Philip Morris
Fields
- Type
- AGEN, AGENDA
- CHAR, CHART, GRAPH, TABLE, MAPS
- FORM, FORM
- Area
- VONCKEN,PETER/INBIFO OFFICE
- Master ID
- 2029272192/2205
Related Documents:
Document Images
MONDAY MORNING - SEPTEMBER 26,1994
Joint Session
8:30 WELCOME AND OPENING REMARKS
8:45 TRIBUTE TO RAY SEVERSON: D. Michael Jackson, USDA-ARS, Crups Research Laboratory,
Oxford, NC 27565, USA
8:55 RECENT ADVANCES IN TOBACCO SCIENCE SYMPOSIUM:
"POSITIVE ASPECTS OF SMOKING"
INTRODUCTION: John H. Robinson,Symposium Chairman, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company,
Research & Development, Winston-Salem, NC 27102, USA
9:00 1. NICOTINE UPTAKE AND METABOLISM IN SMOKERS. G. D. Byrd, J. H. Robinson, W. S.
Caldwell, and J. D. deBethizy, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Research & Development, Winston-
Salem, NC 27102. USA
9:25 2. CHARACTERIZATION OF NICOTINIC CHOLINERGIC RECEPTORS IN THE CENTRAL
NERVOUS SYSTEM. Patrick M. Lippiello, Merouane Bencherif, Elisa Lovette and Kathy Fowler,
R. J. Reynolds 'Ibbacco Co., Winston-Salem, NC 27102, USA
9:50 3. NICOTINE EFFECTS ON WORKING MEMORY PERFORMANCE IN THE RADIAL-ARM
MAZE. E. D. Levin, Neurobehavioral Research Lab., Psychiatry Dept., Duke University Medical
Center, Durham, NC 27710, USA
10:15 BREAK
10:45 4. BRAIN-WAVE EFFECTS OF CIGARETTE SMOKING IN HUMANS. Walter S. Pritchard and
John H. Robinson, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, NC 27102, USA
.;
11:10 5. COGNITIVE AND PSYCHOMOTOR EFFECTS OF NICOTINE AND CIGARETTE SMOKING.
Neil Sherwood, Human Psychopharmacology Research Unit, University of Surrey, Milfoni Hospital,
Godalming GU7 IUF, United Kingdom
11:35 6. WHY PEOPLE SMOKE: STRESS-REDUCTION, COPING ENHANCEMENT AND NICOTINE.
David G. Gilbert, Smoking Research Laboratory, Department of Psychology, Southern Illinois
University, Carbondale, IL 62901, USA
12:00 SUMMARY AND CLOSING REMARKS: John H. Robinson
12:10 LUNCH

t
I
MONDAY AFTERNOON - SEPTEMBER 26, 1994
SSi414lLA Session ChaJr. Maurice E. Snook SSZti>ZJLB Session Chair: Cheryl E. Johnson
1:40 7. PREPARATIVE CIIROMATOGRAPHIC
TECHNIQUES FOR THE ISOLATION OF TOBACCO
GLUCOSIDES. Susan Tafur, Margaret Core, Robert 1:40 SEMI-VOLATILE REMOVAL EFFICIENCIES OF
P VARIOUS CARBON FILTERS. P. F. Clarke, M. Dunn,
R. J. K. Shepherd and M.1. Taylor, Filtrona International
Hale, Ronald Bassfield and Noel Einolf, Philip Morris
USA, Richmond, VA 23261, USA Limited, Hertfordshire AL5 4S1, United Kingdom
2:00 8. A FAST TECIINIQUE FOR ANALYZING ORGANIC
ACIDS IN TOBACCO. M. X. Wang, S. C. Moldovesnu 2:00 16. METHODOLOGY FOR TIIE EVALUATION OF
CHARCOAL ADSORPTION BY VAPOR PHASE
and J. H. Lauterbach, Brown & Williamson Tobacco
Corp., Louisville, KY 40232 and W. W. Weeks, North
Carolina Sfate University, Raleigh, NC 27695, USA ANALYSIS OF CIGARETTE SMOKE. H. Yamazaki,
Y. Sakagawa and K. Iseda, Japan Tobacco Inc., Tobacco
Technology Div., 1-17-7 Yokokawa, Sumida-ku, Tokyo
130, Japan
2:20 9. THE ANALYSIS OF 3-METHYLVALERIC ACID IN
TOBACCO BY HPLC. Tina E. Allen and Andrew J.
jv7anso, British-American Tobacco Co. Ltd., 2:20 17. MICROPLEATED MELTBLOWN FILTERS-A NEW
POLYPROPYLENE PRODUCT FOR USE IN
CIGARETTE FILTttA7ION. Wiliiam R. Martin. 1800D
Southampton SOI 5 BTL, United Kingdom Riverwood Ln., Roswell, GA 30075, W. John G.
McCulloch, The University of Tennessee, Textiles and
Nonwovens Development Center (TANDEC), Knoxville,
TN 37996
A
J
rat
d M
Allen
d M L
b
ies
rti
.
an
,
an
a
o
or
,
a
n
Inc., Dawsonville, GA 30534, USA
2:40 10. CHEMICAL AND SENSORY COMPARISON OF
SOME SELECTED U. S. AND INDIAN FLUE-CURED
TOBACCO GRADES. K. N. Suresh, ITC Ltd., Calcutta, 2:40 C8. ADSORPTION PROPERTIES OF SURFACE-
MODIFIED ACTIVATED CARBON. Chune-Ryyl Kim
Korea Ginseng & Tobacco Research Institute, Dae}eon
India and Willard W. Weeks, Crop Science Department, 305-345, Korea
NCSU, Raleigh, NC 27695-7620, USA
3:00 BREAK 3:00 BREAK
3:30 11. CLASSIFICATION OF TOBACCO LEAVES WITH
THEIR DICHLOROMETHANE EXTRACTS. Y.
Shinozaki, K. Tobita. S. Suhura and Y. Tonoshige, Japan 3:30 19. DETERMINATION OF THE SELECTIVE
REMOVAL
OF PHENOLIC COMPOUNDS BY CIGARETTE
FILTERS USING HIGH-PERFORMANCE LIQUID
Tobacco Inc., Tobacco Technology Planning Dept., 1- CHROMATOGRAPHY. Steven A. Wilson, Eastman
17-7 Yokokawa, Sumida-ku, Tokyo 130, Japan Chemical Company, Kingsport, TN 37662, USA
3:50 ff. TOBACCO BLEND ANALYSIS USING DIFFUSE
REFLECTANCE FOURIER TRANSFORM INFRARED
(FTIR) SPECTROSCOPY. Charles Harward and Don 3:50 20. METHOD FOR DESIGNING VENTILATED
FILTRATION SYSTEMS. Larry W. Renfro, Lyd1tL
Saver and Daniel C. Cobb, Eastman Chemical Co.,
Leyden, Philip Morris USA, Richmond, VA 23261, USA Kingsport, TN 37662-5150, USA
4:I0 13. EVALUATION OF AN ELECTROCHEMICAL
PHOSPHINE DETECTOR AS A UNIT OF AN 4:10 I. NICOTINE MIGRATION IN COMPONENTS OF
BLENDED CIGARE'iTES. R M. Stepwgwski; Lorillard
IMPROVED WAREHOUSE FUMIGATION
MONITORING SYSTEM. Richard F. Dufresne, Tobacco Company, Greensboro, NC 27405, USA
Lawrence H. Gains, Kenneth W. Ingold and Robert D.
Stevens, Lorillard Tobacco Company, Greensboro, NC
27420-1688, USA
4:30 14. PHOSPHINE RELEASE DURING A STANDARD
FUMIGATION IN TWO TOBACCO STORAGES. $,,L
BENEZET Consulting, Winston-Salem
Beneze
NC 4:30 22. THE EFFECTS OF MOISTURE CONTENT AND
TEMPERATURE ON MECHANICAL PROPERTIES
OF TOBACCO LEAF LAMINA. SundrN. tSudl
,
,
27106, C. W. Helms, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.,
Winston-Salem, NC 27102 and A. Hamm Jr., Flue-Cured
Tobacco Stabilization Corp., Raleigh, NC 27608, USA Ganeriwala, Arup K. Basak,loseph L. Banyasz and
Zane
Gibbs, Philip Morris USA, Richmond, VA 23261-6583,
USA
4:50 ADJOURN 4:50 ADJOURN

TUESDAY MORNING - SEPTEMBER 27, 1994
SeliIplLA Session Chair: Raymond C. Long SessiQp @ Session Chair: S. Tom Jones
8:30 23. OVEREXPRESSION OF FOREIGN GENES RELATED
TO ALKALOID AND POLYAMINE METABOLISM
IN TOBACCO. Sam Boaeess, Urmi Das Gupta, Art
I lunt, Neat Denton and Glenn Collins, Department of
Agronomy, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 8:30 32. TLC-MS AND TLC-MS-MS ANALYSIS OF
TERPENES WITH POTENTiAL APPLICATION TO
SMOKE STUDIES. N. l. lensen, T. Sumpter, S. Hassam
and R. Izac, Phiiip Morris USA, Richmond, VA 23261,
USA
40546, USA
8:50 24. PLANT GROWTII REGULATING ACTIVITY OF
TOBACCO FLOWER PIiENOLIC ACID AMIDES 8:50 33. MEASUREMENT OF IONS IN WHOLE SMOKE.
Florian R. Perini and Jimmy Ii. Bell, Lorillard Research
AND RELATED COMPOUNDS. Maurice E. Snook, Center, Greensboro, NC 27405, USA
Horace G. Cutler and Orestes T. Chortyk, USDA-ARS,
Russell Research Center, Athens, GA 30613 and Russell
L. Malmberg, Dept. of Botany, University of Georgia,
Athens, GA 30602, USA
9:10 25. USE OF NICOT1Ah:I KAWAKAMII AS A TRAP CROP
FOR PROTECTION AGAINST TOBACCO
BUDWORM FEEDING DAMAGE ON FLUE-CURED
TOBACCO. D. Michael Jackson and V. A. Sisson, 9:10 34. THE FATE OF RADIOLABELED TARTARIC ACID
IN BURNING CIGARETTES. L. H. Gains and g,8,
L811g, Lorillard Tobacco Company, 420 English Street,
Greensboro, NC 27405, USA
USDA-ARS, Crops Research Laboratory, Oxford. NC {
9:30
:50 27565 and R. F. Severson, USDA-ARS, Phytochemical
Research Unit, Athens, GA 30613, USA
26. THE EFFECTS OF SUPPLEMENTAL LIGHT
SOURCES ON THE PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL
CHARACTERISTICS OF GREENHOUSE GROWN
BRIGIfT (COKER 319) TOBACCO. Carolyn Keene,
Roger Bass, Susan Tafur and George West, Philip Morris
USA, Richmond, VA 23261, USA
27. TIIE ROLE OF RADIATION AND TEMPERATURE
ON TOBACCO CAROTENOIDS. Marcos P. A.
Camoos and Josb R. Pereira da Silva, Souza Cruz SA,
Rio de Janeiro RI 21059-900, Brazil
9:30
:50
35. SIMULTANEOUS GAS CHROMATOGRAPHIC
NICOTINE/WATER ANALYSIS IN SMOKE VIA
SPLIT INJECTION ON DUAL CAPILLARY
COLUMNS. Lance I. Deutsch and Anna L. leffords,
Hoechst Celanese Corporation, Charlotte, NC 29232,
USA
36. QUANTITATION OF "TAR" COLOR WITH SPECIFIC
REFERENCE TO ESTIMATING YIELDS,
QUANTIFYING ETS AND THE PRODUCTION OF
COLOR SCALES. W. S. (Bill)Rjckert. lack C.
Robinson, Labstat Incorporated, Kitchener, Ontario N2C
I L3 and Murray 1. Kaiserman, Health and Welfare
Canada. Ottawa, Ontario K I A OL2, Canada
10:10 BREAK 10:10 BREAK
10:40 28. TI IE POTENTIAL FOR CURING OPTIMIZATION
TI IROUGH FEED-BACK CONTROL. Subhas C. 10:40 37. MICROWAVE MOISTURE MEASUREMENT. D,L
Camn, Filtrona, Milton Keynes MK14 6LY, United
Mohapatra. John S. Singleton and Charles W. Suggs,
Dept. of Biol. & Agric. Eng., NCSU, Raleigh, NC Kingdom and Hans-Rainer Hernnann, Tews Elektronik,
Hamburg 22459, Germany
27695-7625. USA
11:00 29. CHEMICAL AND MICROBIOLOGICAL CHANGES
DURING FLUE-CURING OF NK-149 TOBACCO.
Jackie M. Greene and William S. Caldwell, R. J. 11:00 38. USE OF A RANDOM ACCESS ANALYZER FOR THE
ANALYSES OF MAJOR TOBACCO
CONSTITUENTS. V. L. Geiss, P. S. Lewis, A. B.
Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, NC 27102, USA Canon and J. H. Lauterbach_ Brown & Williamson
Tobacco Corp., Louisville, KY 40232, USA
11:20 30. POST-HARVEST TREATMENT AFFECTS ON TSNA
ACCUMULATION. Lowell Bush, Harold Burton,
Naewanna Dye and Nicole Nicholas, Department of
Agronomy, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 11:20 39. CHARACTERIZATION OF TOBACCO PRODUCTS:
THE ACCQ.TAG AMINO ACID ANALYSIS METHOD
FOR DIFFERENTIATING BETWEEN CIGAR AND
CIGARETTE TOBACCOS. Suresh RalaeatL ATF
40546-0091. USA National Laboratory Center, Rockville, MD 20850 and
Christina M. Burek and James A. Saunders, USDA-
BARC, Beltsville, MD 20705, USA
11:40 31. DISTRIBUTION OF TOBACCO CONSTITUENTS
WITHIN THE LEAF TISSUE. 2. OXIDIZED
NICOTINE DERIVATIVES. Harold R. Burton and 11:40 40. SIMPLIFIED METHOD FOR CONTROLLING
HUMIDITY IN BRIGHT LEAF CURING BARN.
Charles W. Suggs and Subhas C. Mohaoatra, North
Xiaochen Wei, Department of Agronomy, University of
Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40546-0091, USA Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695-7625,
USA
12:00 LUN('lI 12:00 LUNCtt

TUESDAY AFTERNOON - SEPTEMBER 27, 1994
Session A Session Chair: William S. CaldnrH
1:40 41. ABERRANT ALKALOID BIOSYNTHESIS IN
TOBACCO FROM NICOTINIC ACID ANALOGS.
Franklin F. Fannin, Xiaochen Wei, Lowell P. Bush and
Harold R. Burton, University of Kentucky, Department
of Agronomy, Lexington, KY 40546-0091, USA
2:00 42. ISOLATION AND IDENTIFICATION OF SOME
SUBSTITUTED NICOTINES OBTAINED FROM
NICOTIANA TADACUM BY ABERRANT
BIOSYNTHESIS. Xiaochen Wei, Harold R. Burton.
Lowell P. Bush and Franklin F. Fannin, Department of
Agronomy, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY
40546-0091, USA
r '.
2:20 ~' THE REACTION OF NICOTINE IMINIUM IONS
WITH MODEL NUCLEOPHILES. Grayland P. Dobson
and William S. Caldwell, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.,
W inston-Saiem, NC 27102, USA
2:40 44. NICOTINE AND COTININE INHIBIT THE
MUTAGENICITY OF N-NITROSAMINES PRESENT
IN TOBACCO SMOKE. C. Lee, C. Fulp, E. Bombick
and D. Doolittle. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company,
Research & Development, W inston-Salem, NC 27102.
USA
3:00 BREAK
3:30 43. TIIE APPLICATION OF SUPERCRITICAL FLUID
EXTRACTION (SFE) FOR THE DETERMINATION
OF TOBACCO-SPECIFIC NITROSAMINES IN
VARIOUS TOBACCO SAMPLES Ig. OPTIMIZATION
OF THE METHODOLOGY. Bogdan Prokonczvk, Ming
Wu, Jonathan E. Cox, Shantu Amin, Dhimant Desai and
Dietrich Hoffmann, American Health Foundation,
Valhalla, NY 10595, USA
3:50 4)y. EVALUATION OF PURGE AND TRAP\TIIERMAL
DESORP'fION GAS Cl IROMATOGRAPHY FOR TIIE
DETERMINATION OF NICOTINE AND COTININE
IN AQUEOUS SOLUTIONS. Cecil E. Hi¢eins and Amy
B. Dindal, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge,
TN 37831, USA
4:10 47. FRESH WHOLE SMOKE MUTAGENICI'fY ASSAY
WITiI YG SALMONELLA STRAINS. R. S. Lake, C. L.
Gaworski, E. W. Crouse and J. D. I leck. Lorillard
Tobacco Co., Greensboro, NC 27420, USA
4:30 (t~. HEMOGLOBIN ANALYSIS BY ELECTROSPRAY
IONIZATION MS: QUADRUPOLE vs. MAGNETIC
SECTOR. Earl L. White, Mary S. Uhrig and Betsy A.
Reed-Bombick, R. 1. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-
Salem, NC 27102, USA
4:50 ADJOURN
5:00 BUSINESS MEETING
6:30 RECEPTION
7:30 BANQUET
Session B Session Chair: Claude 1. Lewls
1:40 42. CHLORINATED PESTICIDE RESIDUES IN
TOBACCO PRODUCTS: ANALYSIS BASED ON
SUPERCRITICAL FLUID EXTRACTION. Mifjana V.
pJgQjgyjc, Jingrun Fan and Dietrich Hoffmann,
American Health Foundation, Valhalla, NY 10595, USA
2:00 50. HIGH PERFORMANCE LIQUID
CHROMATOGRAPHIC DETERMINATION OF NINE
N-METIIYLCARBAMATES IN TOBACCO. SlGyS
Gelder, Research & Development, Rothmans
International Services Ltd, Basildon, Essex, England
2:20 51. INFRARED ANALYSIS OF (t)-SERRICORNIN. Jjm
L. LYons-H and R_bert A. Fenner, Philip Morris USA,
Richmand, VA 23161, USA
2:40 52. ANALYTICAL PROBLEM SOLVING IN THE
TOBACCO INDUSTRY BY FOURIER TRANSFORM
INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY AND ENERGY
DISPERSIVE SPECTROSCOPY. R. D. Stpvens, B.1.
Craven and R. M. Stepnowski, Lorillard Tobacco
Company, Greensboro, NC 27405, USA
3:00 BREAK
3:30 53. THE APPLICATION OF INFRARED IMAGING
TECHNIQUES TO THE STUDY OF THE IGNITION
PROPENSITY OF A SMOLDERING CIGARETTE.
F_Chung Wu, Lorillard Tobacco Company, Greensboro,
NC 27405, USA
3:50 14. ANALYSIS OF SELECTED MAINSTREAM SMOKE
COMPONENTS OF LOW IGNITION PROPENSITY
CIGARETTES. K. D. Brunnemann and D. Hoii'mann,
American Health Foundation, Valhalla, NY 10595 and
C. 0. Gairola, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY
40546 and B. C. Lee, U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission, Washington, DC 20207, USA
4:10 55. TI IE DEMONSTRATION OF AIR-FLOW AS AN
IMPORTANT FACTOR IN THE IGNITION
PROPENSITY OF A SMOLDERING CIGARETTE.
E:Chuna Wu, Lorillard Tobacco Company, Greensboro,
NC 27405, USA
4:30 56. COMPUTER-ASSISTED CIGARETTE
CALORIMETRY. D. Scott Passer and Claude I. Lewis,
Lorillard Tobacco Company, Greensboro, NC 27405,
USA
4:50 ADJOURN

WEDNESDAY MORNING - SEPTEMBER 28, 1994
Joint Session Session Chair: Charles R. Green
8:30 PHILIP MORRIS AWARDEE ADDRESS
9:10 57. SCIENTIFIC ASSESSMENT OF THE EPA REPORT ON PASSIVE SMOKING. Christopher R. E.
Coggins, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Research & Development, Winston-Salem, NC 27102, USA
9:30 58. DETERMINATION OF PERSONAL EXPOSURE OF NON-SMOKERS TO ENVIRONMENTAL
TOBACCO SMOKE. Roger A. Jenkins, Andi Palausky, Richard W. Counts, Michael R. Guerin,
Amy B. Dindal and Charles K. Bayne, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6120,
l1SA
9:50 59. NATIONAL INCIDENCE OF SMOKING AND MISCLASSIFICATION AMONG THE U.S.
MARRIED FEMALE POPULATION. Michael W. Ogden, David L. Heavner, Riley A. Davis,
Mitchell F. Stiles, Robert B. Hege and Walter T. Morgan, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Research &
Development, Winston-Salem, NC 27102, USA
10:10 60. "CIGARETTE EQUIVALENT" SECONDHAND SMOKE EXPOSURE: ESTIMATION BASED
ON VAPOR AND PARTICUI,ATE TRACERS. Patricia Martin, Michael W. Ogden. Sheila L. Cash,
Katherine C. Maiolo and Walter T. Morgan, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, NC 27102,
USA
10:30 BREAK
10:50 61. SECONDHAND SMOKE (SHS): A MARKET CIGARETTE STUDY. Patricia Martin, David L.
Iieavner, Katherine C. Maiolo, Walter T. Morgan, Paul R. Nelson, Michael W. Ogden, Charles H.
Risner and Paula S. Simmons, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, NC 27102, USA
11:10 62. THE EFFECT OF SMOKERS ON THE GENERATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL TOBACCO
SMOKE. Paul R. Nelson, Susan P. Kelly and Fred W. Conrad, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company,
Winston-Salem, NC 27102-1487, USA
1 1:30 63. DEPOSITION OF ENVIRONMENTAL TOBACCO SMOKE COMPONENTS IN VOLUNTEERS.
John McAuEhev, John Strong and Alec Black, AEA Technology, 551 Iiarwell, Oxfordshire OXI I
ORA, United Kingdom
11:50 64. VARIANCE OF ETS NICOTINE LEVELS IN A SEMI-CONTROLLED OFFICE
ENVIRONMENT. HQv Bohanon, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Environmental Affairs, Winston-
Salem, NC 27102, USA
12:10 65. CONSTRUCTION OF A NEW TRAIN CAR PROVIDING SATISFACTORY AIR TO BOTH
SMOKERS AND NON-SMOKERS. 1. lshii, T. Asai, M. Kawasaki, T. Sakurai, T. Nishina, M.
Matsukura, Y. Ishizu, Japan Tobacco Inc., 6-2, Umegaoka, Midori-ku, Yokohama, Kanagawa 227, S.
Hashizume, T. Igarashi, East Japan Railway Company, 1-6-5, Marunouchi, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 100
and Y. Hayabe, Kinki Sharyo Co., Ltd., 3-9-60, Inada-shinmachi, Higashi-osaka 577, Japan
12:30 ADJOURN

PosHZip Code
Address:
Telephone: (
48TH TCRC REGISTRATION FORM
Please type or print
Name:
Title (DrJMrJMrsJMiss/Ms.) First Middle
City
State
P.O. Box No.
PosdZip Code
prior to August 31 $150.00
after August 31 $165.00
Guest Banquet ticket(s): @ $45.00 each
REGISTR.ATION FEE
(one banquet ticket included in the Registration Fee)
Total:
Name of Guest:
City
Please check appropriate box(es) bebw:
State
Pre-Conference Reception
Sunday, September 25 (6:30 - 8:30 p
0 1 will attend
Guest's Address:
Street
U My guest will also attend
Q I will not attend
GUEST will attend the following complimentary events:
Monday, September 26
~ Continental Breakfast
~ Morning Tour: Replacements, Ltd.
& Mother Murphy's Flavor Lab
~ Afternoon Tour: Outlet Center & other shops
Tuesday, September 27
~ Continental Breakfast
~ Tour: Doll/Minature Museum; Furniture Museum;
Lunch; Fumiture Showrooms in High Point
Firm/Institution:
Street
.
last
Country
Country
this registration fprrl~a.0 ~pft~ vyPti't
to address shown below, ~nefvse a check:. ~awn
on a US bank in US dollai4; or an m44n~i~af}vnal
money order in US dollars, payable to::
1No~7 to:
Registration Ctimrfi
4gth TCRC'
PO Box 21682
Greensboro, NC 27420y 1682
USA
FAX:
(910) 373-6640

.
.
. r ....
........ ..
4
Detail map of
downtown Greensboro
Indicated by shaded area on large area map.
Let us do you a favor.
Please give us a call when you have a question
concerning directions, local events and attrac-
tions while visiting Greensboro. We will be
more than happy to provide you with any
information needed for a wonderful visit in our '`
area.
1-919-274-2282
1-800-344-2282
tazzr..zszoz
WrrfffA1Vfih
AREA CONVENTION & VISfTORS BUREAU
317 South Greene Street
Greensboro, North Carolina 27401-2615
919-274-2282
800-344-2282
FAX 919-230-1183
[o.wrrn.wws..ea
UNITED ARTS COUNCIL
ARTSLINE: 275-ARTS
INTERNATIONAL HOME
FURNISHINGS MARKET
SCHEDULE:
1992 OCTOBER 15 - 23
1993 APRIL 15-23
OCTOBER 14 - 22
1994 APRIL 14 - 22
OCTOBER 20 - 28
Pnnrcd In USA 5.92
Area Map
GREENSBORO AREA
CONVENTION & VISITORS BUREAU

a~woeo
~ Greater Greensboro Ar
I~~I ea Map
sazz~zszoz
