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Show Sunday, January 3. AIDS vaccine testing lagging - NEW YORK (AP) Dehundreds and hundreds spite of inquiries from the public, the hunt for 81 suitable men for the nation's first test of an AIDS vaccine is taking longer than expected, a federal official says. Many potential volunteers have lost interest as they learned about the trial or have been disqualified for medical reasons, said Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. men have gotTwenty-si- x ten the vaccine so far, Fauci said. The study calls for 63 men to get the vaccine, and another 18 men to be injected with a second substance that is not directed against the AIDS virus. Researchers are testing the vaccine only for side effects and for the reaction of the immune system. Effectiveness against the AIDS virus is to be studied later. For New York is akoO Ul untouchable agent After Inventory G-me- n, NEW YORK (AP) The in charge of the new FBI's office here has a problem: New York City, where movies cost $7 and apartments $700,000, is an assignment even Elliot Ness wouldn't take. Albertsons- - me, 3IUII Albertson's Blb V5T ii Discounted Floor Samples Odds & Ends Many items not listed earn more. Sheer made $72,500 a year umit 5 Please $---f xLowfat Janet Lee Limited stock Hurry in for G workers Yogurt rwin l(ssFqt U I forcers. Last month, after only 14 months on the job, Sheer announced he was resigning to take a more lucrative job as a security consultant. Part of his explanation: "I'm broke." FBI agents from Manhattan to Boise, Idaho, start around $500 a week making them half-a-men. Many New York police officers and sanitation rl i Our biggest furniture clearance ever! 25-ye- ar 2 Milk Limit 2 best selection $22,000 Page FIRST OF JJ THE YEAR I I 0 OliABAN "Nobody wants to come here," says James M. Fox, who this week was named to succeed Thomas Sheer, a FBI agent and one of the city's most celebrated law en- Y) THE HERALD, Provo, Utah, 1383 Please less than the police chief, whose department numbers 27,345 employees. The FBI has employees here. Resignations just before the holidays are rare, Fox said in an interview, "but I'm a little frightened about what's going to happen after Jan. 1." . Fox said he hopes to succeed in one of the few areas where Sheer failed: persuading Congress to approve a 25 percent 2,000 JanetLee up TO ingeographic crease for all the employees in the FBI's largest field office, cost-of-livi- 1,200 are as much as 50 percent higher than the national mean, the only young agents who volunteer to work here are natives, some of whom live with their parents, he said. Agents in other offices routinely quit rather than come to New York, and those who are here often accept less desirable jobs elsewhere with the FBI just to get out. Seventy agents are under orders to transfer, to New York, but "a lot of them will never get here," Fox said. "Some resigned as soon as they got their orders. Two joined a suburban police force in Arizona." At the rate things are going, half of the office's support staff will have left within two years, he said. Two veteran, clerks recently $22,000-a-yefor jobs paying twice departed as much. ' Because of the bureau's reputation for selective hiring and ar thorough training, recruits "leave after six months for a job paying $10,000 more," he said. "There's no way we can compete with that." But considering the cost of training new agents and staffers, "We can't afford this kind of turnover," he said. Investigations also suffer. specialist transferring to take advantage of the lower cost of living in the Southwest, and it may take his successor six months just to learn his job. An anti-terroris- m is "Coming into New York is such a culture shock that no one hits the ground running, not the FBI, not the KGB, nobody," Fox said. Fox recalled a recent conversation with a highly-rate- d white-coll- ar crime specialist after visiting the New York area and sizing up the real estate market, decided not to accept a transfer from a who, Midwestern city. "He told me he had a motto: 'No success at work excuses failure at home. He knew he'd have to live 60 miles away (from Manhattan), and he'd never see his family." Fox knows the feeling. He leaves his house in central New Jersey at 5:30 each morndrive to ing for the Manlower in the FBI office well returning hattan, usually or long after the before one-ho- evening ur commuter rush through the Lincoln Tunnel. 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Queen Size Was $819.00. Queen Size Was $899.00 Seafood Salad Reg. '3.00 Doz. I Westwood Lamp Was $149.00 '79 '76 '169 '139 Rembrant Lamp Was $179 Stiffle Lamp Was $285.00 Lagan Lamp Was $198.95 Lawrln Lamp '79 '99 '69 '69 Was $99.95 Rembrant Lamp Was $199.95.... Brandon Lamp Was $99.95 Sunset Lamp Was $119.95.... EVERY RECLINER ON CLEARANCE I here )iu 'i line 'luimture 'lor iYj. - I dozen Ad Prices Effective January 3rd, 4th, 5th, 1988 HVttlLMDILIII 560 West Center St., Provo 2255 N. University Parkway, Provo 25 West Center St., Orem 700 East State Rd., American Fork WON TMUHS '0 9fHi 10 SAT 14 SOU' SWE RAIN CHECK strive to have on hand sufficient stock ot advertised merchandise It any reason we are out ol stock a RAIN CHECK will be issued enabling you to buy the item at the as aoveniseo price soon is becomes available. We - Taylor Furniture OPEN Each ot these advertised items is required to be readily available tor sale at ot below the advertised once m each Aibertsons store, except as specitica'iy noted in 115 ad OPFV Copyright 1911 by Albt rtton't. Inc. All flights Ritrvd 7 |