerns who have mat�;hes in hand also can­not

'afford defeat as they

have slipped dangerously close to the relegation zone.

Boksburg were knocked out of the Trans­vaal Challenge Cup_ at Prince George Park on Tuesday night when Jeppe beat them 1-0 in a second round replay.

Second placed Zoo Lake who have played two more matches than the other contenders will be going for broke when they take on improved The Don Bedfordview at home.

"Make no mistake this will be a tough one, the pressure will be on us, but we have to win this match and the remainder of our

P U B LI C A U CTI O N VE R E D

' auCTIOIIURS/lFSLAEIS Wh-SUl �16!0

MOTOR VEHICLES MEGA POWER (PTYl LIMITED

(IN PROVISIONAL LIQUIDATION) MASTER'S REFERENCE Y1 1 /89

Instructed by the provisional liquidator in the above matter we will sell by public auction the following vehicles: 1 984 lsuzu 5 ton truck 2 x 1 985 Ford Bantam LDV's 2 x 1 985 Mitsubishi L300 LDV's 2 x Toyota Hilux LDV's -1 985 Hino 7 ton truck 1 985 Toyota Corolla PN 1 988 Volkswagen LDV 1 987 Mazda B1 600 LDV and other motor vehicles (Subject to change without notice) . Terms : Cash or bank certified cheques only. Dealers to produce GST certificates. . DATE OF SALE: WEDN ESDAY 26 JULY 1 989 AT 1 0 A M AT NEDFIN BAN K WAREHOUSE, 221 MAIN ROAD, MARTINDALE, JOHANN ESBURG View 2 days before the sale. For further information please phone the auctioneer Harold Sacks at Vered (01 1 ) 646-5432 or

'

.(01 1 ) 486-1 630

P U B L I C A U CT I O N VE R E D

'aUCTIOIIEIIS/lFSLAIIS Wh-SUl �IUO

B.R.I. ENGINEERING SERVICES (PlY) LIMITED

(IN PROVISIONAL LIQUIDATION) : MASTER'S REFERENCE T946/89

2 x COMPLETE MOBILE PIPE CLEANING & PIPE LINING RIGS OFFICE FURNITURE, TYPEWRITERS

& COMPUTER, PHOTOCOPIER Instructed by the provisional liquidation in the above matter we will sell by public auction completely without reserve:

2 x COMPLETE MOBILE STEEL PIPE CLEANING & PIPE LINING RIGS (each rig consists of motor generator plant, single drum winch with motor and gearboxes, cement mixer with motor and gearbox, cement mix pump with motor and gear­box and draw bar trailers) Other plant & equipment consisting of 2 single drum winches with gearboxes, assorted pipes, pipe fittings, v belts, gaskets, tur­mines, drag trails etc.

OFFICE EQUIPMENT: Executive desks and chairs, other desks, filing cabinets, stationary cabinets, etc. Olivette E 1 1 6 typewriter with Sirex computer, Minolta EP450Z copier with feeder and sorter.

DATE OF SALE: MONDAY 24 JULY 1989 AT 10-30 AM AT CORNER FABRIEK & C.R. SWART STREETS, STRYDOM PARK, RANDBURG. All the plant and equipment and furniture can be viewed at the site corner Fabriek & C.R. Swart Sts, Strydom Park on the Friday before the sale. The typewriter, computer and Minolta copier can be viewed at Nedfin Bank warehouse, 221 Main Rd Martindale, Johannesburg.

TERMS: CASH OR BANK CERTIFIED CHEQUE ONLY: DEALERS TO PRODUCE GST CERTIFI­CATES. For fu rther i nfo rmation p lease phone the auction eer Haro ld Sacks at Vered (0 1 1 ) 646-5432 or (0 1 1 ) 486 - 1 630

�age 28

Racing THE CITIZEN Saturday 22 July 1 989

Mainstay is wide open

I Clai rwood Park today I THERE are 17 runners in· But Millard's other won the Mainstay Trial by the R350 000 Mainstay three candidates all hold seven lengths. He was International run over strong claims. Right Pre- sixth in last year's 1 800 metres at Clairwood rogative could well have Mainstay stopping sud­Park today and it is an ex- improved since his July denly close home when cellent field. win and make light of his the race was won by Main

1 - 11 hOO MAIDEN JUV PLATE (C & G). R14 000. 1 600 m. (Swinger/ TriiKta):

1 7012 4P18 8019 ADMIRAlTY ARCH (M RAirey)2·56 ........ FCoetzee 3 2 0012 8013 0014 BOI.ODUKE(JPDawson) 2-56 ................ NShearer 12 3 0012 OC18 ClOSECOMBAT(VHMarshal)2-56 ....... WHarley a 4 OC12 OC10 2V14 DAUNTLESS DAN (PMGadsby)2-56 .......... KShea 13 5 8 7 a 9

10 11 12 13 14 15 18 17

OP12 GAYVERONA(MD Miller) 2-56 ....... ... .... ...... 'Maree 17 5P14 2D13 7P18 HEAO LAO(HWBrown)2-56 ..................... BMMcus a OP12 OP12 8P10 UTTlEBLUE(AJ RiYaltand)2-56 ................ RSingh 5

NfJii AM6ASSAOOR�R Orief) 2-�·� G CreaJock 15 9P12 0016 �EVERGE(MJ )2-56(B) ...... Swanepoel 7

7C14 PANTHRO(D LPayne)2· .................... BSirydom 2 OC10 0016 8P18 PARTYWHIP(DCGoss)2·56 ................ LSaundeB 1

PLENTY OF TIME (M J Riley) 2·56 ...•......... . 'Ceronio 9 RUNNINGBACK(OE Fur)2·56 .......... MHoudalakis 4

8013 SACREDPOOL (ADGonlon)2-56 ................ JUoyd 11 SIMPLY MAJESTIC (C L Kansley)2·56 ............ R Hill 16

OC10 0012 SOlOMON'S SONG (I Pickering) 2-56 .......... P Dillon 10 OC10 9P12 8C14 SWIFTWARRIOR(J P Dawoon)2·56 ........ JHenson 14

Coupled on the Tote lot • win: (2·1n 1•121 15110 Sec: red Pool, 3-1 Deunlteu Den, 4-1 Admh'81ty Ardl, Heed Lad, 10. 1 others.

2 - 1 1 h40 MAIDEN JUY PLATE (FIIIIea). R14 000. 1 200 m. (Swinger! TrffKbl):

1 BONNYAUSTEN(VHMarshaii)2-56 ....... WHarvey 10 2 OC14 8P16 OC16 COOlOFF(MDMilor)2-56(B) ................ ;. G Molloy 14 3 CRIOUETTE (AD Fu"*S)2·56 .............. Randolph 8 4 DREAMCHILO(AJ Rivalland) 2·56 ............. RS«q1 9 5 • 5P12 ELEGAHTSL00P(MRAirey)2-56(B) ...... JHenson 7 8 FINE WINTER (N Pearce) 2-56 ...... ............ .'Ceronio 20 7 FLEET CALL(PLL11111)2-56 ................. ...... POillon 15 a 7112 2112 GLEAMMACHINE (AGLaifd)2-56 ............ BMarcus 2 9 HOMEON TIME (MrsBBJSmilh)2-56 ...... PWynne 5

10 NATALIASTAR(JPDawson)2-56 ........... NShearer 4 11 NIGHTOFSTARS(DLPayne) 2·56 ........ BSirydom 11 12 0012 9P10 0016 NOTOUT(J A McCreedy)2-56(B) ........ ...... ..... A Hill 12 13 PENNYLAND(WCPiele<S)2-56 ............... GHowes I 14 3P10 PROFAHEPROGENY(HJBrown)2·56 .. FCoetzee 17

• 15 8P1 2 OUEEN'SCONOUCT(ADGoldon)2·56 ....... JUoyd 13 18 0012 REGALDECREE(HWBrown)2-56 ........ GCnlaloc:l< 1 17 0012 SKINT(MJRiley)2·56 ........................ MHoudalakis 3 18 SPANISH ROYALE (R T Walkinson) 2-56 19 20

.............................................................. LO'� 19 OC12 �1g ���f�·Rdiiiii$j'2�se· A� 18

.................... ......................... ....... ............... G Schofield 1a 2-1 OUMn'a Conduc:t, 5-2 Glum IUclllna, 4-1 Profane Progany, 5-1 Ele­gant Sloop, 7-1 othara.

1 ST LEG PLACE ACCUMULATOR 3 - 12tl20 JUVENIL£ HANDICAP. R17 000. 1 200 m. (SW!ngat/

TrtfKta/1 at Doubla): 1112 0014 5V12 FANTASY FORTUNE (Mnl 0 J Hemi1g) 2-57 (8)

...................................................................... G van Zyl ,,. 2 1C12 OP12 8012 GUINEA COIN I#' Dawson) 2·56,5 .......... N Sheater a 3 4P1 0 7012 9014 CASEY'S FUG (DE Fur) 2-53,5 ..... M Houdalakis 2 4 8P1 0 7P10 1D13 DAYTONA WAY rec Pielers)2·53,5 ........ G Howes 5 5· 2K12 2C10 1D12 OELTA FORCE ( ESands)2-53,5 .............. GPuler 11 • 1012 4C10 ROYALCOACH (DLP�)2-53,5 ............... JUoyd 4 7 11'12 1C10 RUUNG r: Brown) 2· ,5 ...... ................ BMarC\IS 12 • 1P12 SLEEKP SIAN (MissCPShaw)2·53,5 .... RSf91 7 ' 4C12 8014 5C12 WELL TAXED (J V Goss) 2·53,5 (B) .......... W Harley 10

10 8010 OC10 6C10 STAHD BY ME (HJ8rownJ

2-53 .................... ;. RHI 3 11 OP12 CAPEWEmHJBrownt ·51 ................... ... C.W a 11! FATALMI RE(Miss PShaw)2-51 ...'Randolph 1 13 3P14 5P14 9013 NORTHERNSAILS (CS8anmn) 2-51 ..... A� 9

Coupled on the Tote lor • win: (11-12) (10.11) Delta Force after a third and two aeconda was blletcad 1o 16-10 favourite and rotnped home by live lengtha. Royal Coech lrotn the Payna stable and an e .. y winner llrst time out over 1 200 ..-.. In yielding aolng. In his naxt run waa a modenlte fourth to Deep Down lrotn the Mlilard sta­ble. Sleep Persian waa • nanow wlnnar of his one and only start o_. 1 200 metres starting at 10.1. 1-1 De1t11 Force, 4-1 F-y FortuM, 5-1 Royal Coach, Ruling, Slelok ........ 10.1 othera.

1 ST LEG PICK 6 4 - 131100 BOTTOM DIVISION HANDICAP. R23 500. 1 400 m.

(Swlngar/Trt!Kta): 8011 7C12 5C12 AMERICAN EAGLE (P G Kannemeyer) 3-58

........................................................................ GNer 8 2 6016 8P18 4014 ANOTHER DUZZON (P V Lafferty) 5-58 (B) ... J Uoyd 5 3 8C12 6014 5P14 GOSSIP MONGER (H J Brown) 3-58 (B) .......... R HI 1

" 4 2D14 .C18 5016 ISLANDERtJRival1and)4-56 ..................... KShea 12 5 1P14 . 4014 3014 CRIMSON OLD (G J Rixon) 3-57,5 ...... .. F Coetzee 11 8 7P12 OP16 0014 SECRET TALKS (G M Thompson) 6-56,5 (B)

...................................................................... GHowes 13 7 0014 4P14 1D14 ADAM SMITH (R E C PBS8tn0f8) 5-56 (B)

.................................................................... BSirydom 3 8 6C10 9011 8014 SUPREME SPUR(J PDawson)4-55,5 ..... N� 8 9 2G14 5014 6014 KINGS OOOY (AD Gonion) 4-55 ............. 8 MMcus 7

10 5014 3P12 3014 HIGH ENERGY (DC Goss) 4-54,5 (B) ...... 'liolfnav\ 14 11 4M18 9013 0011 JUMBOUNE(J.Joseph)3-54 ................... .A� 15 12 6116 1112 5N12 CASTANET CAPER (G lol Alexander) 3-52,5

....................................................................... DWhyte 10 13 2C14 3C14 OP14 I'MOUIZZY�� 4-52 .................... RFradd 9 14 OC14 7C14 2C14 TRYFOR (MrsE lleslai)3-49 ..... ... RSingh 4 15 6012 7P12 9012 WINGSOFLOVE(DCan1Jba1)4-48 ---'Randolph 2

Islander haS been favourite In his laat live starts. His last r- was In December when unplaced In a 1 600 me1re A division. Crimson Gold two -n placed ll\lhrae of his laat lour starts In Natal alnce coming lrotn the Cape and -• a good third over 1 400 metres l .. t time out. HlghJ:nargy has had two 1hlrds In • row over 1 200 and 1 400 metres and was unlan­clad In bo1h rac:ee. Now has a claiming apprentice rider. 1$-10 en- Gold, $-1 Amarican E8gle. JumbO Line, Caatenat Caper, 7·1 Olllenl. .

1 ST LEG JACKPOT � - 1 31>40 TOP DIVISION HANDICAP. R28 000. 1 400 m. (Swtngar/

TrffKtll): 9C18 9016 OC18 ANOTHER TREAT (A J Rivlllllnd) &-57,5 (8)

........................................................................ RSi91 1 ' 2 OM18 01<20 OP14 ROYALSEASON(ADGoldon)5-55(B) ... .A� 4

3 1M14 1M14 6C10 OARKGUY(TM Mdllwd)4-54 .................. FCoelzee 2 4 51'12 4P12 9012 JUSTERINI(ELPSieyn)5-53,5 .................. GPullr II 5 SP14 OP16 OC12 BUSINESSUNER(TClRyln)5-52 ........... N sr-er 10 8 3M10 5011 6010 OloiNSUS(PGI<annlmeyef)5-51,5 (B) .... AMartus 5 7 OP18 8016 5C16 OIXJELANO DANDY (M R Airey) 5-50,5 .. G Schofield 8 8 6116 4G17 6G16 VOLTERRA(GMAiexander) $.�9.5 . . ........ D\'lllyte 3 9 9P12 7C16 8014 SCOTSLASS (TG Ryln) 5-49 ................. . 'Cormacl< 7

10 2P12 OP12 1P12 ROYAL NECTAR (Miss C P Shaw) 4-48,5 (B) ................................................................ M Sulhelland 1 1

1 1 2D18 ' 1C18 4016 ' BUDZA(ADGonlon)3-48 ...................... . 'Randoi!lh a Coupled on the Tote lor a win: (2-1 1) (HI .

Dark Guy from the Millard atable and has only heel one unplaced run since coming to Natal. Thla w .. over 1 000 metr ... Won his two p...,_ vloua atarta at the � both over 1 400 metres - Saturday's dlatance. Juaterlnl ran In 1he Ourban Merchanta and flnlahecl ninth - but only 1hnle lengths behind the wlnnar. Voltarra w .. up front lor a long way over 1 800 metre 81 Germlaton belote lading. w .. placed In two ol hla thi"M previous starts. Budu two had • win, two aeconda and a fourth In !IV• lltarta and now mak .. hla debut In • top dlvlalon over' 1 409 meii"M. 12-10 Dllil Guy, 4-1 Juatarlnl, Roy8l Nac:t8r, 5-1 lluclza, 10.1 others. Aile:. I:

6 - 1 41120 IIIAINST AY APPRENTICE 1900. R18 000. 1 900 m. (Swlngar/ TrffKtll):

1 7C18 2 1P18 3 8021

1C16 9C18 AOYALHARRY (AO�)� ...... � 1 9019 8C17 ICNIGKT IN ANoiOUR (toft E lol llalll) 4-55,5 (B) ...................................................................... •Gnljlng 3 3C17 OC20 SIHlAYSRIVER(CRCLae)4-55,5 ...... 'Auplua 10

4 5C20 5 3P18 8 7P18 7 0024 8 OP14 9 5P20

10 'JI3'Z1 11 4C20 12 9P18 13 3016 14 OP14

2C20 6019 SOLO OUT (J P Dawson) 4-53,5 (B) ........ ........ 'Jago 4Ct6 7C16 BOlO REO (P L Lum) 3-53,5 ........... ............ 'Neisius 5C16 OC20 COMMANDER OF ALL (J Joseph).3-53,5 (B)

......................... ................................ ... ........ . 'Cormacll OP20 8014 DASHING DANDY�DCampbeiQ 3-53,5 ..... JHenson 7018 1D18 INDIAN IVORY (D Goss) 3-53,5 (B) ....... 'Ho!tmann 3019 1C20 NORTHERN SPRITE (P M Gadsby) 4-53,5 (B)

... ............. ......... .......................... ..................... . 'Marae 0124 2N28 OUR BUDDY (G M Alexander) 3-53,5 (B) .... 0 Whyte 9C20 OC20 YESTERDAY MAN (P G llenysal:hen) 4-53,5

........................................................................ . 'Carla! OP18 0019 LAG RIMA (DC Gosst 4-53,5 (B) ............. ... . "Ceranic 2P18 7C20 ROSEOFMY HEAR (J =)3-51 (B) ... . 'Bekl<er OC14 0019 UP HILL (I Pickering) 3-50,5 ( ) .. . ........... 'Swanepoet Coupled on the Tota lor • win: (11-13) (11-12)

8 9

13 11 8

14 4 5 7

12 2

RoM ol My Heart waa unplaced l .. t Ume out but had • MCOnd and a 1hlrd before that over 1 600 and 1 600 matr .. starting favourite In one of t'-M rae ... Our Buddy has had • win and three placed runs In lour lltarta In 11Nt Transvaal and was MCOnd last 11me ou1 over 2 aso metres. Northern Sprl1e -• hard ridden when winning a 2 000 me1re malden last 11me out ridden by Felix Coe1zee. An appren1fca now has tiNt ride.

1-1 Our Buddy, 4-1 Roaa Of My Heart, 7-1 Royal Harry, Sold Out. Com­m8nder Of AI� 10.1 others.

7 - 15h10 THE MAINSTAY INTERNATIONAL (Gr l). R350 000. 1 800 m. (Swlnger/Trtlacta):

2 3 4 5 I 7 8 g

10 11 12 13 14 15 18 17

2D14 1C16 7010 9C16 0018 OP16 1114 5T20 OC16 1D18 9T20 &C18 8020 1C24 1014 3019 6G14 1116 8014 1C24 8014 2D19 2D18 1116 1D16 9020 1D18 5020 3020 2C24 2K20 0016 4018 4020

0022 PRICELESS ASSET (P G Kftlemeyer) 4-56,5 .................... .................................................. GHowes

6022 JUNGLEWARRIOR (AE S!nls)4-56 ........... KShea 3C16 HEIR TO RICHES(R J Rixon) 5-55,5(8) .... P Wynne 0019 SHA YBANI (USA) (Mis D J Heming) 4-55,5 (B)

.......................................................................... JUoyd 4C16 SILVER TALLY (USA) (T M Millard) 4-55,5 (B)

.......................... ......................................... G CreaJock 4G18 YARDMAST��)5-55(B) ...... ........ Gvan Zj4 1022 RIGHT PRE VE (T M Millin!) 3-53,5

.......... ................... ... ... ............................. M SulheriMd 0022 COOlSTAR (P G K8lnemeyer) 4-53 ... ....... . G Puller 1P16 BOlO BATTLE (J Nicholson) 4-5?,5 ......... P Slrydom 3022 VIOLERO::) (T M Mlard) 4-52,5 (8) ... F Coelzae 0022 CHIEFW N (GJ Rixon)4-51,5 ........... .... SJI4lp 0022 UNOBERG (RAA l.ainl) 3-50,5 .............. HVermaal< 5022 PERtOUIN (ARG) (R J Rixon) 3-50 ............... R Fradd 2C18 CHIEFOF MEN (AD Gordon)3-49 ............. BMM:us 2C16 2D20

BLUE COSSACK�=) 3--49 (B) ..... AMaroos DAWSONTRAIL( )3--49(B) ... A�

1016 ROYAL FLO (T M Millard) 3-49 ............... G Scholield Coupled on the Tote lor • win: (1-e) (3-13) ($-7-1o-1n

3 s 9

13 12 15 10 7

17 1

1& 8

14 8

1 1 2 4

w Ylolero. s-1 Blue Coeucll. Rlaht PIWOCIIItlve. 11-1 Jungle w.nor, Royal Flo, 10.1 Perlquln, Daw8on 'frail, 12-1 Cool.tar, 111-1 otharL

8 - 151150 B DIVISION HANDICAP. R26 000. 1 700 m. (Swinger/

1 2 3 4 5 8 7 8

fa 11 12 13 14

TrffKtll): ·

5016 0020 1P16 MARAIIARHILLS(P G�)3-58 ... G Puler 9G18 6C14 0020 FLAMINGW1NO (WCPietn)3- ........... GHowes 4P20 3019 1P16 HIGH PRIORITY (V H Manhll) 4-56,5 (B)

................................................................ M Suthertand 4C14 3014 5019 MAJESTIC LIGHT (AD Gordon) 4-54,5 (B)

...................................................................... BMarcus 2P24 7P24 9024 COURTFIELO(Mr.� BBJ Smilh)4-53,5 ...... PWynne 4G18 3P18 �1� ���s������� &;;�i.S:53'.s·,:,S1rydom 01<20 91<32

........................ ........................................... GCrealock 2D14 3019 3P20 WALNUT�� M !.tllanl)4-53,5 (B) .... F Coetzee 1P18 0020 1C17 CROWNE Kl (GJ Rixon)3-53(B) ......... RFradd 0014 ON13 21'16 PRINCESS TITANIA (Mrs D J Heming) 4-51,5

...................................................................... GvanZyl 8P18 3C16 2D18 FOVERITA(Miss C PShaw) 4-51 ................. R Singh 8014 2C1!1 OC14 tEWEMIGRANT (USA) (C R C Lae) 4-51

. ............. ............ ... ..................................... . 'Randolph 3C18 5P16 4016 GREAT GALAXY (DCampllel1) 6-19,5 ...... A � 5014 0014 9P16 ClASSIC MASK (R T W�) 6-48,5

................................................................... GScholield

12 8 4

11 13 7 2 3 g 8

10

14 Marllbar Hills - a vary -y and Impressive winner l .. t 11me out over 1 600 metr" wl1h SS klloa. Now h .. 58. High Priority attar 1hi"M placed runs staged a strong finish 1o get up and win a 1 60o metre C division wl1h 58 klloa. Walnut !rom the Millard stable has had thi"M runs In Natal since cotnlng lrotn the Cape lor • MCOnd and two thlrda. Crownad King thla Cape gelding has won two ol his las1 1hree atarts In Natal and won well last 11me out. 2·1 Marllbar Hilla, 5-2 Crowned King, 4-1 Walnut, 5-1 F6vetlta, 7·1 Flem­� W!nd, MajMtlc Light, Jet Air, Prlnceu Titania, 10.1 othera.

But once again it is extra weight. Man and last year ran Cape Trainer Terrance Silver Tally has been a third in the race to Jungle Millard who looks the little disappointing but he Warrior. Last time out he man they have to beat as undoubtedly has the. po- was third in . the the maestro has no less tential as he started fa- Schweppes Challenge. than four runners in the vourite for the Metropoli- Priceless Asset may race namely, Silver Tally, tan although unplaced. find the 1 800 metres a Right Prerogative, Viole- Royal Flo, who recent- little too far but he has a ro and Royal Flo. ly joined the Millard sta- superb record with eight

Despite his incredible ble, was an impressive wins and seven places in big race record in Natal, winner last time out and is 18 starts. At one stage of the one who could beat a former winner of the SA his career he won five them all is another Cape Invitation. races in a row. He was horse - Blue Cossack - But the third vote ·must badly hampered in this who carries joint bottom go to Jungle Warrior who year's Met but still man­weight.of 49 kilos. won the race last year. He aged to ·finish • three

Blue Cossack, a three- has an excellent record lengths behind the winner year-old colt, has had and last year, in addition Fearless Streaker. He re­three wins and nine to winning the Mainstay cently won the Schweppes placed runs in 16 starts by three lengths, went on Challenge and was up and the key to his possible to win the Champion front half way down the victory lies in the Natal Stakes at Greyville and straight in the July before Derby over 2 400 metres was then beaten a short fading. when second to Right head in the last stride by Shaybani won the John Prerogative. Here they South Lake in the Clair- Skeaping and was then were at level weights of 57 wood Gold Vase. He was third in the Fir.;t National kilos and Right Preroga- then given a long rest. and was narrowly beaten tive went on to win the But after runs in the Con- in this year's Met. He is Rothmans July with 49 cord Stakes and the certainly not out of it on kilos. Schweppes Challenge Saturday. ' Now Right Prerogative

. which he badly needed,

has 53,5 while Blue Cos- he rari a courageous sixth Coolstar is a former sack has 49 so on that in the July and was only winner of the Germiston Derby run Blue Cossack two lengths behind Right Classic which he won by should reverse matters Prerogative. seven lengths setting up a with his rival. The fourth spot goes to new rourse record. He

Last season Blue Cos- Chief Warden who ran won the Daily News 2 000 sack won the Computa- second to Castle Walk in last year by two lengths form Juvenile Stakes over the Miracle Mower.; and and this season staged a 1 800 metres at Oairwood · was actually leading the strong finish to win the by four lengths and this July field halfway down 1 400 metre Drill Hall year won the €ape Derby the straight for a few Stakes. He was third in over 2 000 metres from strides before fading. In the Miracle Mower.; but Dawson Trail. better underfoot condit- could have found the July

He came from a long ions, he should run well. too far for him when un-way back to run third to And there are a host of placed. Rolands Song in the Daily other.; with winning Periquin won the SA News 2 000 and should claims. Dawson Trail, a Guineas in a blanket fin­certainly feature in the former winner of the Na- ish and finished just over finish. tal Breeders and Natal three lengths behind Ro­Of the Millard quar- Guineas, was only beaten lands Song in the Daily te�e. Violero may be the close home by Blue Cos- News 2 000. He was fifth pick. He was a very un- sack in the Cape Derby in the July and that run lucky loser 6f the July and far from disgraced in makes him one for the when third and has an ex- the SA Guineas in a blan- short list. cellent turn of finishing ket finish. He ran a fast speed. If there is anything finishing second in the If you ignore Lind­against him it is the fact Daily News 2000 with berg's poor run in the July that earlier this season he some of the best three- then he must come into won the Woolavington year-olds in the country the picture on his pre­Cup over 2 400 metres behind him. He is a vious form. He was beat­and then the July over strong finisher. en a whisker in the SA 2 200 and Saturday's race Heir To Riches has a Guineas and before that

9 - 181125 c DIVISION HANbiCAP. R22 ooo. 1 100 m. (Swlngar/ is only 1 800 metres. fantastic record at Clair- won the Nomads Handi-Trll8cta/2nd Double): Whether he can adjust wood Park - his favour- cap on the Rand on the 2C20 om 5P18 WINDWARD PASSAGE (J P DIMon) 3-58 himself to the shorter dis- ite course. As a two and bit by two lengths. Earlier

9014""1NciiEiiiil.oos·(WcPiiiii<Si·4:se·::::::::::'l.S::: 1� tance remains to be seen three-year-old he won he won the Dingaans by 2 4P18 8P16

3 0020 &C24 4 SP18 3P18 5 aT14 5P12 8 5P16 1D19 7 4120 2K16 8 4016 2C18 9 9C16 4C17

10 4P10 0011 11 4P16 OP18 12 8016 3P16

4019 ROLLY GO(ARGl(TMMiHatdJ3-55,5 ...... FCoetzee 12 but with vigourous Felix three races here and was two lengths. OP18 CANDLE(MissCPShawl4-54•5 ............. 'Augustus 7 Coetzee 1'n the saddle he h" d B h T I h OP12 GOI.DSmtJCK (NZ) (R r WICI<insonl 5-54,5 (B) t If to us e egrap ........................................................................ RFradd could well justify his pos- in the Daily News 2000. It should be a real good 9P14 AMERICANLASS(JJoseph) 4-53(B) ...... A �

'th B l Cossack 6C18 AWESOIIE. RACER (NZ) (H w Brown) +53 ition as favourite for this Back at Clairwood he was race WJ ue ...................................................................... BMM:us 8 race. He is a seven time second to Pedometer in taken to hold Millard and 6018 BROWN8ERRY(AEs.nds)3-53 ............... GPulor 2

h h b 3016 POLITIC(JVGoss)5-52:) ............... ... ."Swanepoel 4 winner of 17 starts. the Natal Derby and then t e ot er.; at ay. 7011

·-��-���:::..�-��.�--.. �-��!..���.GSdllll* 11 ·--------------------------------.. 5C20 FAIRESf FAME (P G � ll-60,5

................................................................ lol� OC14 HARNESS PEACE (P L Lim) 3-48.5 (8) ...... 'Niillus Clairwood selections

CITIZEN PUNTERS FRIEND TRANsVALER COMPUTAFORM Rolly Go this Mlllatd gelding w .. 12-10 fllvourl1a when running fourth over 1 900 rnatres beaten two lengths. Brown Berry hn been fllvourlte lll hla 1as1 two starts but ran poo rly r .. t 11me out. In his three previous Natal .._ since cotnlng lrotn the Cape had • aecond, fourth and • third !In- ·----������1-:�=�::----+-------+��=�=----1 latllng _,._ Windward Paasage waa not dlagreced 1aat time out when Juet over two lengtha behind the wlnnar wl1h 58 klloa, 1he Nme weight .. � hall on Saturday. •

15-10 Aolly Go, 4-1 Brown Berry, 5-1 A- "-• F.._ Fame, 7·1 � ....... American Laa, 10.1 Olllenl.

1 0 - 171100 MAIDEN PLATE (C & G). R13 500. 1 200 m. (Swinger/ Trltac:ta):

1 OP18

1

2 3

4

( ll ADMIRAlTY ARCH (4 Daunlless Dan -(6) Heed Lad (Sl GLEAM MACHINE

(14 Prolll-. Progeny (5) Elega�t Sloop (5) DELTA FORCE (2) GtJinea Coin (7) Ruling

4) Islander

(6) HEAD LAO (14l

SACRED POOL (1l Adm�ch No � (1 Admia11y /Veil

(14 Sacred (4) Dauntless Dan (1� QUEEN'S CONDUCT

No aelaction (� GLEAM MACHINE

!: :J::. 114 Prolll-. Progony 1 (Mn CordlCI

(5) DELTA FORCE (8) Sleel< Persian (6) Royal Coach

(5!

DELTA FORCE (6 �Coach (2) Gur. Coil

m RUUNG Della Force

(8) Royal Coach (3) GOSSIP MONGER (Sl CRIMSON GOlD (5) CRIMSON GOlD

(3 Gossip � (12) Castanet Caper 2 0011 3 9018 4 9011

t) CRIMSON GOlD (5l Crimson Gold

1) American EaQie (14 Try For Gold 1 1 2) Caslanet Caper (11) Jumbo l.i>e r.1 DARK GUY (10) ROYAL NECTAR t! JUSTERIHI (3l DARK GUY

0019 OC14 ANOTHERLEGENO�

Pickering)4-56 ..... BSirydom 5 6C12 8012 COPPER BEAT (T G an) 3-56 .... ......... . . 'Cormacll 4 OC20 0016 DAPPER LORD(Miss P Shllw)3-56(B) .... RSin!tt 9 I�-+-------+-=�����-.J-�--....,;.--�J-��'=----1 0018 OC14 DIAMOND DAYS (G M �) 3-56 (B)

S 5 8018 4 Justerini (4) Just&ml 3 Dln Guy (10 Royal Nectar ............................. ................................... I Hemingway

6 8014 (8 Vollerra (11) Budza 8 Voltm (6) Omnibus (9) NORTHERN SP!IITE (10) OUR BUDDY (1� OUR BUDDY (1� OUR BUlOY

� :31; EWr1t�=�A'J'�iiiMdi'i� 3 . .................................................................... FCoelzee 2 --��..;_---.-.-+---------�--=-----�--.-��=---1

7 OC12 9012 MRJOY(OCGou)3-56 ......................... LSalnlers 10 6 (10) Our Buddy (13 Roae 01 My Hllrl a 5012 ' 4C10

10 OC14

� Commander 01 AI rs Sold� (13) Rose ut My - Dashing Dandy Bold Red (4 Sold� �� :OCOIWCK (1 � CHIEF OF MEN (1� VIOI..ERO (10) V10LER0

2011 2D12 Cli.JAVER BEAT(OCiml)beii) 3-56(B) .......... KS1lea 1 4C10 6C10 SUNNYSPAIN(0WDurrani)3-56(8) .......... POillon 7 l�-+-----��--+----��-----�-------��---1�:-::-:�-=::------tl 9C10 0011 WllLSAMBITION(I Pic:kering)3-56(B)· .... WHarley 8

Coupled on the Tote lor • win: (1-10) 7 (1 l..inciJerg (7) fl911 Prerogative ! .Uiglt Wrilr ..,... _ (10) V!Oiero 4 Shl!l*i (13) Pariquin (1 J MARABAR HUs (1) MARAIIAR HILLS �8�

WALNIJT �� MARABAR HILLS Mr Joy has had two .- and ran • promising .._ last lima out over ·-1-;.;..-:""'-----������----+----.-�------+--.----�-----------l 1 200 matr" and ahould Improve. Quaver BNI two had two aaconda In •

8 (13) Greal Galaxy 1 Marabar Hla Crowned King l8l Walnut 3 High Priori!Y (11) Fovenla ( 11 Foverl1a (3 High PriOiily �� ROU.YGO (8) BROWN �RAY -

�� ROLLY GO (8�

BROWN BERRY

row and was onlY one lenglh behind 1he winner over 1 200 "*'- when 111-10 larvourlta. (oat Generation hit the lront INttl w., down the alnllght last 1111'18 out over 1 200 rnatrea to llnlah Juat over thrM lengttta behind ·-l--..;,......;..;_---tl-----...,.=----l--------+--�----=:----1 1he wlnnar. 1-1 Loat Ganaratkx., 15-10 Quaver Beat, 5-1 Sunny Spain, 7-1 Copper a.t. 210-1 otharL

9 Brown Berry (11 Ftirelt F-

(3) Rally Go (11) FUesl FSIM Brown Berry

(11 Faieii Gama �� =� (8) QUAVER BEAT

It is recorded lhat although The Citizen has endeavoured to furnlah correct Information, It does not, and will not accept liability lor uny error• ln1dvertently mld1.

1 0 LOll Gsnentliiln m QUAVER BEAT

Mr Jor rsl QUAVER BEAl ·

l.osl Ganeration Stmy Spain rl QUAVER BEAT

9 Sumy� 1 ) Anolltar (6) LOll Generation (9) SuMy Spall

Saturday 22 July 1 989_ THE CITIZEN

I Germ iston today I 1 - 1 t h15 SHARED SPONSORSHIP MAIDEN JUVENILE PLATE

(Fillies). R15 500. 1 300 m. (SwlngarfTrltec:ta):

1 ON10 BOLD TIMES (A G Laitd) 2-55 .................. R van Wy!< 5 2 4N10 CAN'T COUNT (J M Nel) 2-55 ..................... 'B Boles 1 3 OT10 CLEAR POOL(R R�)2-55 .............. 'JGeroudis 3 4 OT10 ON16 0017 GRACEFUL STEPPE (M F de Ked<) 2·55 ... C 8lom 7 5 2G14 4G17 2G14 HIGHLY FORMAL (A Uzent) 2-55 ................ G Turner 8 6 5G17 4G16 ON16 LEOUTOR (R Maroun) 2-55 (B) ........... C van Booma 8 7 PAINTEO FACE(NWvan TOilder)2-55 ........... KNel 10 8 6V12 PARIS LADY (Nic Claassen) 2-55 ............... C van As 4 8 0010 ON10 SALLY UGHT FOOT (B F �:t 2-55 ............ 0 Kun 6

11)- 0010 ON10 SILVER MIRAGE (J H de Bruyn 2-55 ........... OHabib 2

Can't Count was a distant fourth on her debut but she should have Improved with the benefit of that run. Clear Pool was slow out on her debut over 1 000 m and this distance should suit. Highly Formal has been placed In live of her seven starts and her winning turn cannot be far off. Leolilor was placed In her penultimate start but her form Is gener­ally moderate. Parts Lady tired late on her debut but she possibly needed that run and she can improve.

,to • FORECAST BEmNG : 2-1 Highly Formal, 5'2 Paris Lady, 5-1 Can't Count, Leolilor, 7-1 Others

2 - 11h55 THE KANGRA GROUP MAIDEN JUVENILE PLATE (C & G).

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

10 11 12 13 14 15 16

R15 500. 1 300 m. (SwlngarfTrltec:ta):

ON10 4G10 4N13 ON16 3N13

0010 3T14 3G14

ON10 BIG NEPHEW (RR Sage) 2-56 .............. 'J Geroudis 5 BURMESE TIGER (M F de Ked<) ............................ .. 2-56 ..................................................... Tvan Booma 16

OT10 CARAVAN MAN(AP Moltentze)2-56 ........... P Sasso · 12 CHAMPMANS PEAK (M H Maingard) 2-56 .... C Blom 14

6T12 CHARMING IMAGE (M H Maingard) 2·56 .... 0 Habib 9 0010 FOR THE LEGION (G B Scott) 2-56 ...... R Sulhertand 4 5V14 GREEN GOLD (Nic Claassen) 2-56 ............. C van As 2 7N16 LORD COLERIOGE (M 0 Zaki) 2-56 ...... ..... C Magua 3 OP12 PREWITT(MG Azzie) 2-56 ......................... GTumer 10

RAPALLO (R PLerena) 2-56 ................. : ..... DMartin 13 0010 ROYAL I'EGASUS(BFAme<v) 2·56 ............... DKun 15 0016 SALUTEJHE FLAG(Mrs BRi'umer)2·56 ..... A Fieet 7 3N13 SEVEN LtAGUES(R Maroun)2·56 ................. K Nel 8

SON OF SHEIK(N WvanTonder) 2-56 ......... N Kriek 11 STRIKER (S W Fletcher) 2-56 ..................... TV enter 8 WARNING SIGN (A G Laird) 2-56 ............. R van Wyl< 1

Coupled on the Tote lor a win: (4-5)

Charming Image was sixth on his debut altar a slow start and Improve­ment -ms likely. Green Gold was fancied over 1 400 m laat time but was wall beaten into tilth spot. Ha was placed In his previous two starts. Lord Coleridge waa a close third over the distance last month and waa hampered when unplaced in his subsequent outing. Seven Leagues has llnlahed third In his last three starts and Is sura to make a bold bid here.

FORECAST BETTING: 12·10 Seven Leagues, 4-1 Charming Image, Green Gold, 5-1 Warning Sign, &-1 Lord Coleridge, 7·1 Othera

1 ST LEG PLACE ACCUMULATOR 3 - 12h35 MALA MALA MAIDEN PLATE (Fillies). R1 4 000. 1 000 m.

(SwlngerfTrHecta/tat Double):

1 ON08 BANJOLADY(AUzent)3-Ss ...................... G Tumer 4 2 3T10 7T10 BRAZENGOLD (M FdeKod<)3-56 ....... Tvan Boom 1 3 8G10 5N10 3N10 FULLBOW(A Faui)3-56 .......................... Rvan Wy!< 8 4 0014 OT1 4 OV12 HUSKYHELEN (SWKenny) 3-56 ............... 'BBotes 10 5 KUNNENBURG (N WvanTondef)3-56 ..... C Magua 9 6 MADAM LAM tO (N W van T onder) 3-56 (B) ........ K Nei 3 4N10 3G10 2N10 1 UGHTLAURA (JJ J Engelbrecht) 3-56 .. K deRiddef 1 1 ON13 ON12 0010

41>1� 8 SAUCY LUCY (J J J Engelbrecht) ............................ .. 3-56 ................ ...... ........... ............ ... ..... M Bachmann 6

BP14 6P12 8

10 11 12

4G10 ON13 5F11

6G10 7N10 9G16 ON12 3A10 4N12

ON10

MISTY RAINE (WL Fourie) 3-56 (B) ...... .'J Sampson 2 RAINCHILD (0 P F de Vos) 4-56 (B) ............. 0 Habib 5 SUDOEN SWITCH (TPThomas) 3-56 (B) ... CvanAs 12 THATHCHINGS GWRLE (SNL) (Mrs D J Heming) ..... 3-56 ............................................................. P Sasso 7

Coupled on the Tote lor a win: (�) (NI)

Clairwood perms Citizen

R48 Jackpot First Leg: (3) Dark Guy, (4) Justerini, (8) Volterra. Second Leg: (1) Royal Harry, (9) Northern Sprite, (10) Our Buddy, (13) Rose Of My Heart. 'Third Leg: (2) Jungle Warrior, (10) Violero, (11) Chief Warden, (15) Blue Cossack. Fourth Leg: (l ) Marabar Hills, (8) Walnut.

� R54 Place Accumulator First Leg: (2) Guinnea Coin, (5) Delta Force, (1) Ruling. Second Leg: (4) Islander, (5) Crimson Gold. Third Leg: (3) Dark Guy. Fourth Leg: (9) Northern Sprite, (10) Our Buddy, (13) Rose Of My Heart. Fifth Leg: (3) Jungle Warrior, (10) Violero, (15) Blue Cossack. · Sixth Leg: (1) Marabar Hills, (8) Walnut. Se\'enth Leg: (3) Rolly Go

- R27 Pick 6

1st Leg: 1 , 4, 5 4th Leg: 2, 10, 15 2nd Leg: 3 5th Leg: 1, 8 3rd Leg: 9, 10, 13 6th Leg: 3

Punters Friend

R48 Jackpot

First Leg: (� Justerini, (6) Omnibus, (10) Royal Nectar, (11} Budza Second Leg: �10) Our Buddy 'Third Leg: (2) Jungle Warrior, (6) · Yardmaster, (10) Violero, (11) Chief Warden, (12) Undberg, (14) Chief Of Men, (15) Blue Cossack , (16) Dawson Trail '

Fourth Leg: (1) Marabar Hills, (3) High Priority, (13) Great Galaxy

R2� Place Accumulator First Leg: (5) Delta Force Second Leg: (3) Gossip Monger, (5) Crimson Gold 'Third Leg: (4) Justerini, (10) Royal Nectar Fourth Leg: (10) Our Buddy Fifth Leg: (10) Violero, (12) Lindberg, (14) Chief Of Men Sixth Leg: (1) Marabar Hills, (13) Great Galaxy Seventh Leg: (3) Rolly Go (8) Brown Berry

R768 Pick 6 1st Leg: 1 , 3, 5, 14 2nd Leg: 4, 6, 10, 11 3rd Leg: 10 4th Leg: 2, 6, 10, 1 1 , 12, 14, 15, 16 5th Leg: 1 , 1 1 , 13 6th Leg: 1, 3, 8, 1 1

Bruen Gold h• not raced alnce December when third over this dis­tance. Full Bow Is starting to Improve and was third over 1 000 m three weeka ago. Madam Lame has raced three times and has finished In the money on eech occasion. She should go close In this field. Misty Raine needed her last run alter a three month break. She has been placed over this COUI'M and distance. Sudden Switch showed good pace when fourth over 1 200 m last lima and she could challenge over this slightly shorter trip. FORECAST BETTING: 15-10 Madam Lema, 7·2 Full Bow, Sudden Switch, 5-1 Brazen Gold, 7·1 Others .

1ST LEG PICK 6 4 - 13h15 HAGGlE RAND GRADUATION PLATE (F & M). R17 000.

1 800 m. (SwlngarfTrlfacta):

1 6810 8N12 5810 BOLTIMORE (RJ L.ashansky)4-57 .......... RvanWy!< 9 2 ONi2 4812 5N13 ITAUAN DREAM (RJl.asllansky) s-57 .................... . 3 ON16 ON13 6G13 �·uci<ii·;N·cii:Ai''ii'�)a:s:;-::::::::;j·�� � 4 9G16 9V16 7818 ROSEMAIN(AG Kotze)4-57 ...................... P Sasso 11 5 1T12 6G14 8N12 ARIKI (MFde Kod<)3-54 (B) ......................... C Biom 10 6 1B14 ON13 ON16 BOLDRUBY(GB Scot1)4-54 ............... RSuther1and 3 7 7G10 4G14 OT12 FIRSTDEBUTANTE (RP Lerena)4-54 .. 'J Geroudis 5 8 4G16 2G14 1G14 JOYFUL RUSSIAN (JM Goodman) 3-54 .................. .

(B) ............ .................................................... OHabib 2 9 0014 ON16 ON13 JUNGLE SONG(AA Lerena)3-54 (B) ......... JLerena 12

10 8V16 ON13 0019 MELODYHOUR (JJJ Engelbcecht)4-54 ................ ..

1 1 �Rii'TciiE:o ........ ................ ... ..... ... . .. MBachmaM 1 3

12 OT1 2 6N13 ON 1 3 POSE (I A EJayes)3-54 .............................. GTumer 7 13 3N13 ON16 2N16 ROYALAffiNT10N (C 0tto)3-54 ....... Tvan Booma S 14 ON13 7N16 7N13 SHARPY(CE Erasmus)3-54 ...................... CvanAs 15 15 2T19 2N20 1G19 WEIGEUA(JSPienaar) 3-54 ...................... TVenter 4

Coupled on the Tote lor a win: (1-2) '

Italian Dream is usually thereabouta and she coold make the frame In this field. Joyful Ruaalan won her malden at this track last month and she should have acope lor further Improvement. Royal Attention was beaten a length last time and has only once failed to feature In the money. Welgella won her maiden by six lengths three weeks ego aha could follow up. Chuckle 'n Chat showed some Improvement last time and Firat Debutante rates an upset chance on her best form. FORECAST BETTING: 2-1 Joyful Russian, Royal Attention, 6-1 Welgalla, Chuckle 'n Chat, 7·1 Arlkl, Firat Debutante, 10;-1 Others

1 ST LEG JACKPOT 5 - 1 3h55 MIDWAY TOYOTA GRADUATION PLATE (C & G). R17 000.

1 600 m. (SwlngerfTrlfacta):

1 3T16 6V18 6G19 BROCHURE(NW'tlln Tonderl 3-57 ................ K Nel 2 2 8T1 2 ON12 ON13 GROVENOR'SBEST(NZ)(R RSage) ..................... .

�:f �m 6G14 �s:rAc-i<.iii·R's;;;i4:5.i·(ai·:::.·:::::::�J� 10 3N16 ROUGH ANO READY(R R Magnet-) 4·57 ................ ..

5 7V20 7G19 9N20 W�uifi0Ci< .. <A

.G ... La .... ,:., .. � ..

54 .....

(.B .. , ..................... A Fleet a

6 "" ·- ................. 'B Boles 13 7

ON16 8T12 2G14 COC.ONIALBOY (MFde Kod<) 3-54 .... Tvan Booma 7 9N12 7G14 2N16 CRYSTAL DRIVE (JHde Bruyn)3-54 ...................... .

8 4N16 6N20 1T16 (B� ........................................................... RvanWy!< 12

9 OP12 ON12 3G13 �IS��S���)�54(s)::::cviiJ= � 10 9G18 ·OT16 8N16 MONTE RIO(ARg)(MH Maingard) 4-54 ................. .

11 OV20 0027 (B) ................................................................ OHabib 0820 NAUTICAL MILE (R J Lashansky) 3-54 .................... .

12 0020

OV18 WJ ........ ................................ ................ .'JSarnpsoo 11

13 9T16 8V16 VINGMAN(OPFOevos)5-54 ................ PSasso 5 8N10 1N10 YEHUOI (RL Howe)3-54 ............................ OMaM 4

Coupled on the Tote lor a win: (2-3) Haystack failed badly when favourite last time but his previous form was good and he may be worth another chance. Rough and Raecly Ia none too consistent but he runs on strongly when in the mood. Colonial Boy was a good aacond last time behind Raw Ene<gy who flattered the form by winning again next time out. Crystal Drive is Improving steadily In his new atabla and was runner-up behind Lord Eadan last month. Kirov won wall In his-first start lor his new stable and further Improvement may be forthcoming. Mister Mahel ran a vaatly improved race last weak but Ia not always reliable. FORECAST BEmNG: 5-2 Haystack, $-1 Colonial Boy, 4-1 Rough and Reedy, 5-1 Crystal Drive, 7·1 Oth;era

Germiston perms Peter Duffield

R84 Jackpot First Leg: (4) Rough And Ready, (6) Colonial Boy. Second Leg: (2) I Try, (4) Westridge, (7) Cricket Season, {8) Popularity Plus. Third Leg: (2) Jungle Warrior, (4) Shaybani, (10) Violero, (13) Periquin, (14) Chief Of Men, (1,5) Blue Cossack, (16) Dawson Trail. ·

Fourth Leg: (1) Cardinal Sin, (2) Gentleman Jones, (7) Cymbal Lad.

R1 2 Place Accumulator First Leg: (6) Madam Lame Second Leg: (13) Royal Attention Third Leg: (6) Colonial Boy Fourth Leg: (2) I Try, (7) Cricket Season. Fifth Leg: (2) Jungle Warrior, (7) Right Preroga­tive, (10) Violero. Sixth Leg:(1) Cardinal Sin, (2) Gentleman Jones. Seventh Leg: (8) Linen Qraft, (9l Regent's Fun.

R756 Pick 6 1st Leg: 5, 8, 13. 4th Leg: 2, 4, 10, 13, 1 4, 2nd Leg: 4, 6. 15, 16.

5th Leg: 1, 2, 7. 3rd Leg: 2, 4, 7, 8. 6th Leg: 4, 8, 9.

Graeme Hawkins

R56 Jackpot Farst Leg: (3) Haystack, (4) Rough and Ready, (6) !Colonial Boy, (7) Crystal Drive Second Leg: (2) I Try, (4) Westridge, (7) Cricket Season, (9) Raised Status 'Third Leg: (2) Jungle Warrior, (10) Violero, ( 1 1) Chief Warden, (13) Periq�in, (14) Chief of Men, (15) Blue Cossack, (16) Dawson Trail Fourth Leg: (1) Cardinal Sin

R6 Place Accumulator ·First Leg: (6) Madam Lame Second Leg: (13) Royal Attention 'Third Leg: (3) Haystack, (7) Crystal Drive Fourth Leg: (2) I Try, (4) Westridge Fifth Leg: (10) Violero, (13) Periquin, (15) Blue Cossack -·

Sixth Leg: (1) Cardinal Sin Seventh Leg: (8) Linen Craft

1st Leg: l3 2nd Leg: 3, 4, 6, 7 Jrd Leg: 2, 4, 7, 9

R1 1 2 Pick 6

4th Leg: 2, 10, 11 , 13, 14, 15, 16 5th Leg: 1 6th Leg: 81 9 .,.

6 - 14h35 PROTEA DIAMONDS (PTY) LTD HANDICAP. (A Dlvlalon) R33 000. 1 900 m. (SwlngerfTrlfecta/2nd Double):

1 8T20 2T20 8G17 RULEBYTHE SWORO(AFaui)9-57 ....... Tv Booma 2 2 7T20 7C16 2G16 I TRY(IRE)(Mrs OJHeming) 5-56,5(B) ... RvanWy!< 4 3 0019 5G14 5G11 CUP HOLOER(RL Howe)&54,5(B) .......... G Tumer 3 4 3T16 2G17 3G16 WESTRIOGE(SNL) (RMaroon) &-54,5 ............ K Nel 6 5 1G17 8T16 0017· ARTILLERY (NicC1aassen) 5-52,5(B) ........ C vanAs 7 6 3G17 7G17 9G16 SUPREMEROYAL(CJ Maree) &-52 ........... OMartin � 7 2G17 3T14 1G17 CRICKETSEASON (RRMagner)4-51 ,5..................

10 6K20 OP16 6C18 ���:�������:�:��):�s.1_:s.::::::::�::: g

9 6C20 3T20 4G27 RAISEOSTATUS (RP Lerena) 5-51,5(B) .... O Habib 8 10 3T20 2T20 1G19 HARDASSET(RP L.erena) 5-48 ................ CMagua 1

Coupled on the Tote tor a win: (9-10) See lead story FORECAST BETTING: 15-10 I Try, 7-2 Weatrldge, 4-1 Cricket Sauon, 5-1 Herd Asset, 7·1 Ralaed Status, 11)-1 Others

7 - 1 5h10 THE MAINSTAY INTERNATIONAL (Gr 1). R350 000. 1 800 m. (SwlngerfTritacta):

2 3 4

8 9

10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17

2014 1C16 0022 PRICELESS ASSET (P G Kannameyer) ................... 4-56,5 ........................................................ G Howes

7010 9C16 6022 JUNGLEWARRIOR(AESands)4-56 ........... KShea 0016 OP16 3C16 HEIR TO RICHES (R J Rixon) 5-55,5 (B) .... P Wynne 1T14 5T20 0019 SHAYBANI (USA) (Mrs OJ Heming) 4-55,5 ...............

(B) .................................................................. J lloyd OC16 1016 4C16 SILVER TALLY (USA) (T M Millard) 4-55,5 ................

(BlA .............. ..... ...................................... G Crealock 9T20 6C16 4G16 �tG&M�=��s/f�tl:�):::::::::.�

v-�-�� 6020 1C24 1 022

3-53,5 .......................... ........................ M Suther1and 1014 3019 0022 COOLSTAR (P G Kannemeyer) 4-53 ........... G Puilef 6G14 1T16 1P16 BOLD SA TTLE (J Nicholsoo) 4-52,5 ......... P S1rydom 8014 1C24 3022 VKlLERO (ARG) (T M Milan!) 4-52,5 (B) ... F Coetzee 6014 2019 0022 CHIEF WARDEN (GJ Rixon) 4-51 ,5 ............... SJupp 2016 1T16 0022 UNDBERG (R AAlaird) 3-50,5 .............. H Vennaak 1016 9020 5022 PERIOUIN (ARG) (RJ Rixon) 3-50 ............... R Fradd 1016 5020 2C18 CHIEF OF MEN (A 0 Gordon) 3-49 ............. B Martus 3020 2C24 2C16 BlUE COSSACK (A=)3-49(B) ..... AMarcus 2t<20 0016 2020 OAWSON TRAIL(D 1)3-49(B) ... A� 4016 4020 1016 ROYALFLO(TM MiWd) 3-49 ............... G Sch:llield

Coupled on the Tote lor a win: (HI) ($-13) (5-7-tQ-17) See Clalrwood preview

13

12 15 10 7

17 1

18 6

14 8

11 2 4

BECHUS AND SHAM'S BETTING: $-1 Vlolero, 11·2 Blue Coeaacfi. 6-1 Right Prerogative, 8-1 Jungle Warrior, to-t Perlquln, Royal Flo, 12-1, Dewaon TraH, 1 4-1 Others

8 - 151140 NAMPAK HANDICAP (B Dlvlalon). R25 000. 1 600 m. (SwlngerfTrlfacta13rd Double):

1 1G14 2G14 1N16 CAROINAL SI!jb�rKenny) 3-57 ............ Tv Booma 9 2 1T12 1T14 2G16 GENTLEMAN ES (R Maroun) 3-53,5 ......... K Nel 3 3 3T14 7G16 7G19 SCARLETEARL(I G'Bailie)6-52 ................. D HabiJ 10 4 SCRATCHED 5 0017 0016 9G13 OCEAN RULER (JJJ Engelbrecht) ...........................

5-50 ...... ........... ................ ........................ c v Booma 6 6 SCRATCHED 7 3N12 1P12 3T12 CYMBAL LAD Jfl Warren) 3-49,5 ...... .... M Bachmam 4 8 ON13 6T12 5N16 PENT ACHO (F �iolti) 4-49 (B) ............ C Magua 2 8 7T1 2 1G14 ON16 REAOYSTEAOY(R Sege)3-49 .......... 'J Geroudis 1

10 7T16 0014 7T16 BlUNDERBUSS (Nic Claassen) ............................... �fciiiEiii(sNi:)(AC3.i:iii;;ij's:.lii:::�J-= 7

11 5N13 ON16 ON16 8 Cardinal Sin was a good winner of the Newmarket Guineas last time when beating subsequent two-In-a-row winner Chattaronga. Gentleman Jones Ia holding form well and has yet to finish out ot the money. Lest time out he was aacond over this coui'M and distance. Sunshine Harry shows good pace but appears better up to 1 400 m. Cymbal Led has very good form over 1 200 m and will be tackling thla distance lor the llrat flme. Ready Steedy flopped last time but was a good winner In his panut­tlmata start. FORECAST BETTING: 1-1 Cardinal Sin, $-I Gentleman Jones, 4-1 Cym­bal Lad, &-1 Reedy Steedy, to-t Othera

9 - 18h50 JOHANNESBURG NORTH ROUND TA.BLE NO. 71. (C & G).

R14 000. 1 000 m. (SwingarfTrlfacta):

1 SV16 OT16 OT1 2 CARELESS LOVER (T Spies) 3·56 ........ 'J Sampson 8 2 0010 4810 0010 CHARMEX (J J J �) 3-56 (B) ....... T Venter 8 3 9T1 2 7N10 COME ELEVEN (A zent) 3-56 ....... ............ GTumer 4 4 3G10 3N10 4G10 DICKY SAM (I A E Jayes) 3-56 (B) ........ M BachmaM 1 5 OV12 8G14 9G10 HEVERSHAM(N�56 (B) ............... RRoberts 8 6 9G10 7T12 7G10 HINT OF GOLD (J M man) 3-56 (B) ...... 0 Habib 2 7 4810 4N10 ON12 HOT MA �R J Lashansky) 3·56 .. ........... 'B Boles 11 8 6N10 2G10 2G10 LINENC (S WFietcher)3-56 ........... R vanWyl< 3 9 3G10 3T10 8N12 REGENT"S FUN (T A lowe) 3-56 ........ H Badenhorsl 7

10 SELENIAL DESERT (Mrs B R Turner) 3-56 ............... 10 11 2T10 9N12 7T10 WING'S PRIDE (WL Fourie) 3-56 (B) ... Tvan Booma 5

B = BLINKERS

Page 29_

Today's Milnerton selections

Race One: (4) COPPER CO-

BRA (3) Comanche King

(20) Tropical Ruler Race Two: (16) SMOKING JUNE (15) Sanbonani (6) Com Harvest

Race Three: (9) QUININE (6) Dream Sound (4) Waltzing King

Race Four: (8) DREAM OF

DIAMONDS (6) Athasi-Mou

(13) Queen Of The North

Race. Five: (7) RUSSIAN COS­

SACK (3) Legal Pleasure

(10) Beauty Crown Race SiX: (16) MAIDORE (6) Totalize

(11) Bumper Race Seven:

(5) SEVEN SPRINGS (4) Funny Streak (2) Pace And Power

Race Eight: (5) SOLDIER (3) Sovereign Reign (9) Quality

Race N'me: (4) _PICTURE

SF.\RCH (8) Passionate Prince ·

(10) Peach Pie

Citizen's Top _ Tips

PETER DUFFIELD

(5) Highly Fonnal- Race 1

Dicky Sam has been placed In hla last three outings, twice over thia course and distance. Linen Crall was moat unlucky to go down In a tight finish last time and he looks aet to break his malden here. Regent's Fun GRAEME HAWKINS ahoWIId promiae before baing sidelined. He has not raced since October last year and the belting will be the best Indication as to his chances. Wing's Pride also returns from a long rest. His previous form includes a (6) Madam Lame - Race 3 close second over the distance. FORECAST BETTING: 1·1 Linen Craft, 5-2 Ragent"s Fun, &-1 Dicky. Sam, 7·1 Come Efavan, Wing's Pride, to-t Other'

- I Try to shine in local feature ·BY Graeme Hawkins

WITH only a handful o( meetings remaining be­fore the close of the 1 988/89 racing season it is inconceivable that Jean Heming can win the train­ers' championship but she can win this afternoon's Protea Diamond Handi­cap with the Irish bred horse I Try.

I Try lias particularly good form at Gosforth

Park having finished a close second in the Nove.mber Handicap be­fore posting a comfort­able win over 1 900 m back in April.

Last time out he - fin­ished a creditable second over a mile behind Von Spee and on that per­formance he should have the measure of his rivals today.

The consistent Wes­tridge rates the main dan-

ger but he is only half-a­kilo better off for a length beating last time and over the extra 300 m he could again be held by I Try.

Cricket Season came back to winning form last month and although up a division, he is down six ki los provided Botes can claim his full allowance . At the weights he could pose a threat but I expect I Try to deliver the goods.

Geriniston selections Peter Duffield

1 (5l HIGHLY FORMAL (8 Paris Lady· (2) Can't Count

2 (m SEVEN LEAGUES

5 Charming Image Green Gold

3 �6� MADAM LAME 9 Mi�ine

(3 FuN

4 (13) ROYAL AffiNTION (8l Joyful Russian (5 Ariki

5 (6l COlONIAL BOY

l4 Rough And Ready 3) Haystaclt

6 m CRICKET SEASON I Try (4) Westridge

7 (10) VIOLERO (2) Jungle Warrior (7) Right Prerogative

8 � CARDiNAL SIN 2 Gentleman Jones Cymbal Lad

9 (9l REGENrs FUN �8 Unen Craft 4) Dicky Sam

Graeme Hawkins

(5� HIGHLY FORMAL (2 Can't Count (3 Clear Pool (1� SEVEN LEAGUES . �5 Charming Image

Green GOld

(6) MADAM LAME (11) Sudden Switch (2) Brazen Gold (13� ROYAL AffiNTION

(8 Joyful Russian (15) Weigelia rn CRYSTAL DRIVE

(6) =8oy (2) I TRY

m westriL Cricl<at

rl BLUE COSSACK . 13 Periquin

10 VIOiero ill CARDINAL SIN Cymbal Lad Gentleman Jones (8) LINEN CRAFT !9) =·sFun 4) Sam

Punters Friend Computafonn

I �� HIGHLY FORMAL (2) Can't Count (6) Leoiitt

(5) HIGHLY FORMAL l6) Paris Lady 2) Can't Count (m SEVEN LEAGUES (13) SEVEN LEAGUES

Gnlen Gold � Charming Image 5 Charming Image Green Gold (6� MADAM LAME · (2 Brazen Gold (3) FuN Bow

�6� MADAM LAME 3 Full Bow

(11) Sudden Switch (13) ROYAL ATTENTION • (13� ROYAL AffiNTION (2) Italian Dream (8 Joyful Russian

(15) WeiQela (15 Weigela m COLONIAL BOY C/ystal Drive Kirov

(6) COlONIAL BOY

ffi Haystac!< Crystal Drive

� CRICKET SEASON (1 Hard Asset li4) WestrldQe

7) Cticket Season t I TRY

• 4) Westridge f.14) CHIEF OF MEN 121 lindberg

(10 VIOiero

(1� VKlLERO ( Right Pterogative

(13 Pertquin m GENTLEMAN JONES Cymbal Lad ( C8l!inal Sin � CARDINAL SIN 2 Gentleman Jones

Cymbll. Lad

�9) REGENT"S FUN (8) LiNEN CRAFT 81 Unen Ctalt (9l Regent's Fun

(1 1 Wing's Pride (4 Dicky Sam

Page 30

From a Buccaneer to a Bird • • . Moroka Swallows yesterday signed defender SIPHO SIKHONDE from their National Soccer League rivals

Orlando Pirates.

THE CITIZEN Saturday 22 JuJy 1 989 1 ' oo 1 b •- ••

Another big signing as .

Birds swoop for Pirates defender

By Billy Cooper MOROKA Swallows made another big capture when they lured Orlando Pirates left back Sipho Sikhonde into their nest.

This was revealed yes­terday by the Ellis Park based National Soccer League club's coach Ed­die Lewis:" "We needed strenghtening at the back and I believe Sikhonde will be ideal. "

However Lewis i s not sure whether Sikhonde will be fit to make his de­but for The Birds against Jomo Midas Cosmos in a Castle League confronta­tion at Ellis Park tomor· row.

Explained the former Manchester United and West Ham player: "Sik­honde is carrying a groin strain. I will first have to see how serious it is be­fore considering him for selection against Cos-mos."

Sikhonde turned 23 years old on Tuesday and Lewis regards him highly.

"He is a geat prospect and will do a good job for Swallows and will be a big asset."

Although Lewis was happy with his latest sign­ing, he is having sleepless nights worrying about his mounting injury list.

Striker Les Grobler has a badly bruised toe and is doubtful, while another striker Steve Sekano is a non starter. Even worse news from the Swallows camp is that talented mid: fielder Joseph Rapelego is out for two months with a badly strained groin.

But the injury list does not end there. Central de­fender Goodman Hlong­wane has an ankle injury which could sideline him _tomorrow, _while another

defender Bernard Lesho­zi is still suspended.

"It just never seems to end. The old story of 'it never rains but pours' ap­plies to us. It is a terrible blow losing Rapelego as I believe he oould become a very good player. But our backs are to the wall and we will have to go out there against Cosmos and do our best," said Lewis; who has drafted striker

· Fob Shangase into his .o;quad for tomorrow.

Cosmos manager Roy Matthews has ·no such worries but he is hoping that his two top players Thomas Madigae and Au­gust Makalakalane who both leave for Scotland on Tuesday will give him a · pleasant going-away

present in the form of goals.

Matthews confirmed that Madigage will be ioininJ.! Scottish cham­pions Glagow Rangers and Makalakalane Hearts.

"Ho{lefully both lalls will get among the goals. We are in a very positive frame of mind and I have every confidence we can beat Swallows as we have been playing well recent­ly," Matthews said.

In other action tomor­row, lwisa Kaizer Chiefs take on Vaal Reefs Time Stars at Orkney, Pirates :'lay Bush Bucks at Glebe and at Qwa Qwa Fair­ways Stars are at home to Leeds United.

All matches kick off at 3 pm.

Stern test for De Reuck in SA championships

lt�s tough being number one DURBAN. - Colleen de that must make her fa- right on the day," was De Reuck's stranglehold on vourite to give a repeat Reuck's reply. the women's title will face performance this time. She rated Van Zyl as a tough test from Elana The 1986 race in Dur- her biggest danger and van Zy! in the Ohlsson's ban saw De Reuck slash thought that there was a

NEW YORK. - Jim "I want the US to win," though they were far from Pugh is in Palos Verdes, Leach is quick to say. being strangers. California, celebrating his "I'm not rooting against "We had always known first professional tennis · them or anything. But it's each other because we singles title. Rick Leach is getting harder and harder were rivals growing �p," relaxing a few miles far- · to take. They're kind of said Leach, a 24-year-old ther down the coast in putting us" on the back- left-bander. "We were al-Laguna Beach. burner, really." ways the top couple of

Both would rather be in "Even though we beat juniors in southern Call-Munich, West Germany, Flach and Seguso three fornia, and then he went where the United States out of three times (in to a rival university at yesterday began their Da- 1988), we haven't even UCLA and I went to vis Cup semifinal against · had a chance to play" Da- USC." the Boris Becker-led de- vis Cup, said Pugh, who Both Pugh's Uni�rsity fending champions. added that the Internal- of California alma mater

Pugh and Leach are the ional Tennis Federation and Leach's University of world's top-ranked .uses the Davis Cup as a Sout-hern California are in ,doubles team. But the qualifier for the Olympic Los Angeles. doubles for the US Davis , Games. . Cup team Wl"ll be handled "I 1988 ld 't "Both of our fathers n , we cou n by Ken Flach and Robert 'even go to the Olympics played together in seniors Seguso, ranked eighth in even though we were the tennis, and they're good the world.

· No 1 team in the world. friends. We kind of knew

"They've never lost, "I think for something their family all along," and they have that Davis like that, there should be Leach added. Cup experience," said an exception. Obviously I They each had �fferent Pugh, who just won the think the No. 1 team in partners when they play­singles crown at Newport, the world should be al- ed a small United States Rhode Island. "On the lowed to play in the Tennis Association chal­other hand, I know we've Olympics. Ienger tournament in Ral· done better than .any "That was a little eigh, North Carolina, in other doubles team." tough. Then Flach and 1986. But because the

The Flach-Seguso team Seguso won it after we computer ranking of has a 10-0 record in Davis beat them three out of Leach and his partner Cup. three times, so that was wasn't high enough to get

"It's tough for them to even tougher on us." them into the tourna-take a team out that With John McEnroe in- ment, Leach approached hasn't lost," Leach said. jured, the United States Pugh's team and. asked if "Even though, if you look w!ll depend c;>n . Andre they would mind splitting at any other category - Agassi and Brad Gilbert up so all four could play. ranking, point standing, for the singles. results -we've done bet- It was luck that teamed "The only reason Rick

. ier." Leach and Pugh, al- and I played together is

(left) court in doubles," SA Half-marathmr€:ham- . Sonya Laxton's SA re- chance that her record said Pugh, a 25-year-old pionships here today. cord from 73 min 45 sec could be bettered again. right-hander. "It was just down to 71:33. In 1987 "But that depends on a fluk'e thing." In what should develop East London was the ve- the weather," .s,be.-s21tt[

into an exciting and en- With r- "th d They won the Raleigh nue and she ran a cour- I rn van er thralling battle expect an M f. T I t tournament, then cap- ageous race to win in erwe o ransvaa ou all-out effort from the Na- f h "t · 1 tured several other 73:42 in spite of being ill, o t e race I certam Y

doubles titles on the satd- tal Springbok to hold off and then on the same • looks like a two-way chal-the Western Province 1 b t D R k lite tout while continuing course last year she came enge e ween e euc star's challenge and prove d v z 1 h h to play ocassionally with up with a worlc;l-class per- an an Y , w o as that she is still the best by tr t d · · 1 other partners. They were formance by lowering her concen a e mam Y on

first-round losers in their stretching her �tring of own S A record down to track, cross country and victories in this cham- 10 km d ·

first big tournament in . 71:22. roa races m the 1987, then won the next

piOnship to f�ur-in-a�ro'Y. . But the big question is past. week at Scottsdale, Ari- Her winning sequence how does De Reuck see Others who came in zona. over the last thiee years is today's race? with good chances are

Then came 1988, a year already better than any Well, she is as cagey as Sonja Laxton (Tyl), Eve-

most players dream other women's champion ever and that is mo·st lina Tsabalala (W Prov), about. before her had attained. . probably the best sign. Trudie Smuts (Tvl) and

But it was the manner in "I've put the training in Blanche Moila (Natal). -They teame<f up to win which she won those races and I hope that I can get it Sapa. '

tbe Australian Open, 1------------r---------------------their first Grand Slam title. They reached the quarterfinals of the French Open and battled their way to the cham­pionship match at the US Open before being forced to default to the Spanish duo of Sergio Casal and Emilio Sanchez when Leach became too ill to play.

There were six other titles in 1988 as Leach and Pugh qualified for the year-ending Masters Doubles Championship, which they won, beating Casal and Sanchez in the final.

In January, they re­peated as Australian

Hockey tourney

Lamb i nju ry ELEVEN teams will be competing in the South African Country Districts inter-provincial men's hockey tournament which starts at Gerrniston Sports Club on Monday, climax­ing with the final next Saturday.

LONDON. England batsman Allan Lamb could miss the remaining three cricket tests against Australia after damaging his right index finger dur­ing Northamptonshire's county championship match against Leices­tershire.

Lamb will see a special­ist on Monday but it is feared the joint is cracked and some bone has been chipped off the end of the finger.

Former Springbok left wing Brian Surtees is to play for Natal in goal, the position his father played in· for South Africa .

- · Lamb had to stand down from the second ,_ Sapa.

scare test after damaging liga­ments in his left hand playing for Northants against the Australians and missed the third match of the series with a shoulder injury.

He said on yesterday: "I'm feeling very low at the moment. Things cer­tainly haven't worked out very well this season. I've had an incredible run of bad luck with injuries." - Sapa-�euter.

""iii!!i�:;;;;�ii!:��;:!!;i��::::;;�:;;;;!;;;;;; IJ he plays the deuce (right)

• ·court and I play the ad

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OPEN SATURDAYS

II . I

- --- - -- ...._ _ _

TODAY RUGBY

SDrtnallok trilla: Shodow Springbol<s The Rial (Poll Eizabeth). •

l'l'ftlncW Frilndly: Slallallnd • Griquas (VIilloMg} Club rugby Tr--J. Pir1llel Grand Challenge: Wits v Defence

(Wits); Krugersdorp v Police (Krugersdorp); Aandtontein v Alberron (Randfontein); Dig· gars v Roode!loort (Di!lgers). Sub Unton: Sturrock Park v Johaooesburg (Sturrock Park); Wostonaria v Jeppe Old Boys �estonaria); Westelil<es v Durban Deep estellkes); Edenvale v Old Edwar· dians Edenvale). Nol1hlm TranavMI llollnd a.nk c.rtton I..Ngu.: Pretoria y Adelaar (Pretoria A. 3.30 pm); Defence v P� . (Defence Stadium A, 3.30 pm); Oostefikes • Hldeqtjins (Old Students A.

-

Weekend Sports Diary 3.30 pm); UniversitY v POlice (Police Col­lege A, 3.30 pm). Eastern r..,. • .., Senior Lllgul: Benoni v Police �ilow-more Parl<); Springs v BniJ<pan ( ·

Part<); Boksb\Jrg v K8n"4ltOf1 Parl< lll.llg).

SOCCER NSl Culle I..Ngue: Arcacia v Hellenic (lletea Part<); AmaZulu v Super Kurt At:.es (Kings Parl< Rugby Stadium); Giant Black· pool v Double Adion Sundowns (Orlando Stadium). All a1 3 pm. ll'L: Flrlt DIN!on: (All at 3.30 pm) B Northerns v Boksburg (Nonlvnead); Uniao v Kempton P (Turffontein); Florida A v AI· caoa [Trezona Parl<); Jeppe v lletea Parl< (Quondam Park); Ramblers v Wits U (Rho­de5 Park); Defence v Roberts/lam (DHO); Zoo �e v Bedtordview (:ZOO l..al<e). fllllliM Divlllon: (All at 2 pm) B Nortl>­erns v Boksbur!l (Nor1hmead); lJniao v Kempton P [Turlfontoin); Florida A v Alca· dia [Truana Park); Jeppe v Berea Park

(Ouondom Parl<); Ramblers v Wits U (Rho­des Parl<); Defence v Robertsham; Zoo lake v Bedfordview (Zoo Lake); Second DIYialon (AI al 3.30 pm) Wanderers v M Meteors (Wanderers); Atlas v Aiberlon'AJS (Atlas); Prirvose v S Suburbs (� P); Vaal IJtd v JHB Municipals (0 Fourie Slad); Megawatt P v Corinthians (Megawatt P); Elsburg y MocXIertonlein (Elspark); Athleti-00 v Sportilg (PioMer Park B); Third DIYI­IIion {All ai 3.30 pm) SAP (Preloria) v Troyeville (Koedoe Park); Germiston C v VICtoria Saints (Delville); ACPP v Old Be­nonians (Quagga Road); Rangers v Por1o (Bloch Parl<); Avian v F Parkhurst (Vd Bij1 Park).

OK I..Ngue: Motherwell v Highland Spws (Mahweierong 3 pm). Nlllonll � - ..... Dimas Young Star v Wanderers (Delmas); Coronation ADn v Cartllfl Spurs (Coron&­tlon); Continentals v Llrdey Home Sweep­an (Witbank); De Beers v Cosmos 'j,Jan

l..ubbe); Real Sweepera v WIS8r18 White Bids (Sebokeng) AI at 3 pm.

TOMORROW SOCCER

NSl c..u. llegue: Moroka Swallows • Jomo Midas Cosmos (Ellis Park); Fairway Slars v l.-!s United (Phuthacitshaba); Bush Bucks v Orlando Pirates (Glebe); Vaal Reels Tl!rMI Slars v lwisa Kaizer Chiefs (Oppenheimer Stadium). All at 3pm. OK LEAGUE: Umtata Liverpool v Natal United (Umtata); Panthers v Pretoria City (Gale.OOWe); African Wanderers v Swaraj Unrted (Glebe); Chlppas Dynamos v Dan­gerous Oarkies (KR Rumelin); Secllnda iV;es v Mpumalanga Unil8d Brothers (Em­balenhle); Computer Stars v Royal TIQIII'S (Orlando Stadium); S Monalct\5 v Ravens (Wonderkop); Silver Spurs v lJmtala Bucks (Hiobane); Vaal Professionals v Ratanang

iotaholosiane (Sharpevifla). SASFPL: Berea v BallawoOd (a-ttl New Stadium, 3 pm); Real laj v Bida (Northdlle Sladum, PielsnnarftzDuJ, 3pm). Nillonal Proflellonal � l.elgue: Sokesirnbone v Lindley Home SweePers (Lindley); Mighty IWds y Winter Roses (Vosloorus); De Beers v Wanderon (George Goch); Kinross Mine v Vaal Pro­fessionals (Embalenhle); Delmas Young Stars v Cosmos (Coronalion); Young Ones v Oriando.

Pirates (Bekkersdaf). All at 3 pm.

HOCKEY Southern TransVIIIII Wonw�'e Hoc:Mr ANoclellon: 8.15 - Wits - Wits I v Jeppe II. JCE - JCE I v Jeppe I. 9.45 -Randburg Oblates - Oblates I v Wander· ers I. Pirates- Pirates I v Old Edt I. 11:15 - Wanderers - Wanderers II v Old Jo. hannians I.

j f I ( ( ti lJi in PI

r� t;le

Saturday 22 July 1 989 THE CITIZEN

Wits endanger Top Eight spot' but Rangers cl imb the ladder

Diggers strike

trouble By Billy Cooper

BLOEMFONTEIN Cel­tic were full value for their 1-1 draw against Wits University in their Castle League soccer clash at Milpark last night.

The Free State club were on top for the first haH again�t a somewaht lethargic home side who appeared to have little in­itiative and appeared con­tent to go through the motions.

Celtic's striker Troy Saila had the best chance

to break the deadlock in the winner, but some the first period but his good goalkeeping from 23rd minute shot inched John Dzimbira and some past the post. fine saves on the goalline

Celtic held the upper denied the home side vic­hand and were rewarded tpry . .. when substitute Jeffrey . Dzibimbira pulled off Legatle scored with a tre- good saves from Touch mendous goal seven min- Mokwebo, Bwalya and utes after the break. Basil Gwangwa as Wits

The setback spurred piled on the pressure to Wits il!to action and they • no a�ail, �it Top

_Eight

grabb� the equaliser in spot IS now m question. the 62nd minute when AI- "I was happy with the bert Bwalya headed home point but I thought we Peter Gordon's pin point should have sewn up the cross to level matters. match in the first half,"

Wits then piled on the said Celtic coach Dave pressure and pushed for Roberts.

His Wits counterpart John Lathan was far from pleased: "We threw it away but at the end of the night I am happy to settle for a point."

In last night's other match Grinaker Rangers virtually ended their rele­gation worries when they defeated second-bottom Cape Town Spurs 3-1 at Hartleyvale.

Kina Kymalo opened the scoring for Spurs, Bongani Mbhele (2) and Ian Palmer scored Rang­ers, goals.

By Chris Swanepoel ROODEPOORT with all their provincial players available should be able to maintain their unbeat­en record in the second round of the M & M Pi­rates Grand Challenge rugby series when they meet Diggers today.

·

With the likes of Hempas Rademeyer, Cameron Oliver and Adriaan Richter to bolster the team, Diggers will have their hands full to contain the national club champions.

Pu nch i ng action al l the way i n amateur boxi ng tournament

Wits, also still unbeat­en, meet Defence, who are without Springboks Wahl Bartmann and Garth Wright. The stu­dents are playing brilliant rugby this season and

By Chip Wilson DURBAN. - Springbok heavyweight Fransie Bo­tha (NT) provided the big bombs in the third session of the South African Amateur Boxing Associa­tion championships here yesterday when he blast­ed out Lucas Strydom of SAP but not before he had paid a trip to the can­vass himself.

Strydom came out swinging and a left hook dumped Botha who look-

ed more suprised than hurt. The Bok came back strongly and punished Strydom with good lefts and rights but the Police boxer proved a tough nut to crack.

A perfectly timed right upper cut to the solar plexus finally did the trick in the third round but un­til then Botha did not have it all his own way.

There was good action in the middleweight divi­sion as well with Spring-

bok Louis van Winkel, vetran Sampie Mienie and Johnny Mostert all winning their bouts in quick time.

Van Winkel found him­seH with a tiger by the tail in the form of Claasie Coxen (ST), and it was perhaps a little unfortu­nate the referee inter­vened as quickly as he did in the second round, as Coxen did not appear hurt and this could have developed into a great

Player and Frost bow out of the golf Open

TROON. - South Afri­cans David Frost and ve­teran Gary Player both missed the cut at the end of the second day of the British Open golf cham­pionships for the last two rounds at the weekend.

Frost finished his round in a disastrous 79 for a total of 154.

It was Frost's worst performance in the Open after loots's cf 42 ;1nd 37. He dropped six shots in a row but said afterwards: "I didn't play that badly".

Player, three times British Open champion, who started the day on se­ven over par, crashed out of the tournament with a total of 152. He carded a 73 after loops of 33 and 40 in the second round.

The 53-year-old South African will defend his British Open senior title next week at Tumberry.

John Bland started the day on level par, ending on three over par 75 .

He had six birdies but also dropped shots at six holes.

With Bland's final pos­ition not yet finallfaeter­mined, it appeared Jeff Hawkes would carry the South African flag into the last two days of the Open and Gavin Leven­son.

Tony Johnstone of Zimbabwe completed his second round in a 71, one shot better than par for a total of 142.

The 32-year-old Zim­babwean only dropped one shot and carded two birdies in a steady and very consistent round of golf.

South Africa's Ernie Els, playing in his first British Open, played him-

seH right out of conten­tion. The lanky South African amateur carded a four over "par 76 for a total of 148.

Zimbabwe's Mark Mc­Nulty, who won the Monte Carlo Classic re­cently, joined Levenson on a total of 145, with 70.

Fellow countryman Nick Price, who came sec­ond here in 1982 and also last year in the Open, had a 73 for 147.

The best round of the day came from American Payne Stewart. He set up a new course record with a seven under par 65.

Pre-tournament fa-vourites Ian Woosnam (72 for 146) and former British Open and Ameri­can Masters champion Sandy Lyle (73 for 146) were also disappointed at their progress. - Sapa.

bout. should have the measure Mostert showed good of Defence.

boxing skill and punching In other matches in the . power, taking his oppo- super league, Krugers­nent out with a right to dorp host Police and the body, and the middle- Randfontein meet Alber­weight division should ton. prove the most gruellingly In the President's contested of the cham- League, Germiston meet pionships. Union and Pirates are at

There was little luck for home to Randburg. host province Natal, as 1-------....;..----1 both Danie Heynecke Tour I· ng and Jaques van Rensburg were both beaten in semi-final featherweight bouts. rugby Laurent

still leader

line up PORT ELIZABETH. - ·

The ftmtguayan Under-23 rugby team, )mown as the M1Jas Cc3ns, an­nounced their side to play EP U-20 shortly after a two hour practice at the Boet Erasmus Stadium here yesterday.

AIX-LES-BAINS, The players arrived in France. · - American Port Elil:abeth at 9.50 Greg Lemond won his yesterday morning and seoond stage of the Tour wasted no time in chang-· de France on Friday but ing into their kit for the race leader Laurent Fig- 11.00 am practice session , non of France virtually under the direction of cement.ed his expected coach Carlos Denis, an overall victory... architect by profession.

Lemond won the The team is: Luis

125 km 19th stage from Duarte, Sergio Cabrera

Villard de Lans in a pro- (captain), Marco Nunes,

visional time of three Juan Lopez, Luis Sosa,

hours 17 minutes 53 sec- Guillermo Ramas, Felix

onds, edging out Fignon Rivaldi, Vidal Benitez,

into second place in the Carlos Escobar, Jose Rei­

closing sprint. secek, Pedro Mosciaro, Eduardo Heisecke, Ariel

But the American Nunez, Oscar Moriera, gained no time on Fignon Oscar Sequeira. in the last mountain stage 1----....!...-------t of the tour and remained Frith is a 50 seconds behind, with virtually no hope left of f• 1 • t preventing the French- IDa IS man winning in Paris on FRITH van der Merwe Cook h l•ts tWO tOnS tO sunday. has been included in the

list of finalists from which Last year's winner, Pe-• dro Delgado of Spain, the South African Athlete

eq' ual ba. tt i ng record �::ea:h:�� t�

ot�:

h:��� �!

n�he Year will be cho-

LONDON. - Somerset's South African opener Jimmy Cook became on Friday only the second batsman ever to carry his bat in both innings while scoring two centuries.

Cook, who scored 120 not out in the first in­nings, finished on 131 on Friday as Somerset slumped to 218 all out and

· �t at the hands of hire by an in­

t,et . ;t ot'!.S nee

.......

Cook batted for 293 minutes and hit 15 bound­aries, sharing an opening partnership of 127 with Peter Roebuck (50).

West Indian all-round­er Franklyn Stephenson and left-arm spinner Andy Afford did the damage for Nottinghamshire, with four for 60 and five for 90 respectively.

Worcestershire com-pleted a 36-run win over Lancashire, thanks to England strike bowler �am Dilley who took

� 94 to finish with 1gures of 10 for

\ire, chasing 266

stay third overall, two Also included last to win, started the , day minutes 28 seconds be- year's winner of the well placed at 160 for two hind the Frenchman. award, Colleen (Linde­but were soon in trouble 1-----------4 que) de Reuck. with Graeme Hick snap- Clashes 1he winners will be an-ping up four successive nounced at the Nedbank slip catches off Dilley, SA Athlete of the Year and Ian Botham (three function in Pretoria and is for 55. NEWCASTLE. _: The organised by the SA

Middlesex skipper Mike Gatting made a timely return to .form as the visitors scraped home by three wickets against Yorkshire at Headingley.

Gatting produced a de­termined unbeaten 33 as Middlesex chasing only 75 to win, were zequced at

. one stage to 34 for seven.

second round matches of Amateur Athletics the President League will Union. start today. In Glencoe, The finalists, an­the home team, Central, nounced by the SAAAU and current champions, are: Iscor will clash in what Men: Bruce Fordyce, could be an interesting Willie Mtolo, Stanley match. Valentine, Dries Vorster

Central have a good · and Xolile Yawa. pack of forwards, but Is- Women: Myrtle Both­cor are the mo-re balanced rna, Evette de Klerk, Col­side. Vryheid and leady- leen de Reuck, Tanya smith are meeting at Vry- Peckham and Frith van heid. der Merwe. - Sapa.

Page 31

World resu lts BADMINTON

MONUMENT YOYOTA

Resutts of semi��=· Women'o singles: A Section: S 'von

Beneke bl Y Kleyn 11·3 1 1 ·8, H Britz bt l Johnson 12-11 1 1-4. B Section: C C..ause bt l Neilson 11-3 1 1-4, S van As bt l Eloff 1 1 -2 1 1 -5. C Section: M Alexander bt E van def WestOOizen 11-7 1 1-7, E Krause bt C Jacobs 1 1-8 11·1.

llen'o Singles: A Section: W Parsons bt D Moors 15-10 14-17 1 5-2, 1 Richaldson bt G Weitz 8-15 15-5 15-12. B Section: J Roelofse bt D Dugmore 1 7-15 1 5-1 1 , G Hervy bl R Robins 15-8 15-10. C Section: S van Schalkwyk bt A de Bod 15-4 1 5-4, S Perry bt M Wels 15-11 12·15 1 5-9.

Women'o Doubles: A Section: H Brits1S von Benelce bt l Moore/M Weitz 15-1 15-4, W DobieiM du Toil btC Venterll Jotvlson 15-8 8-15 1 7·14. B Section: s van As/C Krause bl T NeiiSOI>'B Britz., 1 1 -3 5-11 12-10, l Elolf/� Greet bt l Kolle$1<y/H van Staden 11-8 8·1 1 1 1 -8. C Section: M Alexander/J Kirby bt E Crous/G Jacobs 1H! 1 1-4, M van Schalkwyk!R Steyn b1 M Pieters&'ll van Sladen 11-3 12·10.

llen'o DoubiM: A Section: G du ToilfT Martell bt P & K lung 1 7·14 15-10, S & C Tallot-Bowe bt E RichardsoniG Weitz 15-8 15-4. B Section: P Splwner/A Ougmore bl W van WyWG Henry 1G-15 15-10 15-8, l 8uy&'F Breed! b1 C le GrangeiG Panther 15-5 1G-15 1 5-9. C Sectlori: J KJaveriH Britz b1 A do BodiC Richards 12·10 11·5, P SleyniS van Schalkwyk bl G & W Manson 1 1-2 11 -4. - Sapa.

BASEBALL AMERICAN

New York American league: Cailomia 4 Detroit 3; Cleveland 4 Kansas City O; Texas 6 New Vorl< 2; Oakland 5 Baltimore 2; Seattle 5 Toronto 2.

National league: S1 L.tHJis 7 San Diego 1; Montreal 4 Cincimati 1; New Vorl< 4 At· lanta 1 ; CN<:ago 4 San Francisco 3.

BOXING SA CHAMPS

Durban Quarter Finall: Mldd'-lght: Clristo Swart (SADF) bt Willie du Plessis (NOFS) pts. loois van Winl<el (SAP) beat Claasie Coxen (ST] OC2. Sampie Mienie (ST] beat Jan Nel f'NID OC2). J Moster! (gw) beat G van der Walt KO! Heevywelgltt: F Botha (NT] beat l Sl!y· dom (SAP) OC3; M Roodman (NOFS) beat C du Randt (SAP) piS. Seml.fln•: flywtlght: P Kuhn (SADf) beat G Myburgh (ST) pts J Fouche (WT) beat W van Jaarsveld (NT] pts. Bantamweight: A Gilmore (ST] beat W Steyn �sn,;s D Moiler (WT) beat J Appel-�g� E Mllthee (NT] beat D Heynecke (N) pts. G JcxiJert (ET] beat J ian Rensburg (N) OC1.

CRIC KET TOURMATCH """'-""'

SaJnlboard on 1he third and final day ol lhe

"":::::rr:,:r"sire;: :S:Ucie. dlrld (D Boon 103, �augh 1 12)

Hampshire first Innings 275 for six de­clared (M NicholaS 102, J Wood 65). Australia second innings (overnight 63 for two) G Marshc R Smith b Andrew .......... 5 M Taylor lbw bMa�\� ................................. 38 D Boon c and b Jefferies ........................... 24 �wa= b � ;;;;;j"""jj"""MiW .... 6� T Zoeluer cJames b Maru .......................... l THolins rotoot .......................... .............. sa T May l>w bJames .................................... 7 G Campbel c Nicholas b Manl ................. 15 G Lawson c Parl<s b Connor ....................... 7 C Aad<emann c Nicholas b Connor .......... 1 1 Extras (lb-5 nb-3) . ..... ...................... .. ..... 8 Total ............ ......................................... 246 Fall of wickets: 1129 'Z/57 3/1 15 41145 51147 6/147 71t68 at189 91212

Bowling: Andrew 1�1. Connor 14.1· 1-68-2, Maru 23-1 G-#5, C Smith 2· G-3-o, Jefferies 1 1 -1·26-1, James .0.32·1

COIH!TY London Results d English County Chamjlionsl14> matches. AI Bristol: Gloocestershire beat Glam­

organ by an innings and 123 r<t1s. Glamor­gao 89 '" 39,2 OV9fS and 171 (A Dale 44, V Greene six for 101). Gloucestersh•e 383 for nine declared in 127,3 overs. Gloucestershire 23 points, Gla"""gan three.

AI Old TnriiOI'd: Worcestershire beat L.encashire by 36 runs. Worcestershire 19t in 67,3 overs and 199. Lancashire 125 in 40.2 overs and 229 (M Atherton 59, G Dil­ley five for 94, I Botham tiYee for 55). Wor­cestershire 1 7 points, L.encashire lour.

AI Headlngfey: Middlesex beat Yorl<shire by three wickets. Yorkshire 179 in 60 overs and 189 (A MetcaHe 81 ; A Fra­ser five for 47), Middlesex 194 in 103,1 overs and 75 for seven (A Sidebottom folK for 32, P Jarvis lhree lor 29). Yorl<shire four points, Middlesex 23. AI Trent Bridge: Noltinghamshire beat Somerset by an innings and 67 runs. So­merset 186 in 67.3 overs and 218 (J Cook 131 rot oot, P Roebucl< SO; J Afford live for 90, F Stepltenson lou' for 60) Nottinghamst>re 471 for seven declared in 133.1 overs. Nottinghamshire 24 points, Somerset two.

Southampton The IIY8e-<lay match between Ha� and Austraia ended in a draw; Scores: Australia 343 for six declared lind 246, Hampshilll 275 for six declared and 81 for "" wicket.

COUNTY At L.elchester: Match drawn. North­amptonshire 198 in 69,4 overs and 312 for seven declared (G Cook 105, D Capel 77, R Baley S::, N Stanley 43), L.eicestershire 300 in 1 14,3 overs and 206 for seven (D Gower 91 ). L.eiceslershire six poinls, Nolt!t-8f1'!l!OIIshire1hree. - Sapa-AeutBr.

CYCLING WOMEN'S TOUR DE FRANCE

All Lea Baine LEADING placings in the ninth s1age: 1 Jeannie Longo (France); 2 lnga Thlmp­son (US); 3 Maria Canins ([taly); 4 Susan Elias (US); 5 Valerie Simonnet (Fnlro:e); 6 Luisa Seghezzi (Italy). leading overall positions. 1 Jeannie Longo (France); 2 Maria. � (Italy); 3 lnga Thompson (US); 4 Susan Elias (US); 5 Cecile Odin (France); 6 Moo­ica Bandini (Italy).

MENS TOUR DE FllAHCt. Alx les Bllnt Results after the 19th stage Villan!-do-l.Bns to Aix-les-Bains. . 1. Greg lemondJUS); 2. I.Jwrent Figron !France) Super- ; 3. Pedro Delgado,

/Speln) Reynolds; 4. Gert.Jan Theuriisse, (Nelh) PDM; 5. Marino l.ajarel1a (Spain) Palemina; 6. Gianni BuQno, (Haly) Chateau D'Ax; 7. Sean Kelly, (fre) PDM; 8. Stew Bauer, (Can) He!vetia-L.a SU1SS8; 9. 51...., Rooks (Neill) PDM; 10. Domi. Arnaud, (France) Reynolds; 11. Helmut Wechse� berger, (Austria) Paternina; 12. Alvaro Pino, (Spain) BH; 13. Gert1IWd Zadrobilek (Austria) 7-EleYen; 14. Frederic Vichot, (France) Helvetia-la Suisse; 1 5. Jerome Simon, (Fnwx:e) z .Peogeot; 16. Bruno Cornillent, (France) Z.Peugeot; 17. luc Roosen, (Bala) AMO; 18. Charty Motte� �ranee) RM<l'; 19. Pascal Simon, (France) =��rto Camargo (Colombia)

Ovwoll Standi�: 1. l.a1Kent F1!1'0fl (France) �-U; 2. Greg Lemond, (US) AOR; 3. Pedro Delga­do (Spain) Reynolds; 4. Gert..Jan Theu­nisse, (Nelh) PoM; 5. Marino L.ejaretta. (Spain) Palemina; 6. Cherty Mottet, (France) RMO; 7. Steven Rooks, (Neth) POM;1l. Raul Alcala. (Maxico) PDM; 9. Ro­bert MiNar, (Br�) Z-�; 10. Sean Kel· ly, (Ire) POM; 1 1 . Gianr• Bugno (Italy) Cha· teau D'Ax; 12. Pascal Simon, (France) Super·U; 13. Eric Caritoux, (France) RMO; 14. Bruno Camille! (France) Z-Peugeot; 15. Alvaro Piro (Spain) BH; 16. Miguel lndu­rain, (Spain) Reynolds; 17. Sieve Bauer (Canada) Helveli&-l.a Suisse; 18. Jerome Sinon. (France) Z.Peugeot; 19. luis Herrera (Cdornbia) Cafe do Colombia; 20. Allert c.nargo (Colombia) Cafe do Colombia. -

GOLF LPGA

� 67-Kathy Pos11ewait, Penny Hammel. 68-Cindy Rarick. Ann&-Maria Pall!

(France), Donna White, Amy AJcolt. 'tina Barrett. 69-Jody Rosenthal, Bath Daniel, DonnaCalhy Reyoolds, Loretta Alderete, Cusanc>-Wtll<ins, � Mariro.

7(}--taora Baugh, Patti Rizzo, Robin Hood, Kristi Albels, Dawn Coe, Sand­ra Haynie, Nancy Taylor, Dottie Mocll­ria, Cathy Morse, Colleen Walker, Pat ty Sheehan, Janice Gibsoo, Shirle Furlong. Other foreign pla1"rs:

71-Mei.Chi Cheng (Taiwan) 72-Yuka hie (Japan) 73-Ayai.o Okam!M (Japan) 74-Matta Fige<as-Dotti (Spain), Jan Step­

henson (Australia) 75-Sosan Ton kin (Australia), Caroline

Pieroe (Britail), Trish Johnson (Brit ail). 77-Chihiro Nakajina (�). Pamela

Wright (Scotland). Silvia Bertolaoon (Argentina), Nicky Leroux (France).

81-Karen Peremezel (Australia). WOMEN Newport

Second roond: laura Gildomeister (Peru) beat (3) Lori McNeil (US) 7 ·5 6-2, Jin He­therington (Canada) beat (7) Gretchen Magers (US) !h'! 7-6 (7·5), (6) Ros Fair bank (SoUth Africa) beat Elizabeth Smylie (Australia) 7-6 (7-2) 6-3, 1-iu Na (US) beat Robyn Field (South Africa) 6-1 6-4.

BRITISH OPEN '"""'

13$-Wane Grady 68 67 137-Payne Stewart 72 65, Torn Watson

69 68 138-Wayne Slephens 66 72, Eduardo

Romero 68 70 1 39-Mark James 69 70, Scott Sim­pson 73 66, Mn Calc:avecclia 71 68, Fnld Couples 68 71, Marl< Mc­Cumber 71 68, Oenid< Cooper 69 70, Greg Norman 69 70, Steve Pete 69 70.

1 4G-Jose-Maria Olazabal 68 12 141-Johnny Miler 72 69, Ray Floyd 73

68, TOIUOIY ArmotJ' 70 71, Jet! Woodland 74 67, Paul Azinger 68 73, Miguel Matlin 68 73, Jan Balter.finch 7269.

142-Davis Love 72 70, Lanny Wadkins 72 70, Richard Boxall 74 68, Joe Ozal<i 71 71, Nick Faldo 71 71, Ronan Raf­ferty 71 72, Craig Stadler 73 69, Jeff Hawfles 75 67.

1 43-<lene Sauers 70 73, Don Pooley 73 70, Phil� Walton 69 74, Mke Har wood 71 72.

144-Quisty O'Conror 71 73. Vijay Singhrd 71 73, Jumbo Ozaki 71 73, Bernha Langer 71 73, Russell Cla�n 70

�R.:rs9.��:,��2 72, ��� Kite 70 74.

14f>-Gavin l..ev8nlon 69 76, Jack Nick­laus 74 71, larry Mize 71 74, Mark McNuhy 75 70, Sew Ballastoros 72 73.

147-Nicl<y Price 74 73, John Blond 72 75.

148-Ernie Efs 72 76. 1�pt=��

TENNIS DAVIS CUP

Various New Zealand took a 1-0 lead over Hungary In their World Groop qualifying malch when Kelly Evernden beat Sandor Noszaly 7-5 6-1 6-4 in the first match of the tie. Switzerland took a 2-o lead over Paraguay In the World G""-" promotiooJrelega lion play-off. aaudio Mezzadn beat Ruben Al­varenga 6-2 6-2 6-1, Jakob Hlasel< beat Hugo Chapacu 7-6 (lQ-8) 6-1 6-3. Jonas Svensson beat Goran lvanisevlc 6-4 7-6 (!H) H 6-4 to give Sweden a 1-o lead over Yugoslavia in their WOOd Group sem final. Israel led South Korea 2-0 alter the open­ing day of their World G<tlt4> prornotion're­legation playoff. Gilad Bloom beat � Dong·Wook 6-4 6-2 6-4, Amos Mansdou baa Kim Bong-Sao 7-6 (7·3) 6·3 6-0. Results in the World Group promotioo'rele­gation pla�off between Britaio and Argenti­na. Chris Bailey lost to Allerto Mancini 5-7 7-6 (H) 6-7 (G-7) 7-5 4-6. Match score: Britain 1 Algentina 1. �-Reuter.

NATIONAL VIDEO Ellis Park

RestAts ol semif01als: Singles: Gills Under· 18: G Foro (1) bt l WteSS 6-3 6-2; J Croth­ers (4) bl M Terlllanche 7-5 Q-8 6-3. Girts Under 16: E Pre!Dfius (6) bt E Smale (1) 6-2 6-2; C Sunxners (B) bt T Swart (6) !h'! 7-6. Boys Under-18: B Cuny (4) bl J do

de1 Beer 7-5 4-6 6-4; W Pretorius bt .1-l Jager 4-6 6-2 7-6 (7-4). Boys Undor-16: C Sl<opefitis (3) b1 G Sleenkamp (1) !h'! 7-5; C Wheeler (4) bt C Myburgh (2) 6-4 6-4. Doubles: Boys Undor-18: Feffeiral Stafford (1) bt Sher/Pretorius 6-1 6-3; Hatgarth/Cuny (3) bl De Jager/De Beer (2) 8-7 (6-8) 6-3 6-4. Boys Undor-16: Wh<elef­/Myburgh (1) bt Sauer/Coetzse {3) 6-,4·6-2;

.$1eenk8f111l/Pretorius (4) bl SteyniKastner (B) 6-1 s-7 !h'!.Girls Under 18: Ford'Croth­ers (1) bl Wtlson/Weiss 5·7 6-0 6·2; Ros­souw/Terblanche (2) bt Askham/Madden 6-2 6-1. Girls Under-16: PretOI'ius/Dreyer (1) bl Malan/Jooberl (4) 4-6 6-2 6-2 Kruger/ Swart (3) bl Summers/Strydom (2) 7-5 6-4 .

.- �.

Page 32 *

THE CITIZEN

SPORT Leaders:

face tests

THE CITIZEN Saturday 22 July

Lightning could strike tWice and it's SA rugby's . . .

Moment of truth