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SUNDAY MORNING         8/30/81                 9

But I came up in two or three days and I stayed at the ghost house and I have never seen the ghost, but other people say they've seen it.

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HARBISON: It's possible, I think, to convey quite rich emotion with simplicity of surface. We- And not only is bygone ages. We acknowledge that Mozart could do that and that Beethoven and Hayden could do that, but we're unwilling to believe that in this century with our complex hopped-up lives that we still can do that. And I think it's important to assert that possibility. And O'Keeffe certainly asserted it and reasserted it.

(Music)

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ANNOUNCER: It's SUNDAY MORNING on CBS, and here again is Bruce Morton.

MORTON: Here's a look at the Sunday morning headlines. 

The London Sunday Times reports that many of the replacements for the striking American air controllers have developed medical problems, including heart ailments. The Federal Aviation Administration says this isn't so.

The space shuttle Columbia is taking a trip tomorrow. It will move at one mile per hour toward a launch pad at Cape Canaveral. The shuttle makes its next trip into space on October 9th.

Off the coast of Nantucket today, divers say they may be making their last dive to try to recover a safe from the sunken luxury liner the Andrea Doria. They haven't given up hope; they have run out of money.