CENIT BANCORP INC
DEFA14A, 1997-04-11
SAVINGS INSTITUTION, FEDERALLY CHARTERED
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                         SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

               Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of
           the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No. )

Filed by Registrant /X/

Filed by a Party other than the Registrant / /

Check the appropriate box:
/ / Preliminary Proxy Statement
/ / Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 
    14a-6(e)(2))
/ / Definitive Proxy Statement
/X/ Definitive Additional Materials
/ / Soliciting Material Pursuant to Section 240.14a-11(c) or
    Section 240.14a-12

CENIT Bancorp, Inc.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
(Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement if other than the Registrant)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
/X/ No fee required.

/ / Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4) and 0-11.
    1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies.

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    2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies.

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    3) Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed to 
    Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (Set forth the amount on which the filing fee is 
    calculated and state how it was determined):

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    4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

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    5) Total fee paid:

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 / / Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.

/ / Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act 
Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid 
previously.  Identify the previous filing by registration statement number, 
or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.

    1) Amount Previously Paid:

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    2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:

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    3) Filing Party:

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    4) Date Filed:

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<PAGE>     


CENIT Bancorp, Inc.
Corporate Offices
225 West Olney Road
Norfolk, Virginia 23510
(757) 446-6678

                                                 CENIT BANCORP, INC.



April 11, 1997



Dear Fellow Stockholders:

At CENIT Bancorp's  annual meeting on April 23, you face a referendum on CENIT's
future. Your choice is between:

   CENIT - a highly  successful  community  banking  business  that has achieved
   outstanding  results for  investors  and that  should  produce  even  greater
   returns in the future;

                                       OR

   Mid-Atlantic  Investors  - a  short-term  speculator  that  backs a slate  of
   unqualified  candidates,  has no business  plan for the  company,  and relies
   single-mindedly on a quick sale to achieve investment return.

We think there are  compelling  reasons for  stockholders  to support  CENIT's
board and management:

- -    CENIT's  stock price has risen an average of more than 31%  annually  since
     going public.

- -    CENIT's lending and assets have expanded substantially, with loans held for
     investment up more than 32% in 1996 alone.

- -    CENIT's  local  banking  presence  grew in 1996  with  the  opening  of new
     branches  and the  acquisition  of more than $68 million of local  deposits
     that can be reinvested in our community.

- -    CENIT's  strategic  business plan focuses on continued  superior growth and
     return for stockholders in the future. We have a valuable  franchise and we
     can  continue  to achieve  significant  growth by  building  CENIT into the
     dominant  force in  community  banking in the  Norfolk -  Virginia  Beach -
     Newport News area.

- -    CENIT's  board and  management  are not  opposed to a sale or merger of the
     company - at the right time and at the right price.  As major  stockholders
     of CENIT,  our interests are allied with all the company's  investors.  Our
     goal is to  maximize  stockholder  value,  and we are  willing to use every
     appropriate means to do so.

There are equally compelling reasons for CENIT stockholders to vote AGAINST Mid-
Atlantic's proposal and board candidates:

- -    Mid-Atlantic  would like you to think that its form of speculation is risk-
     free,  but that is  clearly  not the  case.  Less  than two  years  ago the
     stockholders  of  Bankers  First lost  value  when  Mid-Atlantic  could not
     produce an auction of  competing  bidders and the company had to be sold to
     the sole bidder at a price below its  presale  high.  It is a fact that the
     sale of a business cannot be conducted with fire-

<PAGE>

     sale  tactics and still achieve full value. We believe that Mid-Atlantic 
     wants to gamble on a quick profit for itself, rather than maximizing 
     stockholder value.

- -    Mid-Atlantic's   tactics   are   encountering   growing   resistance   from
     stockholders.  Recently,  the  stockholders of HFNC Financial  refused by a
     vote of nearly two to one to support Mid-Atlantic's attack on the company's
     compensation  program.  We agree with  these  investors  that  professional
     destabilizers  such as Mid-Atlantic can cause harm when their insistence on
     short-term profits disrupts long-term business strategy.

- -    Mid-Atlantic's   board   candidates   could  not  fulfill  their  fiduciary
     responsibilities  if elected as directors of CENIT.  These candidates,  who
     are  controlled by  Mid-Atlantic,  cannot  represent the interests of CENIT
     stockholders  and do not have the  experience  or ability to set policy and
     oversee  the  company's  business.  They stand for only one thing - a quick
     sale.  But if such a sale were not  achieved,  CENIT would be crippled by a
     divided board with  inexperienced  and unqualified  directors  incapable of
     fulfilling their duties.

- -    Mid-Atlantic  Investors is really just two people - Jerry Zucker, a wealthy
     Charleston,  South Carolina  businessman,  and Jerry Shearer,  hired by Mr.
     Zucker to manage his  investment  game.  Mr.  Shearer,  described in a 1995
     profile as having " . . . toiled in obscurity at three South Carolina banks
     . . . . plugging away in the back office," never achieved leadership in the
     profession.  With Mr.  Zucker's money, he now practices a form of corporate
     vandalism  that  ignores the  performance  and  long-term  prospects of the
     companies he puts "in play" for short-term profit.  This is not a game that
     benefits CENIT's stockholders,  employees, customers, or the communities it
     serves.

In making your voting decision at this year's annual meeting,  we urge all CENIT
stockholders  to follow the advice of  Institutional  Shareholder  Services,  an
independent advisory firm that reviews proxy material and gives voting advice to
institutional  investors. ISS has reviewed the proxy materials of both CENIT and
Mid-Atlantic  Investors  and has  recommended  that its clients vote FOR CENIT's
board  nominees  and  AGAINST  Mid-Atlantic's  proposal.  This  appraisal  by an
independent  firm looking out for stockholder  interests is convincing  evidence
that Mid-Atlantic represents only itself, not the stockholders of CENIT Bancorp.

Sincerely,



Michael S. Ives
President and Chief Executive Officer

   If your shares of Common Stock are held in the name of a bank or brokerage
          firm, only that firm can execute a proxy card on your behalf.
Please contact the person responsible for your account and give instructions 
   for a WHITE proxy card to be voted FOR Proposal 1 and AGAINST Proposal 2.
         If you have questions or need assistance in voting your shares,
      please contact the firm assisting us in the solicitation of proxies:

                            GEORGESON & COMPANY INC.
                                WALL STREET PLAZA
                               NEW YORK, NY 10005

                            TOLL-FREE: 1-800-223-2064
                       BANKS & BROKERS CALL: 212-440-9800

                       Internet: http://www.georgeson.com


<PAGE>


News Release
_________________________________________________________________

CENIT Bancorp, Inc.
225 West Olney Road
Norfolk, Virginia 23510
(757) 446-6600

                                            Contact:     
                                            Michael S. Ives/757-446-6678
                                            President & Chief Executive Officer
                                            CENIT Bancorp, Inc.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

     Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) Supports CENIT Bancorp 
                  In Proxy Contest with Mid-Atlantic Investors

     NORFOLK, Va. April 11 -- CENIT Bancorp, Inc., (NASDAQ:CNIT) today announced
that a  respected  independent  advisory  firm has  issued  a report  supporting
CENIT's board nominees and recommending that CENIT shareholders reject the proxy
proposal and board nominees  advanced by Mid-Atlantic  Investors.  Institutional
Shareholder  Services  (ISS),  which  reviews  and  analyzes  proxy  issues  for
institutional  investors,  advised CENIT investors to vote their shares in favor
of the  recommendations  of  CENIT's  Board  at the  company's  upcoming  annual
meeting.

     "We're  pleased  that this  independent  assessment  recognizes  the values
inherent in CENIT's current management  strategy," said Michael Ives,  President
and CEO of CENIT Bancorp.

     Mid-Atlantic  wishes  to force a hasty  sale of  CENIT,  a  community  bank
serving the Norfolk-Newport News-Virginia Beach area.

     The report by ISS, released this week, refutes claims made by Mid-Atlantic,
a Columbia,  S.C.,  investor that has conducted  similar campaigns against other
community banks.

                                     -more-

<PAGE>

ISS release/Page 2

     "We do not  believe  that  pushing  CENIT  into a sale at this point in its
operations will necessarily  command a significant  premium in the market," said
the report by Maryland-based ISS. The report went on to say that "while takeover
speculation  may have  increased  share  value at CENIT  over the period of Mid-
Atlantic's  investment,  we also believe  performance  enhancements  have helped
increase share value."

     The report was released  just two weeks prior to the bank's April 23 annual
meeting,  at which  shareholders will consider whether to unseat incumbent CENIT
directors in favor of three  candidates being promoted by Mid-Atlantic for seats
on CENIT's Board of Directors,  and vote on a Mid-Atlantic proposal to retain an
investment banker to value CENIT.

     "We do not  believe  there are any signs of  management  trying to entrench
itself at the cost of shareholder value," the report said, countering a repeated
Mid-Atlantic claim.

     Among  examples of the bank's  currently  successful  strategy of achieving
shareholder value, the report cited:

         -   a 31 percent annually compounded return on investment
         -   a dividend increase of $1.00 per share from none
         -   growth of retail branch offices to 19 from 11
         -   an increase of average shareholder equity to average assets
             from 5.7 percent to 7.2 percent.

                                       ###




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