The Virginian-Pilot
                             THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT 
              Copyright (c) 1996, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: Wednesday, June 5, 1996               TAG: 9606040120
SECTION: ISLE OF WIGHT CITIZEN   PAGE: 02   EDITION: FINAL 
                                            LENGTH:   60 lines

DIAMONDS, CARS MAKE ZUNI AUCTION SPECIAL

If a set of Homer Laughlin dishes, Georgian pattern, circa 1940, is just what you've been searching for, you can find it - and a whole lot more - Saturday at Zuni Presbyterian Center's 7th annual benefit auction.

Again this year, director Robert Bishop has scoured the state, collecting items for the center's major fund-raising effort.

Bishop, who went to school in 1988 to learn to be an auctioneer, will be assisted by Herb Jones, a former extension agent who has a new career as an auctioneer.

Bishop said he has been overwhelmed by the generosity of supporters - from one end of the state to the other. This year's sale has the usual auction variety: appliances, lawn equipment, furniture, wood, bicycles, kitchen supplies, old records and coins. But there also is the not-so-ordinary: an antique, yellow gold, diamond cluster ring, the finest piece of jewelry Bishop's ever auctioned, he said; the dishes; a tuna fishing rod; a 17-foot pleasure boat; handmade quilts; and 100 old school desks.

And there are several cars: a 1978 Pontiac, '79 Pontiac, '89 Chevrolet Celebrity and an '82 Chrysler Imperial, a collector's auto in excellent condition, according to Bishop.

There also will be something new - and old - on the auction block. The new item is farm equipment. The old element of the farm equipment is that it all has been used at the Zuni Center.

It dates to the original concept with which the center was developed: that mentally challenged young adults could find success working in an agricultural environment. They helped grow crops and raise hogs and cattle.

Selling the farm equipment, Bishop said, marks ``the end of an era.''

But things never stay the same. So, in a continuing effort to keep up with the innovations in teaching the Zuni students how to become a part of their own communities, the auction this year, in a way, will herald several new beginnings.

Bishop, director for more than 20 years, has been promoted to director of public relations over all Presbyterian Home and Family Services programs. He'll still be based in Zuni, but his responsibilities have expanded. A new Zuni director is expected by Aug. 1.

In mid-June, the sounds of hammers and saws will echo across the landscape as what once were dormitories are remodeled into four group homes. Each will have its own kitchen, dining room, laundry room.

Zuni, Bishop said, will become a transitional residential employment center with a population of only about 34. In the past, about 50 students have lived on campus for four years. In the future, how long each student stays there will be judged on an individual basis.

``It will be a complete overhaul,'' Bishop said. ``We are becoming less institutionalized, more community-based.''

The peanut processing business will be expanded. Bishop expects to spend about 10 percent of his time in his new position promoting Zuni's peanuts.

All of the changes are meant to keep up with everything that is being learned about dealing with mental retardation, helping youngsters who go through Zuni to make choices for themselves and to understand that their own quality of life can be - and should be - the same as anyone else's. ILLUSTRATION: Photo

James Pruner, a student at the Zuni Presbyterian Center, displays

some of the items that will be auctioned. by CNB