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                    <text>SC—Even i ng Herald, Sanford, Fl.

BLONDIE
,..—

WE NADA
5P8..UP4Cs 1'E5T

Wednesday,

WE HAD A HUN

13, DI1

VOU Gr THEM

PER

Aj

GOT
T-4EM AI ,5)

0wowc,

___\

Answer to Previous Puzzle
46 Olympic
board (abbr.)
T
1 Bond 48 Time division
11
LI
S Athletic
49 Baby frog
u 1c 1 T1
T1
buildings
53 Oyster eggs
j
I
ICIHII A
57 Flowerless
9 Scamp
NNC
ARA
12 Start off
plant
T Z
I
CK
13 Vast period of 58 Volunteer
time
0 U
0
1
state (abbr.)
1*1016
14 Railroad
EN1
L
N iL0N
60 Protagonist
vehicle
D
9 I
61 Corral
- - - 15 Aleutian
$TL
62 Fibril
T
island
63 Indian tribe
1 r A
16a Station (Fr.) 64 Compass
N 1101*1
tufvtA
0CT
N
F i ri D
17 Scrutinize
point.
18 Throwing disk
35
Potato
65 Goddess of
10 Indian of
fate
38 Cut o ff
Yucatan
20 Rumor
66 Negatives
11 Quarry
40 Springs
22 Curly l etter
19
Phrase
of
un
43
Comfort
24 Snow runner
DOWN
derstanding 12 45 Short dash
25 Balls of fringe
wdi.)
47 Exempt
29 Rains frost
I Joyous
21 Toll
49 Topples
33 Year of
(abbr) 2 Abominable 23 Waste miner 50 Bird class
science
snowman
25 Scrabble
34 Food
51 Force unit
Pools
piece
36 Mountain
City in
India 4 Elicits
26 Advanced in 52 Oklahoma
pass in
years
37 Burning glass 5 Muzzle
54 Air (prefix)
27 Auld Lan
39 Swindles (sI) 6 Slangy
55 Legal
ACROSS

NO

1

J

TODAY

Chic Young

by

RIGHT __)

0 1 WAS

RD5 -A4

IN 50400L

AprIl

'-1

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O!

''ii

•

_____

_______

______

_

BEETLE BAILEY

by
IJUST

YOU MAY
IJ,' 14\
dEALOUS OF MISS 81JXLY
BUT
I'M NOT
_______

SWE '0

CUTE

5

Walker

Mon

Tl-4OUG1T

MAKE

A

5

PINCUS$1I01'4

1'c

Uu

_____

— — — —

1

15

17

-

— —

________________________________________________________

by Art Sansom

-

18 1

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t.

Ca4kP4

)

— — —

—

TR !kE!

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-

— —

-

—

42

—

14
___

———

_

4-to

49 50 51

IT WOULDN'T

~6 INVEST

YOU KNOW

Alow )FT!s SEE WWT
I ACQUIRE t6 A) SOME SHARPTHREAZ?S,
EITHER'

/SOME SPICE TOMY

—

—

-

41 —
40
39
38
______________________________
L
44
45
43
-

47

46
—

-

46

-

—

—

53

52

—

—

———

54 55 56

._...1

TO

— — —

RE

YOUR

,j—

64

rAPJTSA'Efl'Wt/POW

YOU'RE
RIGHT

MY WAR

'

-

YOUR SHIRT, s4iroN

NEED To ADD SPICE I GUESS

YOUR SNEAKERS,'

65

— — —

).JO

WARDROBE?

80

59

61

YEAH" '1Ou'VEGOr,$fUSF*WON

NAW!! DON'T

.

I

— — —

I
—

_.

HOROSCOPE

_____________________________________________________

a

,__

7

I

ByIIERNICEBEDEOSOL

-

April16, 1981

by

EEK&amp; MEEK

or pregnancy. All results were cents with a long, stamped,
negative. Now he wan ts her self-addressed envelope for It
back In a month if her period to me, In care of this
,
P.O. Box
newspaper, po
does not come.
Radio City Station, New York,

.

I

•.

by Ed Sullivan

woman to stop

having

BUGS BUNNY

by Stoffel &amp; Heimdahi

M GO(N 1 GIVE UP '
SLLIN B)jS1S '\
'IQ_WABBITS.

he did prescribe medicines

J

The truck driver was trapped and

1 5

4

s
_.i •',

10 pounds underweight.

.

l wish l could get rid of this
problem for good.

-.

1;k •

.

,'

.

.

-

:.,
1 '

.
...

.:

.

.

.4

NORTH

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23.

achieve all you hoped to today
You may have some an
noyances to contend with on your first effort, but don't
early In the day, but things let this disappoint you.
should smooth out by af- Marshall your forces. Ch arge
ternoon, Hang loose for fun a second time for victory.

4-I5-81

0
.

.
.

____________________________________

.

-

.

,.

..a.

.
'

I

'•

-

by Bob Tha yes

1.ik! $'PING

4
a

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cçEpi'

• 5062

EAST'
• Q tO 9

VQJ97
#KQJ7

4 10952

4' J

4' Q

3

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21-Feb.
times ahead.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) 19) This should be a auc

,. ..

.

trump and

declarer an dummy each
held a small one.

•

in dummy, led dummy's last

I'd Alan Sontag

before the end of the day shift late blast occurred. Three were taken to from where the miners were trapped —
Valley View Hospital at Glenwood said the force of the explosion from deep

Lyle at 9 a.m. (EST). "The situation to

"It knocked off my hat, but It didn't
egg hunt held for families of Seminole Memorial Hospital employees. Sixty rescue teams still were about 1,400 feet possibi ity of asphyxiation by deadly
methane
or
carbon
monoxide
gas.
He
knock
meover,"he said of the explosion.
dozen eggs were hidden for the hunt staged for children I to 10-years-old, away."

4
f,

-

SI I

0

It L)t&amp;Rth

HIS

Officials Pampering Panda Pair
ZA

it

Classified Ads

6&amp;7B

..............

WASHINGTON (UPI) — Ling-Ling, Wednesda y to even leave her den, which
e National Zoo's female panda, was too disappointed zoo officials who hoped the
tired Wednesday night to meet her pandas "would pick up where they left off
Chia-Chia, so mat. (Tuesday) and may be get a little farLondon lover,
chmaking zoo officia ls said they would ther."
in g the two toge ther today.
try to br
The two growled and cuff ed at each

Comics ....................
Dear Abby .....................lB
Dea ths.........................2A
Editorial.......................4A
Florida ........................3A
Ung.Ung Is ready for mating and zoo other in their first encounter Tuesday.
Nation .........................3A spokesman Michael Morgan sa id she
Chia-Chia was brought over from the
O urselves - ..................11148 may stay in heat for only another 24
Television .....................38 "to make hay while the sun shines."

AC

______
-

__________

Affrm

said.

"Once there Is sufficient evidence of an
Also tonight, the council is scheduled to adverse Impact, it Is nei th er un-

rearrange the city's water rate strue- constitutional nor unreasonable to

Construction is to begin immediately

in operation by fall. "For the fields to he up In the freeze on federal funding in

on a water plant and two sports fields at useable, grass has to be planted and for Atlanta," he said.
Sylvan Lake Park so uth of W. Sta te Road the grass to grow we had to have
"Our problem Is not knowing whe th er
46 off Lake Markham Road In the Paola available water," Nelswender said, the freeze will be lifted or when. The

.
asked what It believes is a first priority in their area.
recommendaU
The commissioners ha ve ta ken all
under advisement, and are to make decisions on whether the

restructured system on county government, Secondly, he said,
Seminole's population grew by 115 percent between 10 and
1910.

item can be budgeted In the 1982 fiscal year.
official court reporter.
When construction of the new county courthouse was
— The area now occupied by the law library, Judge Joe
Davis' chambers and the trial clerks' office to an additional planned in the mid and late IM, an architect said thie

Leffler, chid judge; S. Joseph Davis Jr., Vernon Mize Jr. and
Dominick J. Salfi and County Judges Alan Dickey, Wallace

entire courthouse to judicial functions and renovations in the that two events after the new
rooms.
e operation of devastating results as far as space In the facility was con.
— Remaining space to a two and possibly three judge suite Interim are "determined to be necessary for th

with chambers, hearing rooms, secretarial rooms, a shared the circuit and county courts of this county."

cerned.

First article V of the Florida Constitution went Into effect
waiting room and offices for court tthnInlctrative personnel. - The Judges submitted their recommenda tions as part of the
on-going
hearings
the
county
commissioners
twve
been
having
consolidating
the court systems into two tiers — circuit aod
Ile entire east side for the orderly move of the clerk's

_________

present personnel and uses from this area to the same or ad- with various county departments where each department was county — placing all responsibility for providing space for the
'N'

-.

•

4 - ic-

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--

..

---.

-

-'-.-.....

_

-

—

•—

-,-

-

-

-

--

...-.-

Ling and her American partner, Using-

Using, had failed to produce a cub after
Morgan said Ling-Ling was too tired Mx years of tryin g.
—

.
jury trial courtroom and judge's suite with chambers, hearing structure should be, adequate for 10 years.
October, 1985.
the project was
il
e
for
io
ns
uction
was
delayed
wh
is
ns
tr
co
However,
prov
Seven of the county's eight resident county and circuit room, secretarial room, waiting roamtoand
ilet. Law libra ry to the subject of a lawsuit.
receptionist,
access,
passageways
and
th
is
ti
on
citing
es
olu
ty
commission
a
r
coun
Judges sent to the
The lawsuit questioned whether Sanford was the Legal
space in the old jail.
need.
e
kitchen
county
seat. In 1971 the lawsuit was resolved wi th a Florida
— The area in the old jail which was occupied by th
th e Interliii four years the judges are asking the cornIn
missioners to hire an architect or planning group to determine to a grand jury room, offices for court personnel, juvenile Supreme Court ruling that Sanford is the county seat and the
coordinator, juvenile secretary, criminal division secre ta ry, courthouse had to be built in Sanf ord.
ta ble and adequate
w hether the space which is available is sui
In December, 1972, county and court offices were moved into
juvenile arbitration coordinator, guardian ad litem coorfor conversion of:
dinator.
•
— Existing county cotnmiF5ion chambers to a jury trial
Clerk of the Court Arthur H. Beckwith Jr. pointed out today
In the resolution the judges declared the conversion of the
courtroom with jury room, conference room and two witness
courthouse opened 1(Sd

by Craig Leggeft

FLETCHER'S LANDING

TODAY

Opponents of the condominium project
Heathrovi On .Lake AAary Agenda compIled substantial and convincing
evidence that th e development and
The Jeno Paulucci family, principal destruction of about 1,800 acresof bla ck
It's on the agenda, but there's no

The entire Set
the old jail, parking areas and grounds, will be needed ex.
clusively for county and circuit court functions and the offices
of the murts' clerk, the state attorney and pubUc defender by

A—

-t

Fos F_ 0

The three men he aided were semi-

udiciary Needs Ent"ire Courthouse, udges Say

ALTEP LEVELS!

-

"Those are very gassy mines,"

Weather .......................2A
World ..........................2A

ditional areas on the first floor of the north wing. Judicial
'
By DONNA ESTES
needs here would be either the law library or domestic
herald Staff Writer
County courthouse at Sanford, including' relations commi ssioner's office, th e tr ial clerk's office and

'-

somebody needed help."

rescue teams had been extremely slow area.

was tabled when City Attorney Gary ture, a move which could result in require the developer to prove that the
explaining the need for the water plant. county commission had to make a
area.
Massey asked for a delay, but would not slightly higher water bills for some proposed curative measures will be
County Commissioners agreed to
The county administra tor sa id a grant decision whether it wanted to wait and
users.
adequate," th e court sa id in an opinion
spend $40,000 in budgeted county funds to
publicly reveal his reasons for so doing.
to
pay a good portion of the costs of this not provide active recreation t Sylvan
build the water plant and the ba ll fields
And Sem in ole County Administrator written by Justice Parker Lee
The city lost Its Initial effort to annex
eral
grant
will
work
and for development of a bout 90 Lake Park. It d ecided to move forward,"
McDonald.
th
pe
that
a
f
ed
wi
the
ho
ns
for
Roger
Neiswender
will
outline
pla
ed
a
circuit
court
rul
a cres of the 120 acre site as a nature park Nelswender said.
the property when
"Protection of environmentally sen- reimburse the county for half the cost. has been approved by the state already.
the move would create enclaves — the widening of several roads in and
"If the federal government won't
Roger
County
Administrator
sitive areas and pollution prevention are
pockets of county land surrounded by around tAke Mary.
"The
grant
is
approveable
by
the
reimburse
for the expenditure, so be it,"
Nelswender said today the work has to
The council will meet at 7:30 p.m. In legitimate concerns within the police
city property — which are prohibited by
begin
immediately
if
the
fields
are
to
be
federal
authorities,
but
is
currently
hung
Neiswender
said, — DONNA ESTES
power (of the state),"
city hail, 185 E. Crystal Lake Avenue.
state law. That case is under appeal.

I

..&gt;

"The first thing I did was try to find out if

Sports ......................6A.$A hours or so. He said it would be necessary London Zoo this spring, because Ling.

council's March 12 and 26 meetings, but

ARE THE WARtJK6
'ml
VffiY
_____AROUND ON TW)SE EX
WAY

______

Mind officials said the work of the said methane is common in mines In the

Attorney General Jim Smith, during land each time they were used, Smith
Cabinet to approve the construction of a
niultibllllon-dollnr condominium city on oral arguments before the high court a argued.

(v"

1AIElTi4G,41N

brft the first thiree injured miners to Ule

COMPETITION

defenders' third and last trick.

I THINK 60-

SRALL

the mialinviot. y for the missft miners —

more eggs, (:12 of 'em) than anyone else In her age group during an Easter progressing. The last we heard, the If theysurvived the blast — was the surface.

tonight.
The matter was set for a vote at the

No-

by T. K. Ryan

David Chiarello, a miner working 4,100

EGGS OUT

diamond and rutted It. West
overruf fed, but that was the

WE LOWLY
INTERNS WHIT MO

4- Sf

miners who were able to escape

gas at the MidContinent Resource Inc.

.. . . Dutc't Creek No. 1 Mine, occurred shortly were sil closer to the surface when the feet inside the t un nel — about 2,000 feet

Wednesday afternoon.
,•
- ........................Seven
other miners walk ed out or were Springs, a bout 30 m iles to the north, Inside the moun ta in felt hike "a little
hurricane."
where we was in serious condition.
rescued.
He escaped serious injury and was able
Delaney
said
there
was
no
apparent
"There really Isn't much new to report
Herald Photos by Tom Vincent
at this time," said mine accountant Jeff cave-In caused by the explosion, but said to walk out of the mine as well as help

development will come up for discussion the city gives final approval to the anat the Lake Mar' City Council meeting nexatlon ordinance,

his last diamond. South ruffed

N

1) \

"They're restoring ventilation as they go methane, but that is something that will
dawn today.
ha ve to be ascerta ined ," Delaney sa id.
ane
and$hat's
wha t is taking so long."
th
caused
by
me
ed
Th e blast, believ

1,600-acre Heathrow planned unit annexation and have threatened suit If Estero and San Carlos Bays, the court

:

diamond 10, so West chucked

____

_____

guarantee an ordinance to annex the Heathrow landowners, is also fighting mangroves would pollute the waters of

South led a fourth club.

by Leonard Starr

___________

__________________________

,
• e-' :'

.

_____

private land toprotect valuable wetlands take another look at the case and tell the the environment.
and prevent water pollution without developer, Estuary Properties Inc.,
Regulations prohibiting massive
hav in g to condemn and buy th e property. exactly what it could to do minimize dredge and filling operations and other
The court overruled the 1st District environmental damage and proceed with protection measures would become
Court of Appeal, which ordered the construction,
useless if the state had to purchase the

West knew that Rast held the

EH6AGEP IN MPtCARE
WO(JLP SHAPE UP ONCE THEY '
)NEW SOMEONE WAS AFTER
THEM!
HAVE THE

_______________
____________________
______
_____
_

a.
TALLA
critical ever in its possible impact on
Florida Supreme Court said today the Myers or purchase the property.
The
justices
did
order
the
Cabinet
to
efforts
by Florida government to protect
sta te can block the development of

South made the last three
develop today which could usually not supportive of you
When laying a trumpcon tricks with the ace-king of
spell pe rsonal ga in. It has rallies to your banner. You've tract with a five-card side suit spades and his fifth club.
more potential than Is obvious . ga ined a valuable ally.
to develop, it Is usually cor- (NEWSPAI'EH ENTERI'ftISI ASSN.)

CALLING VsJ 5WP(P!
A 600Q
ME! THE CREATOR OF L_'1'
THE WHOLE lt)IOTIC
'RAY N(EK" (PEA!

_

Without Buying Property, Court Says

his hand with the king. West

held the high

Ways can be found today to cessful day because of your
resolve a situation which has ability to treat disturbing

Something unexpected' may surprise today when someone

_

State Ca n Block Land Development

South rut fed again.
Now South was in full
control. He led a heart to
dummy's ace and returned to

2
Pass 4
Pass I'ass

Opening lead:4K

.

REDSTONE, Cob. (UN) - Rescue missing miners since the explosion, and gases from the tunnels.
The explosion occurred near the end of
teams fighting to reach 15 miners authorities have refused to speculate an
the day shift at th e min e, which slopes at
trapped more than a mile underground the men's chances.
"They're rotating crews and working a 15.degree angle Into a low mounta in In
by a violent mountain coal mine exeir way slowly to th e place where the the scenic Crystal River Valley of
th
king
slow
rt
po
ed
ma
were
re
h)lOSiOfl
jrogress and were still at least 1,400 feet' accident occurred," said company weste rn Colorado.
"The most probable cause was
away from th e accident site shortly after spokesman and attorney Bob Delaney.

as they
moved
the tunn'I.
There Delaney said, explaining the company conscious and "real disoriented" when
_____________________________________________________________________________________________ because
of the
needdown
to restore
ventilation
—
have been no signs of life from the uses large fans outside the mine to suck he found them, he said.

two and three he played his
ace and king of clubs.
West ruffed the king and
could do nothing better than
to play a second diamond
which South rutted. South led
a third club which East won.
East led another diamond and

Dealer: South
Wt North

Pass

T

__________

'

South did just that. At tricks

•A K? 4
Vulnerable: East-West

Fo

M-IEDD,NG.

.

-

success that South work on

KS
50653

Pass

______
'

bad breaks it was essential for

WFb7

Th! MAMMO,'I-i$

TUMBLEWEEDS

__________

If hearts and clubs were
going to break 3.2. it wouldn't
matter which suit South started on. But to guard against

ANNIE
FRANK AND ERNEST

¼__

____________________________________________________

. .

rs

-

•

_________

in

trumps

.

• J 87 3

c

_____

-.

...........j

Trying

,

child received a candy-filled Plastic egg. More pictures on Page 5A.

reet tactics to work on the

Defense IntelUgence.

•

,,

Prizes were given those who round the most eggs or a silver egg and each

side suit before touching

photo-processing for Air Force

.

'

4.

pitfalls and career for the Everything comes to him who

-.

Explosion

esc
•,

area. Neither situation is a

•A4 2

By

for makeup, but others are

SCORPIO (Oct. 14-Nov. 22)

•-

.

PETER J. STANKIEWICZ

Trapped

#'

.

WIN AT BRIDGE

coming months are all waits and this principle works

Stankiewicz does photography and

uers

.

'

..

.

in women athletes and in

may have a hand In bringing Your attitude is a winner.

CA

Wright family, she said. Wright was the
father of nine children.

stationed here in Sanford when his son
Peter was two years old. As an active
member of the Boy Scouts, the Air
Force hero learned safety procedures

Stankiewicz continued efforts to andswinuning while still a young boy.

____

PISCES (Feb. 21111-March 20)
about a happy ending.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You could be In for a pleasa nt By Oswald Jacoby

COPPOR

river's

Is accepting gifts of money for the

intelligence In the U.S. Navy, Was

..

needed for such some men.

amounts

been disturbing you. Luck situations philosophically.

Y SKIN

regained consciousness, despite efforts
by Stankiewicz and the others to revive
him with mouth-to-mouth and cardiopulmonary resuscitation methods.

retired master chief petty officer

DEAR DR. LAMB - I have

Depending

Take time to think your steps you today. If you're trying to
through before tackling swin g a big deal, discuss it In
complicated projects today. other than a commercial
You're a good worker on ce atmosphere,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
you get everything organized.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) 19) You may not be able to

__

IS NOT FP7 S1RItIN&amp;A

CaUs are still coming in from all over
the nation from truck drivers and their
families who want to send money to the
couple, Stankiewics's mother said. He

-

Dec. 21) Business and
sure to specify birth date.
TAURUS J April 20-May 20) pleasure tend to blend well for

/

Hegel REPSKIN?

going

dangered his own life in an attempt to

119 Oakland Avenue, Sanford, Peter

and the four worked Wright free of the Stankiewicz's parents, returned
wreckage in minutes.
Tuesday from the Air Force ceremony
In Washington. John Stankiewicz, a
But the driver, who was submerged
of

StankiewiLi down the embankment,

Stankiewicz was near the Great at the time rescuers got to him, never

i constant

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ballet dancers who have very amount of pigment in that

City Station, N.Y. 10019. Be

AWAY!

HArJ&amp;IrlJ&amp; PM

'

hormone Imbalance will
I get
DEAR READER
u pon
cause this.
often.
It
the nature of the imbalance, this question rather
the doctor may want to always makes me wonder.
prescribe some hormones. If Many women use eyeshadow

Astro-Graph, Box 489, Radio benefit.

KEEP THE
FN1E5

__

Y'

denly Jack-knifed through the safety'

rail of the Cabin John Bridge, sending

his

unhealthy and it can affect a
girl's normal functions.

about

You were correct in having
an examina tion. Sometimes a

tankiewicz was driving to work that
morning when a tractor-trailer sud-

in
stream of honors and Falls, Va., side of the bridge,
(ILStiflCtiOflS he's received since the the opposite direction when he stop pe d
car and scrambled down the
March 17 rescue.
embankment,
Initiating a four an
wi
ll
Residents in the nation's capital
long remembe r how Stankiewicz en rescue attempt to save Wright's life.
one in

menstrual periods. It is da rk circles under my eyes. I
l to be understand this resul ts from
common for a gir
g of being thin skinned. Is there
irregular at t he beginnin
and any way besides ma keup to
sexual maturity. Starting
is problem? I am
then stopping Is not unusual. eliminate th

r'u r w THAT discussed in your !tstro- In your favor today. Others
WHAT y -ro '
Graph which begins with your will be busy shIfting things
MEDICAL J 6YWNIE5 IN A MEDICAL jjp,ii
birthday. Mall $1 for each to around for your ultimate
A
JUST' RECENTLY.'
SAYI NG?

PJIJL? PM NOT

Airman's Medal For Ileroisni was just

Peter attended All Souls Ca th oli c
School In Sanford before his fa ther was
transferred to Japan In 1967. Born in
Por tsmouth, Va., Stankiewicz and his
wife Ka thleen make their home in
Gaithersburg, Va.

revive Jackson after the others had
unconscious in the partially submerged
given up. He was later admitted to the
cab. With winds of 28 to 46 miles per
hour, Stankiewicz was the first rescuer emergency room of a local hospital
into the 35-degree water, officials said.
be treated for exposure and exhaustion.
Three unidentified motorists who had
Mr. and Mrs. John Stankiewicz Jr., of
also stopped on the bridge, followed

save Arthur B. Wright, a 56-year-old
truck driver,

Potomac River. the cab of the truck and its driver
And last Tuesday 's award ceremon y plunging some 50 feet Into the Potomac
to present Staff Sergeant Peter J. Ri ver.
Stankiewicz with the U.S. Air Force

hope you have encouraged

DEAR READER — Th ere
are many reasons for a young

Medal For Heroism Given Former Sanford Man

From a bridge into the

I

luck, resources, possible

Li HAMGIN&amp;RO(i(SJP

wime truck had just phinged 50 feet

your daughter to learn to eat
get involved with pills as
ls
are
properly
and not to have a
understand most p il
her
misconcep
tion about the need
cancerous. I have raised
may be stylish to
th
in.
It
be
to keep away from a ll kinds of to
th in, but too th in is
be
and drugs,

the facts, then your judgment control once again. Assert
will be wise. Romance travel, yourself.

I

,

My daughter refuses to NY 10019.

today may not initially be for the better. Unmanagable

\

.

have any more examinations.
Crash die ts and unwise fad
Wi ll her periods begin again
anyway? What kind of diets are a frequent problem
girls these days. I
treatment would the doctor in young

accurate. Pause to gather all situations will be back in your

__•

.

health problem. I suggest you
Fortunately, however, this and more fortunate than usual
Please
review
Th
e
Heal
look
In the mirror and say
th
coming year you will ha ve the today In turning unproductive
17.2,
Female
every
morning, "Aren't you
Letter
number
right people to lean on when situations around Into
something more to your Reproductive Function, that I lucky to have dark alluring
you need them.
am sending you. Others who eyes that make you look a bit
ARIES March 21-April 19) likelng.
want this issue can send 75 different?"
LIBRA JSept. 23-OcL 23
Your understanding of
propositions brought to you Conditions are taking a turn

Z

WZOtC..

CALYLE, I TOW N I 'YOU N.'r WM4ME
'iU•" NO eRoJwIES I I TO E HAPPY! YOU
N'T KNOW AeCUT'
BEFORE PINNER'
I
iT14AT OW MEPICAL A
SAWGj
'&amp;

8 SYBIL MITCHELL (',ItNDY
herald Staff Writer
A former Sanford resident has
become the latest hero in Washington
after his daring attempt to save a man

purposes.

You're the type who strives carefully.

Howie Schneider

afkcted bg

PRISCILLA'S POP

Airman's

a

gynecologist and she was
examined for cysts or tumors

like to rely upon others. You're likely to be cleverer scant fat deposits.

1

-

The condition can be
can't say if she needs from a thin skin that permi ts
them. She ma y not, Many the large amount of bluish
young girls stop menstuating venous blood In th is area to
16, 1981
or delay the onset because affect the color. Or it can, and
at first glance, so study it they are too thin. We see that often Is, from the skin

to be independent and doesn't

anut {om A.

a
.

We took her to a

give her? I don't want her to

Herald—( US PS 481.280)—Price 20 Cents

Evening H

32771

caused

For Thursday, April

c4)I'Iter5 who W deeP14j

Dr.
Lamb

you could be fairly certain upset If nature gave them a
they would be some form of little natural eyeshadow.
hormones to stim ulate th e Dark circles can be covered
onset of menstr uation or to wl th makeup, which is fine lfa
help to reg ulate her. These woman wishes to use it, but I
are not cancerous In the also get th is compla in t from

—

—

H2

three months.

—

58

57
by Bob Montana

CAN

— — —

_______________
_____

ARCHIE

kT -,riij

—

—

— — —

_________

— —

-

37
——

E!

24

23

________

b

DEAR DR. LAMB - My
daughter is 16 years old. She
has never had sex or been
involved wi th pills. She has
had her period since she was
14, but a ll of a sudden it
stopped. S he hasn't had it for

1

30 31 32
29
28
25 26 27
______________________________
36
35
34
33

FF'1 L4.'

CAPM)I

—

22

21

20

19

— — —

WZ

—

—

14

— —

16

— — — —

— —

9 110 11

16 17 18

13

_____________
________________________________________________________
_________

THE BORN LOSER

I
'
LL. I%M

5

3 14

2

12

1

4.15

— — — —

]Hleral4i

Teen s

In

73rd Year, No. 203—Thursday, April 16, 1981—Sanford, Florida

_

document
7 Conventions 28 Eye infection
30 Buckeye State 56 Negatives
8 Creeps
59 Depression ini
31 Alert
9 Applies
hal.
32 Remain
frosting

character
42 Paradises
44 Pleasing
sound

Period

Common

Affirmative

41 Biblical

'

Irregular

.

.'

.•

—

--

-

_-r-

.

--

I___

----

.—..

.

Signing the resolution were Circuit Judges Kenneth M.

Hall and Harold F. Johnson, all resident judges in Seminole.
Only Circuit Judge Robert B. McGregor did not sign the
resolution,

Littler said today the need for additional space for court
functions has been th ere for sometime. He pointed out that
currently new Judge Vernon Mi,,. Jr. has only a hearing room
and does not have a chambers.
"When Judge Davis and I determined not to participate In
sentence negotiations with a'tininaI defendants, the result,
was that we were compelled to try more cases. The case load
has been building," Judge Leffler said.
"We would like to switch some other judges to trying

criminal cases, but we do not have the courtrooms to do this,"
LeftIes' said.

ConMiuliomrs have discussed moving tvwAy

ministrative operations to the Five Points area.

ad-

�Evening H•rald, Sanford, Fl.

In'

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Polish Rank-And-File
Ask Party Resignations
WARSAW, Poland (UPI) — An unauthorized
national meeting of rank-and-file Communist Party
members declared "loss of trust in the party apparatus
at every level" and called for mass resignations in an
unprecedented grass-roots challenge to Poland's
rullers.
A Western observer, assessing the meeting Wed.
nesday of representatives from 14 of Poland's 49
provinces In the northern town of Torun, said, "If
anything brings In the Russians, It will be changes In
the party not the Solidarity" trade union.
The gathering was the first national session of local
party discussion groups which have been springing up
without Central Party directives to discuss
preparations for the coming party congress, and the
delegates' language minced few words.

Hess Breaks Silence
BONN, West Germany (UPI) — Rudolf Hess, Adolf
Hitler's second-In-command, broke 40 years of silence
to announce that his mysterious wartime "peace
mission" to Britain was made without the fuhrer's
knowledge.
In breaking his public silence, the jailed Nazi official
also disclosed In a pamphlet marking the 40th anniversary of the flight that be made three unsuccessful
attempts to fly to Britain before he finally took off on
the mission that ended with his Imprisonment In the
Tower of London.
Since Hess landed In Scotland May 10, 1941, the world
had wondered If Hitler sent his deputy to make a
separate peace to clear the way for his attack six
weeks later on Russia. Hitler at the time denounced
Hess as a madman.

Bomb Left At Army Office
WIESBADEN, West Germany (UPI) — A jailed
Baader-Melnhof terrorist on a hunger strike died and a
bomb was planted In an Army headquarters today In a
campaign against the U.S. military. Police defused the
bomb before It exploded.
The bomb incident occurred before Hamburg
authorities announced the death of Sigurd DeWs who
had refused food for two months. The news was expected to spark further violence, with U.S. Installations
a prime target.

For Series Of Burglaries

'One-Man Crime Wave' Gets 5 Years

A 26-year-old Sanford resident who police described as a
"one-am crime wave," was sentenced In Circuit Court
Wednesday to five years Imprisonment and 20 years probation
for a series of burglaries committed last summer.
Ronald Thomas Alcott of 114 Summerlln Ave. was suspected
of more than two dozen area break-ins, but agreed to plead
guilty to four counts of burglary providing that he received
seven years or less In jail. Judge Joseph Davis Jr. accepted the
deal, but also ordered Alcott to pay back the estimated $30,000
taken In the robberies.
The offenses to which Alcott admitted were the July 18
break-in at Harry's Bar, Park Avenue, Sanford; July 23, the
Orlando Helicopter building at the Sanford Airport; and the
July 29 burglaries at the National Chemical Corp. In the 14
Industrial Park, and the Bowling Alley at 1800W. Airport Blvd.
In other court action, Timothy Scott Perkins, 20, of 750
Lerman Circle, Longwood, was sentenced to live years In
prison, suspended to three years and two years probation,
after his conviction In November of assaulting a Longwood
policeman with a shotgun.
Because of the nature of the offense, Perkins will have to
serve the entire three years In jail. He will not be eligible for
early release.
Perkins was charged with aggravated assault after he
pointed a shotgun at officer R.G. DeFlippo and threatened to
shoot him during a domestic squabble at Perkins' home.
It took a six-member Circuit Court jury just 25 minutes to
convict 29-year-old Willie Gene Miller on a charge of attempted robbery In connection with an ill-fated robbery try at
the Lii' Champ convenience store, 119 W. 25th St., Sanford on
May 15.
Sentencing was deferred pending completion of an investigation Into Miller's background.
Miller, of 54 Castle Brewer Court, Sanford, was accused of
entering the store, shoving clerk Doris Bertrang aside and
trying to rifle the cash drawer.
Failing, Miller fled the store and was captured in a wooded
area a short distance away.
In another trial, Joseph Robert 'Fully, 20, of 9003 Lake
Charity Drive, Maitland, was found not guilty of the June 22
theft of an automobile belonging to Janet Davis.
Also Wednesday, three persons pleaded guilty to various
offenses. They are:
— Sassy Evelyn Freeman, 26, of 1301 W. 13th St., Apopka,
grand theft. Freeman was accused of trying to use a stolen
check to buy $300 worth of jewelry from K-Mart, 951 W. State
Road 438, Altamonte Springs, on Oct. 27. When confronted with
the fact that the check had been stolen, Freeman reportedly
ate it.
— Dwight Lee Moody, 53, of Orlando, attempt to deposit with

Intent to defraud. Moody was charged after he deposited three cidents are related.
The latest victim, Lora Marlin Barger, an administrator for
checks totaling $2,000 from 'a closed out-of.atate bank account
eported to police that she had stopped
into his business account at the Winter Springs branch of the city of Gainesville, r
at the location about 8:00. As she returned to her car, she said,
Tropic Bank.
170 lbs. ran up behind her
— Nelson Dale Scott, 49, Oviedo, petty theft. The charge a young black male about S'lI",
against Scott stemmed from an Oct. 16 incident in which be while she was trying to unlock the door.
Hooking his arm between her right shoulder and the purse
stole a tape measure from Scotty's, 1029 E. Altamonte Springs
strap, he spun her around and knocked her to the ground as sbe
Drive, Altamonte Springs.
DflhI ittmntpd to fight for the
reauzeu WflL was 168PFC11U1

Sentencing for the trio was deferred pending completion of
background investigation.
FIRM SUING CASSELBERRY
They can't very well repossess the street, so representatives
of the Mason contracting firm of Orlando are suing the city of
Casselberry for not paying the entire cost of road paving Job
performed by Mason last year.
In a civil lawsuit filed in Circuit Court in Sanford Tuesday,
Mason contends that the city still owes It $12,616.30 from a total
bill of $197,219.70 and asks the court to order the city to make
the final payment.
The suit claims that on July 1, 1900, Casselberry contracted
with Mason for paving and installation of gutters and storm
drains along Lake Triplett Drive.
The work was completed in December, the suit says, and the
city paid all but $12,616.30 of theblli.
Casselberry City Clerk Mary Hawthorne said the money is
being withheld because a portion of the Job was not done to the
city's satisfaction. However, she said further details would
have to come from city engineer Ken Ehlers who is In New
York.
The case has been assigned to Judge Joseph Davis Jr. No
hearing date has been set.

WEATHER
AREA READINGS (I a.m.): temperature: 74; overnight
low: 67; Wednesday's high: M; barometric pressure: 30.41and
rising; reistive humidity: 73 percent; winds: Northeast at 14
mph.
FRIDAY'S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 6:58 a.m.,
7:15 p.m.; low,, 12:33 a.m., 12: p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 6:50 a.m., 12:22 sin., 12:33 p.m.; Iowa, 6:41 a.m., 7:01
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter billet, Out
Miles: A small craft advisory is In effect. Northeast WIElds
around 20 knots becoming easterly by taillight and southeast 15
to 20 knots by Friday. Seas 5 to 8 feet.
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy through Friday with a
slight chance of showers today. Not so warm during the day
with highs in the low to mid I. Lows tonight mostly low His.
Wind northeast 15 to 20 mph today becoming easterly And
decreasing ajliUe tonight. Rain probability 20 percent today.
IUSPS 411.2N)

Thursday, April 16, 1901—Vol. 73, No. 203
PvbIisMd Daily and kitli!. except $atwday by The Sasterd
Herald. Inc.. 3W N. Fracb Ave.. S.slerd, Fla. 33171.
Second Cmi postage Paid

at

Santerd. Florida 32111

$34.$$ 1
ias.
11114#
11
Home Delivery: Week. $1.11: Month, MU: S 1411041
$1.21:
S
Man*s.
Month.
$1.21:
Mall
Will
Year. 141W. By
134W: Year. U7.N

THE OLD BREAD SCAM
A 19.yep-old Longwood woman was victim of the old bread
scam at a local grocery store Monday night and wound up $431
poorer because of it.
Wendy Cadd of 1401 Speard St. told Seminole County sheriff's
deputies that she was shopping at the Pantry Pride, State Road
436 and U. S. Highway 17-92, about 8p.m. when she was joined
at the Bread rack by two young females.
One of the girls dropped a loaf of bread at Cadd's feet and
when Cadd bent over to pick it up, the second girl grabbed
Cadd's purse out of her shopping cart and ran out the front
door.
Cadd said there was 8 cash and a $375 tax refund check in
the purse.

Winter Springs Council
Seeking More Space
when they came up for Initial discussion on
March 10, sparked a discussion of whether the
city was becoming too commercialized.;

By BRITT SMITH
Herald Staff Writer

•
-

S

.
.

555

Winter Springs city councilmen think the
some residents wondered
city has outgrown Its quarters and they want Specifically,
wbether.ths.zon1ng changes would attract
to move.
more convenience u stores to the city,
Bit the question Is, Where? Hoping to find businesses., they, felt. were eyesores and!
an answer, the council Tuesday voted to ac- hangouts for unruly kids.
cept an offer from the Architects Design
There was no debate Tuesday. Piland had
Group of Florida, Winter Park, to work on the
made
the council's feelings clear a month ago:
city's behalf at no cost to find state and federal
when
he
stated flatly that members would not
on
grants to build a public safety complex
along
with a suggestion to put a cap on the
go
municipal
property
on
Moss
of
eight acres
number of convenience stores allowed within.
Ross.
the city limits.
If the firm is successful, "we would be under
no legal obligation to retain them to do any
"You're talking about interfering with
later architectural work," according to City people's right to free enterprise, to make a
Attorney Wally Stalnaker. "All they would ask living," Piland said, "We can't do it."
is that we consider them along with other
Changing from a rural to commercial
firms."
(allowing such things as neighborhood-type
City Manager Richard toxansky said he retail stores and professional offices) were
doesn't know how much such a facility would two-and-a-half acres on the southeast corner of
cost or even what departments it would house. Hayes Road and State Road 434.
"I'm not real sure how the council would want
to work It, but something needs to be done," he
said.
"We (city ball) are in what is supposed to be
a recreation building, and the police are
pushed In with the fire department. were
really overcrowded."

/
S

Herald Photo by Tom Vincent

BASS BY THE BUCKET

Annapolis Mayor Dead

IN BRIEF
Boston's Fiscal
Crisis Worsens
BOSTON (UN)— City officials struggling with a fiscal
crisis worked today with a court-appointed master to avert

a shutdown of public schools for 64,000 students. Police
angered by budget-cutting layoffs threatened to disrupt
7,000 runners in Monday's Boston Marathon.
The School Department officially ran out of money today
as the city's students began a 10-day spring vacation.
Officials were hopeful a settlement can be worked out
before they return April 27.
Because of Proposition 2½, the radical tax-cutting
measure approved by Massachusetts voters last fall.
Wayne Kevin H. White has laid off 20() police and 200
firefighters and has vowed to let up to 4,000 city workers
from all departments go by July 1. More than 1,700 city
workers have been laid off to date.

Karate Blow Injures Youth'
AMES, Iowa (UPI)— School officials say they will not
cancel a self defense course, despite an accident In which a
girl seriously Injured a ninth-grade boy using a move
learned in the class.
Ron Barnes said Wednesday his son, Michael. was "just
horsing around In the lunchroom with a good friend of his,
like kids do," when the friend rammed her palm up against
the boy's nostrils.
The blow damaged the cartilage In the youth's nose. An
infection developed, and Michael was hospitalized Sunday.
"The girl told me she probably would have just popped
Michael In the arm when they were horsing around,"
Barnes said, "but she had learned the nose blow move in a
self defense unit in her class the day before and she just
used it without thinking."

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (UP!)— Gustav J. Akerland, who
served al acting mayor of Annapolis for just over a month,
died Wednesday, four days alter shooting himself in the
head because he couldn't cope with the city's financial
condition.
Dr. Jack Kushner, who operated on Akerland Saturday
night, pronounced him dead at 2:35 p.m.
Police said the 60-year-old retired Air Force Colonel shot
himself because he could not deal with the financial
problems left behind by former Mayor Jon C. Apostol, who
resigned to join a bank in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., In March,
three months before his term as mayor would have expired.

More Rape Arrests Expected
RICHMOND (UPI)—Additional arrests are possible in
the alleged weekend rape of a 14-year-old runaway girl by
three University of Richmond football players, police said.
The players allegedly raped the unidentified teen-ager
early Sunday at a temporary modular residence hail on.
campus. They were arrested Tuesday, said Henrico County
police, adding that additional arrests are possible.
Students who refused to be identified told the Richmond
Times-Dispatch the incident involved a girl who had been
staying at a dormitory for two days. The girl's parents had
reported her as a runaway.

Gov. Graham Pledges
Help For Poverty Stricken
TALLAHASSEE, (UPI) — Gov. Bob Graham has
promised Florida's proverty striken the state won't stand
by and let vital federal programs they depend upon come to
a halt.
About 200 persons marched on the Capitol Wednesday to
protest President Reagan's plans to abolish the Community Services Administration and eliminate most other
anti-proverty programs launched in the mld.1960's by then.
President Lyndon Johnson.
Graham came out on the Capitol steps to address the
crowd. He wouldn't promise the Legislature will replace all
of the $20 million a year In federal money going to CA
programs in Florida, including Operation Head Start
groups, day care centers and special assistance for the
elderly, but he vowed that Florida's needy won't go
unassisted.

___

These young fingerling bass being weighed by James Dillard, biological
technician with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, at Welaka, may be only a
drop in the bucket now, but some day with a little luck may be some fisher.
man's prize catch. The fish were being weighed Wednesday prior to
distribution at the Imperial Station on State Road 46, Sanford, delivery
location for the fish in Seminole County. The fish and wildlife service
provides largemouth bass, sunfish and channel catfish free for stocking
ponds of one-fourth acre or more with a depth of 54 feet. Application for the
fish must be made by July 1 with the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture Soil Con.
servation Service in Orlando.

WASHINGTON (UPI)— President Reagan felt so
strongly about the convictions of former top-level FBI officials W. Mark Felt and Edward S. Miller he granted them
full pardons before they asked for them.
Reagan granted a full pardon Wednesday to Felt, the
FBI's former No. 2 official, and Miller, head of Its intelllgence section, who were convicted of approving illegal
break-Ins In a search for fugitive Weathermen in the early
1970s.
"Four year ago, thousands of draft evaders and others
who violated the Selective Service laws were un-conditionally pardoned by my predecessor," Reagan said
in a statement.

MIAMI (UN) — A Salvadoran "fugitive" allegedly
linked to the January murders of two Americans and a land
reform official In El Salvador has been placed In custody of
the U.S. Marshal following his arrest by federal authorities.
Hans Christ, 30, was arrested by FBI agents at a Miami
Beach cond.Iminlum at pre-dawn. State Department officials In Washington said the arrest was made at the
request of the San Salvador government.
Sources close to Christ's family In San Salvador said he Is
a former director of the Salvadoran Association of Industry
and son of a cotton plantation owner whose land holdings
were recently nationalized by decree of the ruling
Salvadoran junta.

Harbor Pilot Negligent?
TAMPA, (UP!) — The Coast Guard has charged Tampa
Bay harbor pilot Harry Eugene Knight with misconduct
and negligence aboard the tanker Capricorn when it
collided with the buoy tender Blackthorn last year killing 23
Coast Guardsmen.
The charges could result In suspension' or revocation of
Knight's federal maritime license.
"I think it's unfair and we'll light It," his attorney
William Dorsey III said from his Baltimore office Wednesday.

SANFORD:
Martha 0. boss
Jane R. Glenn
Floyd E. Horn
Jessli M. Jackson
Eva P. Koonts
Arthur S. Macek

oil
No, these fellows don't ordinarily play with toys and share Easter baskets,
but they are preparing for Sunday's Sanford-Seminole Jaycees' annual
Easter Egg Hunt from I to:; p.m. at the park adjacent to the civic center in
downtown Sanford. $50 savings bond goes to winner in each of three age
groups. From left to right, Eddy Avis, hunt committee chairman; George
Currie, Jaycees vice president: and Clark Mack, treasurer.

EASTER
EGG HUNT

Man With Naked Wife Arrested In Store::
DEERFIELD BEACH, Fla. (UPI) Police were still trying
today to unravel a strange series of events that led to the arrest
of a prominent Johnstown, Pa., businessman who was found
with his naked wife Wednesday brandishing a pistol In a
convenience store.
Walter A. Stiles, 49, owner of Johnstown Aviation Corp. and
Al-Mar Manufacturing Co., was coarged with aggravated assault and reckless display of a firearm.
l,t. Frank Landuskey of the Deerfield Beach Police department said a call was received at 1:30 a.m. Wednesday that
someone was holding up a convenience store.
When police arrived they said they Found Stiles and his
naked wife inside the store and saw a car speed off. Stiles was
brandishing a .22 caliber pistol, officers said.
One officer went Into the store and handed Mrs. Phyllis
Stiles, 49, a blanket to cover herself and arrested her husband.
-

.

But when they arrived, they said the garage doors were wide
open anti they entered to see if there were any intruders inside.
They said found more than $60,000 in cash and a "large
quantity" of cocaine lying in the open. There was one report
¶
the cocaine was about a half-pound.
Stiles also had $7,000 in cash in his 1xckets.when he was
arrested.
The businessman was freed on bond later in the tiny.

ler-Winni Story Was Fake
Puitzng
WASHINGTON (UPI) A tragic tale questioning she fabricated details of Prize Foundation Miss Cooke was decliriof an 8-year-old ghetto kid hooked on "Jimmy's World," the account of a child ing the prize, the most coveted in
heroin has turned into the real-life addict living in Washington's slums she American journalism, and resigning
from the newspaper.
tragedy of a "talented and promising" wrote for the paper last fall.
Bradlee described the woman as
young reporter who faked the story and
The Pulitzer Prize board, Informed of "particularly talented and promising.'
won Journalism's highest award.
the hoax by the Post, withdrew the $l
"She was an extremely good writer
rize 1r0m Miss Cooke and awarded it to
good reporter," Bradley told'
Executives or The Washington Post' p
Teresa Carpenter of the Village Voice United
and a Press International. "She was
disclosed Wednesday Janet Cooke,
for newspaper In New York.
bright, cheerful, intelligent, an involved
who won the 1980 Pulitzer Prize
Benjamin Bradlee, executive editor of person."
feature writing this week, admitted
Bradlee said, "It devastated rue."
under several hours of intense the newspaper, then wired the Pulitzer

I

n

fl

fl
I

-\
.._llIIi

' 22"CUT

1310

I

oviEls

l

1P

to

Estrella Mendoza
Rudolph B. Putman
Eudreaky D. Walden
Frank E. Holmes, D.Bary
George B. Martin, Deltona
Adiline Wilder, Deitona
Kau$t* Wuimlinger, Deltona
Mary L. Tew, Orange City
DISCHAROIS:
SANFORD:

dicated none hadcome off other than
the 16 discovered missing in orbit.
He said crews would be checking the
bonding of the tiles to the shuttle's
aluminum akin.
Young said "I've heard of
nothing" from inspections at
Edwards or from post-mgig data
study already under way to change
S3aon's assessment of
nit
"*iXpernteufgm,'
At Cape Canaveral, it was .announced that the Columbia will be
equipped with a toot-long robot
arm the next time It Ina in orbit.
Also onboard will be the sljttle',
tint scientific payload, a package of
Earth resources experiments
mounted on a lOuoI.long pallet to
be carried in the 60-toot cargo hold.

7

Vpvlc

eiIIIIp

P0

Jimmy Bryant
Louise S. Harris
Jiss A. Riley
Martha M. Zimmer
Valentine Cox Jr. DiBary
Estrella M. Austin, DeLand
Births J. Anonick, Doltona
C. Cartier, Deitona
Rosa E. King, Deutona
Erik J. Rowan, Deitona
Harriet A. Varner, Deltona

Astronauts Re-Live Mission For Engineers
purged with dry, inert gases.
The shuttle will fly piggyback ona
jumbo jet to the Kennedy Space
Center at Cape Canaveral next
Tuesday.
A preliminary Inspection by
engineers showed some of the
shuttle's heat-resistant tiles were
discolored, chipped and pitted
during its maiden flight — but test
•
- "
"°
could be repaired and the recyclable
transporter "looks superb" for 100
more missions in space.
Although the mission went
unexpectedly well, there were a host
of minor problems — all beIfl6
discussed by the astronauts.
Spokesman Dick Young said
further visual inspection of the heat
shield tiles on the Columbia in.

'

posite Edgemon Avenue will now be allowed!
not only small retail outlets and offices, but
also light industry such as chemical analysis
firms and non-polluting manufacturing plants.

Next Trip Expected In September

Space Center Friday, to write their
personal reports Monday and
Tuesday and to meet program
directors to answer more questions
next Wednesday. A news conference
was tentatively set for a week fkalm
today, April 23.
At Edwards Air Force Base In
California, a crew of more than 100
worked today atop a 1%.foot-taU
.
steel acaitoa W SflUL UOWB
plane.
The shuttle's on-board fuel cells
were turned off Wednesday and the
electricity needed to operate various
equipment on the Columbia now is
being drawn from the base's system.
For the next few days, the various
fuel tanks and reservoirs holding
liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen
were to be drained and thoroughly

While Stiles was being booked at the police station, he told
officers he and his wife had fled their home because they
thought someone was breaking in. He then said his sports car
broke down near the Seven Eleven store.
because they had left in such it hurry, they failed to
, lie said
lock the home and asked officers to do it for them. Lighthouse
Point police were notified and obliged.

Three lots on Sherry Avenue were ch*nged
from residential to commercial zoning, and on:
seven acres of land along State Road 419 op-

-

SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON
(UPI) — While technicians ready
the Columbia for its piggyback ride
to Cape Canaveral next week,
astronauts John Young and Robert
Crippen are .e-ijjifi.g the space
shuttle's maiden flight to give
engineers and the next crew detailed
reports on its extraterrestial performance.
Young and i..rlppen riwi at IUC
Lunar and Planetary Science
Institute Wednesday afternoon to
start an exhaustive eight to nine
days of debriefings, the first two
days of which were schedUled to
locus on technical aspects of the
mission.
The schedule called for the
astronauts to have a detailed
medical examination at the Johnson

S.

1

THE NEW MAN
IN TOWN

HOSPITAL NOTES
April11
ADMISSIONS.

,.

- )_t_

In other action, the council gave unanimous
Also Tuesday, the council voted to buy a
final approval to rezoning changes for three 1,500-gallon tanker fire truck at a cost of
separate parcels of land from a rural or $132,X0. The pumper, which will not be
residential classification to commercial, delivered for two months, will replace two'
These were some of the same rezonlngswhich, dilapidated trucks both over 25 years old.

somiloolle Memorial Hospital

—:
-.

FBI Agents Pardoned

'Fugitive' Linked To Murders

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF

'Ip
:-..' '

.-&amp;,'4

--

Fwnlng Henild

RAPIST STRD(ES SLEEPING WOMAN
A 51-year4d Winter Park Woman was raped early Sunday I
morning by a man who had apparently crawled into her
bedroom through an unlocked window.
The victim reported to Seminole County sheriff's deputies
that she was awakened about 4 a.m. by a man standing over
her with a knife. He threatened to kill her If she did not
cooperate,

SECOND STRONG-ARM ROBBERY
A 23-year-old Gainesville woman Friday night became the
second victim of strong-arm robbety in a week, at the Phillips
66 Service Station located at State Road 427 and Plumosa in
Casselberry. She had stopped to ask directions.
The first victim was attacked April 6 when she was returning
to her car. Although police have not determined both women
were robbed by the same thief, investigators suspect the In-

State Nixes
Track In Polk
Longwood entrepreneur Marc Robinson lost his second bid to
build a pari-mutuel quarter-horse racetrack Wednesday.
The Parl-Mutuel Mutuet Wagering Commission, after two
public hearings in Polk County, turned down the request from
Harness Racing Inc., a group represented by Robinson, to
build a racing facility In Polk City,
Gary Rutledge, executive director of the commission, said
the refusal came beOsuse It appeared the Longwood group
lacked qualified, experienced personnel and could not begin
operation of the track soon enough. Another reason for the
refusal was the opposition from residents of the area, he said.
To seal the demise of Robinson's announced plans to build a
similar pari-mutuel wagering facility in Lake Mary, the site
proposed for the track has been sold.
Mid State Development, the company which was to build the
(cilLty, has sold the proposed site to Florida Land Co. for
$1,251,300. Florida Land is the original developer of Greenwood
Lakes, a new planned unit development near the proposed site
or the racetrack.
During a referendum In December, the citizens of Lake
Mary turned down the track proposal by a 2-1 margin.
Meanwhile, State Rep. Bobby Brantley, R-Longwood, and
Sen. Clark Maxwell, R-Melbourne, have run Into opposition on
their jointly sponsored bill to repeal a portion of state law
which Robinson said months ago would allow him to build the
harness racetrack In Lake Mary whether the people wanted It
there or not.
The section of law exempted capital Improvements at parimutuel wagering establishments from city laws, rules and
regulations.
,Brantley said from Tallahassee today State Rep. Carl
Ogden, chairman of the Regulated Industries committee,
spoke before the part-mutual wagering sub-committee in
opposition to the repeal.
Brantley said Ogden was concerned with the problem a parimutuel facility is having in Hallandale In gaining city approval
JO install restrooms on an upper deck at a track there.
Brantley said he hopes If outright repeal of the section
cannot be accomplished, that a committee compromise will at
Ind define the term "capital improvements" and provide
that while cities and counties must issue the MU1)
talldIng permits the pari-mutuel will have to abide by city
building codes and zoning ordinances. — DONNA ESTES

Barger told police she was then dragged along the
ground until she released the bag. In the struggle, she suffered
a head Injury and lacerations on both knees.
The first victim was attacked about 9:00 p.m. also as she
returned to her parked car. A black male, estimated to be in
his late teens or early twenties, suddenly pounced on her as she
passed the pay phone just outside the door snatched the purse
from her side. tearing the strap from her shoulder, she told
police.
The thief then fled down Plumosa, preventing the victim and
witnesses from getting an adequate description of him.
But the Friday night victim was able to give police a
reasonable description of the man, reporting that he jumped
over a low brick wall after obtaining the purse and disappeared behind the Food Mart. He was wearing long, dark pants
and a light short-sleeved shirt with the tails out, she said.

NA11ON

Thursday, April 16, 19l1-3A'

Evening Herald. Sanford, Fl.

1

The Columbia is tentatively
scheduled to return on the back of
a 747 Jumbo jet — to the Kennedy
Space Center launch site next
Tuesday from its Edwards Air
Force Use, Calif., landing site.
Space experts expect the shuttle to
be ready fora four-day orbital test
flight In late September with
astronauts Joe Engle and Richard
Tr* at the controls, but engineers
plan numerous modifications to the
spacecraft before then.
One of the big changes will be the
addition of the 50.foot.long
rnanlpuator arm that will be wed
on future mission, to lift satellites
out of the ship', huge cargo bay and
d.rop them off in orbit.
The arm, built in Canada, will be
operated by remote control.

229°°

DAN STEBBINS

P bRIG0

UL 3Y

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George said the family had a nice meal at a
local steak house. It was identical to the nice
meal they had at an identical steak house the
year before that was more than 600 miles from
home.
So what?
The klds got to swim In the motel pool and dive
off the diving board.
They didn't have to get up real early to start
their trip, orleaveearly to get back home. And
"we let the boys take the difference between
what we would have spent if we'd gone onto!
state and what we did spend in Orlando and buy
clothes with the money," George said.
He expected the chamber of commerce to
present him with a plaque. He expected to hear
I= the conservation folks praising him for not
wasting gasoline. He expected a lot of nice things
from his fellow central Floridians.
But N00000000l
The chamber of commerce wasn't interested,
the conservation people totally Ignored him, and
practically everyone who knows him castigated
poor George with heckles and hoots of derision.
"I still think we did the right thing," George
said unrepentent. "I gave the children a choice
—we could go either to the beach. home (North

Just let 'em"call him cheap again.
For the benefit of all thoSewho: (A) called him
cheap; (B) said he had no Imagination; (C)
accused him of being unfair to his children; and
(D) called him cheap, my neighbor George
wishes to announce his 1911 vacatIon plans.
Last year, George took the girl who promised
to love, honor, and plan vacation tripe, plus the
two children, on vacation in Orlando.
He thought the 21-mile trip from Park Avenue,
Sanford to Orlando — where they took In the
sights, shopped downtown, stayed at a nice
motel, enjoyed a good meal and movie, then
went home the next day — was a terrific
vacation.

(USPS 41.210)

300 N. FRENCH AVE.,SANFORD, FL. 32771
Area Code 305322-2811 or 8314993
Thursday, April 16, 1981-4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

Home Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, $4.25; 6 Months, $24.00;
Year, $45.00. By Mall: Week, 11.25; Month, $5.25; I Months,
$30.00; Year. $51.00.
-

They got to travel —90 total miles.
They went by the planetarium, the art
museum, and the Orange County Library, but
they didn't stop. George said he and the family
aaw several historical markers and didn't stop to
read them either.

Joint Chiefs
Get Their Due

He figured they wouldn't stop to read the
markers If they were In Jacksonville, or
Savannah, or Atlanta, or Charleston, so why do
something different just because they were
vacationing near home?

During his 1961-68 tenure as secretary of
defense, Robert S. McNamara did more than just
mismanage the war in Vietnam. He also transformed the Pentagon's planning, management
and budgeting procedures in ways that have ill-

served the nation ever since.
'Specifically, McNamara sharply diminished
ROBERT WAGMAN
the role of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in strategic
planning, management and the budgeting process
so vital to the Implementation of defense policy.
Most of the authority stripped from the JCS was
transferred directly to the office of secretary of
defense, where it has largely remained.
Recounting all of the blunders attributable to
this overcentralization of power would fill
volumes. Suffice it to say that the armed forces
and the country they serve have paid a severe
£L_ ...._..t......la.snI
n, ,trA%
'I'k
e..è
w1tbr1zruLI.rn ueit,
price tnaeeu zor discounting uie piuieiuui
advice of those appointed to head the armed Department and the u.S Embassy inPretoria
knew the Identities of the five South African
services,
military officers well In advance of their U.S.
Moreover, the ill-advised concentration of visit that came to an abrupt end In mid.
management and budget authority in the defense March
secretary's office has inevitably detracted fromIU State
instructed the
the larger task of shaping strategic doctrIn, embassy to Issue U.S. visa to the five - In, - the cluding Lt. Gen. P. W. Van der Westerhuixen,
which should be the overriding concern o91
headofsouthAfrlcanmllltarylnteillgenCe —
cabinet officer responsible for defense policy.
Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger has because the South African government had
that their visit would be both
now begun the job of undoing Mr. McNamara's guaranteed
quick and private. This order ran counter to
unfortunate handiwork. Hence forth, the Joint the U.S. policy that since 1965 has barred
Chiefs will have more to say about the decisions members of the South African armed forces
that determine defense policy, and the makeup of from entering this country.
These assertionsfrom a member of the
forces assigned to carry out that policy.
The service secretaries, whose responsibilities embassy staff contradicts official statements
have dwindled drastically since the McNamara made by the State Department when the five
ordered to leave the United States once
era, - will now be given a more worthwhile role in were
their pi'eaencçbecame public knowledge.
policy and management. That too is good news.
According th State Department spokesman
When President Reagan selected Caspar William Dyila, the South African government
Weinberger as his secretary of defense, there applied for diplomatic en permits so that
were those who questioned the appointment on the five could "consult with the South
grounds that Mr. Weinberger lacked experience Embassy here In Washington." Dyes said
that they were admitted to this country
in defense matters.
largely
because the South African governWe are pleased to note that Secretary Weinment "Inadverently omitted" their military
berger Is proving to be a quick study. HePenhas ranks from the official letter requesting the

Carolina) or deep-sea fishing. Or, we could take
the mini-vacation In Orlando and spend the
difference on clothes."
They chose the clothes.
See? George Isn't cheap. It's just that the girl
who promised to love, honor, and have very
intelligent children did a really good job.
But there area lot of smart alecks around here
who took It as a personal Insult. Evidently, they
figure central Florida Is a good place to live, but
a rotten place to visit.

He has already spent $100 just to make sure the
car Is perfect.
So quit calling him cheap.

'What's Good For...

'

,

.l.

mon," the embassy official Mid by Phone
would not have to carry. The savings to the public
from South Africa. "That would be like saying
would be about $9.3 billion,
that a major foreign embassy In Washington
The big question is whether we should be giving
did not realize who J. Edgar Hoover was
because Hoover Is a rather common
up important health and safety protection fQr the
American name."
sake of saving money for the auto companies and
for ourselves: We doubt it. New cars would meet
The source reiterated that Washington had
the same standards they are meeting now. The been apprised of the situation and had ap
standards would not be rolled back It Is provedo( t)iev'iIt so king as It remained
private and brief. But problems developed
for future models that are affected.

requirements

once the American Security Council began
arranging brief Ings with the South Africans

The expensive air-bag and self-locking seat
belts are safety innovations that lost their luster

the more they were examined. The benefit of for some members of Congrear and when the
against visitors began paying "courtesy calls" on
heavier bumpers is questionable weighed
frlendi in the Defense Intelligence Agency
and the National Security COWICU.
the cost and the sacrifice in gas mileage.
The authors of these and other regulatory
Still later it was learned that several in the
demands have dreamed of a more ideal
OU had met with U.N. Ambassador Jeans
automobile, not always considering the cost of
who has since said that she
Kirkpatrick,
manufacturing it. Federal mandates are comthought that she was meeting with private
plicating Detroit's effort to survive a disastrous Sou th African citizens, not military officers,
drop in earnings and re-establish its position in

the auto market. Lifting the regulations targeted

.

BERRY'S WORLD

,

.

.

.

4JJI1

you caught me at a bad time for doing yardwork. lam about to go into my napping mode."

.

. •

..

.1,

'

19101 and 1970 as education for the job day-today transactions."
market or a scholarly love alone became
— Shared memb&amp;ih1p In groups and In.
for those In the stampede far a stitutlans: "The life of everyone is touched, In
college diploma,
one way or another by government,
General education actually Is something business, school, church, marriage and
extra on top of required courses for major.. It family. General education means Unputs breadth In the college education, says derstanding bow these Institutions originate,
Ernst L Boyer, foundation president, former how they evolved, grow strong, become weak
US. Conunlasloner of Education and co- and sometimes die. The (lnitltutbonl)provide
author of the report entitled "A Quest for the essential arrangements through which
Common Learning.
transactions are conducted and social
More and more colleges, the report said, structure maintained."
are trying t0 inject general education Into the
—Shared activities of consumption and
curriculum. Here's why: there are certain
basic topics that all students should be production: "Studentssbould understand that
required to investigate regardless of their everyone produces and consumes and that,
'individual Interest or ultimate *rea of through this process we are dependent on
each other. This Is an essential part of
Boyer and Dr. Arthur Levine, senior fellow common learning. We propose a general
at the foundation, tell In the report how education program that explores the
colleges can speed a rebirth of general significance of work In the lives of In.
diVidUals."
education.

¶'•

.•'"''

Tom Brokaw and John
Ch a ncellor delivered solidly

The Ingenuity of Reagan's aides In raising
large sums of money while providing
deductions for the con tr ibutors was
demonstrated when they tailed to convince
any of the three television networks to
biedCsZt the Inaugural gala, an evening of
entertainment, as a special program
Undeterred by those rejections, Reagan's
staff paid the American Broadcasbng Co.
$500,000 for two hours of prime evening time,
spent another $400,000 on television
production costs and laid out another $75,000
to rent the cavernous arena where the gala
was being held.
To recoup those costs, they sold cornmercial time, at the Inflated rate of $250,000
per minute, to sponsors that included many of
the country's largest corporations — Merrill
Lynch, Atlantic Richfield, Eastern Airlines,
Bristol Myers, Pfizer, General Motors,
American Express and others.

to

.. . . - ,•
mum

-

_

_

.

."
._.•.-.',

.

.

'

SLOPPY JOE

ABC, CBS and NBC made it
believable — right down to the
giant praying-mantis trucks
that crawled out at the finale
to meet the thing from space.
To their credit, the networks resisted any temptation to turn the thing into an
orbital cliffhanger because of
a few missing heat tiles.
Following Sunday's launch,
when the tiles were lost,
NBC's John Chancellor
played briefly with that
scenario, but astronaut Joe

Herald Photos by Tom Vincent

Shannon Ramsey, 10, of Sanford (above) shows off the 28 eggs she found
during SemInole MemorIal hospital's Easter Egg hunt for area children.
Christina Saporn,.3,plq- of Sanford (below,JeIcl chals with the Easter
Bunny (reaI1y.Brd.woby of Sanford).

EASTER
EGG

HU &amp;IY

"I

.. -'

In Federal Court

Cymbal-Making Family
BOSTON (UP!) — The heirs to a secret formula that
produces some of the most melodious cymbals In the world are
clashing In federal court over control of the family company.
The secret cymbal formula and control of the Avedis Zildj Ian
Co. have been passed to the oldest male heir for the past 350
years. But that tradition ended with the current generation of

Zildjlans.
Soon after the death of the man for whom the company Is
named, his Sons began maneuvering for control, court papers

say.
The battle has become so bitter an attorney for Robert
Zildjlan argued In documents filed In U.S. District Court,
"there exists 1nnumerable and potentially Irreconcilable
differences between his brother, Armand, and himself which
have made It Impossible for the two men to co-exist as
shareholders and directors of the company."

Avedis ZildJian, an alchemist near Constantinople,
discovered the formula In 1623 for a cymbal that pleased the
sultan as well as the Armenian church, which uses cymbals In
worship services.
Taking the name of Zildjian, or "cymbal-maker," he began
manufacturing the Instruments In Europe, passing on the
formula — which includes about Be percent copper and 20
percent tin — to the next generation.
In 1920, Aram Zlldjlan brought the formula to the United
States to pass on to his nephew, also named Avedis, who for.
med a company In suburban Quincy. The firm moved to
Norwell in 1973.
Most orchestras use Zlldjlan cymbals, as well as such

Clashes

famous percussionists as Gene Krupa and Buddy Rich.
When Avedis died in 1979, he passed ownership of the company to his two sons, Robert and Armand, and their children.
Each son got 49.472 percent, with the remainder going to a
trust controlled by both men.
But Robert Zlldjlan claims he has been leader of the company since his father assumed less of a role In 1968. Robert is
arguing Armand and his sons have conspired with the bank
that holds the trust to freeze him out of any role in
management of the company.
Robert contends he has the option to buy the company's
Canadian subsidiary and wants the court to forbid the rest of
the family from interfering with his operation of the other
foreign branches, whose sales he takes credit for.
Armand's son, Rab, has argued Robert Is trying to buy the
Canadian subsidiary at only 2 percent of its actual value.
Armand's side wants the option declared invalid.
The company's sales have risen from $250,000 In 1947 to more
than $9 million in 1979.

DON'T GAMBLE

I

/A

with your Insurance I
—CALL—

TONY RUSSU

INSURANCE
322•0285

(/

TUCKER'S

FARM &amp; GARDEN
CENTER

AND

Men In Kremlin Hold Mankind's Fate,
— The Defense Council also has a key role
— With that lineup, 12* Defense Council has
WASHIWGTON — A small, supsr..scret aoclate Dale Van AU., Is just four pages
undeniable clout. As the DIA report puts It, In overseeing the way Communist Part
group of old men—seven or eight at most— long,
Here's a summary of what our intelligence "Since key Defense Council member, are policy Is actually carried out by the mllltarl
bear responsibility for the Kremlin's decision
experts have been able to learn about the also the top Politburo personalities most — and In the formulation of that policy.
on military Intervention In Poland,
concern$ with military-political Issue, (its)
council:
This gray-haired, gray-clad Inner circle of
recommendations
It
Is
"the
main
coordinator
of
defenseare probably almost
—
wist it all boils down to Is that the Soviet
Communist Party elders Is known simply as
related activities of all government bodies, sonired of party approval. In fact, sources Defense Council apparently combines 111114
the Defense Council. Its deliberations In the
providing key recommendations on defense said, ti
Is no , known instance of the functionsof our National Security council,
Byzantine e1eganie of the czarist council
puucy
w
me
ruumeiu
azu
enrmg
wsi
overurmng
a major uiaamun Dy defense secretary and Joint Chiefs of Staff4
chambers produce decisions that affect me
correctly
executed
by
state
the
Defense
Council.
party
policy
Is
But the repeated use of such fudge words aj'
peace and well being of the whole world.
— "Tea Defense Council occupies an In- "probably" and "implies"
organs."
Utile Is known about the Defense Council.
and "may" In the
termediEy role between the highest party DIA analysis betrays time basic uncertainty
— The members of the Diftnas Council, as
In fact, Its very existence was not officially
rar as the DIA has been able to determine, and government organizations Involved In that surrounds our Kremllnolog(stsl
acknowledged until 1976, In a passing
national security affairs," the DIA concluded. •sent of the secret group. Our ln
Leonid
President
include Brezimer Defense
reference to Soviet
Brezhnev's role as council chairman. The 1Jifijy,. a- viiiaa tscrst; .r.craip "It irovids top-lava) roerdlnatlon for all t.lilgencr experts can make educatet
Minister Andrel Grotnyko; premier Nlkciai gowrnment activities relating to defense, gu, but, In the end, they are still only
Soviet constitution published the following
establidlilng the general guidelines for Soviet
De
fense
th
Tlkhonov, replacing the late Alexel Kosygin,
year Includes a brief mention of e
military development."
th
e
that
It
is
or
"f
med"
by
his lifetime boss; KGB bo's Yuripov;
Council, stating
—'lbw council probably reviews Military
e
Supreme
Soviet
of
staff,
and
One thing emerges clearly from the D14
Nikolai Ogarkov, military chief
Presidium of th
ce
Agency
ll
en
ig
Military
Industrial
Commission
ecial
Defense
Inte
decisions
that
report,
however: Seven or eight old men II)
Leonid Smnlrnov, drief of the
A sp
Industrial Command. Yakov Ryabov was authorize the design, development and the murky deptheof the Kremlin hold the f
appraisal, titled ,USSR: Def ense Council's
Role In Decision Mak in g," conta ins
believedtohave been amn.mber, until hewas production of major weapons systems. of mankind In their hands. An error of
everytning our experts know about the secret
dumped from his post as ConmWiist Party Defense Council approval may also be judgment by the Soviet Defense Council could
necessary for any program revisions,"
blow up the world.
group. The appraisal, which was shown to my
secretary for defense affairs.

effectir&amp;'l.

for NBC, most

shifting coverage from shuttl,
mock-up
crowded S(I.n(.5

'

",'•'.

t

-

TT1L

'.

JACK ANDERSON

by the administration will not solve everything,
but this is surely one way the government can

help.

•

'hi - ?resiôent
Reagan's proclivity to seek out wealthy
donors to finance various semi-official
projects may have gone a long way toward
undermining the political-finance reforms
adopted during the 1e70s.
Rich Individuals and corporations, whose
contributions to presidential candidates have
been severely restricted by the relatively new
campaign-fInance laws, now can Ingratiate
themselves with the White House by donating
large sums of money to underwrite Reagan's
favorite programs.
Moreover, the president's aides were not
entirely candid when they promoted those
fund-raising schemes as a bonanza for the
country's taxpayers on the grounds that
collecting the money from private sources
relieved the federal treasury of a potential
financial obligation.
In almost every Instance' where committees
have been established to solicit funds from
private sources, special provisions have been
made to ensure that the contributions could
be treated by the donors as tax-deductible
expenditures.
Those deductions lead directly to lost
government Income that must be recouped
from other sources — and the federal
treasury's largest single source of revenue Is

' Ge nero I Education Rev i vaI,

The cars being built in that period also would be
cheaper by about $150 because of equipment they

head of Walter Cronkite.
Dan Rather's excitement
rendertMl him a hit tongue-tied
from time to time for CBS

-

Buying
Into The
P
residency

EDUCATION WORLD

investment during the next five years.

on the calm aura 'ni't'
detectable only aixmt th'

,.

entry permits.
Dyes said that the Identities of the five ______________________________________________ the personal Income tax.
In other words, millions of middle-Income
were not discovered until well into their viult
taxpayers are Indirectly sharing the burden
because their names are as common In South
Qf the "fat cats" who donate $50,000t0$100,0®
Africa as Is "Smith or Jones" In the United
or more to support Reagan's pet projects.
States.
Like incoming presidents In the past,
This story Is disputed In Its entirety
Ragan relied almost exclusively upon
embassy official, who says that several of his
voluntary contributions to finance the work of
colleagues In the embassy knew the Identities
Their Plan, "more a guide than a
By PATRICIA McCORMACK
his Inaugural committee — but his skies also
of the traveling party almost from the start.
blueprint," encompsis certain study
UP! Education p&amp;itor
established an imlirecendented Presidential
They were also aware that the visit was
_____
COl1eIe$ doing best by students these and .
Inaugural Trust Fund with a fund-raising
being arranged by the American Security
use
of symbols: "All students
days are those which wave a "generaleducagoal of $1.6 million.
m
Donors to that fund were
Council, a right-wing lobby that supports
tlOfl" banner, says a new report from time should ... understand how language has evolp
the
benefits
of a tax deduction
able
to
white-minority government of South Africa.
ved how feelings and Ideas are conveyed,
Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement
applicable to their contributions.
Members of the Council include a number of
how numeracy Is a symbol system, and how
Similar arrangements prevailed for those
Teaching.
Influential businessmen and politicians who
The payoff for students, say the report's we communicate not only verbally but nwho
pledged more than $900,000 to a nowcomprise a who's who of the Reagan adauthors, Is schooling that enables grads "to verbally through dance, mUSIC and the visual
defunct fund to promote the president's
XflinlstartlOn's tar-right supporters.
understand themselves, their society and time arts. The language of computers merits
economic program and those who gave more
study, too. "Every generally educated
"It's kind of Insulting to us here to say that
world In which they live." Lifelong,
than $735,000 to refurbish the residential
student should learn about this pervasive
we did not know who Van der Westerhuizen
So what's general education?
areas of the White House,
Nothing new. It was squeezed out In the signal system that Increasingly controls our
was, even though the name Is rather corn-

'The Reagan administration has followed
through on its promise to help the auto Industry
through a hard time by easing up on federal
regulations. Relaxing or eliminating 34 safety and
anti-pollution regulations of questionable value
will save the manufacturers $1.3 billion in captial

The result was a giant step
for mankind of a television
audience. On Tuesday, we

-

ROBERT WALTERS

'

I

Kerwin calmly defused it and

never built and Greece never the subject was muted at
dreamed what America did Tuesday's homecoming.
All three networks called in discussed "entry interface,"
Tuesday, but the real miracle
of space ship Columbia was former spacemen to help "sensible atmosphere," and
them through the linguistic "roll, pitch and yaw jets,"
its audience.
Tens of millions In the complexities of the mission, and we understood.
ABCs Frank Reynolds may
United States and Un- CBS had Jack Lousma and
have
been the smoothest and
countable millions elsewhere ABC employed Eugene
most
articulate of the anchor.
who
looks,
act.3
and
in the world vicariously rode Cernan
men. Increasingly, he takes
the space shuttle through Its talks like an anchorman.
atmospheric ball of fire,
sweating at the controls with
astronauts John Young and
Bob Crippen and cheering a
perfect landing as though they
themselves had made It.
Through the medium of
television, triumph or tragedy
were but a heartbeat away
..
.
as was the knowlege that had
.
-.
the epic mission ended in
4V
tragedy it would have been
replayed again and again
.--;, .
until its pain was part of the
',ss 'ir
.
human soul,
Television does that. It
cushions no shock, leaves
nothing to the Imagination.
Marshall Mchuhan said It —
-the medium has become the
message, The television set
breathes with a life of Its own
at such times.
Three commercial networks competed to cover the
hazardous
and
unique
mission, and they covered It
Piece Beautiful Leather Look P4augahyde Combined with
Durable Herculon. It Features Mix And Match Reversible
well considering the whole
Cushions And Heavy Solid Wood Frames. Set Includes Sofa,
thing was a segment straight
Chair, Rocker, 2 Solid Wood End Tables And I Coffee
r es
dUPIre Strikes
out f "ThC Empire
Table. Loveseat Only $10?.

1.

.

tagon's decision-making processes should be
decentralized and that civilian officials, Including
the secretary of defense, can only benefit by
taking full advantage of the professional
knowledge and experience available to them.
That Is more, much more, than can be said for
many of Caspar Weinberger's predecessors.

NEW YORK (UP!) — Rome

"I am NOT going to vacation In Florida. I've
already told the kids that when school Is out,
we're heading for the hills." They have rented a
house and plan to spend an entire week In the
North Carolina mountains. "I'll probably spend
a fortune," George moaned.

-

already learned enough to know that the

TV Gave Millions Vicarious Ride

"Everyone gave me a tough time for not
spending a wad of dough going SOMEWHERE
ELSE," George groused. So, listen up. He is
announcing right now that things will be different this summer.

Visiting
South
Aff ricans

- At.....

irsday, April 16,

Evening Hera ld, Sanford. f_L_

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—

�Wrong Time Trance
Costs Boggs, Game
No-Hitter To Astros

SPORTS
6A—Evenlng Herald

Thursday, April 1&amp; 911

Sanford, Ft.

McCloud, Poppa
Jay

'
s

Miller

Still Cookin'

Leading only 74, Poppa Jay's scored
Sanford D.A.V., winning only its
game
of
the
season,
upset
the
seven
runs on five hits In the top of the
second
Railroaders 17-11 Wednesday In the fourth to break the game open.
Lawrence Ayers pitched to the first few
Sanford Little national League.
In other games, Poppa Jay's upped its Clem Leonard batters and had trouble
record to 5-0 with a 144 win over Clem getting the ball over the plate. He yielded
Leonard Shell, while Sunniland Cor- to Willie McCloud, who pitched a
poratton bombed Cardinal Industries 15- hitter, striking out nine.
Ronald Blake and Stewart Gordon each
S• Two the three teams that are tied for slapped a double and single for the
first place in the Sanford Little American winners,
Sunniland Corporation scored nine
League, Seminole Petroleum and
Atlantic Bank, square off today at 5 p.m. runs in the bottom of the first inning and
at Weatside Field. At Fort Mellon Park, Coasted to the win.
Dwight Brinson went three for three
the other first place team, triple I.I.I.
Trucking. plays Krayola Kollege at 5 for Sunniland. including a double, while
p.m., while Butch's Chevron Service Rod Medlock belted a home run.
batths Jack Prosser Ford at 7 p.m.
601 431— 17 1 1
Sanford D.A.V.
009 110-11 9 1
D.A.V. scored six runs without a hit in Railroaders
WP
Re9nald Lawrencc LP Walter Hopson.
the top of the first and added a single run Hitters
Sa nfo rd D A V tra 1i,Jr1;
in the third before the Railroaders scored run, double, Reginald Law
nine runs on five hits In the bottom of the Bobby Cot leld 13; Ralroaderi Walter H0PS0n
JD Paul 122
third to take the lead. A home run by 33 ho me
2. Theron Tephabock
Walter Hopson was the big hit of the third ITerrance Carr 14
inning for the Railroaders.
331
7-14 9 0
D.A.V. regained the lead with four runs
310 0-4 0 2
em
Willie McCloud. Li' Leonard OCA
Wi'
in the top of the fourth and the Hitters
Poppa Jay's Ronald Blake 21 double,
Railroaders could never catch up again. Stewart Gordon 2 4 double, Willie McCloud 1.1,
Reginald Lawrence was the winning Kevin Campbell 1.7, Dexter Debose, 1 2, Jeff
pitcher for D.A.V., with relief from Blake 12, Joey Sheehan I 4.
Dewight Everett.
012 2— 5 1 2
Cardinal Industries
906 x--I5
1
SunnilandCorpaeetlon
Ira hail Jr pounded a home run and WPTodd
Willis. Hitters:
Revels. LP
added
a
Lawrence
Uflu
sj.:s.v.
.A .V.
uonuie IorD
cardinal Industries Robert Mathews 13
double, Kevin Nathan 11. Aaron Corehard 12,
double.
Hopson was three for filree for the Sheraiton May% 1 3; Sunniland Corp,.Dwight
Brinson 3 3 double, Rod Medlock 1 3 home fun,
losers, while J.D. Paul added a double Kevin
Moore 13 double, Oscar Merthie 12
double, Homer Wells 11.
and single.

..'

.

.

..

...

.

.. .

.
•

11

11

D,.,.rl,In,,*

flVUIIVOUUJ £ I 'OUblIt

:'

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£%ob

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A

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•,j•••,•

-

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) — Former
heavyweight champion Joe Louis, who
demolished the pride of Nazi Germans' on
the eve of World War Il, will be buried in
the military cemetery at Arlington
following a public viewing today and
funeral Friday at the boxing arena where
he spent his last night.
An administration official said

_
•
.
. -, .
by

-

boxer LOUIS tO

.

•.

.

.

-

1

.

•

-

.

winners and Lee Fredrick added atriple.
Elks also won on the strength of a big
first inning, sending 11 batters to the
plate and scoring eight runs on

'

..

II

•.

Herald P hoto by Tom Vincent

Moose's Patrick Murphy tiptoes a high, inside pitch from Knights of
Columbus pitcher Frederick Miller. Miller however, didn't toss too
man wild ones as he tamed M oose Ofl OIIC hit Il-I,

III'

waived eligibility requirements to permit Berbick. Louis died the next day of an
Louis, who held the world heavyweight apparent heart attack at his home. He
championship longer than any man,in was 66.
The gold-colored casket was attended
history, to be buried in Arlington
by an honor guard at one end of the
National Cemetery.
"The Brown Bomber," meanwhile, lay pavilion. Louis was dressed in a brown
in state at the sports pavilion of Caesars tuxedo with if yellow shirt and a flag was
Palace, where he watched Larry Holmes folded near his shoulder.
The funeral was scheduled Friday with
successfully defend his heavyweight
Szitiirtl:v night
noninst
Trevor the Rev. Jesse Jackson to deliver the
crown ••••.••••J
O
"O"

4

I

NtS-

0-0 1 4
611 x-1I 6 0

MOE.
Knights otColumbus
WP—

Fredrick Miller. LP— Mike Jones./

Hitters:

Moose—

Richard

Leonard

1-1;

Knights of Columbus— Jo Jo McCloud 1-2 hogie.

:-'•'-•

I
e iuuieu iitI ItJUI

two

7

eulogy. The arena was set up to seat
about 4,000 people.
Date of the burial was not confirmed.
Louis, who served in the Army during
World War II and fought exhibitions for
servicemen, would be the 39th exception
to the eligibility criteria 'for burial in
Arlington.
Louis, born Joe Louis Barrow in
Alabama and raised in Detroit.

Rotor" ruii s
pl Play
Tre
•

run, Lee Fredrick 1.3 trIple, Fredrick Miller 1.'
7, Brian Athcratt 1-2, Teron LIgons 12, Glenn
Lendress 1.3,

WP—

Darrell Wooden. LP—

Hitters: Rotary —

Dee Johnsoril

James Jones

1.1; Elks—

By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
Don Reynolds had it made.
The polished 46-year-old principal was In his
); eighth year at Seminole High School. He could have
easily spent his remaining working years in San-

Chris Henry 21, Steve Dennis 1-1 triple, Keith
1-2. Mike Hickman

The highlight of the game came in the McGriff,
Leroy Richardson
1-2, Donald Grayson 1.3.
bottom of the fifth when Rotary turned
the first triple play of the season.LIK3
was winning 103 and had runners on first
and third when Contrel Knight hit a high
infield popup. Rotary third baseman
Roger Mann back-peddled and caught
the ball and then fired the ball to first
base to catch Keith McGriff off the base
for the second out. Roatry first baseman
Pat Robinson then threw the bail to
catcher Billy Penick, who tagged out
Reginald Hayes as he tried to score from

But the challenge beckoned. What he believes will
be the "super school" was being built just a few
miles south in Lake Mary.
Reynolds decided to accept the challenge, but not
without reservations.
"It was a very difficult decision," he recalled the
other day. "I'd been at Seminole so long and I knew
everybody. I was very combortable.
"The challenge of opening something like this
hôo1 and building it into'sbrnethfng, is something
few people ever have In a lifetime," explained
Reynolds.
And why was he picked? "I have no idea,"
Ieynolds laughed. "Maybe it's because I've been
around so long.

third.

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Among the other developments will beacomplete

lunchroom facility with walkin coolers.
'
Just off the kitchen on the west side are four
tennis courts, three softball fields, a baseball field
—
and a combination marching band-football prac.
While the academic areas will be excellent, tice-soccer field.
The main football field is encircled by an eightReynolds is not forgetting the voostional areas.

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"We're going to have a good, comprehensive lane track,
"I guess I've survived a lot. The longer you live,
Why, though build a new school, but only fill it half
the more you survive. I reckon you get a little of the program," said Reynolds. "This high school will
educate everyone, to those with high academic full with students? (Lake Mary will have 900-1000
odds going for you," Reynolds conceded.
freshmen and sophomores.)
With Lake Mary, Reynolds has more than the ability to those with ability in other areas."
"It's a shame in one sense that it's only going to
equipment
and
Lake
Mary
will
have
the
best
odds going for him.
gourmet
behalf
full," agreed Reynolds. "But It would be sad
not
curriculum
in
fast
foods
preparation,
excellent
complex,"
said
Reynolds
"It's an
trying to hide his enthusiasm. "The school board preparation, power tools, carpentery, automobile- to pull kids off a curriculum they've already started
somewhere else.
related work and home economies.
has really out done themselves."
"Really, a curriculum is the most important
come
in
"Wó'll
have
the
Rotary
or
the
Kiwanis
,, It has the finest science department I've eviland have our kids prepare meals for them," said thing," said Reynolds.
seen. Our computer area should be fantastic."

'

AlternatOrS..\4ithol.1t Built—
in RegulatOr.•i4ost GM, Ford

Reynolds. "We'll also have a day care center a few
hours in the morning."
Another area dear to Reynolds is the Educable
Mentally Handicapped, which will be county-based
at Lake Mary.
"We're tired of putting them in the backyard,"
Reynolds said about the EMH students. "They need
as much help as anybody else, probably more."
Reynolds will also look for a strong student
government, which he plans to accommodate with
its own facility.
"The kids will have a government conference
room and work area," maintained Reynolds. "I'll
tell them, 'You kids are important. Let's develop
this school into the best.'

,-

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AUTOMOTIVE
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position to clinch the best-of-seven force a sixth game In their semifinal.
By United Press International
if
the
Milwaukee
series
Friday night in Milwaukee.
Don't be surprised
Spurs 101, Rockets %
Bucks make a collective visit to it
"When you have a player of Marques'
Reserve center Dave Corzine and
chiropractor upon their return home caliber missing because of an injury, George Gervin hit shots in the final
from Philadelphia.
there's no question it would have sin minute to help the Spurs avert
Forced to play most of the second 11811 impact," said Sixers' Coach Billy elimination, The best-of-seven series,
while forward Marques Johnson was Cunningham.
tied 3-3, goes back to San Antonio for
nursing an Injured back, the Milwaukee
Philadelphia led 5847 at halftime but the finale Friday night. Houston, led by
Bucks were downed by the Philadelphia the Bucks, behind the hot shooting of
76ers, 116-99, Wednesday night, They Sidney Moncrief, cut the margin to 5 Moses Malone's 36 points, failed to get a
now have their bruised and battered points on four occasions, the final time field goal In the final two minutes as
four players missed five shots.
backs to the wail with a 3-2 deficit in at 78-73 with 2:41 left,
their Eastern Conference semifinal.
Suns 101, Kings 89
But they could come no closer.
"We knew he'd have problems," said
Walter Davis scored 20 points and
Moncrief and Mickey Johnson paced
Bucks' Coach Don Nelson. "We were
each
but
Truck
Robinson pulled down 20
the Bucks with 20 points
hoping someone could pick up the slack
to 9 points before rebounds, to keep the Suns alive.
held
but tonight was not one Of those flights." Johnson was
Kansas City lends the series, 3.2.
Maurice Cheeks and Lionel Hollins leaving.
In Western Conference semifinal Robinson also sparked the Suns with 15
scored 20 points each to lead a balanced
76cr attack. Julius Erving added 19 and action, San Antonio defeated Houston, points to go with his 20 rebounds. Game
Steve Mix 17 as the 76ers placed six 101.96, to tie their series at 3-3 and 6 is scheduled for Friday night In
men in double figures to move into Phoenix downed Kansas City, 10119, to Kansas City.

.

Reynolds 'Rams' Into Lake Mary

120 000 0— 3 1 2..
11114). 201. s—li. 7.6

Rotary
Elks

Pelts alto

7'6ers 'Back OW BUcks;
Spurs Square. Series 3-3

"

and so was the shutout.
run, eighth-inning rally to boost Montreal
Craig Reynolds spoiled Boggs' no-hit to a frigid home-opening victory. "I have
bid with a leadoff, single to center and never played in game conditions that
Cesar Cedeno then attempted a sacrifice were cold like this," said Carter,
bunt, A visibly rattled Boggs picked up referring to the temperature of 39
the bunt and threw wildly into the right- degrees,
field corner of the Astrodome for a threeSanford's Tim Raines singled twice,
base error, scoring Reynolds. Cedeno drove in one run and stole his second base
then came across on a wild pitch by of the year.
Boggs, 0-1, who lost 2-0 despite finishing
Raises has five hits in 12 at bats for a
'with a two-hitter.
.417 average,
"It was just stupid," said Boggs, "I PhIliles 4, Pirates 3
picked the bail up and rushed it. It's not
Gary Matthews led off the bottom of
oneofthosethlngsyoucansaywhyyou the 11th with his first home run as a
did it — I Just did it.
!'hfllle to lilt the world champions past
Ryan struck out nine in seven innings Pittsburgh. Tug McGraw, 1.0, pitched the
in his first outing of the season aafter 11th to gain the victory,
lug
being hampered by a pulled
Reds 10, Padres 1
nuscle. He moved Into the No, 3 spot on
Dan Driessen drove in four runs, three
the all-time strikeout list by fanning
with a homer, and George Foster and
BOggs to end the seventh, recording 3,118 Dave Concepcion drove in three apiece
to pass Bob Gibson. Ryan allowed three behind Mario Solo's three-hitter to lead
hits and walked three. Frank LaCorte Cincinnati to a sweep.
pitched the final two innings for his first Doers 4, Giants 2
save.
Burt Hooton scattered six hits over 72"Boggs was super," said Reynolds. 3 Innings and doubled in two rims, giving
"It's a shame either he or Nolan had to unbeaten Los Angeles its sixth straight
lose."
triumph. Bobby Castillo got the last four
Meta 5, Cardinals 3
outs and gained credit for his second
Mookie Wilson's two-run triple
climaxed a four-run second inning aided save.
UsCOII In Scoreboard.

Frederick Miller tamed Moose with a
onejitter Wednesday as Knights of
Columbus won 11.1 to move into a tie With
Kiwanis for first place in the Sanford
Junior League
Kiwanis and Knights of Columbus are
.both 3-0, while Moose dropped to 2-1.
' - ,'•
other
game,
Elks
In Wednesday's
top ped Rotary 11-3.
,,'.:
.,. .•
The first nine Knights of Columbus
bat ters to step up to the plate reached
base, and the first six crossed the plate as
Tom Vincent..
the Knights scored a hall-dozen runs on
Herald Photo
just one hit. Three errors and five walks
Moose's Richard Leonard
figured In the first inning scoring.
Miller allowed only two base runners in bubbles up while delivering pitch,
the four inning contest. He gave up a to Knights of Columbus. KOC.
second inning walk and then was burst Leonard's bubble with an
touched for a fourth inning single by 11-1 victory to stay undefeated In,;
Richard Leonard. Miller tanned six.
the Sanford Junior League.
Jo Jo McCloud had a h me run for the

•

.

-

Moose

.

Red Sox 7, Orioles 2
By United Press International
Carl Yastrzerr..ki, who missed three
Dave Rozema pitches like his career
with the Detroit Tigers is on the line. And games with back spasms, made his 1981
debut with three RB!. He drove in a run
-perhaps it Is.
'l.ti(, ønd %'ii
1 don't want to be traded," Rozema- in-a; first wt
said Wednesday night, after scattering more in the fourth with a single off
•
six hits to lead the Tigers to a 4-0 victory Dennis Martinez, 0-1. Reliever Bob
over the Kansas City Royals. "I've been Stanley evened his record at 1.1.
4
with this team all my life ,.. When you White Sox 5, Brewers 4
hear you're going to be traded to Texas
Pinch-hitter Bobby Molinaro's eighthor that you're going to be traded to
\ '
sacrifice fly snapped a 4-4 tie
inning
Seattle, you can feel the pressure
against Rollie Fingers, 0.1. Lamarr Hoyt,
produce."
Steve Kemp knocked in two runs with a 2.0, earned the victory.
sacrifice fly and single in support of Yankees 6, Blue Jays 3
Oscar Gamble belted a solo homer and
Rozema's first shutout in almost a year.
"I never thought I'd see a shutout Dave Winfield stroked a two-run single to
pitched against that lineup," said Detroit key a five-run fourth. Rudy May, 2.0,
Manager Sparky Anderson. "... He's allowed four hits over seven innings
matured. He's only 24 years old ,,, while Jackson Todd fell to 0-1.
sometimes! think we expect too much." Rangers 8, Indians 0
Doe Medich and John Henry Johnson
Kemp's sacrifice fly in the first inning combined on the Rangers' first shutout of
off Larry Gura, 0-2, was the only run the season and Al Oliver drove in three
Rozema needed. Ricky Peters opened the runs. Cleveland catcher Ron Hassey
game with a double and took third on a suffered possible damage to his left knee
sacrifice by Alan Tramniell before Kemp in a play at the plate and was removed on
drove him home with a fly to left,
a stretcher.
Detroit added two runs in the second on Mariners 1. TWIN 5
Joe Simpson and Richie Zisk drove in
a walk to John Wockenfuss, a triple by Al
runs apiece in support of Jerry Don
Kelleher.
two
Mick
Cowens and a single by
outing.
Detroit scored again In the eighth on a Gleaton's second impressivehis
first
Bryan
Clark
earned
by
Rookie
single by Lou Whitaker, a sacrifice
save.
major
league
Peters and a single by Kemp, giving him
at least one hit in all five Detroit games A's 5, Angels 3
Tony Armas capped a four-run eigh th
this season.
,
j
-.
'
CO
nwith
a two-out, three-run homer to keep
''
"'
"The real story was Ilozema,"
'... ' 4 r ' ,,
Frey.
Oakland
unbeaten after seven games.
ceded Kansas City manager Jim
became the sixth Oakland
Rick
Langford
cr
him
edit
Give
Burt Hooton limited the Giants to six hits and doubled in two runs for "He Just shut us down.
pitcher to go the distance this year.
,,,,'
the Dodgers sixth straight victory.

by two St. Louis errors, helping the Mets
After mesmerizing Houston for six to a victory in their home opener. Pat
innings, Atlanta's Tommy Boggs fell Into Zathry went 5 1-3 innings to earn his
second victory of the season with strong
a trance himself — at the wrong time.
Boggs held the Astros hitless entering relief help from Tom Hausman and Neil
the seventh inning of a scoreless duel Allen.
with Nolan Ryan Tuesday night. Two Expos 5, Cubs 4
batters later, the no-hitter was over ...
Gary Carter's RBI single capped a two.

lit

Sanford
Titusville
605W. 25th St. U.S. I t Hopklng

254uu1722 295.6090 773•8800 323•4470 267.8820

Burger King 2nd
In Jan Tourney;
Boatworks Wins 2-0
Sanford's Burger King soccer turn competed in the Jan
International Tournament last weekend and came home with a
second place trophy.
The eight and under group was among six teams in the
competition held at the Sheraton Twin Towers. In all, 47 turns
participated in the two-day affair.
In Sanford Soccer Club action, Sanford 280 Boatworks staged
a major upset by shutting the goal on Maitland 2802-0.
Boatworks received goals from Mike Renaud and Shea
Whigham to knock Maitland from the unbeaten ranks in "B"
Division play. Chris Ray assisted on Renaud's second half
goal.
Keeper Cary Smith turned in an outstanding 12 saves. He
was helped defensively by Brantley Robert, I.apce Broderick,
Chandler Tyre, Vicky Pakovic and Bess Arnall.
Sanford Boatworks, 3-2-1, hosts Winter Park April 25 at the
Sanford Airport.
In another "B" Division game, Sanford's Rich Plan of
Florida 281 lost to F.C. United 200 2-0.
Eddie Chaplin was the only high light for Rich Plan which
dropped to 2-2-1. They play Pine hIlls April 25.
In a 12 and under "C" Division match, Pine hills 300
Sanford's Kiwanis 6-1 with five flrzthalf goals.
Ru&amp;m Matlpano tallied the only goal for KIwan who had
just 10 players.
Kiwanis, 14, plays Downtown AprIl 25.
Swinging to eight and under "C" Division action, Winter
Park 602 nipped Sanford's Ellman Battery 600 2-1.
The setback keeps Battery winless at 04-1. They play Pine
Hills April Z.
In 10 and under "B" Division games, Downtown tripped
Sanford's Dell's Auction 24 and Southeast Orange blanked
riford 0013-0.
rarnie Dellarco, with an assist from Drew Horn, booted the
Auction goal.
)efl's Auction, 24, plays Maitland April 25, while Sanford
faces Downtown the same day. Sanford is 14.
ianford 480 Celery City Printing demolished Seminole 4016.0
scoring six second4ialf goals.
(eve Sapp was the big man for Celery City Printing, scoring
I e goals. Three came unassisted while Darrand Richards
1 1 Tom Cherneatky aided two. Sapp also had an assist,
ichards scored two goals and thernestky one. Scott
I CaskIll moved to forward hr the first time, registered his
f tgoal.
deny City PrInting, 3-1-1, plays Pine Hills at the Sardord'
a port April 25.

1

Thursday, April 16,

Rozema Blanks
KC; As Win 7th

'.

By United Press International

Tames

'

E vening Herald, Sanford, Fl.

Tire &amp; Muffler

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�Herald, Sanford, Fl. Thursday, April U, if)
'r) "1Off2Wit TON Lopez-Melton
1c75rgG(T'
WO0t.P 46#i'EF
r
ThV
IA-Evening

cot/49 81 /'V,4,Y't74cqf 7
601 W111 7W COOWIF-RINXII

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//F7dO,P

ORLANDO, Fla. (UP!) Nancy Lopez-Mellon has had her
hands immersed in soapsuds for a week instead of clutching a
golf club, but she's back to menace her competitors today in
the opening round of the $100,000 Lady Citrus Classic.
The leading money-winner on the LPGA tour so far this year,
Lopez-Melton will battle the 6,138-yard Rio Pinar Country Club
layout following a week's layoff. She said the break may have
hurt her grip, but she's not complaining.
"My hatids got a little sore," she said Wednesday. "I guess
the callouses got soft from washing dishes for a week. But I
feel pretty good about the way I'm playing."
Already the winner of two tournaments this year, Lopez.
Mellon says she's been content with her practice rounds,
especially her putting. She said Rio Pinar's greens were in
excellent condition but that the fairways were patchy.
Donna Caponi, last week's winner at the American Defender
Classic in Raleigh, hopes to match her 1980 performance when
she notched back-to-back victories.
"I've won back-to-back tournaments a couple of times," she
said, commenting on her reputation as a charger who gains
momentum with each victory. "I do tend to play in hot
streaks."
-

eve,rr

H

.41 Z?. D

-

Rio Pinar

A

..

277.

...

ii
./•
:!

"

County

Seminole

OURSELVES

Spotlight

Evening Herald, Sanford,

Fl,

Thursday, April is, 1911-1B

-•

Batting Average
Charlie Miller (LH)
Terry Griffin (0)
Ronnie Coleman (LB)
John Sinus (LB)
Brian Wright (t,B)
Edwin Wiggins (OV)
F.d Turner (OV)
Tracy Walker (S)
Gary Smith (LH)
Alton Davis (S)
Benton Wood (L)
Chuck Bolton (LB)
Home Runs
Jay Drivas (LH)
John Simas (LB)
Charlie Miller (LII)

At Bats Hilt Avg.
35 .443
79
43
19 442
20 .417
48
69
24 .348
75
26 .342
49
16 .327
43
14 .326
91
20 .319
70
fl •314
81
25
55
17 .309
80
28

Stolen Bases
Edwin Wiggins (OV)
Brett Von Herbulis(S)
Eugene DeAlba (S)
Alton Davis (S)
John Reich (L)
Runs Batted In
Jay Dnivas(LH)

SBA SIB

-

4
3
3
,

20
15
13
16

18
13
13
12

25

-

23

John Sinus (LB)
Alton Davis (S)
Chip Saunders (S)
Charlie Miller (LH)
Terry Griffin (OV)
Brian Holzworth (L)
Carl Canton (LII)
Gary Smith (LH)
Earüed Rust Av erage'
Mike Dreihelbis(L)
Greg Hill (S)
Tom Novak (LB)
Tracy Walker (S)
Scott Killiam (LB)
Mike Dunlap (LB)
Kevin' Brubaker (L)
Decisions
Gary Smith (LH)
Charlie Miller (LH)
Scott Klillam(LB)
Duan McGuire (L1I)
Thurman Granville (OV)
Biily,Strip(LH)
Greg HilLS)
Mike Dunlap (LB)
Tracy Walker(S)

19

•

19
18
37
16
16
16

.

.

1.30
1.65
1.97
2,33
2.33
2.33
2.51
I. Pd,
1 .833
1 .933
3 .833
1 .800
1 .750
1 .750
5 .500
6 .455
4 ,427

W
5
5
5
4
3
3
5
5
3

-

---.

.

IV

0
0,1 1

LESLIE-ANNE DOWN

CATHY MORIARTY

DIANE LANE

BEVERLY JOHNSON

I FF

SCOREBOARD
Major League Standings
By United Press International
National League
East
Wednesday night results
W L Pct. 05
Istrace - 5-16, C: 31.05
3 I .750
New York
IMandy Dee
34.60 0.20 3.10
2 I .667 'a
3.4o 3.60 Montreal
SWorthing
3 2 .600
'a
I River Earl
1.40 Phile
I 2 .333 Il
St. Louis
0 (S-I) 3030: 1 (Is-I) 116.10
I 3 .250 2
Pittsburgh
2nd race -3$. C: 31.11
I 3 .250 2
Chicago
2 Stolen Charm
16.00 6.50 100
West
1 APi Pick You
1.00 300
6 0 1.000 Los Angeles
3Annie Scott
7.20
S 2 .714 11.1
Cincinnati
0(1.3)13.603 P (2-1) 66.60; 1 (2.
3 3 .500 3
Atlanta
1-3) 150.20; 00 (1-2) 373.60
Houston
2 1 .333 1
3rd race-S-iS, 0:31.51
2 5 .206 41.
San Fran
2 Sady Belle
5.50 17.40 4.40
2 S .286 4'
San Diego
4 Linda Purl
6.20 4.20
Wednesday's Results
3 Black Dart
3.00
Montreal S. Chicago 4
0(3.4130,60; P (2.4) 149.141 T 113.
New York S. St. Louis 3
4-3) 200.00
Phila 4, Pittsbgh 3, Il inns.
•
4th race -3.I6,D: 31.40
Houston 2, Atlanta 0
S Fell Good
10.00 6.70 3.40
Cincinnati 10, San Diego 1
6 Wright Girl Talk
3.10 2.40
Los AngeleS 4, San Fran 2
7 River DIme
3.50
s Probable Pitchers
Today'
0(5-6)17.40: P (5-5) 30.00, 1 (5(All Times EST)
6-7) 332.60
Chicago (McGlothen 00) at
Sth race -7-16. C: 43.54
Montreal (Sanderson 00). 1:35
2 Birthday Girl
3.00 3.50 2.40
p.m.
3 Hey Mary
4.10 2.50
St. Louis (Rincon 00) at New
SRosy Devil
2.50
York (Scott 00). 2:03 p.m.
0(2-3)13.604 P (2-3)30.70:1 42Pittsburgh (Robinson 00) at
3-6i 73.00
1.0),
Philadelphia
(Ruthven
6th race -S.16,A: 31.27
7:35 P.M.
SMiti Immortal
3.60 3.00 2.10
American League
IllelloCathy
4.50 3.20
East
* 7 Brain Scott
2.60
W L Pct. 05
0(4-S) 23.00: P (5-4) 40.60: 1 IS.
4 1 .000
Detroit
4.7) 07.30
New York
3 2 .600 I
7th race -1-16, 5:43.43
Milwauke
2 2 .500 I'/a
3 Gypsy's Assasin 4.40 3.20 7.40
Baltimore
2 7 .500 tI',
Sisley Scott
5.00 3.00
Boston
2 2 .500 1'.'a
6 Mrs. Jug
Toronto
2 3 .400 2
0(3.0) 16.10; P 13-1137.5411 y (3.
Cleveland
1 3 .250 21ta
s.si 1100
West
$th rate -S-16,A: 30.83
Oakland
7 0 1.000 4 Wright Arch
2.10 2.20 2.20
Chicago
3 I .750 21
3 Persuade Me
3.10 4.40
California
3 4 .420 4
S$syNomore
440
Texas
2 3 .400 4
013.4) 13.00; P (4.2) 14.00: T (4
Seattle
2 4 .333 41 :
3-3) 374.00
KansaS City
I 3 .250 4'
01h race -3.5*: 35.67
Minnesota
I 5 .167 5'
lMoto, Man
11.60 1.60 2.50
Wednesday's Results
2 Will HePost
3.60 2.40
Boston?, Baltimore 7
3 Michelle R
2.10
Chicago S. Milwaukee 4
0(2-7)17.60; P 11- 2151.601 1 0
Texas S. Cleveland 0
3-3) 121.00
New York 6, Toronto 3
10th race -S.lS, TA: 30.00
Detroit 4, Kansas City 0
S PR's Charlie
5.00 3.10 3.40
Oakland 5, California 3
lShogun Warrior
0.611 4.20
Seattle 6, Minnesota S
2 Free Spirit
00
Today's Probable Pitchers
0(3-1)21.10: P (5-7) 101.00:1 (5(All Times EST)
7.3) 210.00
Cleveland (Garland 00) at
llth race -3$,T: 311 .19
Milwaukee (Caldwell 10), 2:30
S Squirt Scott
15.00 6.20 6.00
SHeyArlene
3.50 3.s0 p.m.
Detroit
(Wilcox
1.0)
at
IRK'My Katy
3.60
Toronto (Stieb 01). 7:30 p.m.
O (56) 33.40: P (5.6) 111.70; 1(5Oakland
(Keough
at
10)
5-5) 601.20
California (Witt 00), 10.30 p m,
12th race -7.16,0; 44.41
3 Kerry O'Hara
10.10 4.50 3.20
Major League Results
S River Best
71.00 4.60
By United Press International
4 Revel
2.60
National League
0(3-0)41.20: P (3-5) 333.00:1 13000 220 000- 4 7 3
Chi
34) 317,60
Mil
070000 02x' 5 7 3
A
2.406: Handle $341,316
Reuschel, Ca udill (5). Tidrow
Tonight's entries
(I) and Blackwell; Rogers,
Poe, time: up.rn.
Bahnsen (I) and Carter. W1st-- S. 16, B; 1. Highway Agent;
Bahnsen (10). L-Tidr
(Ii).
2. .e Mars Acer; 3. Chuckle Scott:
"m's Kathy C: S. Ms
St.Lo$Jis
002000010-3 55
,uod; 6. Mrs. Garden; 7
010001 OOx- 5 5 1
Carolyn's Champ; I. Every Stride N.Y.
Often
and
Martine;,
(7)
2nd-3 5,D: 1. Husker Agnes;?.
3. Debleon; 4. Jazzy Porter; Zachry, Hausman (6).
Amy Pool;
Allen (7) and Trevino. WCritter; S. Jason Scott: 5. Deluxe
Zathry (20). L-Martinet (01).
Shingles; 7. Dandy Karma; S.
Fawn Boy
(II innings)
3rd-$.I6, 0: l, Anchor, Weight ;
Pittsburgh
2. l's Uno. 3, Joni Wail; 1. Wriwht
011001 00000-3 12 I
Datatact; S. Manatee Scott; 6.
Philadelphia
Jungle Fever, 7. Dinner Prince; S
ODO 10000201-4101
Lessen Lisa
Bibby. Tekulve (9), Jackson
4th - $16, 0: 1. Snittin A Tear;
Porno (10) and Nicosia;
2. Lake Ira; 3. Kickie Mc; 1
Bystrom, Lyle (9), McGraw
Candle Stick; S. Chasse; 6. Challis
(II) and Boone, Moreland (10).
Delight, 7, C P Ringo; 6 Joseph
W-McGraw (1.0). L-Romo (0.
Scott
1). HR-Philadelphia, Matthews
5th
5.16, D: I. Light Bear; 2.
Stuart; 3. Wright Appleyard;
Candy Sandy; S. Tally Fred; 6.
000 000 000- 0 4 I
Stream Lines; 7. HP'S Sun Dance; Atla
Hous
000 000 20x-' 2 2 0
S. Misty Green
Boggs and Benedict; Ryan,
6th- 5.16, A: I. Elmer Eyed; 7
te (5) and Ashby. WPine Grove; 3. Top Stub; 4. PR LaCor
Ryan 110). L-Boggs (01).
Ghost; S. Wright Chinook; 6.

I Orchestra Given
Challenge Grant
The Edyth Bush Charitable F"ndation, Inc. has recently
awarded a major challenge grant to. tht 1nrida Symphony
Orchestra in the amount of $00,000.
The $00,000 is in addition to the $30,000 given to the Council of
Arts and Sciences last fall to publicize the Symphony Season
and to promote increased contributions, The Symphony has to
raise $180,000 from contributions and memberships in order to
receive the $60,000 grant.
The Edvth Bush Charitable Foundation has offered this
grant for the express purpose of developing a broader and
stronger contributions base for the Florida Symphony. Half of
the grant is to be used to assist children's concerts and the
other half is to be used for the general purposes of the SyniPhony.
In order for the Symphony to receive any of the grant money,
it must raise $180,000 in contributions and memberships within
the presecribod period. Proceeds from tickets sales or any
other earned income will not count toward that total. An additional requirement is that all revenue from ticket sales for
next season must be put in trust and used for next season's
expenses. The 1981-82 Subscription Series tickets have Just
gone on sale.

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ALTAMONTE SPRINGS
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I

••

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2 x 2 SPRUCE/PINE
STRIPPING

Each

,[he higher the

Sq. Ft.

Each

I x2x8' SPRUCE

"Boat the Heat" $lO.00 Bonus Offer
Details at your local Scotty's store.
R-IV

pay for the cost of the meal pettiness. Sincerely,
is alter.
DEAR ABBY: My wife and was present when any of their
jewelry and accessories for an (
41)
and a gift, that such a request THE REV. ALAN F.
I are in our early 20s and plan children were born, and none
always-somel hinq'ne'w way to 'V
DEAR ABBY: Richard ,a was of "questionable taste." STEINKE,
to have at least one child in of us seems to have suffered
individualtie tour very own look.
VALLEY STREAM KY.
My brothers and sisters and
divorced U. S. Army officer,
the future. We are curious any deprivation of love,
he was shocked at the I recently used a similar
Our friends who have ex(Problems? You'll feel
about "natural childbirth,"
A,'-I' Abby said
hn
number
of
women
who
exp
ec
t
tec
ique
in
organizing
our
better
al
childbir
th
y
penienced
nat
ur
if )-oil get them off your
where the moth er is full
1 'J10
sex on the first date in parents' 50th anniversary chest. For a personal reply,
conscious and ia given nothIng praise it highly. The whole
repayment for a lovely celebration. We invited write to Abby, 132 Lasky
for pain. Also, the father is idea of natural childbirth
evening. It's true. And these guests, requested they pay for Drive, Beverly hills, Calif
present to coach her the mother'S being conscious
218.220 EAST FIRST ST.
breathing and stays to witness without taking anything for had been very close recently women spoil it for the rest of their own banquet portions, 90212. Please enclose a
SANFORD
but solicited no gift money, staiiipe(j, self-addressed
pain, and the father's wit- separated. (They weren't us.
the actual birth.
PH. 322.3524
Many men expect women to Over a 50-year period our envelope.)
Personally, I wouldn't cane nessing the entire procedure married, Just living together.)
.,...n• In this iIt,Ilu,.pu
seems
to both The four of us had spent many
"nut out" or cet out on the narents have accumulated
accumulated
.
---S--- renuenant
-rwonderful
times
together.
To
first
date.
I'm
talking
about
myriad
friends
and
my
wife
and
me.
Although
my
room, yet I've heard that the
SANFORD PLAZA - OPEN 10-9 MON. THRU SAT.
doctors, acquaintances who deserved
father who witnesses the birth wife has a fairly high make a long story short, Lisa professionals
of his child feels much closer tolerance for pain, she would has been using my husband's lawyers,-ollege students, etc. to be invited. If all who were
who come from good invited had shown up, we
to the child as well as to his prefer to have some type of shoulder to cry on. Doug (my
Lisa's
husband)
has
taken
would not have been able to
families,
anesthetic,
and!
really
don't
wife.
There are a lot of men who pay for the affair.
Abby, my parents and my think I would love my child side of it, and he is no longer
the
financially
If
wife's had a total of 11 less if I satin the waiting friendly to Lisa's former refuse to date a woman unless
boyfriend.
beleaguered
middle
class
they
get
to
know
her
sexually.
.
room
during
the
delivery,
children between them.
I always had the feeling that Who needs this kind of gar- desires to Initiate a pay-asOur friends can't believe
Neither her father nor mine
that we still prefer the old- Doug had more than Just a bage and abuse? Sex devoid of you-come policy on order to
fashioned private-type brotherly feeling about Lisa, love is a form of prostitution; preserve some middle-class
delivery.
Is there something although in the 10 years we women are using their bodies traditions, who are you, an
Gets
have been married, he hasn't for trade and in the process overprivileged media mogul,
wrong with our thinking?
given
me any reason to be they're degrading them- to tell us this of "questionable
CURIOUS IN N.H.
Donations
taste?" And who is arrogant
selves,
DEAR CURIOUS: There is Jealous.
Doug visits Lisa frequently
Don't worry, RICHARD, ALICE to tell us to "skip it"?
The Board of Trustees of the nothing "wrong" with your
How come It's tasteful for
DeBary Public Library met In thinking, but since you are at her apartment and she there arestill plenty of women
natural calls him on the phone at out there who believe in wealthy politics to charge
curious about
the library on April 8.
Attending were: President childbirth, you should learn home and at work, but she romantic love and are real $1000-a-plate for dinner to
raise campaign money, but
Walter Gloger, Jacqueline more about It.Your doctor, or always includes both of us ladies.
'when
she
entertains.
Should
I
for the middle
distasteful
I'm
happy
to
see
that
real
friends
who
have
praised
it,
Emery,
Whiteford, Charles
class to charge $30-a-plate to
gentlemen exist, too,
May Kling, Hannah Stone, can provide you with some be worried?
M. A. FROM MASS.
ONE OF A FEW raise the spirits of two
Marian Evers, Marcia Illuminating literature on the
DEAR
M.A.:
Worrying
is
DEAR
ABBY:
You told magnificent people?
subject.
Carson, Gloria Accardi,
ALICE.
who
was
shocked
at
non-productive.
But
do
keep
I think what is of
James Wheeler, Director of
being
invited
to
a
25th
anyour
eyes
open.
It
may
not
be
"questionable taste," Abby, Is
DEAR ABBY: A couple
Volusia County Libraries,
Norma Hines, librarian and with whom my husband and I your husband's shoulder Usa niversary party and asked to your insinuation and ALICE's
Marjorie Altiger.
April 15 was Library Day,
Board members were asked
to write to T.K. Wetherell, 418
House Office Building,
Tallahassee, urging his
support for full funding of
state aid to public libraries,
Recent gifts received by the
DeBary Library were as
follows: $100 donated by Mrs.
E .M. Grierson for the
Building Fund; $25 from the
Business and Professional
Women's Club; $25 from Mrs.
E:2. Cleaver in memory of a
White or
friend and $25 from Mr. and
Bone, Tan &amp; Brown
Mrs. Merle Swanger for the
Multi-Color
purchase of a large print
book, given In memory of Mr.
Harry Miller.
Mrs. Hines reported
14 k.iral \'OItI. 13
registrations doubled over
I' I :*,1:4: t - ro..'.. 14 &amp;iiiiil .1t1
last year but circulation is
o;'eilai,. 2'
down.
'i' s..t'.*I .i
* Ill ''t'iiIilit , t'lt),' 'i'tii(i:sIS
Mrs. Accardi reported the
I ka, a! Vold. 511 0.(W)
annual card party was a
success.
McDonald's sponsored a
Public Library poster for
'u, in
Library Week.
.,; 's'!' ( j.' :
.
There were 154 responses to
the telephone survey.
The DeBary Library plans
to change the closing time on
Tuesday to 4:30 p.m. and on
Thursday to keep open until
9:30 p.m. in order to avoid
conflicts with meetings of
OE
'.Wi
'a Pt
.
* 101 111 IN, is
other organizations.
308 E. FIRST ST,
*.t,.l.,* .,,,I.j",A' .,a'.i.jn..'t
iiia,.',. 't','.,t 11
PH. 323-6204
The next meeting will be
held on July 8th.
-

z199

Fiberglass handle with
rubber grip. 16 oz.
8001 A/F Curved or
8003 A/F Ripping.

GAS GRILL

Belts and handbags, sc arves

-

Tube

CLAW
HAMMERS

'

Sect,on

-

Mirvi

-

Clear.

Silicone Rubber
BATHTUB CAULK

Bonds in seconds.

6' high x 8' wide
sections. (Posts not
included.)

.

Single lever, 5 year "drip-free"
guarantee. No. 07229,

97C

-

-

Was he rless
KITCHEN FAUCET

Gallon

SUPER GLUE

'CYPRESS STOCKADE FENCE

Each Tile

29 I

Gallon

,
$ 4

I

Colors

479

r"
'

5Ø5C
Each

White

fl• 7'

C

-

Latex paint for
masonry or metal
surfaces.

closets. (Less seat and
supply) WS 1100
White.

'tli

DURAVINYL FLOOR TILE/\
enancetiles. Exeter style
in Beige, Gold or White.

1
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SqYd

.4NATIi

easily to conventions of a tailor-made image.
Their W11qUC self-confident styles have made
theni among the most visible WOIIICII of ti't'
year. And they're just getting started."

and chains.,.ts melange of

Uses 50% less water
than most two-piece

_______

Exterior PAINT

Rugged constructIon. 4 cu. ft.
capacity. KB-4

Ss 31%

FMCafalogPr.cr
(sq ydL. .339

House-Cote

for

Natural Childbirth Repugnent To Pair

Water Saver
CLOSET COMBINATION

I d1I I IT 1 iI 1.1'iii '1.A'.A

Big Four Heavy Duty
WHEELBARROW

L
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TURF CARPET SCOYS
SIn

Bargains Galore

Gallon

C.IaIo SpsdM

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-

BASEBALL

99

MOPIACO"

Peg Puce

-

--

Great

1

-

-

Don't Miss It!!'

White and colors

501b Bag

A

Rag Price

SATURDAY, APRIL 18

latex paint. In

Itn.wdI

•

Manatee Critter;?. Crow's Truck;
000 004 303'- 10 12 2
Cinci
S. Speedball Arwiie
000 001 000- I 30
San DgO
7th -$16, C: I. Divine Lady; 2.
Mura,
and
Nolan;
Soto
Hard Try; 3. K's Mama; A. ct
Littlefield (6), Lucas (7), Welsh
Daddy; S. Afternoon Jane; S
(9) and 1.Kennedy. W--Soto ()
Chico Buddy; 7. DO's Tip Top; S.
HR5-to I).
LMura
1).
Harem Whit
Cincinnati, Driossen (2), Foster
i;,, S IS, C: 1. Champion Fox;
7. Honda Hoodoo; 3. Morning; 4.
Le Mars Beth; S. Allen's P K; 6.
020200000-4 $ 7
Tally Brook; 7. Streak J; I. Flying LOS Ang
010 000 010- 2 S I
San Fran
Shingles
Castillo
(0)
and
HootOfl.
9th
$16, 6: I. Jude; 2. Spider
Scioscia; Whitson, Moffitt (6).
La Ru; 3. Jays Blue Jet; I
Breinlng (I) and May. WManatee Katydid; S. Tin. Cash; 6.
110010(5 (30). L-Whitson (01).
ElCapi; 7. Pamela Sue; I. Kemmy
Baby
American League
10th
30. A: I. Sabatha; 2.
Golden Taste; 3. One Beer Mary;
130000010-1 70
1. Wonder Alice; S. N's Brent Detroit
000000000-0 50
Went; 5. Uncle Bubba; 7. DO's Kan City
Ro:ema and Parrish. Dyer
Caprice; S. Cowabunga
11th - 516, 0; 1. Dorothy's (9); Gura and Wathan. WWolf; 2 Bob's Escape; 3. Buc. Rozemi (10). L-Gura (03).
comania; 1. H's Polly; S. Lake
000000011-S 50
AIt4e; 6. NK's Lit Nan; 1 S Chop Oaklnd
001001 100- 310 3
Calif
Slick; I. Marinda
Langford and Heath; JaIler.
30, C: I. Manatee I
12th
bone; 2. Tally Russ; 3. Mary son, Hauler (S) Asse (9) and
Decker; 1. Ah Liv. S. Top Rate; S. Downing. W-Langlord (20). L
Hauler (1.1). HR-Oakland,
Fleetloot Zella; 1. Golf Scott; S.
Armas (4).
* Leading Girl

"'

99

AI

.

-

i,o.,,, Exterior, acrylic

All-purpose use on
anything you grow.

49

7

-

i1

cut-rent issue of Harper's Bazaar, its editors
reveal their collective choice for the top
beauties of 1981, "Each has a look," say the
editors, "that's startling and undeniably her
a 10(1k and an attitude that do not yield
own

Great beauty is just a little shocking. More
than the pretty assemblage of fine skin and
delicate features, it contains that element of
the unexpected that makes people do a quick
double-take ... then keep on looking. In the

SALE

HOUSE PAIT

6 6-6 FERTIUZER

Plain back carpet in decorator
colors 12' width.

PRINCESS CAROLINE OF MONACO

•

Bazaar Picks 198 1 's Most Beautiful And Visible Women

.

-SIDEWALK

elndoor-Outdoor_

-

-

Specials

AV

anummomm~

JULIE HAGERTY

KELLY LEBROCK

ad us

[ORANGE CITY
12323 S Voiuta .A
Hwy 17 and 92
Ph 77b. 72 68

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS

Prices quoted in this
based on custornrs picking-up
Merchandise at our stois Do.
livery is available lot a sin'
chwge.
Management reserss the right
to limit quantities on speci al
sale merchandise

675W Hwy 436

Classic
Naturaftza.
Comfort.

skjintoltp-

32.99

c\

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THE DIAMOND STORE

Ph 862•7254

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ViilIfli. ..r&amp;la, Se,.,Ul'U, i'i.
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Herald, Sanford, FL

Thursday, April H, 961
--

-

-

PREVIEWING
UNIVERSITY

w8w

2David Abbott and his
su. vIII

THURSDAY, APRIL 16
National Spinal Cord injury Foundation, Central
Florida Chapter, Ramada Inn, 4919 W. Colonial Drive,
Orlando. Dinner at the Gangplank Restaurant, 7 p.m.
and program at 6 p.m. featuring three short films.
Opentopersonswlthlimltedmobflhtyandguestg.Cau
Joanne Leber at $314304 for information.
Cancer Victlmi&amp; Friend, Central Florida Chapter,

-

Edgewater Drive, Orlando. Speakers from the Central
Florida Macrobiotic Study Group.

I J1...

EVENING

600

j0)(S0IDONEW5
EARTH, SEA AND SKY

'1

CAROL IURHETT AND

6:30

Si(1)NBC NEWS
CU NEWS
(1)
ABC NEWS
(.7)
5) SANFORD AND SON
101 EARTH. SEA AND SKY
17 )BOB NEWHART

o ® NEWS

7:00

(1)0

P.M. MAGAZINE Find out
why the shark is a very misunder.
stood animal; a man Who sculpts
clay on skulls to recreate the lea.
lures of murder victims; Chef Till
on slicing and dicing onions; Judi
Mlssett has fleCk and 5hOUIdif 5 j
zercIs.s; Joyce Kuihawik has a fold.
stove
JOKER'S WILD
5) BARNEY MILLER
10) MACNEIL / LEHAEA
REPORT
(17) ALL IN THE FAMILY

dM
(M

7.30

TIC TAO oouos
PYRAMID
FAMILY FEUD
5) RHODA
(10) DICK CAVETT Guest:
Peter Sheller.
ox (17) sooAND SON

600
0 (4) BUCK ROGERS A menaclog warlord threatens the ship when

two.
(7) • SARNEY MILLER A new

detective accuses Barney and his
squad of being on the take. 1
0 (10) THE PAPER
1E
Scavenger Hunt" Professor
Klngstlelds annual exercise riquw.
big students to find answers to 100
legal questions In three days is
attacked by a resentful faculty.

trying to
romance a new cab driver. Louis
'drives a cab Into a little old lady
stepping off a curb arid Ii socked
with a million-dollar lawsuit.

0(4) TODAY

m

MNGARUO
G])135)POPEYE
0(101 VILLA ALEGRE(R)
02) (17)1 DREAM OF JEANNIE

.wf,

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141,

The Na1byb 's*l Cot"

Sale 7.99

Sale 49.99

Our striped vested suit.

Men's soft-touch dress shirts.

The JCPenney Comfort Suit.

The perfect blend of fashion
and function Tailored in a
durable polyester Traditional
or multi-stripes
Reg $110 Sale 89.99

Reg. $9. Ultressa double knit
dress shirt of Dacron polyester is cut for comfort
Short sleeves Solid colors
14'. to 17

Reg. $68. The suit that makes
you feel great all over Tailored
in a new stretch fabric of
Today's 1000-o Dacron- polyester from Klopman Textured
Woverts Slacks have flexible
waistband

Our vested suit IS wrinkleresistant polyester in your
choice of neat patterns or
solids Many colors
Special 69.99

5O' e

Sale $1. Reg. $10.
Ultressa - double knit dress
shirt with long sleeves.
Solid colors. Sizes 141 2 to 17.

Sale
Reg
$49 35.00
Jacket
Solid slack ........19 14.99
Vest, not shown .
18 13.99
Patterned slack
18 13.99
21 17.40
Continental slack

..,

....

1%DU POW

Wallpaper &amp; Woven Woods!

(7.) Q0000 MOANING AMERICA
i5)

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pric

3O'

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(DO 0000 MOANING FLORIDA
8:30
(4) TODAY

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Houlif
DONANUIE
(DO MOVIE
mi 135) Q0ME PYIJ
t (10) SESAME STREET p
(17) HAflI.

NURSE A deaf hospital
employee reacts In an unexpected
manner to Mary's new that his
hearing can be restored.

0Z(17) GREEN ACRES

0 (10) AMERICAN SHORT STO"
My •$lof Daughter" by

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(7)0 aoiso

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10:00
SUILLOSYS
RICHARD SIMMONS
flit.Q
,5) I LOVE LUCY
10) MATH PATROL

N

0)(17)uovls
Nathaniel Hawthorne. In 111th-con10:16
fury Padua. a young Italian scholar
0(10) MATH PATROL III
(Krlstofter Taborl) falls in love with a
mysterious scientists daughter
10:30
(Kathleen Biller) whose very touch
®
can bring death: (R) pALICE
(R)

1030
(1]) (35) CAR CARE CANTER
1100

) DICK VA$VKE
0(10) ILICTRIC COMPANY (N)
1100
(3) WHEEL OF FORTUNE
(1)0 THE PRICE IsRIGHT

T'.I

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3O

All In-Stock
Wallpaper

Patternsl

(wallpaper pack agedki

double and

rolls)

VIAL

1:30
0]) (35) MOVIE

Sporty swimwear.

TODAY! (not available at all stores)

Save'.

on Custom
Window
Fashions!.

Ulli 3O-5O'off

i

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j-:

Over 90 Perfect Touch"'
Custom Woven Woods
Patterns.

-==-.
'

window decor

installillone*Ira)

(10)ALLA$OUTYOU

1:45

.

.1

Sale
6.40

3O"off

Over 200
Beautiful
Colors

200
mANGwORI,D
THE WORLD TURNS
(1) AS
ONIURSTOUVI
THE "M

(I)•BOALLSII

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658

(7300000 MORNING FLORIDA
700

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SINGER!FTMINIS
______
AMERICA
(DGOOD MC
A M11%
(9 (35) PUSS BUNNY
10) TODAY IN THE LIG4LA0J(17)PIJPIT1MI

7:25
(1ITOOAYPIFLORIDA
(7.)60000MORNINGPLORIDA

IT , 6

2:30
AVETT
2:50

0

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0) (17) WHAT IN THE WORLD?
®TELAS
(1). DIJIONIG UGHT
HOSPITAL
(7) Q
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only

(TURTU1,11i

Ti-virs poly
Ony.(Might, 50

69V
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POSTSCRIPTS
17FuwTnii
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3:30

Nylon
'j!

1130
51 DAPYDUDIC
IoVERIASY

17 SPACE GIANTS
400

I

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430
6:00

1

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6:30
® 0 M'A'$'H
(7)OIIEWS

d (35 WONDER WOMAN
0110 ELECTRIC COMPANY (N)
63(17 SIVERLY1.LSIUJIS

.
Values

from

Sq.Yd.

-

$8.99
$15.99 Sq. Yd.
(piddinq and Installation extra not available at all stotes)

Sale ends May 9

SHERWIn i t

(9(35) TOM AND ,IERRY
63(17) THE BRADY BUNCH

iptie..

-

-

I
I

IS),The5*ijC.a

318 FRENCH AVE.
SANFORD

Sale
7.60
Rag. 9.50. Athletic style boxer
short of poly/cotton poplin
Has flap COlfl pocket. nylon
supporter Sizes S,M.L,XL
Not shown

s

5.99

iH l5 WOODY WOOOPSCKLR
(10 SS5/IMEIII*1Q
63(17 TNIRJNT$TONU

35 IDRIAMOFJIANNIE
10 MISTBRRO0(R
II? ILOVELUCY

pile.

9 64- yd.

I

On Sale

tons)

Reg. $8. Cool, comfortable top
knit terry with V-neck
and contrasting trim. Men's
S,M,L,XL

5

SALEI

fl1

1

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CLUI

Special Carpet

(7)

. . 1.'"N

of cotton

Stylish
inch
-1
Meta II
iiflgS.

(1O)LETTIRP,OPLII

5JIMIAICICER
17 HOLLYWOOD
7
IALTHFIILD REPORT
630
-' - '3:45

20% off

READY TOTAKE HOME...

S

0(10)A.aWEATHER

,1.'IIOOD 11*01"

7t1 Av

9:30

(7)

)Il oilo ,
TWUES.

Dress and sport savings.

off

8:25

800
® TODAY INFLORIDA

CLOSED

The pharmacy program adds Impetus to the Society's
nationwide Glaucoma Alert. Most drugstores cooperating
in the Alert display campaign posters in their windows or on
their counters "If your pharmacy is participating," ad-

prevent further damage to sight," Ugate continued,

0 135) ANDY GRIFFITH

1000

T&amp; DALY WORD

H. 751$

I.

TOTAL COST $10.00
Reservation
Required

8:00

0)(17)NEWS

5:58
DALY DEVOTIONAL.

THE JAZZ

-

Sale 89.99

.1

I

Phones (305)

M9-$l0
322.U21

) 0 cms

CI)

ZAll1TNI
ill ONLY
Nil DIAMOND

"people are still going blind from this eye disease. Since
there are usually no early symptoms, its victims frequently
don't realize anything Is wrong until their vision has
already been significantly affected."
Warning all Americans, "Don't let glaucoma rob you
blind," the NSPB sponsors screenings to find those
threatened by the disease. The Glaucoma Alert, backed by

-

APRIL 20 TO MAY 13
MON.&amp;WED.7:30P.M.
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH
700 ELM AVE., SANFORD

CY0

0000 MOANING AMERICA
(35) GREAT SPACE COASTER

N)

.

An estimated two million Americans have glaucoma
and hail of them don't know it. Some
86,000 In Florida
5,400 In the U. S. go blind from this disease each year.

prominent national organizations and strong medical
leadership, seeks to expand glaucoma education and
detection projects in communities nationwide.
Supplementing the Glaucoma Alert Is the film "Seeing,"
featuring Helen Hayes and highlighting the the value of
early detection and treatment in controlling glaucoma.
Available to groups on free loan, this film is the centerpiece
of a complete program, with a free Leader's Discussion
Guide and public education materials.
For more information on glaucoma, the Glaucoma Alert
Program or the flint "Seeing," contact the National Society
to Prevent Blindness, Florida Affiliate, 3741 Neptune
Street, Tampa, 33609.

7:30

A

w

vised Thomas R. Ugarte, M.D., Chairman of the Medical
Advisory Committee of the Florida Affiliate. "ask for ii frpe
pamphlet on Glaucoma.
"Even though treatment can halt Its progress and

Giant Wallpaper Sale!

9:30

(7) 0. TAXI While

-

your

soldiers at Gettysburg, and "what they did there," adding that
the world will never forget.
She went on to say that it Is the things people do that make a
story, even though they may seem unimportant at first glance.
Each thing they do contributes to the heritage of the men and
women who have made America; and that history Is a continuous process that goes far back Into the past and will go on,
far into the future.
To complete the program, each member present described
some item brought that represented their own American
heritage In their family.
A buffet of finger sandwiches, cookies and punch, decorated
with an Easter theme, was served by the hostess, Mrs. Nance.
The occasion was attended by 17 members, one associate
member, and two guests, Mrs. James W. Soverna and Mrs. Zoo
A. Stanley.

-'a.-

Buck offers sanctuary torn beautiful
stowaway.
NEWS
(j) 0 CHECKING IN A rowdy
NETWORK
football team. coached by Lyle. old
LOVE BOAT (R)
Ef
high school nemesis, checks into
15MNCIDOU$
0(10) TODAY IN THE LIGISLAthe St. Frederick.
(10I FREESTYLE
(7)0 MORK AND MINOY Mendy's
0)(17)NIGHTGALLERY
11:30
grandmother Core gets mugged In
PASSWORD PLUS
1F30
the park.
(10) $45105/OUT
(3) TONIGHT Host: Johnny
(II) (35) THE SEVEN DIALS MYS.
Carson, Quests: Don McLean, Lo.TINY Cheryl Campbell, Sir John
11:45
naPatterson.
Olelgud. James Warwick and Lucy0(10)LZTTER PEOPLE N
MA-$'H
Gutteridge star In thés dramatlza.Cl)
m *50 NEWS NIGHTUNI
lion 01 Agatha Civistiss mystery
AFTERNOON
51 @11101Y HILL
novel which combines romance.
"The
Barefoot
(17)
MOVIE
0)
international intrigue, murder and a
Contessa" (1964) Humphrey
generous portion of the
12:oo
Bogart. Ave Gardner.
famous red herrings. Peter Ustinov
CARD SHARKS
hosts
(F(DOII1Ws
12'00
0(10)FLORIDAFOCUS
0(10) MATH RILATIONSHIPSA
(1)%STAMKYAND HUTCH
Give
(11)
MOVIE
•'
Up
ox
(73 CHARLIE'S ANGELS While(17) IMAN REPORTS
The Ship" (1959) Jerry Lewis, Dina
attending a party on Charlie's
1215
Macnil,
couples honeymoon Is
yacht, the Angels discover mIllions
0(10) MATH RELATIONSHIPS
interrupted when the groom
in
gold bullion hidden below the
called to Washington to account Io,
12:30
a destroyer lost during World War
cit NEWS
deckI)
0]) (3SJIM SAKXIR
II
(1) SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
________
C!) RYAN$ NOPE
8:30
(Ii) 5)GuRNSm
PARK
PLACE
The
teen-age
IFRIYi
0
10) ELECTRIC COMPANY
(1)0
daughter of a hippie couple seeks
100
legal aid to he adopted Into a isgu.
MORNING
(4) DAYS OF - LIM
lar family.
THE
YOUNG AND THE
(1) 0
(DO BOSOM S1JOOICI lop final.
AWLIU
ty gets a chance to lake Sonny out
500
m ALL MY CHILDREN
on the town (R)
(7)0 MARCUS WLSY, M.D.
(10) COVER TO COVER I
0(10) SNEAK PREVIEWS Roger
(17) MOVIE
630
Eb.rl and GemBiskel host an
SUNRIS1 SIMSETER
informative look at what's new at
1:15
0)it,)UTPAT$OL
the moves

ALL SLATS 99C
LAST NITI
II ONLY
V
.
-

Most weight cor'trol programs are concerned with only
one thing - rapid weight loss. They all talk about how
many pounds you can lose and how W. These crash
diets are never concerned with lifetime results. And the
pounds always cum rolling back
Long-term weight control requires a total life style approach. One in which your ideal weight is scientifically
determined, safety achieved and intelligently maintak'ied.
And that's exactly wttat TNt HATLMALWAYTOWOM
CONTROI. is all about. It works with nature, not e9ainst it,
to help you lose naturally.
Discover for yourself how lifetime weight control can
be a reality. If you're going to lose weight, why not lose it
for good? Make THE NATURAL WAY TO WUGHT CONlast loss.
TROI.

-

The Salle Harrison Chapter, Daughters of the American
Revolution, met for their April meeting at the home of Mrs.
Mary E. Tolar Nance.
Mrs. R.. E. True read the President General's message,
which related to the 50th Anniversary of the adoption of "The
Star Spangled Banner" as the NaUonl Anthem by an Act of
Congress of the United States of America.
Mrs. V. C. Messenger gave the National Defense message.
Regent, Mrs. William S. Brumley, thanked Mrs. Raymond
M. Ball, Calling Committee chairman, for her efforts In contacttng members.
The attending membership voted to hold their annual May
luncheon meeting at Frogg's Restaurant at The Crossings,
Lake Mary.
An American Heritage program was presented by Mrs. W.
E. Baker, chairman of that committee, speaking of the

MOVIE "Paper Moon (C)
(1913) Ryan O'NeaI, Tatum 0N.&amp;
A young orphan ,adopts,, f9q
by following a former friend of her
mother f his fl.jfij$f .scapides
during the Depression.
.
(1)ØMAGN,P.L Magnum hs
hired to find a woman. missing
flancs. and part of the )ob Includes
entering a marathon swlm-run.blk.

(1)

J

.

QN1n It Back!

American Heritage: DAR Shows And Tells

SATURDAY, APRIL It
Sanford Republican Women's ash, 11 a.m., Holiday
Inn, 1-4 and State Road 46. Speaker, Rocky Pennington
from State Republican Headquarters.
SanfortiAA Women's Group, 2 p.m., 1201W. First St.
SUNDAY, APRIL19
Dusty Boots Riding Association, Inc. Open Horse
Show, beginning at 9:30 a.m., Wilco Sales Arena, 4
miles west of 14 on W. State Road 46. Lunch break
Easter egg hunt for ages 14 and Easter egg fun class
for ages 6-13 and 14 and older. Spectators free.

-

•

•:

, ,1,

FRIDAY, APRIL 17
Singles of Sanford covered dish supper, 6:30 p.m.,
McKinley Hall, First United Methodist Church of
Sanford Park Avenue entrance.
Seminole South Rotary, 7:50 a.m., Lord thumley's
Atlamonte Springs.
7:.V a.m., Deliona Inn.
Weight Watchers 10 a.,
.mSears, Altamonte MaU.
Tanglewood AA, closed, 8 p.m., St. Richards Church,
Lake Howell Road.
Longwood AA, closed, $ p.m., Rolling Hills Moravian
Church, State Road 434, Longwood.

TONIGHT'S TV
9.00
ri
0 (1)

'
.

OnlyTo

auu

Art Abbott of Altamonte Springs, attended the "Preview of
Florida State Univer.
sity" last weekend in
Tallahassee. Tours of
the
campus,
inFormation sessions and
social events gave students an opportunity to
get acquainted with
the University.

..

P

_uI uayu

]

Don't Let
Glaucoma Rob
You Blind

SPECIAL TO ThE HERALD
Pharmacists across the state are joining the National
Society to Prevent Blindness, Florida Affiliate, In alerting
the public to the danger of glaucoma, the nation's leading
cause of blindness.

.

Sale 960
Rig $12. poly-cotton poplin sport
short with 3 contrast side stripes,
side vents and side seam pockets,
fully elasticized waist with
drawstring, i) pct. nylon supporter.
A l 'I I-

charge

Li
sr{L::
2t

1I

Sherwin-Williams

-

.

Available
'sat J C Pv'., Oomph",

IC

JcPenney

SANFORD PLAZA
Open Monday thru Saturday,10 a.m.-Il p.m.
Open Sunday,12:30-5:30 p.m.

�Evening Herald. Sanford, Fl.
4 B—Evening Herald Sanford Ft.

Thursday, April 1, lfli

Mickey
An

Do your Easter shopping the one

322-7244
323-5823

HOURS BY
APPOINTMENT

stop way. The selection is great, the
SANFORD PLAZA'S
merchandise fresh and exciting, and

DR. A.H. CANN

Featured
Event

the prices are reasonable. Save gas,

OPTOMETRIST
time, and money!

THIS WEEKEND!!!

1070 State Strut
Sanford Plaza

Easter's on Its Way

(Sanford Plaza
Cleaners

W

PPECKERD7
_6"w

SANFORD PLAZA ON LV1.

John's Deli-Cafe
3236563

DRUqjmIA

Limit Rights
Reserved
SANFORD PLAZA
ONLY

SPECIAL

Cafe &amp; Caterers

REG. 2.69

TABOR

SANFORD PLAZA

Professional quality
. dry cleaning

PRICES GOOD
THRU
SATURDAY

blix

see Us

Coke 8

THROUGH SATURDAY F

12 OZ.
PK. CANS

REG. 1.09

ASSTD CREME

for ALL your

Alterations
A time of renewed religious inspiration,
a celebration of spring—whatever Easter
means to you, Hallmark helps you make it
memorable with cards, gifts and gift wrap for
Sunday, April 19.
I aflO Iii Ucna, I. Car ii s tic

o

Laundry service
=
Wedding gowns..

g Cards and Gifts
•
VliitStl A Sanford Plaza

C

322.6982

ufTe

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fl!

am quo
4M

NEW
PHONE

322w 8
, 063

U

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BY MR. ED

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D

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BONNIE&amp;GARY

NEW HOURS

NEXT TOTHE THEATRE
DINE IN

CARRYOUT

MON,-TUES,.
WED-FRI. ,

A

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Phone

M IMflUIRJ
SANFORD PLAZA

322861O

ILA

SANFORD PLAZA
SANFORD, FL. 32771

HAIR.

L

Men's AND

REG. S10.611

At Work

CHAIR

Ladies and

..

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lAO!

.

.ROMPERS
REG* 1100

U v iO

20" 2 SPEED
BREEZEBOX

REG. $22.97

FAN

$1888

$

ALL GALAXY
BLUE BLADE

MEG. $36.

4U

SMOKER GRILL $33W
VISA
LAYAWAY

.•.

OFF

FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY ONLY

DON'S SHOES
SANFORD PLAZA AND DOWNTOWN DELAND
AND SOUTH DAYTONA

our

choose

wide selection

SCHRAFFT JELLYBIRD

REG. 79c

Eggs

2/$1

2 OZ.

DONALD DUCK

REG. 2.99

2

Fun Mug

si

(-

REG. 1.99

TRIPLE TOP

Pitchers

159

of religious jewelry
and giftware.

ZALES

We and P, Wadi èà wli corn. tv..
SANFORD PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER
Also iv. Iable.
The Diamond Store

April is Natural Foods Month, so,
this Easter give your family healthy
treats. We have sugar-free carob
Easter Bunnies and carob.cQated
fruit and nut filled Easter Eggs, as
we.tL.s..othr goodies.-11%_ fill your.
baskets.
While you're in, take a look at our
complete line of herbal teas, refreshing fruit juices, and natural
cosmetics line. For those days you
would rather be outside sunning
than in the kitchen cooking, check
out our new line of frozen foods and
dinners — scrumptioust

0,

BUDDYL

MASTERCARD
CASH

87

RE0.$17. TO $42.fl

o% OFF $15WToMO
FANS 2

from

in and

30%OFF

By HICK Ku:INEII
11(11.1 ,\'WOOI) i NEA) .- I would have liked to have dragged
many of today's actors - who take themselves and their trade
so seriously - over to watch Mickey Rooney at work.
Many actors today are the kind who must go into a deep
study - undisturbed, communing with their souls - for hours
and maybe days before they do a scene. They resent anything
that intrudes into their introspective cocoon. Woe to anybody
who breaks their self-imposed spell.
But, on the other hand, there is Mickey Ilooney. Maybe you
scoff at comparing Hooney with today's ''serious" actors. But
real pros will tell you Hooney is one 01 the best actors we have
ever had.
And watching hi", work is a joy. Here is a man who needs
perhaps an eighth of a second to prepare a scene. As for introspection, he thinks it's the first chapter in a book. All he
needs to get ready for a scent' is to hear the director say
"Action
I us was one of the most amazing performances I have ever
watched, as In' (11(1 il scene For (lire('tor Jackie Cooper in the TV
movie "I .eave lIIi I .aughing,'' to be shown on CBS April 2).
Itooney plays a character based on a real Iwrson, a ('hicago
circus clown named Jack 'ihuni who withhis wife) helped
raise dozens of homeless kids. 'L'he scene they were shooting
WS One in which 'l'hum was hospitalized - lung cancer, the
and he was in pain, physically and mentally.
doctor said
his wife Anne Jackson agonized on one side of his bed. His
doctor 1MIen Goorwit?. I ministered on the other side. And
'I'hum ( Hooney ) gasped and groaned and suffered.
It was a difficnit scene to shoot. The nurse had to appear with
the tray holding the medication at precisely the right muonient.
Time doctor had to do his thing, the wife had to shade a bit to ()fle
side so the camera could t'a tclm the action and, through it all.
Rooney had to be in obvious pain and suffering.
But HO4uie, (luring the dozens of breaks, sat up in bed and
turned on the old lloont'y charm. lie was fooling around, telling
jokes, carrying on as only he can. But the moment Cooper
called for ''action," l(ooney turned on the misery.
''lie can turn it on and off like a faucet." Cooper said later.
"1 think lit' does it in self-defense. If he 1(51k the whole thing too
seriously, it would be too depressing For him,"
Utfilper iiitl Hooney , incidentally, are both former child
stars, and hadn't worked together since they were boys.
Cooper prefers ti irect ing to acting these days.
them- cut. H ooney Silt up.
Cooper called another
this is depressing." he said. "I need a laugh. Did you
know that a crowded elevator smimells different From an empty
elevator?"
There were a few dutiful titters. l(ooney groaned. But, tindaunted, lit' ha ga n a long story that nobody paid munch attention t(l. lie was might in the middle of it when Cooper called
''action'' again, and lie immediately lay down flat. In an instant he was back in character, moaning and groaning.
When they broke again, Bouncy beckoned to Cooper and the
director went over to the bedside.
"I Icy Jack," Rooney said. ''I low about ill keel) going 'Ohihi,
ouch, yii.' mid Anne will say, 'l'oor Jack, does it hurt terribly"'
And I'll say, Ni', you're Standing on m% oxygen limit'.'
And lie broke into shrieks of laughter. Cooper smiled politely
and went hark to his work. But again, as iliti as the camiiera
rolled, Itoomicy was instantly back in character.
''Did oii ever go up in the mountains and pick Ferns""
Bouncy asked, during another break. Nobody answered his
question, Si, he ti itit ii it'tl. "I went up in the mnounta ins once
with Fermi and %% picked sunflowers."
M ickt'y, ' ' ( 'oupi'i' SiI iii, -you slititilti thrash ai'iitiiiil ililiR'.
NIid. "You will see such thrashing as you've
''OK,"
never seen."
And on and on, for hours. Rooney was two different people
himself, or whoever that clownish, puckish little man is, and
ii, t ni his death bed, once ( 'oopt'r started the act ion
Jack Thum,
going.
And that is what is imit'ant by acting.

(305) 321-0240

Women's

__

BEST CHINESE FOOD
LUNCH SPECIALS $1.99
DINNERS — TAKEOUTh
SANFORD, FLORIDA

Junior
MULTI POSITION
CHAISE LOUNGE OR

Restaurant

323-7254

3224580

SANFORD
PLAZA

Gift GIVING
Come

• Gifts

250

'S

1

READY$49
TO EAT
LB.

• Firing

• Classes

Mr.

nimals

A

• Greenware

TRY ONE AT THE LOW PRICE OF

79.;
6PK.

ALL EASTER PLUSH

For Easter

Un*icurl
is here!

PIZZA

Smoked Hams

½ LB.

.

NOTAPERM — NOTJUSTA
SET — JUST LOTS OF BODY
TO HOLD YOUR HAIR STYLE
FROM 4 TO 6 WEEKS.

A

u oy Parties
$150

$1 00 OFF WITH THIS AD

Eggs

In our Deli

209

Rooney:

Old-Fashion

Actor

Eyes Exomksed
Contact Lenses

Thursday, April 16, 1981—SB

.

HAPPY EASTER

PLAZA SQUARE

Taylor's

SANFORD PLAZA

Natural Foods

We discount everything

SANFORD PLAZA

Hermit Crabs
49
UP
HERMIT CRAB SUPPLIES
SHELLS, FOOD, BOOKS,
HOMES.

Pg!R[OAIJOPPLY
TS

PER YOURS"

Lbw OI
Cc
PIT $UPPUU PIT OONNSQ
OEM"
D006
PIA PS
flSH HAMS
_____ — CMPIIM
AOUAMM

am
- 323-46351 -J
323.6760

Mickey Rooney is an actor who needs little
prepai'atinii flume to playa role, even for a scene In
"-hich he has to show strong emotions. Says
Jackie ('oopt'm. $% w is directing Rowley in a new
TV movie, ''11e cami turn it on and oil like a
iaiwet.''
A MATTER OF RECORD
I of 1. Si, ar Ridge at !a hal
REALTY TRANSFERS Poapt , $177,400
Olin Amer (tomes mu Gary A
ShrOeder &amp; wi Cynthia . Lot 25. DISSOLUTIONS
Un 1
MARRIAGE
Olin American Homes to Robert F Goodson 8. Belt,, i
Gregory C. Scariato. sgl . Lot , Susan K Morgan I Michael D.
Cluster C. Deer Run Un 72. 566,000 Lynn ('lopper 6. LeRoy. wi
Olin Amer Homes to John E maiden name - Mustard
Mardeil L. Hicks &amp; William
Wells &amp; wi Dorothy C . Lot
Cluster U. Deer Run, Un n, Marie M. Jamiesoni George 0.
Mammie Redding Roberts &amp;
$63500
William () Martin I wi Mary C Sylvester
to Edward J ML iuggrt &amp; M Joel Bruce Smith &amp; Rebecca ,
Jeanne C . Lot-, i s 6 24 &amp;s. alk c. Ann. WI maiden fliflhl- Langdale
Saniarido Springs Tr IS. $90.000 Vatef,eS Starkwrather &amp; David
Sun Rise Erectors, Inc. to L
Marietta M Mailer, sgl . Lot 79, Manor H Saimond &amp; Lee A
Patricia See Smith &amp; Douglas A.
Sunrise. U.' Iwo A. 553.000
Iic't mil I r,'rtj V Comery (4',rne Larry Eu,JCOC Thompson I
Irk, it, ,If lar I James, Margaret Arwi

A

Sale $12
R9. $15. Perfect for the long hot summer
100 pct. cotton-sheeting leans In cool pastel
colors.
Junior sizes 3 to 13.

iCPenneY
Sanford Plaza

i

V

(

F.

�1q 4',

e6-éena; r•,' alO, inford, Ft.

Thuridiy, Aprfl 16, 911

Legal Notice

Area Honor Rolls
ALL SOULS SCHOOL
FIRST GRADE
First Honors - Barbara
Frank, Jessica Ligac, Allison
Wallace, Jennifer Wight,
Matthew Wilk
Second Honors - Wendy
Bonnel, Tony Dodson, Helen
Gutmann, Tim LaPeters,
Jennifer Sparkman, Andy
Tomerlin, Randy Bowlin,
Jessica Feuerhahn, Teddy
Holloway, Donald McWatters,
Billy Strickland, Dee Dee
Vincent
SECOND GRADE
First honors - Steve Cann,
Jason Feuerhahn, Michael
Roberts, Cindy Leffler,
Debbie Bernosky, Kristi
Carroll, Stacey Shumaker,
Stacey Schenck,
Second Honors - Erick
Houck, IAn Knowles, Kim
Gormly, Angela Walton,
Julian,
Bill
Matthew
Schanel, Melody Sanders
THIRDGRADE
First Honors - Lisa Sundvail, Gina Sparkman, Heather
Schaffer, Tammy Roche,
Jennie Meriwether, Angela
Day, Michael Wilk
Second Honors - Gina
Plkkarainen, Victoria Ricci,
Tami Holloway, Tina
Bradley, Jim Scheetz, Chad
Houck, Lori Stortzum, Git,a
Joshi, Jennifer Gillmor,
Elizabeth Bernosky, Matthew
Pagliarulo, John Bernosky
FOURTH GRADE
Jennifer
First Honors
Birmingham, Kriati
Meriwether
Second Honors - Stasi
Bojanowaki, Chris Bowlin,
Jessica Dense, Nicole
Guernsey, Lee Kaleel, Julia
Robert, Sean Boudreaux,
Sandra Bryant, Jennifer Gill,
Steve Hickson, Elizabeth
Long, Chrissie Wilkening
FITH GRADE
First Honors - Jan lice
Second Honors - Jaime
Bojanowaki, Jennifer
McKibbin, Mark Roberts,
Leslie Crabtree
SIXTH GRADE
Second Honors - Chris
Bolssonneault, Karen
Edgeinon, Kimberly
Machnik, Brantley Robert,
Kimberly Vonflerbulis, John
Burton, Jeffrey Lower, Julie
Mericle, Lynda Swisher
GRADE SEVEN
Second Honors - Tern
Bodnar, Amy Breeze, Joni
Jane, Rléhàrd Leonard,
Paula Volpi

EIGHTH GRADE
First Honors - Ken Mike
LaPeters
Second Honors - Margaret
Davis, Patricia FitzPatrick,
Beth Nelson, Tammy Vincent,
Tins Vincent
SANFORD CHRISTIAN
SCHOOL
FIRST GRADE
"B" Honor Roll - Paul
Guanino, Rachel Harrison
SECOND GRADE
"B" Honor Roll - Tam
Doan, Derek Drake, Bob
Nicholas, Joanna Porter
THIRD GRADE
"B" Honor Roll - Tim
Waisanen, Brian Howard
FOURTH GRADE
"B" Honor Roll - Jeanette
Reagan
FIVIH GRADE
Honor Roll - Scott
Waisanen
SIXTH GRADE
Honor Roll - Enik
lrrgang
SEVENTH GRADE
"B" Honor Roll - Richie
Adams, Kim Carter, Shelly
Herndon, Lorrie Scott
Honor Roll - Vincent
Howard
EiGHTH GRADE
Honor Roll - Carol
Angle
SANFORD MIDDLE
SCHOOL
THIRD NINE WEEKS
HONOR ROLL
'80.'81
HONOR ROLL
Sixth Grade - Elizabeth,
Brooks, Kenneth Eckatein,
Steven Sapp
Seventh Grade - James
Allen, Sharon, Gaines, Jeanne
Goodenough
HONOR ROLL
Sixth Grade - Kathryn
Buckmaster, Debra Homer,
Jennifer Roberts, Sherri
Rumler, Carla Walker,
Roger Harlow, Nancy
McQuatters, Jennifer
Prendergast, Corey Bumbarner, Michael Edwards,
Susan Harwood, Jackie
Newell, Amy Allen, Stephanie
Debase
Seventh Grade - Tona Bell,
Deborah Coleman, Alan
Kendall, Michael Minton,
Melissa Moak, Michael
Chaudoin, Keeley Mahoney,
Sravut Rivers, Sandra Stiffey,
Michael Homer, Wilburn
Penick, David Rape, Rose
Rouse, Steven Sellers, Cynthia
Grove,
Kurt
Schumacher, Elijah Williams

Legal Notice

r

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA. IN AND
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
CASE NO $1472.CA.21.E
DIVISION E-Jvdge 5.111
IN THE MATTER OF THE
ADOPTION OF
LESLEY ANN MURPHY, minor
by
STUART BLAIR MURPHY
and
KATHY STEADMAN MURPHY,

-.

CLASSI

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR

SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
Fill Number S1.lI1CP
Division
IN RE: ESTATE OF
EDWARD DOUGLAS SEAWELL,
ak-a EDWARD 0. SEAWELL
Deceased
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
Theadministralionof the estate
of Edward Dodglas Seawell ak-a
Edward 0. deceased, File Number
S1.1$1-CP, is pending in the Circuit
Court for Seminole County.
Florida, Probate Division, the
address of which Is North Park

FlED ADS
Drndo - Winter PQrk

Seminole

831-9993

-

......

,'

.

-

'

..

-________________________

RUMM MOPWT1O, INC.
lS A-I (Aj

)CtIlsM CIssc)
A

/'\

Otiu. P.
5-1 (IiØ ImI)

_____

EFRONT APARTMENTS
110.2 Bdrm on Lake Jennie
Sanford. Pool, rec. room,
door BBQ. tennis courts 0.
sposals. Walk to schools i,
opping centers. 3230742.

.

Excellent Opportunity fOr
persons ii or older to mak,
good money. For appointmeOt
Call 323721$ after 2 p.m.

We are currently seeking npj'.
and experienced Salis

X$JRY APARTMENTS.
imily &amp; Adults sectin.

Associates. For confidentl$1.
interview call Marcus Bro*u1.'
at 331-0700 today.

Ni Apt,. 3237900. Open on
tekends.

PARK PLACE ASSOC. lflC.
REALTORS

iner's Village on LaKe oa.
2 Bedroom Apts. frcm $220.
ocated 17.93 lust touth of

CASTING
Need 300 extras for Major F,lrn

Irport Slvd. in Sarford, All
luIts. 323-1430,

c-i .., c=-u
Ji /7

-

14. J.

WV..LL5
(5)
Al(*iv#)
'-' C•Z (l CUil)

.

'4
L DAVIS

1

LU J.

iii,1J27

-

____

oo GLOUP, us
JsaAAIcw,)

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_____

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PuD(I
J.JLI-Sd
Pi
kptwIl Lt

JRssn..iA($.i m,lp)
C1 (IssICIdI

W5ITTIN GT$ PLLD WIN ?I( LMC MAii.
PUSON$ £t
MLPIT MAIIAGL$ EU.. M CONIID(
g mg Pt*uC NtARIM J. 4A50
N COWTINUID PSON TINt TO TINt a
PJ N(5SARY
t
£CA j 4
A,.,.. #(IP1I

Clergymu.iigaer
Reverend John Wither.
spoon. the only active clergyman among the signers of the
Declaration of Independence,
achieved a greater reputation
as a religious leader and educator than as a politician.
Emigrating from Scotland to
took
America. Withers
part in the Revo uti n, and
signed the Articles of ConS
federation as well as the
Declaration. He is belier
known, The World Almanac
notes. for his distinguished
presidency of the College of
New Jersey (later Princeton
University).

tor the purpose of adopting the
minor child, DELIVERANCE
LYNN WEBB, and that you are
required to file any objection you
may have to said Petition on
WALLACE F. STALNAKER, JR.,
EsquIre, Petitioners attorney,
whose address is 400 Maitland
Avenue, Altamonte SprIngs,
Florida, 3270$ on or before April
27, 1911, and file the original with
the Clerk of this Court either
bslor•-Iarvic•-on- PiIiHonox's'

attorney
or
immediately
thereafter.
WITNESS my hand and seal of
Ihis Court on this 23rd day of
March, 1911.

ISEAL)
Arthur H. B.ckwlth, Jr.
Clerk of the Circuit Court
By: sEleanor F. Buratto
Deputy Clerk
PublishMar.26&amp;Apr.2,9,

DEG $24

dinae proves to be Invalid,
unlawful or unconstitutional,
shall not be held to invalidate or
impair the validity, force or effect
of any section of this ordinance.
SECTION 4; That all ordinances
or parts of ordinances in conflict
herewith be and the same are
hereby repealed.
SECTION 5: That this 0r
dinance shall become effective
immedlalely upon it5 passage si
adoption.
A Copy-mitt be Ivaltabli St the
Office of the City Clerk for all
persons desiring to examine the
All parties in interest ano

citizens shall have an Opportunity
to be heard at said hearing.
By order of the City CommissIon
ICity of Sanford, Florida.
C

N.H. Tamm, Jr.
City Clerk
Publish: April 3,9, $4, 73, $95$

DEN 11

County, Florida in accordancu
with the provisions of the Ficitious
Name Statutes, ToWit: Section
545.09 FlorIda Statutes $957.
Sig. Patricia J. Scott
Publish Apr.9, 14, 23, 30, 1911
OEH.37

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given that I air
ifl business •t 110 Savoni
Court,
Altamonte
Springs,
seeninate County. FioridL-vnds,
the fictitious name of IDS.EAI1
CENTRAL FLORIDA. and that
intend to register said name witt
the Clerk of the Circuit Court
Seminole County, Florida in ac
cordancewithlheprovision$ofthi
Fictitious Name Statutes. T.Wit
Section $45.09 Florida Statutsi

1957.
51g. W. Bruce Woodard
PUblishMar.341AP1.2,$, $4, 195

DEG.123

No expelenc, necessary, will
train, good salary, hospital.
izatlon, other benefits. Call
333-3443.

Call Debbie or Jim $0-I
331.9254.

Madam geriatric center. Ex.
cellent pay 8. benefitr. Exp.
only. Call Mrs. McCranhi
Longwood 3399200.

-Apartments

SERVICE personnel wanted:
Exp. only Weekend. lunCh
shift. l.mi,.. Mi y restaurant.
3327110 bet. 2:104OQ p.m.

STOCKMN_ Experienced.
Needed, Food Barn. Inc. 75th
St. I. Park Ave.

JUNE
PORZIGftALTV

COUNTY LIVING. 3 Bdrm, 2
Bath home, over 2,000 sq. ft.
surrounded by 7 acres of
orange groves. $173,000.

REALTOR 322.4991
Eves 323.4302, 349.5400, 322.195,
Multiple Listing Servige

NFORDLake Mary area-?

GAS ATTENDANT
Phillips 66 Station
Lorgwood
Good pay, Company benefits...'.
Apply 202 N. Laurel Ave.,
Sanford.

Bdrm, air, no pets. 1 chIld. $240
mo Call $344235.

Hm'oid Hal ReIv

EW OUPLEX-LONGWOOD
rgeous sittlngl 2 Bdrm, 1

REALTORS, MLS

Bath. Garage, Decorator
blinds, all Kitchen appliances,

323.5774

$345 Lease. No Fee. THE
STEPHENS CO. 6290013.

Nurses Aides. 3.1$ li-i. $3.60 per.
hr. Experienced only.
Longwood Health Care Center. ,.
339.9200.

BOYS&amp;GIRLS
AG5 13.11

Living Sm., Family Sm,
Large yard, $44,900.

PLENTY OF ROOM in this 4
Bdrm, 2 Bath. Separate Dining

rage $0 full there's no room
for the car? Clean it out with a
Want Ad in the Herald. PH.
332.3411 or $319993.

EARNIXTRA$$

AFTER SCHOOL

32- Houses Unlurrgshsd

CALL 322.2611

-t

Ewnlng Hendd:

Bdrm, 3 B. Quiet street nr.
Mayfair Country Club. $350
mo. 1st &amp; last + Sec. Dep. 322.
234$.

Want ads are black &amp; white I.
read all over.

-v--.

CONVENIINCE STORE
CLERK

Full time posilions. Experienced
preferred. 4 LocatIons ii)

tmon Bluff. 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath,
Fenced yard, Dock. '$390 mo.
304-541.2700.

YOUR OWN HOME AT LAST. 2
story, 2 Bdrm Plus nursery, 2
Bath, EaI.In kitchen, Paneled

Seminole County. For lh;
formation call 3733443.
Exp. Waitresses wanted. Apply'
in person. Pizza Boy, Sanford
.'
K.mart Plaza. 3733006.

Reasonable rent. Refined
Adults preferred. 661.5723.

ford NursIng 1. Convalesc.nl
Center. Contact Mrs. Brown,,322•1366.

Restaurant Help Wanted-Minimum wage, must be nest.
I clean. Apply in pePson 7
to6 p.m. Stucksy's, SI. Rd 44..
&amp; 1.4. No phone calls plessp

-.

Day or Night. SummtP'

Come and visit Sanford's newest
Clothing Consignment store.
Serving the entire family.
Quality clothing wantedl Open
6 p.m.

SECOND IMAGE
3104 S. Sanford Ave.

Lake Mary area. Corner Lot,
shaded by large oaks. Fishing
and Swimming near by. Call
332.4493.
DONALOG. JACKSON, INC.
Realtor 322-3295

STENSTROM
REALTY

Evening Herald Paper Routs.
Net 5150+ wk. Less than 2.
vs. a day delivery time. Call
337.4341

down $32,000. Owner finan.
3236213

SPACE iVADER
Investment from $2175. Latesl.
color models. Call loll free, I'
500137.4357, Mr. Bennett.
.
Golden Opporlunityl Sail pai;
ented Gas Saver for cars,
vans, trucks, etc. DIstributof.'.'
ships AvaIl. 332.4079.

Want.Ad way. The magic
number is 322-2611 or *31.9993.
2 Berm, Block Home
In Sanford, by owner
Call for Appt. 574.3714

COUNTRY LIVING. $0 mm.
from Sanford, 4 Berm, 3 bath,
fireplace, lcar gar., can. H.A,
1 acre wooded lot. $13,S00. S
Adjoining acres avail. Dy
owner-. Eves I Wknd$ 322.7111.

-

ioIIuI'
SIALTY
REALTOR, MLS
wi s.

-

w

t
'

l_f.b

1IT REALTY Inc

MUI.Tlp$,I LISTING REALTOR

.'..

Entey country Ilwi.? I Idrm

,

535.901

HANDY MAN SPICIALI 3
Berm, I bath home in Winter
$pringsl Lots of pstentiaii
534.9111
LAKIFRONTI 2 Berm. 1½ bath
home overlookliai St. Johns
Riverl New Cent. H.A,, Washst
and Dryer. W.rkshsp, ww
carpet and morel 544,1111
RIDGEWOOD ACRESI Duplex
loft Zoned, all utilities, paved
roads Near SHII Will
subordinate for builders. Buy
newt Build now or later-I
Just II leftl From $141111
MAYFAIR VILLASI 2 &amp; 3
Berm., 2 lath Coeds Villas,
neat to Mayfair Country Club.
Select your let, floor plan &amp;
Interior decorl Quality ci.structed by Shoemaker for
47,200 &amp; opt Open Satwday

11:34-1:00 &amp; Sun. fIoi..II
ASSOCIATES NEEDEDI New
or experienced. Call H.rb

E\,es.3220$12

Stenstrom today &amp; scover
success I

_____

-.

MOVE RIGHT INI FurnIshed 3
Berm I bath home in lel Airet
Family Sm., w-w carpet. SplIt
Berm Plant Gold Termsl

323.7832
.

payment.
BAKS 1104 N. Mills (17.92)

.

2INOUI'II 322 92$3
MM

337 3553

:

,,

monthly. Financing, no down

scaped loft Only I Mas. eldl
540,9001

Wonder what to do with Two'?
Sell One - The quick, easy

Plumbing OlY, Hardware and
Electrical retail and repair
Business W.WO Real Estate,
Best Terms. $143,000. Wm.
Maiiczowilii REALTOR 322. ,
79$). Eves 3223307.
----c
OPEN YOUR own 'stout shop..
13.000 can start your ow,

VACUUM. RAINBOW
Repossessed with all at.
tachm ants &amp; power head. Like
new warranty. Pay 524$ or 51$

-

screened porch. Newkitchen I
bath with new Central HIA &amp;
ww carpet. Brick fireplace,
large shaded lot on quiet
street. Mid 30's. Call 323.0214
eftir 6 pm.

GAME ROUTB

ROomforR,nt

JUST LISTEDI4 Berm, 2. beth
horns n Rambiewoodl Split
Bdrrn Plan, Dining area,
Equipped kitchen, Land.

mple$ely redecorit•d 2 Berm,
1 beth, large dining rm I

CALL ANYTIME

Apts. Olympic 51. Peel.
Opea,9

f5

322.2420

UP ,,

CornEr of Airport Blvd. and
Santord Ave. You're always
first at Second Image.

REALTORS'

WE LiST AND SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN THE
SANFORD AREA

cing. Owner Associate.
________

-

Sanford's Sales Leader

Completely refurbished. $1,000

Private Entrance

Motor Inn, 3200 SoUth Orlando
Drive (17.92), 10a.m. to9 p.m.,

Tues thru Sun. (AprIl 14.19).

By Owner: 3 Bdrm, 1 bath.

-

.

41-Houses

'-

SANFORD
Reas. wtly
monthly rates.UtiI Inc. Kit
Oak. Adults 511.7953,

priced less than $4. Portraits,
seascapes, landscapes,
orientals, etc. All reduced.
Sale prices on frames many
styles I sizes. You must see
these paIntings todayl
Banquet room
Cavalier

Monday thru Saturday 9a.m.

discounts.

stout shop. We're specialists in
womens stout apparel. Call o..
Write Mr. Jay (904)737.4623;
P.O. Box 23566, Jacksonville,

- up
to 75% savingst Hundreds of
beautiful oil paintings. Many

amer Store. Lake Mary. New
Carpet, New Drapes, $250 Mo.
323.1960 149.1044.

21 Hr. Babysitting in my Horn..-

24-Business

Must sell truck load of art

37.-Business Property

21-Situations WanteéC...

Orlando 149.3140
Air Conditioner. 10,000 ITU.
Fedders. Used 3 Mos., $125.;
Lincoln Arc Wilder, 225 Amps,
good cond, $75: BIE Cash
lip.
register, new, 5195;
Compressor and coil, 5)15.

5311373.

-

Freach. 323 .2222

LkMary

3236363

REALTORS
Multiple Listing Service
I

68-Wanted

Saddle, Longhorn 775 roping

saddle. With all goodies. Orig.
5630, asking 1325. 349.5011.

to Buy

ANTIQUE &amp; Modern dolls,
Kewpie dolls &amp; figurines,
Aleitander dolls. 665 6631.

Waterbed Sheets
King and Queen size, $29.

r,urntr
,
longer needed but useful items
with a Classified Ad.

I

llyou don'tbelievethatwant ads
bring results, try one, and
listen to your phone ring. Dial
372 261$ or 531 9993

1976 Honda Express
Moped$173
Call 323.4026

1 -

CONSULT OUR

Year old. CodeAPhone. 1500
answering device ith
remote control, 5110. 322.2510.

DUSINESS SERVICE LISTING

52-Appliances
_____

ANI) LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

Kenmore parts, service, used

washers. MOONEY APPLI.
ANCES 3230697.
REF. REPO. 16c0. Itt rost free.
Orig. $529, now $705 or $19 mo.
Agent 339-1316.

To List Your Business...
I32226

MICROWAVE

j

Brand New, push button control

Washer repo. GE deluxe model.
Accounting&amp;
Sold crig. $109.35. used short
Tax Service
time. Sal $119.11 or $19.35 mo
____________
Mint 339.$3$4
_____________________
53.-TV.Radio.StereO
-

-

-

--

------

TELEVISION 21" RCA
Solid state color console in
Pay $$9 or $15 monthly.
Financing, no down payment
SAKS 1)01 N. Mills (1797)
Orlando 896.3860

TV's FON RENT

-

Color I. Black I white. Free
delivery &amp; pickup. Jimmy's
TV Rental. P'one Anytime

TELEVISION
RCA, 19" television. XL 100 Solid
Portable.
Color
State
Warranty. Pay $149 or $14
Monthly. Financing. No Down

Payment.
SAKS 1104 N. Mills Ave. (I192)
Orlando 1-1964140

Air

5493,75, Bal. $153.16 or $17 mo
Agent 339.1306.

Condition

-

Aluminum Siding &amp;
Screen Rooms

Bill
&amp;
Jim's Furniture
Refinishing &amp; Restoration. We
buy 8. sell. Call 1)1.3211 after

Small Appliances like new.
Household items, clothing,
material, misc. Priced to sell.
Friday and Saturday 93. 110
Meadowlark Dr. (Robin Hill),
____________________________
Carport Sale: Fnil. Sat. 9.5 3409
S. Laurel Ave. Easter Items,
appliances,horseshOa set, lots
more. Rain or Shine.
Household Furniture. Nothing
over $40. Fri. I Sal., 9.5. 134
Garrison Dr., Sanlord.

Hospital Bed
$225
349.57,'

layaway Balance
of $36.50 on Zig Zag sewing
machine or 7 payments of 56.
Call Credit Manager 3229411
Sintoro Plaza.
Looking For a New Home?
Check the WanI Ads for houses
of every size and price.

-

GE TV color. 11*10 cabinet
working, $75. Typ.writl,
Royal $00. Excellent, $10. Desk
&amp; Chair 41*22, Glass top,
excellent, $140. High pressure,
hardy spray pump. $310. .ini
Chrysler New Yorker, 44,000
ml., Loaded, $1295. Several
other misc. items. 45 Allison

St., I.ongwood.

Garage Sale: Furniture, clothes,
fractor lawnmowers,
Household items, Plants.
Saturday Only, 95. 2112 5.
Orange Ave. oft E. 25th St. lit
left after railroad track.

55-Boats &amp; Accessories

Auto I Industrial. 100 S Syn
thetic. 10*10 Motor Oil.

Bi'ush Cutting

223-7114

Complete lawn care. 373.1793

.
&amp;..)
)171
i---. I1_'\,

Free EstImates 323-2049

y.

_______

Custom Decorating. Painting,
int,rjor..ey'ar ioc.. .si1,o.,fr'1ne.. - ••

I

ri

wallpapering. All types of
home repairs. Quality work.
Seas. Free eat. 3221915.

ADSI
.

Carpet Cleaning
-

Home Repairs

Shampoo &amp; Deep Steam LIV,
Din Rifl, Hall, $25. $10 ca
additional rm. 331 06a9.

CasamicTile

_____________________________

QUALITY AT A FAIR PR ICEI
Gen Repairs I lmprov. 17 yrs.
locally. Senibr DiSc. 3232305.

-

Remodeling I. Carpentry
Repair, screen rooms I
repair. Phone 323.0134. 323.
2105 after 4 p.m.

MEINIZER TILl

'

,

-

Cleck Repair

.

results. Just try one. 372241)
or $11 9993

GWALTNEY JIWELER
Park Ave

'"

-

Carpentry I Remodeling
P,00btOoSmall
321 1451 orAtterl 30

3226509

CornnrciaI
ogpy
Models Prufessional
Studio
establishing file. Prestige
portfolio 1. composite at
reasonable rates. 3272211.

Crockett's Lawn
.

Beautif cation and
Maintenance ServIce

Thepersonaltouchl
3220791

Horseshosing

,

.,

..

NO LONGER USED CAMPING
GEAR IS IN DEMAND. SELL
IT NOW WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD.

FONSECA PLUMBING. Con.
struction, Repairs, Emergen.

cy. Lic., Bonded, Ins 323 4075.
Looking for garden equipment?
Read today's classif led ads for
good buys.

Iiorse'shoeing Trimming
Dave Smith
Mornings 321-2131

Unit Harold Rankln 373 2753
If you don't fell people, how are
they going 10 know? Tell them
with a classified ad, by calling
3222611 or 831 9993

additions, drywall, etc. 20 yrs.
sip. Call 33)5097 eves.

All types of Mason Work.
No job too large or too small
3221541 or 3236774

Remodeling Spcla list
We handle the
Whole Ballot Wax

B. E. Link Cons?,
322.7029

Mn1.ULo
NEW Concrete Buildings, all
sIze's$2OIup. At Ill. 55 44.1.
4 Industrial Park 373006$

Financino AviMible
SancLlastlng

-

OUR RAILS ARE LOWER
I .tkcv.ew Nursing CinIer
9)91 Second SI.. Sanfàrd
322 6707
Plintlng&amp;

Pressure Clean(ng
Interior, eslenior, repairs,
painting or staining, spray or

brush, wallpaper, wailtex.
ing and teilured ce,iings.
Residential or commercial,
local references. No Job too
big or small, we handle them
all. Call, 3220071 or 333.1391.

Painting
Ifeslman Painting I Repairs.
Quality work. Free lit. Disc.
to Seniors. 134 $490. Refer.
'House Painter lit Class Wurt'.
rei..onable price's. IS years
rap Kenneth 14011 37? 3259
anytime alter S
Professional Paintl'-Ca.
tenor lnterl,2r. RemodelIng.
Lic..Ins. Free 1st 1. III 3417
.

Mobile Homes, Houses, Roots,
Trucks, Trailer, Etc. Portable

Complete Home Repairs I
Remodeling, Painting, room

Masonry

•..IurslngCenter

Pressure Cleaning

Remodeling

Al Lawn Care
All Phases. Top Quality
Low prices. Roy $319433

L.itI1e.wanI ads bring big, big

_____________________________

.

Closed Office, must sell IBM
typewriters, Model C, from $99
up. 147.4172.

Carson Lawn Service

Painting, Roofing, Carpentry
Lic. Bonded 4. Guaranteed
_______

specialty. 25 yts. Isp. $69 $542
_____________________________

EpIiW4

Tree Service, call Right.Way

CENTRAL FLORIDA HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

GET THOSE LUXURY ITEMS
FORAFRACTIONOF THEIR

Surge brakes, $3500. After 4
332.1341.

3225791

For a Professional and reliable

Hanging. Textured Ceilings. S.
0. Balint, 323.4837, 322 8665.
Jim's Home Improvements
Housepalnting, plumbing, patIo
work, carpentry. 2$ Yrs. Eip.

Newur repair, leaky showerso'Jr

PIANO-Upright antique piano
Asking ssoo. Call 323
1552
Excellent COrd

Right.Way Tree Service

Remodeling I. kepair, Dry Wish.

Classified Ad Call a friendly
ad taker at 372 P611 or 531 9993.

23' TROJAN Cabin cruiserNew fioal.on tandem trailer.

.

perience. Insured &amp; bonded.
327 119$

Free eslImates..322..41$S

CallAft. 6.3391220

ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
Don't Despair Or Pull Your Hair
-Use AWnI Ad. 337.2411 or
*31 '93.

DOS HOME IMPROVEMENTS
Carpentry, etc. I? Yrs. Exp.

CUSTOM WORK
Reasonable
Rates.
Free
Estimate. Call Early A. M. s,.,
Eve 323 154$ or (305) 29$ 3261.

________________________

,9-M,sil'*rchandise
______

LAWN £ GARDEN CARE
Free estimates. 10 yrs. cx

-

Make room ,n your alt,c, garage.
Sell idle items with a

D... •

Pkin*lng

Lawn&amp; Garden
Service

TRI.ANOEL LAWN SERVICE
SERVICE WITH CARE
PHONE 323-7444

Home Improvement

Animal Haven Boarding $.
Grooming Kennels. Therm,
Controlled Heat. Off Floor
Sleeping Boxes. We cater to
your pets. 322.5752.

Wallpaper hang,ng servicv.

-today. Fret Est. 322.4183

Handyman. Retired, Will fix
almost anything in the home.
323 2071.

Boarding &amp;Groonng

____________________
35 Hp. Motor,Mercury
GoodCondition

________________________________
-

LARGE TREE INSTALLLR

Hoiilyinan

TOWER'S BEAUTY SALON
FORMERLY Harriett's Beauty
Nook. 519 E. 1st St , 322 5712

54-Garage Sales

Landscaping

hrs. 831.5735.

Beauty Care

I

Landscaping, Old Lawns Re
placed. 365 5501.

Cypress MJICh

Furniture R.fIAISlIiI*
_________________________

Aluminum Application Service,
Alumn. &amp; vinyl siding, sotfit.
screen rooms, windows, doors
gutters, 3)9 5754 eves

Pa-1441. After hrs. 169 1005.

Top Quality Mulch delivered to
home or business. 35 Yds. 533
1.80 Call Dan 32)7726.

IF TIllS IS THE DAY to buy a
new car, see today's Classified
ads for best buys.

MILLERS

SAVE ENERGY I DOLLAR'SI
BaIt &amp; Blown. PRONTO IN.
SULATION CO. 323.4113or $34.
1221 Fret Estimate's.

Driveways, Patios, Walks, etc.
Quaiitywork.NOjobtOOsmall.
Low prices. Free Est. Eves.
aft. 6 Tom 3225270.

Chris will service AC's, retrig,
freezers, water coolers, misc,
Call 323 6727.

Good Used TV's, $25 I up
Ph.3220332
24l9OrlandoDr.
___________________________
TV repo 19" Zenith. Sold orlO.

IMMN. QUALITY OPERATION
9 yrs e'p Patios, Driveways.
etc Wayne Beal 32? 1)21,.

Palnting&amp;

Insulation

Concrete V*wic

Larry L. Grimm &amp; Associates
307 E. 1st Street
dnTQrg,I- ,.
J4J'YVIO
_____________________________

Walnut Cabinet. Warranty.

Yard Sale: Friday and Satur.
day. 2000 S. Park Ave. Airless
sprayer,
clothes,
paint
cosmetics, furniture, Etc.

$311101

Case lot $30. 305-3394051.

1969 Datsun S W, A C. new tires,
and engine reworked, $550.
323 728$ atter 2 p.m.

7LA-Mopsth

..
.
oorrnu:.ncj your

!.UILL)Ir.0
RLC
30.11' 33.987. 40.72 $6,748,
48.96 59,9)1. 80.150 539,780
Call today 331 16.17

'72 Opal Rally. Good Condition,
$1100 or best offer. See at 203
Hays Dr. 372 7902 alt. 6 p.m.

1971 HONDA 550.1 cyl.
1(1)350 Honda
Call .122 5769

___________________________

-. ,-

1721

HONDA. $916360
Runs Good. $430
322 1713 Call atter 5.00

Antiques, Modern Furniture,
Sterling Silver, Oriental Rugs,
Diamonds
3732501
(ridgesAnti,lueS

61-Building Materials
_______

'74 CHEVY VEGA Hatchback.
Auto, Air, PS, good sticker.
good tires, no rust. 5993. 831

78-Motorcycles

"old, Silver, CoinS, Jewelry, non
ferrous metals, KoKoMo Tool
Co. 918 W. 1st St. 323.1100.
OPEN
SAT. 9A.M. TO 1PM.
___________________

.

1969 MERCURY I Dr. Sedan. I
owner, new inside &amp; out. V.0.
auto, PS. PB. good sticker.
cold air, $795. $31 1221.

BUY JUNK CARS &amp; TRUCKS
From $1010 $50 or more
Call 322.1624, 327 4160

________

Altamonte springs.

Brown rock, sand, cement.
Grease traps, dry wells
Window sills, Iintells.blocks
Precast steps, patio stone
Miracle Concrete Co.
322-5751
309 Elm Ave.

310S.anfordAve.

Top Dollar Paid for Junk &amp; Used
cars. trucks &amp; heavy equip.
ment. 327.5990.

-

driveloacter Leave

311.315E. FIRST ST.
332.5637
_______________________________
Dinette set, I chairs. Beautiful
Oval glass table. Chairs,
plexgIass. Used 3 months.
Cost $750, Sell $350. 831 5253.

purses, shoes, Suitcases, craft

Vinyl Rainsults $3.99 Eaci

NICE Large 3 Bdrm, upstairs
Apt. $400. Includes all utilities.
Inquire downstairs. tI9
French A,v. Vince or Gene
before 5pm Afterlp.rn. 373
1100,

It's like pennies from heaven
when you sell "Don't Needs"
with a want ad.
___________________________

-

,..... ......,

'74OLDS CUTLASS Push button
window, Air. PS, AT I. other
extras, $75 Mo. No money
down. Applications by phone.
339.9100 or $344405.

77-Junk Cars Removed

-

Used Iwheel

.

%AAVERICK '73, 2 Dr.. 6 Cyl.,
auto, radio, yeliow 8. black.
Looks &amp; runs like new. 51.595
or offer. 131.3239.

TIRES- 2 700xIS 4 ply nylon,
like new. Mounted on rimS W
tubes, $50. 831.1324.

BEF.F CALVES Weaned heif ens.
bulls steers $170 up. Cows 8.
slaughter beet Delivery avail.
1904) 719 4155.

,

CALL ANYTIME

Efficiencies. I &amp; 7 Bdrm Apts.
Shown by app*. Call 3731340.

67-Li
vestock. Poultry
_______________________

message at 859 8560.

r',rt,
. tL

'WILSON.MAIER FURNITURE

-

and Up Call Richard at 339.
910') or 834 4605.

has probe. Originally $619,
balance $391, $19 montt.iy.
339 $316

EMERGE NCY
ART SALE

CALL 323-5714

574.1040

.

1975 Honda Civic Wagon
Very Good Cond. $1000
323 4532

REBUILT BATTERIES $1600

______

________

more onl,'cres Pius or minus.
5,5,5%.

$200.2 Bdrm, $225 Mo. 1st, last,
security.

Saturday. April 1$, 10AM
Partial Listing
30 Farm traitors, 2 handcocl. 292
elevated scrapers, 9 12 yards.
17) OMC engines Wabco 666
grader 1972 Ford F 700 LWB
Chassis Cab new engine. Leroi
$05 CFM compressor. Atlas
Copco 170 (FM deisel corn
pressor Casel50track loading
shovel Massey 133 Tractor
Iitted forktitt Lancer side
loader torklift 3 1970 Ford
School Buses 19') Rio Car
bage trucks 1959 Brocicway 10
ton dump Bush hogs flail
Scraper
box.
mower
cultivator. etc. etc Also Misc.
Items
Consignment Accepted Daily
Hwy 92 Daytona Beach,
901 255 8311
-_

Table, 4 chairs I hutch, 5799.
United FurnIture Sale 331 7288

3O-Mscellaneous for Sale

Houses, ster'4 flat, pend.
Fenced, security ligP.ts and

ePona, Attractive homes.
Neat, clean. No pets. I Bdrm,

Licensed Practical Nurse. 120.
shift. Full or part time, San.,

2Mares
Reasonable
322 7972
___________________________

-

Headboard, $399. Dining Room

We pay cash for 1st 0. 2nd
mortgages. Ray Legg, Lic.
Mortgage Broker, 1104 E.
Robinson, 2*2.1279.

BEST MOBILE HOME BUY IN
NORTH SEMINOLE. I 3
Berm, 2 lath 12 Sdrm, 2 lath.
Kitchens equipped. 3 Green

v.ly Furnished house con
venient Delary location.

51-A--Furniture

MORE, front &amp; rear BR's.
GREGORY MOBILE HOMES
3$LOrlandoDr.
323.5200
VAIFHAFinancing
______________________
47-Real Estate Wanted

47-A-Mortgages BougtW
&amp;Sold

Living Rm. Established area.
Only 530.9W 535,000.

-

1975 SInger Futura Fully auto,
repossessed, used very short
time. Original $593, abl. 518$ or
$21 ma. Agent 339-1316.

See our beauliful new BROAD.

We buy equity In Houses,
apartments, vacant land and
IN.
Acreage. • LUCKY
VESTMENTS, P. 0. Box 2500.
Sanford, FIa. 32771.

Ct. 323.6570.

-

950 Merc. Cougar XR 7, fully
loaded. Auto. AC AM FM,
moon root, like new $7800
373 3117

76-Auto Parts

Equipment Auction

New Singer Bedroom Set.
Dresser, Mirror, Chest,

FHA &amp; VA BUYERS. HAVE
YOU SEEN THIS HOME?
Low, low dawn on this 3 Berm
hems in Pinecrest. lacks up to
beautiful wooded Oaks. Only

32-Houses Furnished

-

42-Wb1le Homes

Investor
Buying
Income
Property. Principals only. No
brokers .Algrean, Box 1943
Winter Park, Fl. 32793.

EXCELLENT CASH TO MORT.
GAGE on this 3 Bdrrn home.
Gigantic fenced yard, whole
house like brand now. Terrific
country setting. 539,500.

51-Household GOOdS

6 CHEVY IMPALA I Dr. Exc
Coed . $1900 or best offer. 322
0537 between 5 I 6 p m

$977 ROCKW000 motor home
77', sleeps 1. self.containad,
awning I root air 20.315 mites.
Call 322.1775 afler 3 p.m.

66-Horses

-

'DAY TbNA AU TO AUCT ION
,Hwy 97, I mile west of Speed
way, Daytona Beach, will holc
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Wednesday at I p.m. It't
theonly one in Florida. You se
the reserved price. Call 904
2551311 for further details,....

1977 Prowler Travel TraIler, 24
ft. Inquire at Lot 26. $1700.
Lk. Monroe Pk., Delary Fl.

BABY COCKAf IlLS
Pieds &amp; Grays
Call 322 0014

62A-Farm Equipment
..

WANTED

Sm, Family Sm, Screened
porch, spilt plan, Fenced yard.
Pinecrest area $44,900.

532.505.

Berm, 1½ bath. Nice yard. $310
+ sac. dep. 1413 W. Vrnlencia

CONVENIENCE STORE..
CLERK - Good company
benefits. Apply Handy Way.'
Food Stores, Sanford area.

Day or Night

COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE.
Minutes from downtown
Sanford. 3 Berm, I
iath,

or Sent: 2 Berm, 1 Bath. New
Duplex, Sanford area. All
appliances, inside utility,
washerdryer hookup. Availa
ble April 0. Call Orlando 456.
4144 or 295.4710 Evenings,

-

-

DRAGLINE FOR SALE -Made
by American. Will handle' or
1
yard bucket. Hew GM
Diesel engine I new cables.
(305) 322 1313. Ask for Tony,

-

WEKIVA RIVER ACCESS
This 2 Bdrm, 1', bath mobile
home sits on an acre. Lots of
trees I screened porch, tool
525,000. P.S. You may be able
to assume a 10% interest rate
mortgage with a sizeable
balance.

STEMPER AGENCY

pets. $335.00. 2535 Ridgewood
Day 2950072. Eve. 395.1773.

for Sale

DON'T STORE IT, SELL IT with
a low cost Classified Ad.

Reg. Real Estate Irsker
311.1670
lv. 323 2954
NEW LISTING

5 ACRE PARCELS. Geneva and
Osteen. Call for information.

all 5.1. New? BR, 2 bath, kit.
ppI., carpeted, drapes. No

LPN. Pull trme 3.11 P.M. SP,4f7.
Apply Lakeview Nursin9
Cpnter. 919 E. 2nd St.

50-MIscellaneous

'73 Lincoln Mark IV. Clean. Best
otter. Lowery Organ. Best
offer. Load of Flea Market
Merchandise, Make offer. 331
4457 Aft. $0 am.

rvrnunea

31A-DJplexes

-

Sell those u%1fu1.i.Ianger_
needed items with a Herald
Classified Ad. Call 3273611 or
$31,993.

OSTEEN. Small 2 Berm home.
Newly remodeled, new appli.
ances. Fenced, Lot 77x159.S.
$16,500. 3230417.

CLOSE TO 1.4. 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath
MODlIe flome, with
guest cottage, and large lot.
115,000.

leposit. 3225009.

.'...'UTTO

"

il'i''IiIitUl

32376)3 322 5333

iO$W..Commercial St. 32761;3

erg. yard. $200 mo. $75

Get full exposure - take Ihai
"For Sale" sign down I run a
classified ad. Call 332.7611 or
131-9993.
- -

fI. 32217.

Inc.

513.., 32? 0779

B,droom, porch, near town,

Prepare meals, and care for
invalid lady in Sanford
residence. Call 3O5322.42I

'5

':

2544 S. French Ave. 3fl4'3I

The Time Tesled Firm
Reg. Real Estate Broker

CitIzens. 31$ Palmetto Ave., J.
Cowan. No phone calls.

Wanted: Mature Lady to live ln2'
Days and Nights a week,.

Doberman Puppies. 01k. &amp; tan, 5
wIts., 1.65 106 Sunland Dr
Sunland Estates, S.antord.

•:-1

-

75-Recreational

,.

'

ALLFLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
'

,rnlstSed apartments for án1or

.

.

"4.

_______________________

Si. cjo/zni lea

Furnished

\

,,

'69 VW Ex Cond Custom in
tenor Many new items Great
Mileage. $15003223461

ror Estate Commercial &amp;
14,'s'ctenh,al Auctions &amp; Ap
Praisais Call Dell's Auction
" 3670

COCKER SPANIEL. Buff, 1 yr.
old, Goad for Adults Pay for
ad. 32) 7913

I

,•,,,,,,

-

Park Ave. townhouse, 2.)',, kit.
equip, CHA. $31,500 FIRM.
Owner 3220903 aft. 5:30 p.m
or anytime wkend.

hood,.543,900,339.55l0.

O?flfifltf

._

.il

Quick Sale or Lease. Sanford
Area, by owner. 2 Berm. I
Bath, Kitchen equip., Washer.
Dryer, Nice quiet neighbor.

J

WN'T

Ford I bra, 1979. 2 Door Autu
Air. etc 9500 ml Like ne..
11495. 831 $233

___________________

4 Month old Male Beagle. Tn
Color. Beautiful features Call
305 668 0710 Aft. 5 pm

\

(
!

\PECriN'.'

321475

1'..

'
-

Lic. Real Estate Broker
7440 Sanford Ave.

REAL ESTATE
REALTOR. 332 749M

7..

..

-.

BATEMAN REALTY

'6SPONITAC FIREBIRD
56100 mo No money down
3237531

NAT ION AL 0 UARD AR MOR V
2109 S Ferncreek Ave . Orlando
1 BIk S. of Michigan St
OVER 40 DEALERS For Info
Call 191 2066
J &amp;M. PROMOTIONS

Rabbits for Sale
Young and Healthy, $1 each
3)91507

WELL
ii'..'E 141M

.......'

80-Autos for Sale

ANTIQUE SHOW

4.1 with extra lot. 544.500.

.

72-Auction

Free AdmisSiOfl&amp; Parking
SAT ,APR 119a.m. 109p.m.
SUN. APR 19. 10am 106pm

65-Pets.Suppiies

.

Thursday, April 14, 1911-lB

ORLANDO'SONLYMONTHLY

LAWNMOWER SALE. 3 Star
Special. Available nowhere
but Western Auto, Sanford.

10 Acres. Terms $31,000.

CaliBart

c)ous 1 BORM APT., $175
Mature Persons. June
orzig Realty, REALTOR 327

Aluminum Installer for screened
room, carports, and poql enclosures. Some ext erience..
-.
required. 323.4673.

YELLOW SAND
Call Clark IHirt 3 7580

'

Ilk Duplex, 2 BR. Ea. $39,900.

Evening Herald, Sanford, Fl.

FILL DIRTS. TOP SOIL

-

Close in 2.1 with cottage. $39,900.

FINEST NEIGHBORHOOD. 3
BR, 2 Bath. CB Home with
Large Open Space and Family
Rm You'll enioy the charm.
$39,900

dults. No pets. 3229253.
-

$64,900.

.

ciOusModern2Bdrm., 1 bath
t. Carpeted, kit. equipped,
PIIA. Near hospital 1, lake.

Office Assistant, and Girl
Friday. Accurate typinQ
required, working with writer'
and publisher. Call for Ap.
pointment. 3236071.

3227972

BROWSE AND SAVE .
It's
easy and fun . . The Want Ad
Way

posit. Broker.Owner
322-5992

','.:

Owner fInancing. 4.2 with Pool.

BINGO! L&amp; Lll(E WE
W"P 7)iINN THAT A
5LEtPY Pc2 //(( &lt; COT A SiPNI6HT F'HPsHTCM
I'IP4 P.. PERN..L
TEMPLE7W CaJLP
APPEARANCE ON
TI/RN INTO A MAN'
T1'i E LATE,
EAT/N' T4çER7 HE
LATE 6W'
PuT 41OREHOIE.5/N
MYaO7iFJ TH4S' CHEAP
cO1/P'fSOT74 SLIP
1
I
j-'.
/NTaAIYOTn'ER
:'
•'

Ilaily Furn. 1 Bdrm, rural
cation, $175 mo. 1st &amp; last +

LPN 11-7ShIft

RN. Full time I4.shift. Sanford
Nursing and Convaliscent
Canter. Contact Mrs. Brown
322S544.

KICK THE STORAGE HABIT.

REALTORS
1612W. 1st St.

joiside 7 Bdrms. Master's

•'

S Acres, Wooded. Terms. $22,500.

Ii

62-LaWfl.Gardefl

-

Osteen '. of an Acre. Terms.
$14,000

25. 2 Bdrm 5300. Adults, No
tp 377.1591 Orlando.

with Major Hoopla

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

41-Houses

SM, Washer, Dryer I Pool,

Mm. 55 wpm, handt9.
TYPIST
phone orders. Shorthand '.:
plus. Medical, pension and
profit sharing. United Solvents
323.1100.
.,

.-

OIL SLES .L CSOMLI
( 3 )5u,in,A.I(AvSc,m,.,)$,
\.....'M•IA(UW*mfflaI) (\P!IOLPUI.G&amp;,IA$D
IN.)4
sN A-I (AIQiSWS)

- -

Apartments
U,dur,shed

-.

-

322-2611
______________
Eilhth Grade - Michael
Whelchel, Pamela Williams,
RATES
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
Charles Burgess, Diana
socailno
tim................
Croslyn, Ken Lake, Mark
HOURS
cons.cuttv. times. .50cC lIne
Hibbard, Rodniquiz
censecutivi times .......42c
I;OO A.M. - 5:30 P.M.
Alexander, Matthew Hibbard,
MONDAY titru FRIDAY 1Ic.ns.cuttv. times .37cC line
James Sapp
SATURDAY 9. Noon
$2.10 Minimum
___________
SPECIAL RECOGNITION his wife.
3 LInes Minimum
NOTICE OF ACTION
LIST
DEADI.INES
TO: DAVID, PHILLIPS
Sixth Grade - Susan Flake,
Address unknown
Avenue, Sanford, Florida. The
Noon The Dotj fBefore PublicQtion
Keith Redwine, David Bruce,
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an names and addresses of the per.
action for adoption of a female sonal representative and the
Candi Carroll
minor child, Lesley Ann Murphy, personal representative's attorney
Sundo - Noon FridQy
Seventh Grade - Bernard has
been filed by Stuart Blair are set forth below.
____________________________
Rouse, Marvette Christopher, Murphy and Kathy Steadman
All interested personS are
David Joiner, Wayne Robey Murphy, his wife, in which you are required to file with this court. ___________________________
alleged to be the nalural falher of WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF
Eighth Grade - Cassandra saidchild,andyouarerequiredto
I$-lIp nd_
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
4.,flab
Barnes
serve a copy of your written THIS NOTICE; (1) all claims __________________________
AVON REPRESENTATIVES
SPECIAL EDUCATION defenses, if any, to it on Harris against the estate and (2) any
L.oneiyChristlafl Singles
Ball, attorney for petitioners, objection by an interested person
Sanford Territories available.
HONOR ROLL
Meet Christian singles In your
whose address Is 531 Edward Ball to whom notice was mailed that
644.3079 cellect 4-555.5795.
area. Write Southern Christian
Seventh Grade Building, Jacksonville, Florida challenges the validity of the will,
Box 1123
Club,
P.O.
Singles
Brodenick Collins, Vimnses 32202 on or before May 19. 191L the qualifications of the personal
Summerville, SC 29413 or call
andfiletheoriginalwiththeClerk representative,
or
venue,
Chapman, Stacey Webb, of
i.s.rn.sso 24 hrs.
LET US
this Court either before service
______________________________
of the court.
Towanna Young, David on petitioners attorney or Im jurisdiction
ALL CLAIMS AND OB
MAKE IT HAPPEN
Taylor, Tammy Bunk, mediately thereafter; otherwise a .IECTIONS NOT SO FILED WILL WHY BE LONELY? Write"Get
A Mate" Dating Service. All'
and
final
judgment
of BE FOREVER BARRED.
default
Camellia Holden
P.O. Box 6071, Clear.
JUST FOR YOU
adoption of said child v.111 be en
Publication of this Notice has
w,ter, Fl. 3351$.
Eighth Grade - Shanta tered against you, the relief begun
____________________________
on April 16, $911.
MANAGER TRAINEE
prayed for in the petition for
Beasley
Personal Representative;
COMPAT.A.DATE
Supervision background. Will
adoption.
Gunn W. Seawell
LAKEVIEW MIDDLE
Take 1 minute to listen to
learn all phases. Excellent
'WITNESS my hand and the seal
960 Seminole Avenue
recorded m.ssage-1$03.I1t.
SCHOOL
opportunity for right person.
of this Court on April $4,
Altamonte Springs, Florida
9553.9151 or write Compat.A.
$200 wk. to start.
(SEAL)
SIXTh GRADE
3270)
Date P.O. Box 1123 Sum.
Arthur H. Beckwith, Jr.
Attorney for Personal
A HONOR ROLL - Karen
merville, S.C. 29413.
CLERK TYPIST
As Clerk of the Court
Representative:
__________________________
E. Barley, Rebecca S.
Accurate typing, bubbly per.
By: Eleanor F. Buratto
Benjamin T. Shuman
LONELY? New singles FIa.
sonaiity. Busy phones, DOE.
Edwards, Susan K. Morris,
As Deputy Clerk
1500 W. Colonial Drive
mag. 5$ + tax; SSSM(16) Box
Tonja D. Simpson, Kenneth P. PubliSh Apr. 16, 23, 20 1. May 7, Orlando, Florida 321k
NO.
Boynton,
FL
33135.
WARRANTY CLERK
DFH$7 Telephone; (305) $43 7552
l9tl
____________________________
Tumin
Prefer exp. but will train.
IN THI CIRCUIT COURT FOR Publish April 16, 23. 1951
B HONOR ROLL - Mat- SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA DEHIl
Sweetheart for a boss.. Out.
Meet MANY single, divorced,
standing Co. $160 wk to start.
widowed, and separated Men
thew D. Albert, Valanle E. PROBATE DIVISION
A
PUBLIC
NOTICE
OF
and Women by Advertising
G. File Number St.16O.CP
Barnes,
Manda
ROOFERS
HEARING TO CONSIDER THE
with pictures and details about
IN RE:IS1'ATE OF
Bessner, Nikki 14. Byrd, MARY K. SAMANICH,
Be on top. Learn money making
OF
AN
ORDINANCE
ADOPTION
you in the weekly newsletter
5's' THE CITY OF SANFORD,
trade. $110 &amp; up.
Single Scene. WOMEN AD.
Stephanie Carbonara, Core)
Deceased
FLORIDA.
VERTISE
FREE.
Man
pay
NOTICEOPADMINISTRATION
A. Cohen, Joseph D. Coral,
WAREHOUSE
Notk i hereby given that a
The administration of the estate
$2500 br 10 weeks. 305273William Griffin, Kelly K. of Mary K. Samanich deceased,
Forklift exp. Grow with co. $150
Pub Hearing will be held t the
4121 anytime or P.O. Box
+
Hysell, Deborah 14. Jackson, File Number Sl.160-CP, is pending Commission Room in the City Hall
ie Aioma Branch, FL 32793.
in the City of Sanford, Florida, at
Angela M. Larsen, Rhonda C. in the Circuit Court for Seminole 7:00
__________________________
o'clock P.M. on April 27, 1951,
LABORERS
County,
Florida
Probate
Lewis, John J. Luidwig, Carol Division, the address of which is to consider the adoption of an Lonely? Writs "Bringing peopz.
Several needed immediately.
together Dating Servicel" All
Hurry in today. DOE
Michael Seminole County Courthouse, Post ordinance by the City of Sanford,
A.
Lykens,
as follows:
lies I. Senior Citizens. P.O.
McCnskill, Jennifer Office Box C, Sanford, Florida Florida,
ORDINANCE NO. $514
MEAT CUTTER
$651, Winter Haven, E&amp;a. 33110.
32771. The names and addresses of
McCarron, Lisa D. McGrotha, the
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
Fully qualified with hanging
personal representative and
________________
beet I counter sales. Up to
William McMurrer, Mark A. the personal representative's OF SANFORD, FLORIDA, TO
6-Child Care
ANNEX WITHIN THE COR.
57.50 hr.
attorney
are
set
forth
below.
Nelson, Joshua M. Nyros,
PORATE
AREA
OF
THE
CITY
All interested persons are
James Orioles, Beverly A. required
OF SANFORD, FLORIDA, UPON Areyoua*-ingMother?f so,
REPAIR PERSON
to file with this court,
Exp. with commercial reirl.
Perry, Michael A. Renaud, WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF ADOPTION OF SAID ORcall anqut our Unique hiId
DINANCE. A PORTION OF THAT
geration units. DOE
Care FacJllty. 333.1A24
Cathleen M. Rusho, David A. THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF CERTAIN PROPERTY LYING _______________________
THIS NOTICE: (1) all claims
Russell, Shannon K. Smith, against the estate and
BETWEEN 25TH STREET (CR
Loving care for your child by
(2) any
grandmotherly lady, in my
Wendell Springfield Jr., objection by an interested person MA) AND SARITA STREET AND
AA..A.
BETWEEN GRENADA AVENUE
home. 373.1359.
Christine Stickney, Lori D. to whom notice was mailed that AND MARSHALL AVENUE;
EMPLOYMENT
challenges the validity of th. will,
PROPERTY
Swain, Barbara Tniplett, the
SAID
BEING
*
Excellent child care facility.
quaiificiations of the personal
Discounts avail, if you qualIfy.
David M. Thplett, Franklin representative, venue, or SITUATEO IN SEMINOLE
'i917 French Ave.
COUNTY, FLORIDA, IN AC.
Call 323-5490.
Whigham
jurisdiction of the court.
COR DANCE
WITH
THE
________________________
323-5176
ALL
CLAIMS
AND
OB.
SEVENTH GRADE
VOLUNTARY ANNEXATION CLASSIFIED ADS MOVE.
JECTIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
PROVISIONS
OF
SECTION
Corner
of 2OtI and French
A HONOR ROLL - Jenrold BE FOREVER BARRED.
MOUNTAINS of merchandise
171.044, FLORIDA STAT UTE$;
Your future our concern
every
day.
V. Hauck, Michelle A. Poe,
Publication of this Notice has
P 14 0 V I 0 I N 0
F0R
MicheleQuarterman, Todd D. begun on April 9, 1911.
Will babysit children, any ai,e,
SEVERABILITY,
CONFLICTS
A low
The Best Buy In Town
Personal Representative:
during I. after school hrs. Also
AND EFFECTIVE DATE.
Smith
cost Classified Ad.
Alexandra S. Warden
during the summer. Call 323.
WHEREAS, therehas been filed
B. HONOR ROLL - Julie
1436 Hickory Drive
5344.
with the City Clerk of the City of
Canvasser. Door to door. Ex.
Maitland, Florida 3275$
Archambault, Melonie
Sanford, Florida, a petition con
penanced preferred, but not
Child
Care my Home. Fenced
Attorney for Personal
taming the names of the property
Barrington, Holmes T. Representative:
necessary. Excellent com
Mon. thru Fri.
area.
ay
owners In the area described
Bennett, Kimberly Carpenter, John T. Skolfield, Jr.
mission schedule plus gas
Voyager st. ott Providence.
hereinafter requesting aPh6aation
allowance. 661.47$?.
Reasonable 574.M.
Post
Office
Box
1510
Thomas Chernetaky, Linda A.
to the corporate area of the City of,
____________________________
Park, Florida 32790
sanford, Florida, and r.questin
Cushing, Loni E. Daub, Shawn Winter
The sooner you place your
Child care In my home for pre.
Telephone: (305) 647.1576
be included therein; and,
classified ad, the sooner you
school ages. Weekdays only.
M. Epperson, Tina E. Foakey, Publish Apr. 9, 16, 1951 DEH 35 toWHEREAS,
the Property Ap.
will get results.
Previous child care counselor.
Suzanne K. Freltag, Melvina
praiser of Seminole County,
FICTITIOUS NAME
Ravenna Pk. 3335034
Florida,
having
that
__________________________
certifIed
TECHNICIAN
TRAINEE for
Gano, Lori A. Gilbert, Julie K.
Notice is hereby given that we
are two property owners in
cutting &amp; polishing optical
Hafner, PhIllip 0. Hagan, are engaged In business at 2529 S. there
.A-HSaIIh&amp;SNUIY,
crystals. Delicate IprecisIon
Ave., Sanford, Fla., the area to be annexed, and that
Kristen K. Jarand, Michael Magnolia
said property owners have signed
___________________________
hendwork. Apply in person
Seminole County, Florida under
the
petition
for
annexation;
and,
Quantum Terhnology 2620
Korgan, Steven M. Lane, the fictitious name of CON.
DM50
WHEREAS, it h5 been deter.
Iroquois Ave., Sanford.
Dineen Ocehipinti, Paul A. TEMPORARY TILE, and that
mined
that
the
property
described
100% our. solvent-lA oz. $19.95
Intend to register said name with
Phillip, Jean M. Prokoach, the Clerk of the Circuit Court, hereinafter is reasonably compact
COSMETOLOGIST WANTED
us $1.SO TP&amp;H. Ditributsd
with 3 yrs. exp. 0. following
Donna M. Reynolds, Pamela Seminole County, Florida in ac and contiguous to the corporate
Nu.Rem.
We
ship
by
of the City of Sanford,
Call 323.7530.
anywhere.130$)373 4321.
Robinson, Kristin Rueckert, cordance with the provisions of the area
Florida, and it
been further ____________________________
Fictitious Name Statutes, To-Wit:
Production
Expedltor with
Sheri 14. Sargent, Debra Section 563.09 Florida Statutes determined that the annexation of
SHAKLEE HERB TABLETS
experience in Fiberglass or
said property will not result in the
Sensakovic, Michele 14. 1957
WE DELIVER
Boats helpful. This Is an Entry
creation of an enclave; and,
Sig. Larry Eliwick
3237492
Simmons, Nicks S. Smith,
level lob with advancement for
WHEREAS,
the
City
of
Sanford,
____________________________
Brenda Elswick
the right man. Cobia Boat
Curtis R. Snow, Robert W. Publish: April 2, 9, 16, 33, $9S$
Florida, is in a position to provide
Spring Fever Sale
Company Silver Lake Rd.,
municipal services to th. property
Stefen, Kenneth W. Sterner, DEH$0
Watkins Products.
Sanford, Fla.
described herein, and the City
333.59
FICTITIOUS NAME
Pamela R. Stowe, Kathy K.
________________________
Notice Is hereby given that I am Commission of the City of Sanford,
QualIty Control with experience
Tinker, Jill White, Kenneth engaged In business at Post Office Florida, deems it in the best in.
in Fiberglass or Boat building
9-Good TtflgS to Eat
terest of the City to accept said
Williams, Peter Williams
Box 312 Lake Monroe, Florida,
helpful. This is a good op.
PetitIon and to annex said
Seminole
County,
Florida,
under
EIGHTH GRADE
portunily with good benefits
property
the licitious name of LAKE
for the hard worker. Cobia
A HONOR ROLL - Anne MONROE
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT STRAWBERRIES
SPORTS, and that I
Boat Company, Silver Lake
Edwards, Maude E. Intend to register said name with ENACTED BY THE PEOPLE OF
STRAWSERRI ES
Rd., Sanford, Fla.
THE CITY OF SANFORD,
the Clerk of the Circuit Court,
Swaggerty
STRAWBERRIES
FLORIDA:
in ac•
Fiberglass Mold maintenance
B HONOR ROLL - Edward Seminole County, Florida
SECTION 1: That the following
Why go to Leesburg
cordance with the provisions of
and Builders needed •t once.
A. Allen, Erika K. Arndt, the Fictitious Name Statutes, To. described property situated in or Plant City when you
Good pay for good producers.
Seminole County, Florida, be and
Rebecca Baker, Jay Barker, Wit: Section 545.09 Florida thesameisherebyannexedtoand .an buy them here? 3
Cobia Boat Company, Silver
Lake Rd., Sanford.
Mellanie J. Boyd, Chanel Statutes
made a part of the City of Sanford, pInts $1.25, $5.50 flat.
Sig. Manley L. Rutho
Florida, pursuant to the voluntary
Brown, Jennifer Canal, Publish Apr. 9, $6, 73. 30. 1911
Boat Riggers. Steady Work.
annexation provisions of Section CabbSVS War Gou On
Goad pay and benefits for real
Nitoaha M. Coleman, Kern Jo 01)410
171.044, Florida Statutes:
H or more for $1.00
workers. Cobia Boat Corn.
FICTITIOUS NAME
Collins, Kimberly Courson,
Lots II and 12, Bock 10,
pany, Silver Lake Rd..
Notice
is
hereby
given
that
we
DREAMWOLD,
as
recorded
in
Lettuce
3
for
$1
.00
Michael D. Cushing, Celeste are engaged in business at
Sanford.
647 SR
Plat Book3andl. Pageslo and 99,
Dando, Scott Dodd, David H. 127 Longwood, FL 32750, Seminole Seminole Counfy, Florida.
All Purpose Potatoes 5
PHONE CALL STARTS A
Eiland, Demetnius Eudell, County, Florida under 'the tic.
The above described property is
lbs. 89c; 10 lbs. $1.69 ONE
CLASSIFIED AD ON ITS
further described as a portion of
Donald Evans, Karen S. tltioui name of LONGW000 that
RESULTFuL, END. THE
PRINTING, and that we intend to
certain property lying bet.
NUMBER 5 337.3;
Flateau, Troy S. Glasaman, register said name with the Clerk ween 25th Street (CR MA) and We Take Food Stamps
Fran Gordon, Janet 1. Hauck, of the Circuit Court, Seminole Santa Street and between LeRoy Farms, SR 46 &amp;
WAITS E5S-Experieed.
Florida in accordance
Grenada Avenue and Marshall
Upsala Rd., Sanford
Valerie 14. Hartung, Rita C. County,
Days 322-0330. Eves. 130-1770.
with the provisions of the Fic.
Avenue; said property beIng
___________________________
Hemsath, Michael Henley, titious Name Statutes, ToWit: situated in Seminole County,
Ask for John.
Graham T. Hughes, Gena M. Section 563.09 Florida Statutes Florida.
SECURITY GUARDS
SECTtON 7: That upon this
Humphrey, Stanley M. 1957.51g. Marian Sperber
Applications being taken for
ordinance becoming effective the
qualified individuals seeking
T.,is Instruction U.S.P,T.A.
Kondracki, John A. LaBree,
Beverly .1. Campbell
property owners and any resident
Cerified. Group or Private
full time employment. Must be
Lonnie 14. Lawson, Beth A. Publish April $6, 73, 30, 1. May 7, on the property described herein
willIng to work any hours,
Insane. ChIldren a specIalty.
shall
be
entitled
to
all
the
rights
1951
Mackey, John Makslmowtcz,
dependable. Able to qualify for
Ooiig. Maliczowskl. 323.2309.
DEN 05
and privileges and immunities as
_______
State Guard License and have
Diane M. Martin, Brenda L
are
from
lime
to
time
granted
to
____________________________
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
own transportati and phone,
Michaux, Bruce A. Monies, THE EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL residents and property owners of
Interested applicants Can
theCityofSanford,Flonida,andas
Legal Notice
Brian Moore, Philip 14. Ogden, CIRCUIT IN AND FOR are
apply at Pinkerton's 3203
further provided in Chapter
SEMINOLE
COUNTY,
FLORIDA
Lawton Rd., Suite 150 Amherst
Aileen Patterson' Kevin E.
Ill, Florida Statutes, and shall
CASE NO. IO.)643.CA.2$.E
Building, Orlando, Fla. Equal
FICTITIOUS PAMS
further be subject to the respon.
Perry, Christina Reynolds, IN R1* The Adoption f
Opportunity Employer-,
Notice is hereby given that lam
sibilitiesof
residence
or
owner-ship
Stephanie Roberts, Joshua DELIVERANCE LYNN BLAN. as may from time 10 tIme be .'aa
In business at $220 WssI
BEAUTICIAN
'obbin, Ria A. Singleton, CETL..
determined by tne governing SR. 134. Forest CIty, Fl. 32711,
Achild.
Temporary for 7 weeks in May.
authority of the City of Sanford, Seminole County, Florida, under
Tammy Shrout, Nathan Skop,
Call 3227530
NOTICE OF ACTION
Florida, and the provisions of said the fICtitious name of HAIR E*.
Anita Smith, Strickland
TO: PATRICIA WEBB
TENDER, and that I Intend to
Chapter 171, FlorIda Statutes.
COOKS
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that a
Smith, Heather 14. Wallace,
SECTION 3: If any section or register said name with the Clerk
Petition
for
Adoption
has
been
of
the
FAST
Circuit
Court,
portion
FOOD
of
a
section
of
this
Or.
Seminole
OPERATION
Judy White
fifed by Vickie and Larry Biancctt,
-

Forklift Operators. Lumber exp.
only. Fuller Builders Supply.
Gary Wygant 373.3617.

SAN DILA$TIN.(1..
DAVIS WELDING
333.479, SANFORD

Screen Roome
Vnd Repairs
Custom
Screen
Rms.
Rescreening. Low Prices. New
Window screen, glass 4.
window repair. 377.1741

Tax &amp;Accountlng
Services
For Businesses and Individuals.
Elizabeth A. Grindle C.P.A.
3371145

TopSoil
TOP SOIL for yards,
Potting Soil
Call after 1p.m. 3224102
Tree Service

TrI'Covnty Tree Service.
Trimming, removal, clearing,
hauling. Free 1st. 3229410.
HARPER'S TREE SERVICE
Trimming, removing I Land
scaping. Free Eat. 3230713

S

�.1

.3
BLON DIE

$5-Evening Herald, Sanford, El.

U I

WHV PE'OU
WEIGHING
YOUR5EL

Th

ursday,

April 16, ml

by Chic

Young

_________________________________

SOWI4AT 1OM0
HAPPENS
WITHOUT THE

501 CAN FEEL

-

DICTIONARY11

__

47 Cowboys
nickname
5OHomeof
1 Ghastly
Adam
9 Guy
13 Annoying one 51 Roll of

Answer to Previous Puzzle
____
oIvivH 0Y1M1$ !.fMfi
LIIIAH
tOt ++i
EYI
_

ACROSS

.

14 Emil.

r
.~

__
AjTJT

tol

Ring

In Ears

ing

Hd
eim

1_f

LJ

postage

Has Vaned

Causes

author
stamps
1.jt1LIsi
15 Lions share 52 Furnish with
A1
OICTIO4AR1
16 Applaud
weapons
I
My
DEAR DR. IAMB
!
17 Bofors long 53 Force
2
in
his
husband
has
had
ringing
L
t
18 Part of to be 54 Whoopeel
I Oj_J
19 Author
________________________ _______________________
56 Preposition
ears for a long time. The
1 1Zj1 ________
Fleming
57 Says anew
doctor told him that his high
20 Eggs on
N
P1IjN
HjAiIts
blood pressure was the cause
21 Bench
DOWN
A
11
4111
list
of it. He has been taking blood
22 Ocean liner
41 Dina .
2! Apple (Fr.)
(abbr.)
1 Chew
pressure medicine for years
22 Painful
23 Hardship
2 Hawaiian
42 Renovate
and his pressure is normal
dance
23 Communists 43
deity
with medication. But he still
31
Esaus
count
3
Lubricates
24 Object of
'PrIiVi
_____
44
_____
______ ______________________________
i.
,
ringing in his ears. Could
4 Pronoun
32 Cuisine
Fight
26
worship
__
Toward
the
45
_____________________
5
More
33
Smallaword
you
please tell us what causes
Pierce
with
BEETLE BAILEY
by Mort Walker
25
ornamental
34 Campus
center
the horns
this and what medicines can
Mate's kin
6
building
in The Ear. Others who want
26 Actor Grant 46 Lacquered
COMES
ALWAYS
WE
T.4Et4
TRYIrG 70 COI4VsJCE
We.1ATG
help?
WE
TAKES
TWEM
WE
PLAYS
35 Anger
Z
(comp. wd) 27 Skewered
It
is
this
issue can send 7b cents
metalware
DEAR READER
ONTWEIR 8AC)(ANDGIGN5
'TUEGUTOREENLJST
7 Lookover
FOR AWALK,
38WeIl(Sp)
SARGE
dish
47
Strained
8
In
the
know
37
Slimly
true
that
high
blood
pressure
with
a long, stamped, selft TELLS TI-1EM I SENSE OF Lip FOR ANOTHER
DOING?
28 On grand
9 Former
e
ears
addressed
envelope for it to
39
Shakes
48
Indian
tribe
can
cause
ringing
in
th
PATRIOTISM
scale
ALL TI-IE
Russian ruler
40 Part of the
49 Christ's
Kong 29 Smell
(tinnitus). ut there are me, in care of th is newspaper,
ADVANTAGES / AND GOOD
10
psyche
30Wants(sl)
many causes of tinnitus P.O. Box 1551, Radio City
birthday
41 U.boat(abbr.) 11 Lilygenus
OF ARM_...L FELLOW32 Forst
bad
5
I
Coach
42
Red-breasted
12
Gives
besides high blood pressure Station, New York, NY 10019,
SNIP
LIFE...
38 Relatives
review
bird
Some people have a hearing
.
*
;
55 Note of
e, *
and
many people who have
46 Avoirdupois 20 Entertainment 39 Streamlet
Guido's
scale
high
blood
pressure
do
not
loss
and are unaware of it.
(Val.)
group (abbr.)
weight
That loss, which can be
have tinnitus.
10 I II 12
9
8
7
4
5 6
3
1
2
Your doctor is a family detected with test in g, may be
I
an important factor in
NI
14
0
13
the tinnitus.
evidently,
since
he
is
treating
causing
Pau
DEAR DR. LAMB A good
your
husband's
blood
iT
16
iipressure. Ask him to refer friend, 22 years old, had an
by Art Sansom
____________
THE BORN LOSER
your husband to a specialist in operation for the removal of
20
19
18
_______________
____________________________
ear,
nose and throat diseases cancerous testicles. I realize
,. (.J4,,%J
I
jjQJ .rt,4O ,&amp;J2\
for
further
evaluation of his he will not be able to father
REALIZL
22
21
any children. I have two
r
tinnitus.
CTA9(
________________
Tinnitus can be caused by questions: 1) Will he be able
28
27 28 29 30
23 24 25
t.
I I

I

rk
:

ill
I

0

-,

R

I

'

73rd

Year,

No. 204-Friday, April 17, 1981-

Evening Herald-( US PS 481.280)-Price 20 Cents

r1Ida 32771

-

0 £

-

'

Dr.
Lamb

_____

!

____

___________________
__________
__

___

__

__
______________

_________________

I. -

H

-

Cox

.

O$

_

rnMSELFJ

.•.

:

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:
.

p".

..

______

~

____________

-

_____

.
•

.

.

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-

-

-

[..

--

;

(CCP ALL
114 TIME,

__

________

-.--'

HURRY-Me."

/

.0.01

(H

________

3 )

I

-

LIST
`EMl0JWLPJA'?

-

-

-

-

3

.

--

-

-

.

38

- - - 42 43 44 45
by Bob Montana

HE wASQOThZEJ
WHEN HEJ
P/
_____

KNOW.

-

I

-

_

_______

50
53
- - - 58
-

-

-

-

-

39

,

ever

be from

wax

in

I

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by Howie Schneider

A OJFLI(T

546 W~E 7PAT
______IM
________
_______
.

2"

.;:e

(4

-

-

-.

______
______

C..

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by Ed Sullivan

______
HE6 EITHER AN 1

'"OR THE
EXCEPTIONALLY
REINCARNATION
TALENTEP I CFRT.ARNUMI'

-

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-

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-

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,

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'EATh rrs NICE 10 wv SOME -THIN

travel, luck, resources, whom you're involved.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
possible pitfalls and career
s are all If your ears are tingling a bit
for th e coming mon th
oday it could be because
discussed in your Astro- t
Graphwhichbeginswithyour associates are saying nice
things a bout you. You ma y
birthday. Mail $1 for each
hear of it later.

NEVER

CHANGE
______

There's a possibility it may suggestions and refine them

t

be

_____
r

L/ 1, I/

-

I

'b
L

Lr

amount

WIN

AT

ji

by Bob Tha yes

ACPCODIN6 TO ''*4
$.ATE$T pog.,.
ST

....

4.16.81

NORTH

.

I

'0

i.

I

play.

A slightlydevious South
leads his eig t of spades in the
hope that I Wes holds ace
and one spade, he will duck
and give South 3 chance to get
in two quick trump leads.
A bridge-playing South
realizes that here s no one
holding a gun to his head to
force him to lead a trump at
that time. He notes that t here
is a strong possibilit that dia.
monds are brea ing 5-2
against him and that his

Sou th
4+

"!
:

.
r:

remaining hi diamond can

order to discard that bothersome diamond. Then he goes
after trumps and scores his
rubber.
Of course. hearts might

~
4

break 7-1. In that case. late is

spades nd no one else can (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN,)

by Leonard Starr

_____

______

.

EE6PECTEt PERHAIE, UT NEY ..
HOT UlE. I'VE
, THAT/
SOMEHOW PEJ I
I
MEN MUCH
HOW
YOU________
T'_L I
ATPERSOWAL
ANNE!
KELATIOtOIF5______
'_
REALLY- i. I

by T. K. Ryan

TUMBLEWEEDS,,

OUR -

MAY I
OVER

H I GH

INThS1

SAVINGS

CETIFIC41'S?

C5l 4

____

______

b0N' frr1t)

pilot ;uject designed to ease overcrowding at the Seminole
Q

by

I PC1c. PiCS. PIC
P1'uij
FLOM.
PICKJP4
ON
Mt.
______ _________________
!_._yr_________
______
It
_____

ft.L Ut
(443O.
______

________

WON

_____

Craig L"ge"

-

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_____

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____
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_________

Be

Put

To

Work

This

Weekend

If the experiment with weekend prisoners proves succesafuL
"These are generally not the most affluent people In the "Having them inside once is a good way to get their attentin," Steve Sounders, jail administrator, said the program could be
expanded so that "maybe 10-15" trustees could be used to
world," he said."If we weigh them down with any more fines, according to Chief Deputy Sheriff Duane Harrell. "Givs! them
cell
and
the
vast
majority
will
want
perform
various types of work during the normal Mondayin
a
what
it's
like
taste
of
a
It."
to
cell
rather
than
pay
sit
in
a
many may choose
Friday work week.
to work."
The proposal was shelved,
While the only incentive for weekenders would be to avoid
Leffler also said that the key to the program's success is
on subsequent weekends, work program participants will
spending their first Saturday and Sunday behind bars.

defender.

being locked up, trustees (minimum security prisoners) could
proper supervision. "You must make sure those participating
not report to the jail, but will instead go straight to their
qualify
for what is known as 'good time' off, up to 11 days per
report for work and do the job assigned. U you don't, some of
s work and go home.
assigned job site, put in a full day'
of
their sentence, Saunders said.
them will just lay down Slid 5leP."
"They could do any number of things," Polk said. "They month
The ultimate step, suggested by Glenn, would be to use in.
Altamonte Springs city fathers am apparently Willing to could work for the parks and recreation folks cutting grass,

__

...

-_

-

-

___

.

Could

trimming hedges, repairing fences. They could do custodial mates in road gangs to cut highway rtghts.of-way, resurface
Glenn, Sheriff John Polk, and Chief Seminole Circuit Judge take the chance and have already requested some of
lay drainage pipe, and do other
county's prison workers. But Glenn, anticipating the
- Kenneth Leffler, it appears the proposal is now reality. The
work, clerical duties, routine maintenance, or ii they had a and widen roads, pick up litter,
hard
labor.
popularity of free prison labor with shOrt4Wfed public of
meeting was mainly a fine-tunIng session to Iron out final
specific skill, like welding, they could do t1at.
"The weekend and trustee aspects of the program wouldn't
ficlals, said she Will ask her colleagues at Tuesday's corn- details before the first group of Inmates begin to labor.
"I'm
a
firm
believer
In
the
work
ethic,"
Polk
said.
"These
require
supervision by law enforcement personnel," Saunders
mission meeting whether local municipalities should be
A strong backer of the work release concept, Leffler was of
said.
"This would."
people
should
be
doing
something
useful
instead
of
just
sitting
opinion
that
jail
officials
already
have
the
statutory
allowed
to
dip
into
the
convict
labor
pool.
the
revival
of the old chain gang? Saunders said no. "We
TV."
A
or
watching
up
space
the
In.
around
taking
no
be
aimed
at
Initially.
the
new
work
program
will
work
program,
and
they
need
authority to implement a
s the more practical consideration -the fact probably wouWn't use forced labor. We could make them do it,
Then there'
creasing numbers of persons serving prim sentences on
Icial
order
from
him.
However,
he
did
question
a
suggestion
six
weekends. Anywhere from to 50 prIsoners show up atthe jail that 14 county workers will be losing their federally-funded but we would be wiser taking only volunteers" to- minimize
that working inmates be req uired to help defray the cost of
securi ty risks, he said.
each weekend to do their time, and many end up sleeping on Comprehensive Employment and training Act (CETA) jobs at
their supervision,
But for now, that's not an issue, "We'll see how the first two
or
k
another
10
CETA
employees
to
w
e
mon
wi
th
th
th
mattresses on the floor because there isn't enough room In the the end of
Leffler pointed out that many prisoners are ordered to pay
with
their
final
day
June
30,
In
many
cases,
inmates
will
be
phases
work out," Glenn said, "and then discuss It again In a
226-bed
facility,
varying sums to the Victims Compensation Fund, the
year."
said.
th
la
ck,"
th.
sheriff
e
s
te
p
right
in
and
take
up
able
to
"s
As
proposed,
weekend
inmates
will
begin
their
sentence
by
of
their
public
services
probation and parole office, and for the

_______

t

____

County Jail and fill the labor gap caused by cutbacks in a
federal jobs program.
The idea of putting crooks to work instead of locking them up
has been on the drawing board for several weeks, but after' a
meeting Thursday between county commissioner Sandra

I

w

Inmates

Prisoners serving time on weekends could be performing
public work as early as next weekend as part of a two-p ronged

LANDING

Lake Mary Drops
Annexation

TODAY

Stops
Bunny '

By BRIITT SMITH
Herald aft Writer

\

FLETCHER'S

Harter predicted a growing shortage of
$17.7 billion, up 0.8 percent for the month
mortgage money as people continue to
Higher savings is considered a good was set at 1,284,000 units.
compared to a 0.7 percent rise in sign by Oconomists because It means
William Cox, the department's acting withdraw their savings, reducing the
February.
about the same more investment, which in turn makes chief economist, said the ups and dowrts amount available for other people to
Spending increased by
the economy more productive.
of the volatile housing industry have been borrow to finance home purchases.
percentage, adjusted for seasonally
by unusually good
Manufacturing wages and salaries exaggerated this year
Michael Sumichrast, chief economist
recurr ing patterns.
while
weather
that
has
changed
builders'
t'i'a 1,1
C
Its . .9 9. 9.i
for the Industry's largest trade group, the
But enough money was left over after grew by about half a pe r ce nt,
boost the savings rate wages and salaries for service industries plans.
National Association of Home Builders,
million is almost certain ford lab also hand les law enforcement spending to
More tha
Increase
in
conblamed high mortgage interest rates for
percenL
Government
pay
for
by
1.5
per.
grew
by
I
to be spent by the state over a two year laboratory tests for the entire Central slightly for March. It was up
the month went up 0.4 percent. Overall, struction, Cox said, "The trend Is clearly the seven-mon th downward trend in
cent.
pe riod to construct a new crime lab in Florida area.
At the same time, the Commerce personal income rose at about a 10 downward at this phase ...."
home sales.
Hattaway sa id th e f unding will also
Seminole County.
"I'm 99.9 percent positive that we'll be permit an expansion in the number of
able to get approval for the fu nd ing," personnel at the local laboratory from 39
State Rep. Robert Hattaway, D- to 50.
Disaster
t
The building to be constructed, he Last Bodies Recovered In
Altamonte Springs, sa id today from
- said, will measure 177 feet-by-In feet
REDSTONE, Cob. (UPI) - Rescue in Glenwood at 10:30 this morning," were found about 1,000 feet from the coroner's office at this point," mortician
Tallahassee.
"I've met with John Mills of and will be of single story design. teams early today recovered the last of Meyers said. "The coroner will meet "slope," the slanting shalt that leads to Dave Wagner said. "We will work with
the families to see what they want to do."
Gainesville, chairman of the House Parking will be provided for about 60 15 bodies of miners trapped more than a with them to tell them what happens the surface.
Vince Ayala, whose brother was
vehicles.
to
the
mine
and
Body
bags
were
sent
apcommittee considering the
mile underground by a methane gas next."
Also included in the budget request, explosion Wednesday.
Glenwood Springs is 30 miles north of the coroner was summoned late Thur. among those trapped, said he was told all
propriation," Hattaway said, "and Gov.
Bob Graham is recommending the Hattaway said, is $99,000 for special
Mary Meyers, personnel director for the Dutch Creek No. 1 mine, where the sday as mine officials said the chances 15 were dead.
equipment.
"All of them are dead, all 15,11 said
project as well.o'
the Mid-Continent Coal and Coke Co., bodies of nine miners were recovered were remote of finding any survivors.
No site has been selected for the new said the last body was found In the same early today at about the 6,000-foot level in
The bodies were to be transferred Ayala, who with other relatives had kept
Hattaway said the funding will facility.
temporarily to Farnham-Richardson a nightlong vigil around a fire in a rusty
general area as the others.
the mine.
probably come in two annual phases. The
Prospective sites mentioned are in the
drum on a gravel road leading to the
Mary Boland, spokeswoman for the Mortuary in Glenwood Springs.
"The families of the men have been
first sum - $445,300 - will be used for Lake Mary area off Rinehart Road and in told to ga ther at the St. Stephens Center m ine company, sa id five more bodies
"We will be the receiving unit for the mine.
land acquisition, plan preparation and the Sanford area.
getting the site ready, he said. The
Hattaway mid it was lucky Seminole
second sun -$4.64 million -will be used County's facility has been recommended
the second year for actual construction. for expansion.
Cop
"There's a real shortfall of money here
Th e Sa nford Crime Lab, located at the
Action Reports.................ZA
Sanford Airport, is the work horse of the (Ta llahassee). Many programs are being
s Hops
Around The Clock ..............4A
state, Hattaway said, and similar labs in cutout. We are zero-base budgeting with
Effort
LEBANON,
Pa.
(UPI)
Even
the
Bridge ........................10A
Tallahassee, Tampa and Jacksonville a small inflation factor," he said. of Appeals in Orlando.
abrupt
turnaround,
the
Lake
Court
In an
Easter Bunny can get a speed ing ticket. Calendar .................. ....5A
send their excess work there. The San- DONNA ESTES
on the appellate cou rt's
Depending
Mary
City
Council
Thursday
abandoned
SA-9A
The fuzzy white rabbit, known to her Classified Ads ..............
ruling,
Heathrow
could still end up in the
1,600effort
to
annex
the
its
fo
ur
-y
ea
r-old
.......................
IOA
friends as Janice Holsinger, was hopping Comics
acre
planned
Heathrow
development
city.
When
the
county
challenged the
1OA
....................
.
Crossword
at
nursery
between afternoon parties
Flies Into Trouble
DeLand
city's annexation effort - primarily on
west of the city.
coals in Lebanon, Pa., Wednesday when Dear Abby .....................5A
The move came as something of a the grounds that it would create illegal
Deaths ......................... 2A
her car was pulled over.
WWVILLE, N.Y. (UP!) - A DeLand through the Federal Aviation
surprise
after councilmen had enclaves, pockets of county- land
Officer Thomas Capeilo was unmoved Dr. Lamb ..................... IOA
man who flew a private plane to Lewis Administration Thursday, he discovered
repeatedly
insisted
they would continue surrounded by city property -a circuit
.......................
4A
Like
the
Editorial
by the bunny's insistence County landed in jail when the that it had been stolen in Florida in 1979.
to push for the Heathrow annexation over court upheld the county's position last
.................... 10A
that
"I'm
Horoscope
White
Rabbit
of
Wonderland
prospective buyer, a state trooper,
Hiliner was arrested and charged with
objections from Seminole County of- December. The city appealed.
Hospital ....................... 3A
late, I'm late," said Mrs. Holsinger.
discovered that the aircraft was stolen. first-degree possession of stolen
ficials and the Jeno Paulucci family,
If the district court overturns the lower
,,This is the first time I've ever Nation ......................... 3A
Richard Hilmer. 56, of DeLand, property. He was remanded to the county
principal
Heathrow
landowners.
......................
SA
court
ruling, the city's original Heathrow
bunny,"
Capello
said,
handing
Ourselves
arrested a
new the small Cessna into the Duflo jail after his arraignment before
Sports
......................
6A-7A
Despite
Thursday's
action,
Heathrow
annexation
will stand. If the ruling goes
her the $70 ticket.
Airport In New Bremen where he had Lowville Town Justice Robert King.
is not a dead issue. The city's initial the other way, "Heathrow stays in the
"I'll admit I was going faster than I Television ................ Leisure
hoped to sell the plane to State PGIlce Sgt. Hilmer was to appear In court again
annexation attempt of July 1977, which county and that's the end of it," said
Weather .......................2A
should ha ve," she said.
Monday for a bail hearing.
Gary Hopps of the Lowville barracks.
wound up in court after the county sued, Assistant County Attorney Robert
World
..........................
2A
"Never again."
is currently before the Fifth District McMillan.
The
plane
was
valued
at
$18,000.
But when Hopps checked the plane

County

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from spending $92.3 billion, the revised dropped a record 26.9 percent. The undoubtedly go down."

Man

be rutted. e then plays
dummy's ace-king of hearts it

THE MOHEY
-A140 A FELLOW WITH GHLY
ALL THAT MONEY YOU I VOE6H'T MATTER.
ONE LO CA14't FOOL.
PAIR OUT FOR THOE MY HEEPG ARE
AROUMP, NEE HAS TO
GREATLY
FEW'. MY OWE
FOLLOW-UP EXAMS
FAITH FUL TO THAT
TO ME
LINE FM LOVE OR HE
NOTHING If

More Money

Now Crime Lab In Seminole?

ace of clubs later along in the

Opening iead:•I0

'4$5 4-16

:

vin g
ment reported today.

from its facility at the Sanford Airport.

leads another diamond. East
ruffs and is going to make his

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)

that another has going.

,

Earning,

Thomas R. Harter, chief economist of
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Americans' Department revised February's figures percent compounded annual rate In
be thinking as he eyes come of the packages of chocolate covered
the Mortgage Bankers Association,
Realtors this personal income rose at about a 10 to reveal far more savings than March.
almonds being sold by the Seminole County Board of
The Commerce Department reported whose members finance about one out of
percent compounded annual rate in originally reported. Instead of the $75.8
March, and they continued to put more of billion originally found to be saved in Thursday that housing starts in March every fout homcs, said "The higher rate
Building Fund. The society needs a new home because it must move It in the bank, the Commerce Depart- February, Americans actually withheld rose by 5.8 percent. In February, it Is a quirk and the next month's levels will

portant is that you can come spot today at the right time to
Here is a very simple hand. against South and he Is
up with the right bright ideas benefit from something good South decides to open four doomed from the start.

0+11ND I'Aw 4ftIVA.

..

11

ans

Herald Photo by Tom Vincent

%

-

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-

CHOCOLATE TO THE RESCUE
'Mmmm! That's enough to give a pup a sweet tooth this Scmmole County humane Society Animal Shelter resident seems to

South is on lead and if Soul is
a simple soul, he promptly
leads out his king of trumps:
West takes is ace and

6"Ploo"Aft lus"Wopealue.

PA

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testosterone

and returns the four a t

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find a bid.
West opens the 10 of
diamonds, East takes his ace

can't.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
You're easily motivated today

to achieve them.

.

__

"

..

9RIDGE

ANNIE
FRANK AND ERNEST

..

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a hearing loss, an audiologist remains and he recovers he

goals, but what is more im- you might be in just the right

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_____________________________________________

such as stopping a medicine that case they would not want
testosterone
use
or cleaning out the ears or a to
suitable hearing aictif there is replacement. If one testicle

make sense of what others

within your means.

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corrected by some measure hormone that was present. In

Geminis. Someone with whom enjoyment, even where
off instantly serious objectives are con.
Vulnerable: Both
you will hit it
cerned. Whistle while you Dealer: South
e
picture.
may en te r th
w
North
CANCER (June 21-July 22) work.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
Shoparoundtoday for an item
p
p
p
you've been deba ting a bout 19) You have the ability today
take complicated ideas and
buying because of its price, to
not be offered at a figure to their root values. You can

-

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•___
______________________________
... .. . . -

plete Idea of all the'causes of their slaves.
LIBRA (SePt. 23-Oct. 23) tinnitus and what can be done If he needs and can take
With a little imagination, I am sending you The Health male hormones, he will have
should turn out to be
sex drive and characrewarding for you today, today you have the capability Letter number 110., Help for
to change something so that It Tinnitus - Noise or Ringing terlstIC3 Of any normal male.
ta ble for you as ____________________________________________________
with someone who has a is more profi
th
k na ck for business. Romance, well as for someone wi

easily today if you try to find

by Stoffel&amp; Hel mdahl

EAL7, HERR OOC.
HA

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to test and apply ti nnitus He will not change greatly
financially. Some of the sedds attitude in money matter. maskers before he can offer physically and may be able to
you've been sowing may be You'
re a tough guy to beat
perform sexually. The
a that service,
getting ready to yield a big when it comes to stretching
To give you a more com. Romans found thalL out with

think.
you and others as well.
CAPRICORN (Dec.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
g day 19) Progress will come more
is
could
be
an
excit
in
Th
4-I 4

BUGS BUNNY

2 I.

His

up for you this coming year because of your practical

Give vent to your artistic and are a bit outlandish, don't let
this discourage you from
creative urges today. You're
producing pursuing them. They're more
capable
of
realistic than your associates

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SAG1TARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Just because others
sure to specify birth date.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) may feel your present hopes

-

V"11

READER

.

can, through testing, often may well be entirely normal
mask the tinnitus sound. That sexually and even have
For Friday, April 17, 198 1
means the person must wear
YOUR BIRTHDAY
VIRGO
A mature male responds
(Aug. 23-Sept. 22) a finnitus masker if one is
April 17
Your financial aspects are indicated. The audiologist differently from an Immature

Radio
Astro-Gra
Box
City Station, N.Y. 10019. Be

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Things should begin to look greatly enhanced today must be trained and cleared male to a loss of both testicles.

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exposure to excessive loud effects will there be on the
noises or ear damage It can body due to the loss of hocbe part of hearing loss or it mones?
can

HOROSCOPE

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Immediate heal th Is th e first
41
- - - i ears.
Not even every ear, nose consideration. It makes a
- - - - and throat specialist's office great deal of difference what
48 49
46
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cases of tinnitus and offer the present. It is somewhat rare
52
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best available treatment, But to have both testicles inIt is your best bet. U it is volved, if that was actually
54
55
- - ._ - - - - - caused by a medicine it can be the case. But, it may be that to
control th e tumor the doctors
57
discontinued,
The treatment depends wanted to decrease the
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____________________________________________________
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

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____

rHE MADE_UP I THOUGHT HE WAS, BUT
AND HE WAS THEY BROKE UP
BETTY, DO YOU HEARNO
GOING
LAST WEEK'
I ¶HE'YRE GOING
LATEST ABOUT WHAT,
Ac'Y AGAIN' STEADY

-

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said th e only place left whe re cuts voided because It did.t-toUaw HUD
the differcneebween compcnaaticn
By DONNA EES
guidelines. The guidelines require that
Cox's
salarr
as
finance
director
and
a
can
be
made is in rsersonnei.
Herald Staff Writer
Linda Williams, deputy director of representatives of all six housing
Lewis Cox, who took over the reins of new salary yet to be set for his job as
for the per iod Housing Management, said probl ems pro jects be present when an election to
the Sanford Housing Authority (SI-IA) executive director
persist with organizing a tenants council the tenants council is held. This was not
last November on an interim basis, has between January and this month.
executive
director
to represent tenants in the housing the case and It has been difficult to get
Wilson's
salary
as
been named executive director of the
hold
projects.
She said the election of a representatives of all six housing
istO
$24,000
annually.
The
board
was
organization.
k
to
set
Cox's
tenants
council
held last October was projects toge th er for a new election, she
ee
e
a
special
meeting
next
w
The SHA Board of Directors, at th
said. Ms. Williams said three
suggestion of its chairman, Edward new salary
representatives from each housing
t~
budget of anitcipated subsidies from the ~,4 , T I
Blacksheare, chose Cox for the position
project must be elected by the tenants of
50
applicants
for
the
U.S.
Department
of
Housing
and
Urban
t'ç
Thursday night over
each
project. those elected represen'
"'
for
the
fiscal
year
(HUD)
Development
job.
tatives in turn elect officers of the
"After reviewing the applications, it beginning in October.
tenants council.
Cox told the board Thursday night the
appears the position could best be filled
by someone in-house," Blacksheare said. total of the subsidy to be requested for .
Cox said today the problem basically is
the 1981.82 fiscal year is $3,400, corn"I recommend Lewis Cox."
a neighborhood squabble between the
pared with $272,000 for the current fiscal
I
The appointment was unanimous.
five projects on the city's west side and
Cox, with SHA for slightly less than a year.
Redding Gardens on the east side.
.
He said, however, he was also told by
year, was originally hired as director in
Redding Gardens tenants, Ms.
charge of finance. He has been serving in HUD officials the allocation is likely to be
Williams said, have refused to par.
the dual role of finance director and cut by 15 percent in August.
ticipate.
.
1.
Cox said he has already cut from the
executive director since eight year
-4
The tenants council annually receives
veteran SHA executive director Thomas proposed budget the purchase of 75
"
funding
from SHA totaling $1,440 for
Wilson was dismissed by the board last refrigerators which were to be used as
,.
es
benefitting the projects. The
activi
ti
for
worn
out
appliances
in
replacemen
ts
November.
funds
cannot
be released, Cox said, until
the
six
Sanford
public
in
finance
director
was
apartments
Cox's salary as
the te na n ts ha ve the elections as required
$19,000 annually. The board agreed housin g projects. In addition cu ts have
by guidelines.
LEWIS COX
Thursday night it willapprove additional been made in maintenance activities.
,.,_,

~'

_____

-

Director

Authority

-

-

-

Housing
.--

__

__
____________

Named

__-

. -

-

-

-

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-

- - W. ... ..

.

I

-

-

--

4
--.._-

--

.-

-

--

--

--

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                    <text>SUNDAY EDITION
n r d Year. No. 2 5 9 -S u n d ay , Ju n e la, l» ll-S a n fo rd . F lo rid a 37771

Evening H erald -tU S P S 481-280)—Price 35 Cents

Frantic Grappling Fails
To Save Boy, 6, In Well
FRASCATI, Italy (U PI) - A
veteran cave explorer reached a slxyear-old boy trapped 200 (eet un­
derground In a narrow cartesian well
Saturday but was unable to pull him
out. He said the boy "really looked
dead to me" and cffidals held out
little hope the child would be brought
out alive.
Rescuers then lowered another
volunteer cave expert down the well.
Officials said they hoped to attach a
grappling device to the boy In an
attempt to hoist him to the surface.
Cave eiplorer Donato Caruso, 25,
dangled head first from a rope for two
hours and 17 minutes In a desperate
effort to free Alfredo Rampi, trapped
for more than two days and throe

nights, from the narrow well shaft
But his effort failed when a handcuff
clasped to the boy’s mud-covered
hand slipped off.
"He was rigid and really looked
dead to me,” Caruso said after he was
pulled from the well. "He didn't move
a centimeter."
Caruso said he wax willing to make
another try at bringing the boy out.
but workers nailed boards over the
opening of the well as a safety
precaution while officials decided on a
new course of action.
Alfredo's mother Francesca sobbed
uncontrollably when Caruso was
pulled out of the well without her son,
who has a heart condition. Italy's 64year-old president, Sandro Pertlnl,

who kept a nightlong vigil at the well,
sadly embraced the woman.
As Pertlnl left the scene, a group of
women surrounded his limousine
shouting,"Dead or alive, bring the boy
out Make more attempts because the
mother wants her son."
Officials said there probably would
be a further attempt later In the day to
bring up the boy. But P.eme fire chief
Elveno Pastorelll, the head of the
rescue operations, made It clear he
held little hopes Alfredo would be
brought alive.
"We have made every attempt
possible or Imaginable to bring him
out alive. They were all In vain...,"
Pastorelll told reporters.
Sis year old Alfredo, who tumbled

$373,000 For Sylvan Lake

TODAY

Seminole Gets Park Grants
HtftM

NEW ARRIVAL

6 OLD GLORY

I t T#m V i »k *« i

L tm p h ro n e S a y s a v a n k . a 1-y en r-o ld L aotian b o y ,
w ho a tte n d ! n u r s e r y sc h o o l a t th e S anford E a r ly
C hildhood C e n te r, c e le b r a te s h is firs t F la g D ay in
h is new c o u n try w ith f la g s d o n a te d by F la g s h ip
H ank. He a r r iv e d in S a n fo rd N ov. 7, 1980, w ith h is
p a re n ts H o u n ch an h a n d S o m c h a y a n d a s is te r a n d
b r o th r r . T he fa m ily p r e v io u s ly liv e d In a re fu g e e
c a m p In T h a ila n d . T h e fa m ily is sp o n so re d by P a t
S o u th w a rd o f L a k e M a r y .

Seminole County h is been swarded more than 6373,000
In state and federal grants (or the development cf the 120acre Sylvan Lake Park off lak e Markham Road, north of
Sylvan Lake Drive, U.5. Rep. Bill McCollum, RAltaraonte Springs, announced
The grants have been approved by the lan d and Water
Conservation Fund through the U J. Department of the
Interior. The funding Is to be administered through the
state Department of Natural Resources.
The funding Is to be used to develop a nature and out­
door recreation park far picnicking, nature study, fishing
and swimming beach area. County Administrator Roger
Neiswender said
Fourteen to fifteen acres of the park Is already being
developed by the county on the south side of the property
Into ball fields and active recreaUon facilities,
Neiswender said. In this portion of (ha park, land has been

cleared and a water plant Is being built to serve the
facility. The entire park Is now fenced In, he said.
The county's share of developing the facility is 6177,931,
McCollum said In announcing the grant award. Con­
struction on the nature portion will begin as soon as
contracts are signed with the federal agency, Neiswender
said.
This is the first time Seminole County has received
aland and water conservation program grant.
“I'm delighted to hear that those of us In Seminole
County will have a park like Sylvan Lake before long,"
McCollum said. "A recreation facility such as this will
&gt;tract visitors In our area and will Improve the quality of
life far everyone In the county."
Neiswender, when notified of the award, said. "I'm
delighted " — DONNA ESTES

Iraq Asks U.N. Sanctions Against Israel; Reagan Says No
UNITED NATIONS (UPI) - In the
first bitter exchanges of what Is expected
to be a long and stormy Security Council
debate, Iraq charged Israel attacked
Baghdad's nuclear reactor to cover up Its
own atomic arsenal. Israel said it
respouded to a

threat

ul

nuclear

obliteration" by Iraq.
The council, meeting Friday to con­
sider the Israeli attack on an Iraqi
nuclear reactor, heard six speakers In a
3W-hour debate before adjourning until
Saturday at 10 JO a.m . EDT.
Israeli Ambassador Yehuda Blum told
council president, Mexican Ambassador
Porftrto Minot lado, that Israel would
not be represented at Saturday's meeting
— the Jewish Sabbath.
Iraq and other Arab states went before
the 15-member round! tfl demand a total

boycott of Israel (or Its attack on the
Iraqi reactor.
President Reagan apposes any sanc­
tions by the United Nation against Ivael
(or that nation's bombing of an Iraqi
nuclear Installation
Reagan Is keeping tabs on an emotioncharged U.N. Security Council debate on
the bombing, and has given Ambassador
Jcanc Kirkpatrick her marching orders
on how to vote.
Iraqi F oreign M inister Saddoun
Hammadl u l d Israel had been
developing nuclear atomic weapons for
three decades with the help of the United
States and West Germany.
“The motives behind the the Zionist
campaign and their aggression against
Iraq Is first to cover Israel's possession

of nuclear weapons and second, and
more Importantly, their determination
not to allow the Arab nation to acquire
scientific or technical knowledge
necessary for their development and
progress," Hammadl told a packed
chamber.
He charged that Israel "contemplated
from the very beginning the possession of
nuclear weapons" to guarantee con­
tinued exile of Palestinian Arabs and to
"realize the Zionist dream of ‘Greater
IsrseL"'
Hammadl u ld in his 45-mlnute speech
that Israel had decided on the raid "after
the failure of Camp David," where the
E gyptlan-Israell
settlem ent was
negotiated.
The raid was “ a d ear Indication," he
u l d , of Is ra e l's determination "to

into the 200 foot deep well Wednesday,
had talking animatedly to rescuers
above ground, but five hours before
the latest rescue attempt he fell silent.
The slightly-built Caruso began his
headlong descent Into the cartesian
well just after dawn and stayed un­
derground longer than any of the five
previous men who had attempted the
fescue.
"He's cot moving and he's stiff,"
Caruso called to his helpers as he
reached the boy at the bottom of the
muddy well shaft.
Caruso said he clamped a policestyle handcuff on the boy's hand, but
the cuff slipped off when rescue
workers pulled an attached rope to
raise the child.

escalate their provocations with acts of
armed aggression prior to launching a
full-scale war to subjugate the Arab
countries and to Impose full Zionist
domination over the whole Middle East.”
Blum, In an Impassioned Jefense of
last Sunday's air strike, said: "In so
doing Israel was exercising Its Inherent
right of self-defense as understood In
general International law.
"A threat of nuclear obliteration was
being developed against Israel by Iraq,
one of Israel's most Implacable ene­
mies," Blum u ld .
"We were obliged to remove that
mortal danger," he u ld . “We did it
cleanly and effectively. The Middle East
has become a safer place."
Hours before the debate begsn,
Hammadl lobbeyed nonaligned members

of the council for support of a resolution
"with teeth" — meaning total trade and
diplomatic sanctions — to punish Israel
far the raid.
A White House aide made It clear
Friday that she would cast a veto for the
United SUtes on any U.N. resolution that
Imposes mandatory trade or diplomatic
sanctions against Israel.
The Security Council Saturday was to
resume Its emergency session on the
attack.
In the opening day of the session
Friday, Israel u ld the asu u lt was Its
only defense against the "threat of
nuclear obliteration." But Iraq called the
air strike a prelude to "(ullacalc w ar."
The session Is expected to last for
several days ax Arab nations press for a
total boycott of Israel In retaliation.

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'Vikings'
Host Picnic
More than 300 central Floridians
of Scandinavian descent are ex­
pected to descend on Sanford
Sunday for the Hagar Viking
Club's annual summer picnic.
Festivities will begin at II a.m.
with the raising of the maypole at
the lak e Golden recreation area
near the Sanford airport. The
opening flag ceremonies will be
held at 1:30 p.m. with dancing
around the maypole to follow.
A barbecue will highlight the
afternoon which will also see
games, dancing, and swimming.
Admission la 13 for adults,
children under It tree.

Murder In Seminole: M essy And Inelegant But Rare
By BRITT SMITH
Herald Staff Writer
This spring, Sanford has been preoccupied with murder,
obsessed by homicide. The Robert Preston Jr. murder trial,
the replaying of the Tiffany Benthall case, the sentencing to
the electric chair of brutal killer "Crazy Joe” Spaziaiw. have
all combined to put murder on our minds.
We quaver with fear that we may be a homicide victim, an
unlucky target of some psychopathic killer. If one judged from
conversations about town and from reading the papers,
Sanford would appear to be the murder capital of Florida. But
alas, far aQ our Illusions and civic pride, we have promoted
murder all out of proportion and have sought to out-star
Miami, No. 1 In per capita murder not only In the state, but In
the entire country last year.
Imagination, nurtured by fear, has outrun the facts.
Seminole County police recorded ■ total of only II murders In
the past two years, and judging from the pace so far this year,
1961 looks to be an S-hocnlcide year. That works out to about

...Sem inole homicides lack class,
panacha, and a distinguished cast of
characters. There hasn't been a killing
In recent memory that would have
bestirred Sherlock Holmes or been

worthy of the Insights of Miss Marple.
one klUU| every mooth-anda-half, not nearly enough to turn a
profit 'or local funeral establishments.
Comparatively uncommon though they are, Seminole
homicides are usually messy and Inelegant. The most likely
victim Is ■ black male, done In by a friend or relative In his
home. Killings, even those performed In affluent suburbs, are
grungy and sleazy affairs.
Considering, moreover, the advanced technology of killing,
our murderers operate In the Dark Ages, employing chiefly
handguns, knives, and blunt Instrununta. Any oaf can pall a
trigger. And where Is the cunning in wielding a knife or

baseball bat? There Isn't a Borgia In the lot, let alone a skilled
chemist or poisoner. They arc dullards, our killers, which
explains In large part why thiy are so readily caught.
Let's face U, Seminole homicides lack class, panache, and a
distinguished cast of characters. There hasn’t been a killing In
recent memory that would have bestirred Sherlock Holmes, or
been worthy of the Insights of Mias Marple.
Homicide In Florida Is a mug's game. The cops say, for
example, that the least likely victim to be murdered is an
Asian girl between I and 10 years of age living In a small town
In the Panhandle. Statistically, she Is safest ret a Thursday In
May.
For Tiffany Benthall, the figures just didn't add up The only
number that w u ap was hers. She lived on Sanford's west tide.
She w u black. She w u two. It w u a Wednesday In January
when the died
TUfany had gone for a walk near her wtsliide Sanford heme
with her mother's boyfriend — Bernard J . Beaton. Along the
way, Tiffany became unruly and Beaton, In a drunken rage,
struck the child In the stomach with a Judo chop, then tossed
her like a rag doll In the air. She landed on her head and died
four hours later at Seminole Memorial Hospital
It w u a sudden, senseless a tme. But then, to say police, are
most homicides In Seminole County.
The Benthall death has been the only slaying recorded In
Sanfurd ao far this year. In the unincorporated area of the
county, the number of murders stands at 1
The cops u y most of the killing goes on In Seminole’s
poorer sections, the city and county's underside the! business
h u bypassed and tourists don’t see. Slightly more than half of
the victims arc black, roughly five times their proportion In
the population
Said one Investigator who requested anonymity, "As long u
murder la confined to th o u we don’t care about" - meaning
lower-dasa blacks and whites — "nobody Is going to give a
damn. Nothing will be done about i t "
Then there are those like detective Sgt BUI Bernoiky of the
Sanford Police Department who are of the opinion that nothing
CAN te done about It
" It started with Cain and h u been going downhill ever
since," be u y s.
With a peaslmtwn born of 11 years au the force, Bcmosky
glumly claims “ttopis are always going to Ull. Gun control

wouldn't help. Technology Is such that we have college kids
building atomic bombs. Hell, you can build a gun out of a piece
of pipe."
Besides, Beroosky adds, "most of our killings are of the
P«««inn -ariety — wile kills husband, lover vs. lover, friends
killing each other over a quarter at the pool hall. The lack of a
gun Isn't going to be a major obstacle in a heai-of-the-momeni
situation. They'll always find something — a knife off the
kitchen tabic, a candlestick, a pool cue.” He sighs and repeats
himself, "People are always going to kill.
"The only thing we can be grateful for around here Is that we
don't have much drug-related murder Uke In Miami, or gang
fights with the Indiscriminate killing of paaaersby and
defenseless old folks hke In New York," Bemosky u y s.
Why do passions run so high.. . and ao deadly? Ccpa arto 'l
to sociological analysis and psychological

probing, but when pressed, most will eventually make tome
reference to the economy — how the poor and unskilled are
constantly frustrated by their failure to get ahead.
“Crime, even murder, la no big deal to them,” u y s one
detective. "Thev have very Uttle to lost."
Investigators also point out that Seminole Is still basically a
small rural Southern county where many folks park shotguns
and rifles In their pickups and cany pistols. Illegally, In bars.
In addition, there la a strong macho sensibility here, they u y ,
which adds to a tendency to respond to personal Insult with
quick violence.
It Is this very speed with which most murder is committid
that Is frequently the killer's undoing.
“Homicide Is not a rational thing," u y s sheriffs In­
vestigator U . George llagood "People don't stop and reflect
on what they’re doing. If they did we wouldn't have so much
killing. It's just pick up a gun or a knife and POW! you haves
corpse on your hands. Most of your killings occur at home or In
a bar where there a r t witnesses — friends, customers, neigh­
bors. Truly cold, calculated, premeditated murder* are rare
around here."
Hagood u y s homicide Is a relatively easy crime to solve,
usually much mors ao than u y burglary or robbery.
"Burglary la one of the meet common of serious crimes," he
u y s . "It's not ■ crime of passion such as most murders, but •
crime for profit The burglar commits his crime stealthily si
night, alone and not before witnesses. He usually doesn't know
his victim ”
Although a murder case might be generally easier to crack
than a break-in, the homicide gets much mors attention. The
reason Is morbidly simple, according to Benuaky.
"The public hi.- a romance with murder. What i k e i i u
precious u human life?'' he asks. “An auto accident can be
mors bizarre, but murder la the work of a depraved mind, of a
person who h u willfully and wantonly taken a human Ufa."
That's • "pretty heavy load to carry around," Bemosky
u y s , "and people often end up telling on themselves.
Sometime*, a murderer will tell somebody what they have
done in order to relieve tnemaehrss. Then, what you have to do
is find that person.''
Falling that, an appreciation (or minuia detail becomes the
detective's greatest caaeL "You can't dixregxrd anything,"

See MURDER, Pa(«t A

�■■■m m

i

1A— Evening Mtr»td,Jaii*ord. FI.

Sunday, Juwa 14,1W1

W ORLD
IN BRIEF
Irish Elect IRA Convict
To Seat In Parliament
DUBLIN, Inland (UPI) — Irish v otcn have elected one
of the nine IRA convicts who ran (or a Mat In Parliament,
and Prime Miniiter Chariee H augheyi government w u
going down to defeat u the (Inal ballot! were being counted
Saturday.
Another IRA priioner — a Mare prison hunger striker —
also w u heading (or a victory.
Pinal results lor Ireland'/Parliam ent w en due Saturday
lor Thursday’s general election, but Patrick Agnew, ser­
ving IS years in Belfast's Mate prison (or possessing ex­
plosives, topped the poll in winning one of (our seats at
stake in his native Louth county constitutenry near the
Northern Inland border.
Agnew la not on hunger strike, but hie election paraiicd
that of Bobby Sands, elected to the British Parliament in
April 23 days before he died of self-imposed starvation May
3, In the IRA's ca.npalgn to wrest political s ta tu from
Britain. Also like Sands, Agenw will not be sble to take his
seat because be Is a prisoner,
iiizc prisca hu.~4U *UtTut Jo* MtDowitU, serving 14
years for Unarms offenses, w u likely to win In the CavanMonaghan border district when counting, election ob­
servers said McDonnell Is In the 26th day of a "fast to
death” In the IRA's campaign to win political s ta tu from
Britain.

Israeli Plane Shot Down
DAMASCUS, Syria (UPI) - Syrian air defenses shot
down an liras!! rccccsalxsanct plane northeast of
Damascus, Damascys radio reported today.
Tlte Syrian military statement broadcast did not indicate
whether the plana w u manned or a pilotless remote-control
"drone.” The Syrians claim to have shot down six Israeli
pilotless “drones” since the start of the missile crista with
Israel In early May.

NATION
IN BRIEF
Pat Boone Singing Blues
Over Acne Cream Refunds
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Entertainer Pal Boone, who
hawked an acne cream for Its manufacturer, is now ringing
the bkiea —trying to get out from under a federal order that
could cost him big bucks.
Boone asked the Federal Trade Commission Friday to
drop the 1I7X order requiring him to make refunds to
customers ol tha cream he endorsed In radio, television and
print ads.
Boone appeared in ads for the mall order product, AcneStatin, during 1977. The FTC said Boone received about 23
cents for every bottle of the treatm ent sold
The agency alleged Boone and K arr Preventative Medi­
cal Products Inc., which made the product, falsely claimed
It could cure acne and w u effective In anti-bacterial treat­
ment of the condition.
Aa part of the settlement, the company w u to set up a
117),000 fund fur restitution to buyeri of the product Boone
w u ordered to contribute to the fund in an amount
leTmUng ilia ptmewis (rum the sales. No refunds have
been made yet, the ccmmlaslon said
Boone's petition said the order placed an unreasonable
burden on him because It Involved a requirement the
commissi on has never impoeed on another celebrity en­
dorser. He died the same reasoning In asking the com­
mission to drop a meant part of the order that require* him
to disclose In future advertising whether he h u a financial
interest In the product being sold.

U.S. Sub M eets Soviet Ship
BLOCK ISLAND, R.l. (UPI) — An American submarine
surfaced and took a close look at a Soviet spy ship cruising
in international waters off the New York coast, apparently
waiting to monitor the first Trident submarine sea trial
next weak.
A Polaris tub surfaced Friday about IS m llu off the coast
of Long Island, N.Y., and moved in on the Soviet vessel,
which w u spotted four days earlier in the area by com­
mercial fishermen.
The meeting took place outside UB. territorial waters
south of Block Island, R.I., and about 1} mile* east of
Montauk Point on Long Island.

Treason Trial For Bani-Sadr?
ANKARA, Turkey (UPI) — Iranian religious fun­
damentalists surrounded the office of embattled President
Abolhaaun Banl-Sadr, chanting slogans and demanding
that he be placed on trial (or treason, witnesses said.
Bani-Sadr reportedly Issued a statement Friday laying a
coup attempt was In the making and appealed to the Iranian
people (or support, but the report could not be confirmed.
Details of the message were not immediately available.
The demons tr ito n , supporters of the Islamic hard-liners
who control parliament, surrounded the Tehran office
building containing Banl-Sadr's office Friday. They
chanted Islamic slogans and called for a treason trial (or
the president, witnesses as Id.

Premier Warns Poles
WARSAW, Poland (UPI) - Premier Gen. Wojctech
Jsn aelsk i defended the tough Soviet warning letter sent to
Poland this week and vowed more vigoru action against
anti-Russian activity, uytng he wouldn't let "madmen” set
fire to “our home."
Jan in lsk l'a statements, which indicated ha wanted to
dampen anti-Soviet activity to avoid giving the Kremlin an
ex c u e to invade, came Friday in a session of Parliament in
which deputies also approved a major Cabinet shake up
prompted by the critical economic attution.
One deputy however, criticised the Soviet letter u being
"onesided" and Ignoring the strengths of the reform
movement The session was televised live a r r e a the naticn.

Shots Fired Near Queen
LONDON (UPI) — A man fired several "blank shots" a
few feet from Queen Elizabeth Saturday u she rode on
horseback at the traditional Trooping the Color ceremony
near Buckingham palace.
No one w u hurt and the nun w u dragged to the ground
and arc rated aa pcifce came naming from •!! directions.
Millions of television viewers wltreaaed the Incident
A police spokesman said several "blank shots" were fired
from what he described u a "good replica” pistol.
The queen's black hone shied briefly u It turned off the
Mall where the ceremony w u being held. The queen, a
practiced horsewoman, rode on apparently unperturbed.

Atlanta Stakeout Sloppy?
ATLANTA ( U P I)- T h e lucky break Investigators have
been seeking to crack the murders of a young blacks may
have come and gone, botched by a "sloppy" police stakeout
in which one of the officers reportedly fell asleep.
Authorities will not comment for the record on what
happened at the South Cobb Parkway bridge in the
predawn hours of May a . But they make it d e a r that the
events that brought Wayne Williams, a suspect in the case,
to their attention may make it difficult ever to bring any
charges against him.
"Sloppy police work," la the way one highly placed source
described events of that night by the Chattahoochee River.
“It wasn't a real smooth operation.”

Iowa Advised Money In Pot
DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI) — Leaders of a marijuana
reform iroup, noting that Iowa makes money from stalerun liquor stores, u y the stats should study the possibility
of also entering the marijuana business.
Judd Golden, legal director of the National Organisation
for Reform of Marijuana Lews, wrote to Gov. Robert D.
Rey preparing that a study should be made so (he state
might make money from marijuana rather than "wasting"
it on law enforcement efforts against pot distributors.
"Iowa enjoys a multi-million dollar annual profit” from
its state-run liquor stores. Golden wrote.
"R ather than w aits more money on marijuana law en­
forcement, I urge you to establish a blue ribbon' com­
mission to study the feasibility of establishing a licensing
and marketing program (or marijuana distribution in
Iowa."

Woman Burned Over Thawing
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A woman has filed suit against
the Cryonlcs Society of Cabfarnia for 110.} million for
allegedly (ailing to keep her father'* corpse frozen, as the
organisation had agreed to do.
Laura Coronal! claimed In a suit (Ued Friday that officials
of the now defunct society agreed to keep her father’s body
in cold storage until medical science found a way to bring
him back to life.
The society had used liquid nitrogen to freeze corpses
with the notion that they could be reanimated tn future
years and "cured” of whatever had caused their death*.
Mrs. C ornell said aha paid flldOO to society president
Robert Nelson to maintain the body of her father, Pedro
Ledesma. But In 1171 ah* discovered the body had been
“desecrated," the Superior Court suit charged.
The suit also claimed that Nelson knew the body w u not
bring preserved but did not tell her and threatened to stop
tha (reeling process If the woman (ailed to send him money.

2 Indicted In Extortion Try

Administration sources in Washington said the Soviet
ship w u apparently awaiting Wednesday's trail voyage of
(he USS Ohio, the nation's first mlaailpfiring Trident
submarine.

NEW HAVEN.tdbn. (UPI) — Two reputed underworld
figure* Indicted In an alleged conspiracy to extort money
through threats of violence against performers Wayne
Newton and Lola Falana are tree on bond today.

The tam e ship had been sitting off the Florida coast in
March during the space shuttle launch and w u forced out
of the a n a by Coast Guard cu tten , a Coast Guard
spokesman said.

Guido Penoi* and Frank Piccolo were arrested Friday on
charges handed up by a VS. District Court grand Jury
Investigating racketeering, drug trafficking and illegal
gambling.

...Murder In Seminole
I Continued from Page I A)
Hagood says. "You don't know where it*s going to fit Into the
puzzle until later.”
A matchbook, coffee cups, position of the body, location of
the crime scene, or the victim's lifestyle can be Just a few of the
crucial variables which m utt be fitted Into the murder
equation.
Hagood points out, for example, that it w u something u
seemingly Innocuous u a pubic hair found in a belt buckle
which led to the arrest and conviction earlier this week of
Robert Preston Jr. for the sevage slaying of an Altamonte
Springs convenience store clerk nearly three and a half years
ago.
Perhaps the toughest homicide for police to solve is one in
which drugs are somehow involved.
“No one wants to talk," explains sheriffs investigator Ron
Gilbert. "Anybody that knows anything about it is either doing
dope, selling It, smuggling, distributing. . . aQ of which ob­
viously is illegal, and they don't want to put their hides on the
line by cooperating."
Be that u It may, statistics say murder continues to be
solved more readily than any other type of serious crime. In
Seminole County, four out of five killings are cleared by arrest
within s week, and nine out of 10 are eventual!* ooirod,
generally through diligent police work, or luck, or both. A few
cases each year, however, remain unsolved, but never
forgotten. There is no statute of limitations on homicide.
Hagood is presently working on four such cases, but he
refuses to discuss them.
"1 bon t want we bad guys to know I’m after them,” he says.
"You can never teii when something will shake Lo o m ; someone
wanting to get even will fink on a killer, or maybe well arrest
some guy for burglary and he’ll give us information on a
murder hoping well given him a break.”
1
Bemotky is not so reticent about discussing hi* unsolved
homicides. He wants the bad guyi to know "I’m out there
looking.” Unsolved cases which occupy Bemosky's spare
momenta:
..
„ .
. ,
-Elizabeth Oliver Young, a 66-year-old retired school
teacher, waa found with her threat slit in the living room of her
home at 1016 Locuit Ave. There w u no sign of a struggle and
no evidence of burglary. She probably knew her attacker.
Date: July 4. 1976.
-Christine Cincotti, 24, a Sanford ‘street person,' was found
nude in a patch of weed* off W. 11th Street on July 12, 1976,

having been bludgeoned to death.
-Carolyn Perry. 22. another ’itreet person.' was found in
the same place roughly a year later on Aug. 22, 1977. She died
of multiple stab wounds.
-P a u l Hinson,*66,1910 Summerlin Ave., was discovered in
hi* home Nov. 29. 1979 by neighbors who had become con­
cerned after not aeelng him for several daya. Cause of death:
multiple gunshot wounds.
-George Hemadollar, 42, of Orlando, w u gunned down at
the Sanford Greyhound bus station June 77.197} while making
a telephone calL He w u shot u v eral times with a .22-caliber
pistol, a favorite weapon of organized crime assassins. That,

'People a n always going to kill. It
started with Cain and has been going
_______ downhill ever since."
combined with the (act that a large sum of money w u found in
Hemadollar'* Cadillac, led Investigators to surmise the
shooting w u a drug-related ‘hit,*
After reviewing his list, Bemosky paused to relect, "I never
realized how many people die akme. Most of these did.
Sometime* two nr three day* r u n before they're missed and
found. Murder is usually a very lonely crime. You're shot, you
fall, you bleed, you die.”
Such pensive musings are out of character for most cops
who, with practiced Indifference, have come to view corpses
not u people, but a* bodies wftNvit pcncnaBttca.
"It is difficult to treat a human form that once held life like a
tack of grain,” Bemosky uy*, "but you have to do It. You'd go
nuts otherwise."
Backsliding comes e u y , however. To appraise the room
whose four walls encompassed the life of an Individual who h u
died violently yields an impression Uke a sledgehammer, he
admits.
"You'll pull open a drawer and find a handful of paper dips,
a broken ballpoint pen or two, a crumpled photograph, or an
old letter.
"Yuu think, 'Is this the sum total of a person's existence?’
He's not here to u y , ‘No, I w u Important; 1 had feelings, I
loved, I w u loved, I laughed, I accomplished."’
Only his meager belongings remain to offer testimony to
what he w u and sometimes this testimony is too softly spoken
to convince us. Death Indeed is empty and lonely.

15 Years Probation Given
For Husband's Killing
By BRfTT SMITH
Herald Staff Writer
A 36-year-old wife and mother who admitted to killing her
husband last fall after he threatened to leave her for another
woman, will not go to Jail. She w u sentenced in Seminole
Circuit Court this week to 1} years probation.
Mary L McElroy, formerly of 431 Harney Drive, Geneva,
pleaded guilty March 9 to a charge of manslaughter tn con­
nection with the ihcollng of Frands McElroy In the reuple'a
home on O ct 21.
Mr*. McElroy. who now Uvea in West Palm Beach, could
have been sent to prison for up to 1} years. She has two teenage
sons.
Prior to sentencing, Mr*. McElroy told Judge Joseph Davta
Jr. that the did not recaU shooting her husband three times tn
the back wtih a 22-caliber rifle. She u td she remembered
Francis threatening to leave her for another woman and then

Fires
*

She w u accused of using a ruse to gain entry into the trailer
of Allred and Margeret Sumpter in order to pave the way for
two armed, hooded accomplice* who have never been caught.
The two figures exchanged gunfire with Alfred Sumpter
before fleeing the trailer. Nothing w u stolen and no one w u
wounded.
«

King, who stole 662,430 worth of merchandise in his Illegal
forays, could have received up to 60 yeari in prison. Al the
time of the offenses, he w u on probation for a prior home
burglary.

C ourts
*

In other court action, Anita Marie Amlotte, 14, of
Gainesville, w u sentenced to 74 y e a n in prison and ordered
to pay her public defender 11,200 in connection with a bizarre
Halloween night shootout between a Geneva couple and two
mysterious white-sheeted figures.
Amlotte w u convicted by e six-member Jury in midFebruary of armed burglary, shooting Into a dwelling, and
attempted murder in connection with the Oct. 31 Incident.

Judge Dominick Salfl sentenced Kevin King, 21, of
Altamonte Springs, to 114 months in prison, 1* months
probation and ordered him to pay a total of 64,000 tn restitution
for a series of nine residential burglaries committed in the
spring of last year.

Action Reports
*

long history of abusing his wife, particularly mentally.

Police

calling the Seminole County Sheriffs Office tar help.
A tape of that converse lion showed Mrs. McElroy uytng,
"I've Just shot my husband.”
She w u originally charged with second degree murder and.
If convicted, could have received life imprisonment. However,
Mrs. McElroy w u allowed to plead guilty to the leaser charge
of manslaughter alter two peychlatmti testified that she w u
temporarily insane at the time of the shooting.
II was alio revealed in court that Francis McElroy had a

In other sentencing!, Izel Martin. 21, of 117 Hughes Ave.,
Sanford, w u sentenced to five years in prison for hi* part in
the Sept. 13 robbery of 160 from the lU-Way OU Co., 2423 S.
French Ave.
Dale Patrick Glilan, 21, of 906 Cherokee Circle, Sanford, w u
placed on five years probation after being convicted in
February of burglary and grand theft in connection with the
Nov. 20 theft of a .22-caliber pistol from a car parked at the
Sanford Court Apartments.

AREA DEATHS
DONALD A ANDERSON
Donald J. Anderson, 74, of
Cypress, Calif, and formerly
of Sanford, died Tuesday. A
Florida resident since 1947, he
lived in Bram Towers before
moving to California four
months ago. He w u retired
from the Mid-Florida Gas Co.
where ha had been manager.
A veteran of World War II. he
terved In the 63rd Signal Co.
of the 13rd Infantry Division
He w u a member of the First
United Methodist Church of
Sanford.
Survivors include his
daughter, Nancy Allllama of

Cypress, Calif.; grand­
children, Craig, Christine and
Crystal; nieces, Ruth Stafford
of Like Monroe; Lorens Stooe
and Gene
Tuggle
of
Jacksonville; Lucille King of
Deerfield Beach; nephew
Jack S*ooe of Jacksonville
and sister-in-law, Ju lia
Anderson of Sanford.
A memorial service w u
scheduled (or 4 p.m .,
Saturday at F irst United
Methodist Church, Sanford.
The family h u requested that
no (lowers be sent but that
those wishing to may make
contribution to their favorite

charitie* In Mr. Anderson's
name. Burial w u
In
W oedlaw n
C e m e te ry ,
Orlando.

Briaaon Funeral Home In
charge.

FunTalNotlcfj

w a a a a . Mas. tv* a. IVA&amp; WEBER
Funeral M r y k n tor Mr* i . i •
Mr*. IvaB. Weber, 16, of 111
ex w tie e me st.
E. 2nd S I, Sanford, died
•rtw die* Thunder
ill be held at It t m.
Thursday evening. Born in
Menday at trevetw* In Oatieon
Lockport, N.Y., aha came to Memorial Sara mth Or. Vlrtll
L. Bryant Jr ettxia’ing Bruton
Sanford in 1991 and w u a
Funeral Hama In charge
m em ber of the F irst
Presbyterian Church.
Survivors
Includa
a HUNT MONUMENT ».0
N*Mf l » T H M PAtM
daughter, Mias Doris Weber
of Southhampton, N.Y.; a son,
Ph ))9 49|*
H arry Waber, Pampano
• All Tvptt M6rt«m»9l|
Beach; two grandchildren,,
9C»m»iti6 ini6«i««'
• Ar«ftf« M irtrrt *
five creat-grandchildren.

School Physicals Required

FLORENCE
D E N T U R E C L IN IC S , u :

N ow in
ORLANDO, FLA.
(305) 644-1753
D r. Jo h n R. P a rry , D .D .S. 8c A s s o c ia te s

Children entering Seminole County Schools for the first time
next fall in kindergarten and first grads or from oot ol itale
may obtain the physical required by state law at tha Seminob
County Migrant and Community Health Center at 214 S. Oak
Ave., Sanford.

KNOWLEDGE
AND EXPERIENCE

Parents may call 223-164} to make an appointment between I
a.m. and 3 p m., Monday through Friday.
If a child lias hau a physical examination since Jan. 1 of this
year, It will not be necessary to have another one to enter
school, according to Bill Scborr.berg, renter director. Parents
are urged to avoid the last minute rush and make ap­
pointments now, he laid.

K w riln j* I l c iu J d

tu se i e n a i

ENABLING US TO SERVE
m

OUR FAMILIES BETTER

Robert I. B rtu M . L F D
Sunday, June U , IM I-Vol 73. No U3
P . l ......... ....
tad Sunday. •icu*l Saturday by Tha
Marate. lac-. M N. F rear* * y* . taatar*./u. ZZTTl
Strata Clart Ftttaaa Pate al la*turd, Ftartda ZZZM
Hats* Dun&gt;tryi wuuk, 1141, Mutt*. M M , 4
Vuar, M J S . ty MaU. Watt t i l l , M n a . n a i l a
U M t i Vuar. U f.M

Brisson Funeral Home, P .A .
905 Laurel Ave. Sanford, FI. 322-2131

'A*

�Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Sundiy, June 16, I t lt — )A

Quarter-Penny Sales Tax Could Help Break Budget Deadlock
Every county's financial situation
has been worsened by the recent In­
creases in the homestead esem ptir.
that cut substantially Into proper*, tax
revenues and cuts In federal revenue
sharing that are part of President
Reagan’s drive to balance the federal
budget.
Ray Sitting, director of the Florida
League of Cities, says municipal
governments are getUng a raw deal
under the quarter-cent proposal, but
he’s not sure he can oppose the plan.
I ve got to decide whether an
Inequitable share of something is better
than nothing at all,” Sittlg said.
Dunn agrees that cities aren’t treated

(airly by the funding formula, but he
has a greater concern.
” 1 don’t think a quarter penny comes
anywhere dealing with a problem that
is serious now. but will become critical
later once the full Impact of federal
revenue sharing cuts is felt," the
Daytona Beach lawyer says.
"And I’m afraid the Legislature is
precluding itself, politically, from
coming up with a fair, more effective
solution later. We may be boxing
ourselves into the position of having
said, ‘we have solved local govern­
ments' problems and that’s it.."’
Serious local prison problems aren't
addressed by the q usrter-cent

proposal Graham recommended a 1390
million state bond issue to build and
expand local jails, but that proposal has
been discarded by legislators as too
expensive because the state would pay
close to |1 billion paying off the 1390
million in bonds.
As things stand now, cities and
counties will have to continue to meet
their road needs with their 1100 million
a year share of state gas tax revenues,
and most officials admit the Job can't
be done without substantially more
money.
Municipalities get ISO million a year
for roads, but they having to spend
another II SOmillion in local money and

that doesn't include funds for mass
transit, Sittig says.
"We're going to have to, at some
point, completely reassess the extent to
which state dollars are going to have to
flow to local governments and 1 hope
what we're about to do now won't keep
us from doing what we must do later if
we are to act responsibly," Dunn says.
The taxing package consists of a 17 a
year boost in the average family's
property taxes, a gas tax hike not
taking effect until 1983 and a plan let­
ting county commissions raise the sales
tax by a quarter-of-a-penny.
The proposal, which would generate
1178 million a year, will be reviewed bv

legislators trying to work out a deal on
the budget concluded last week a
quarter-cent plan was the only one that
could be sold to rank-and-file
legislators, if, in fact, it will fly because
it would amount to the first major state
tax Increase since 1377.
Dunn has been pushing a countyoption penny increase with the 1720
m illion which would be raised
distributed between cities and counties
on the basis of population as well as
property taxes collected.
Gov. Bob Graham proposed a halfcent option, with half of the money
going for law enforcement and half for
transportation.

the Senate Monday afternoon and by
the House either Monday or Tuesday.
County commissions would be able,
by a majority vote, to raise the sales
tax within their country from four cents
on the dollar to four-and-a-quarter
cents and use the money lor law en­
forcement
Municipalities would also get money
for law enforcement, but only a small
share because of a complicated for­
mula based on property tax and in­
ventory tax collections, the bulk of
which are taken in by the counties.
Several versions of a so called local
option sales tax hate been considered
throughout the session. The handful of

5th Of Religious Sect
Shop Sanford and Orlando daily 9:30-9.30, Sun. 13-0
Shop Leesburg, DoLind, Kissimmee daily 9-9, Sun 11-8
Shop Ml. Dora, Clermonf dally 9-9, Sun 13-8

Woman Convicted In
Child Beating Death
WOLF POINT. Mont. IUPI) — A fifth member of the River
of life Tabemade has been convicted on a charge of
deliberate huiiidde fur beating a 8-year-old boy because he
had not learned to ride a bicycle.
Sherry Riley was accused of contributing to the January
death of James Gill, whose body was found to have scores of
scars when he was taken dead to a Poplar, Mont., hospiUL
The boy's parents and two other members of the religious
group were previously convicted of deliberate homicide In his
death.
A jury that convicted Mrs. Riley on Friday acquitted her
husband, Arthur.
On Thursday their 9-vear-old son testified that Mrs Riley
had whipped James with an electrical cord while the group
was in the state of Washington. Riley said the boy was beaten
because he had not learned to ride a bicycle.
When his acquittal was announced, Riley stood and had a
bailiff undo his handcuffs. Mrs. Riley cried when her
husband's verdict was read. She was later expressionless
when her own conviction was announced.
The verdict was delivered after 34 houn of deliberation.
Prosecutors admitted that not all the defendants par­
ticipated In the beatings that finally killed the boy but said they
had a part in the group's policy of harshly disciplining
children.
Children of group members testified during the trial to
severe beatings of other children with electrical cords, pieces
of wood and hoses.
Members of the River of Life Tabernacle began moving to
northern Montana from Wapato, Wash , late last year.
The group's founder, Jam es Delorme, was originally ac­
cused of deliberate homicide, but charges against him and his
wife were dropped because of a lack of jurisdiction.
Delorme was an enrolled member of Montana’s Fort Peck
Indian Reservation tribes. He was believed to have returned to
Washington.
The Rileys' five children remained in the custody of
Roosevelt County, as do two of the three children of Norma
Phillips who was cleared of charges on Thursday. District
Judge James Sorte said there was no evidence that she even
knew about James' beating.
The four convicted earlier for the youngster's death will be
sentenced Thursday.

Abortion Hearing Clash
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Four liberal theologians preached
in favor of abortions at a congressional hearing, drawing the
wrath and anger of the panel's chairman.
Sen. John P. East, R-N.C , accused them of falling to answer
same of his questions Friday, while one of them shot back that
he apparently did not listen to her response.
The theologians testified against a bill that would define life
as starting at conception. 1)118 measrr&gt; -rould effectively
negate the 1973 Supreme Court decision that legalised abor­
tions by giving unborn infants rights.
They maintained that in some c.ises abortions are morally
permissible. But East protested they were "stripping away
any notion of the right to life of the unborn."
"When I hear theologians giving no help or assistance in this
area, 1 have to wonder if their theology is not as bad as their
constltutnnal law," East said.
"I don't think you heard anything I said in my testimony,"
said Rosemary Radford Ruether, a Catholic theologian at
Garrett seminary of Evan ton, 111.
"1 did," East Interrupted.
The so-called “human life" bill is this year's chief goal of
anti-abortion groups.
The Senate judidary separation of powers subcommittee
began hearings on the measure In April. A final session is tc be
held next week.
Opposing the bill were Mrs Reuther; William P. Thompson,
stated clerk of the United Presbyterian Church; Paul D.
Simmons, ChrtitUn ethidst at the Southern Baptist Theologi­
cal Seminary in l/wisvllle, Ky.; and Rabbi Henry Siegman,
executive director of the American Jewish Congress.
Simmons, who fold of a girl Impregnated by her grandfather
and a seminary couple whose first two pregnancies resulted In
deformities, resorted to questioning East.
"At what point in the continuum (of life) does the fetus have
the same rights as the woman carrying the fetus - now is that
your question, Mr. Chairman?" Simmons asked.
"I have stated IL Reverend, as well as I can," East replied.
Thompson said the bill "would result in writing Into law the
most extreme position of one group of religious persons and the
denial of views held with equal force by other religious per­
sona."
________________ ______

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Residents braced for more rain
today in the flood-deluged Plains where swirling water washed
out streets and surged through homes. Three people were
missing and presumed drowned in Kansas.
AREA READINGS (I a.m.): temperature: II; overnight
low: 78; Friday's high: 92; barometric pressure: 30.18 and
rising; relative humidity: O percent; winds: south to
southeast at 10 mph.
SUNDAY’S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs. 1:89 a m.,
7:18 p.m.; lows, 12:31 a m .. 12:37 p .m ; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 8:81 a m., 7:08 p.m.; lows, 11:30 a .m , 12:21 p .m ;
BAYPORT: hljhi. 11:81 a m .. 11:00 p m ; lows, 8:19 a m , 7:10
p.m
MONDAY’S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 7:32 a m ,
7:38 p m ; lows, 1:22 a m , 1:18 p .m ; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 7:28 am .. 7:88 p m ; lows. 1:11 a m . 1:00 p m ;
BAYPORT: highs, 1:18a.m., 12:12 p m ; lows. 1:17 a m . 7:87
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter l a H Out
M Miles: Wind southeast to south around 10 knots through
Sunday. Seas 1 to 3 feet. Scattered afternoon and nighttime
thundershowers.
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy through Sunday with a
chance of afternoon and evening thunderstorms.

_
_
Open Oaily 10-10
Sundays 12 7

lun. Thru Wed. ta le

Tho Saving Place “

Q u a lity p a th a n d

service

| Cotry Out, lo. 5.88 |

S a le Price

3 4 .8 8
S e t of 4 H e a v y -d u t y
S h o c k A b s o r b e r s I n i t a l lo d

TOP FUND
RAISERS

I
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mounts a n d ’ . shaft In n :e r tot
m any US c a d a n d light trucks

K e v in t ro tty (le ft) a n d R o b e rt K lu g es ( r ig h t) of
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w in n e rs In th e A m e ric a n C a n c e r S o c ie ty ’s G re a t
A m e ric a n H id e for C a n c e r R e s e a r c h . C ro tty
c o lle c te d 1366.00 and K lag es r a is e d $233.30. T h ird
p r l i e o f a b la c k and w hile TV w e n t to D o m in ick
D iC iiovanni ( e r n t r r ) of M a itla n d w ho c o lle c te d
$192.90 for th e fight a g a in s t c a n c e r .

Com puter lo lo n ca loch Wheel,

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Researcher Says Sex
During Pregnancy Risky
PROVIDENCE, R I. (UPI) - Sexual Intrreourse during pregnancy dramatically
Increases the risk of miscarriage and can
produce developmental problems In the fetus,
a Pennsylvania State Unlverlslty pathologist
says.
Dr. Richard Natye told a seminar at
Women It Infants Hospital that engaging in
sex during pregnancy is more dangerous to the
fetus than the combined effects of cigarette
smoking and alcohol use.
In some groups, he said, the Infant death
rate can be 20 times higher (or mothers who
continue to have sex.
Naeye, chairman of Penn State patimtogy
department, said research In the last sis
months confirmed his earlier findings that sex
during pregnanacy increases the chance of
infection from bacteria in semen.
"The (infant) death rates are much, much
higher" in women who continue to have inter­
course during pregnancy, Nteye said Thur­
sday. "II looks to us like the complications of
intercourse s ta rt very early, certainly
beginning in the (fourth month.)"
Parents who abstain from sex during

pregnancy have a dramatically lower infant
death rate than those who continue to have sex
Intermittently, Naeye said. Frequent In­
tercourse increases the risk, but not sub­
stantially, he u id .
The bacteria in semen, called Chonoaronianltls, cause premature delivery and may
reduce oxygen going to a fetus, he said. He
u id there is “no question" intercourse during
pregnancy may lead to problems In ■ sur­
viving infant's nervous system
The infection attacks llie placenta, which
transfers food, oxygen and protective chemi­
cals from the mother's blood to the fetus. It is
caused by normally harmless bacteria, which
Is why pregnant women with the Infection
seldom show symptons.
Despite his findings, Nseye Mid he has not
publicly advocated abstinence because ‘‘it
would be dangerous, unwise and unfair to give
public advice on this m atter."
Naeye Mid he hasn't published the results of
his study on damage to the central nervous
system because of its Implications.
"We're going to cause a heck of a mess," he
told the seminar.

2 97

•or Moot Can

4 - p l y P o ly a t t a r C o r d W h lt e w a l li
Ova u*g J

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2 8 =9 7 :
PtustSStf t (och

larger Sues Comparably Priced

19.88“’ 44.88%

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u many US cart sgnt
truest wei e i c t a q s

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front only, irony U S cars Add&gt;&lt;roi ports A m m c o i t*»*’u for.
egrt cars aro e.t’a

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S p e c ia l G ifts F o r Dad
With Cot*

Power Bill A ssistance Available
Seminole County residents who meet income
eligibility requirements may apply for statefederal funds for assistance in paying power
bills for cooling their homes.
Elmer Wonlenay. supervisor of the low
income energy assistance program of tlie state
Department of Health and Rehabilitative
Services ( HRS), applicants must also submit a
doctor's statement certifying the exiling
energy is medically necessary for the client or
a household member.
He M id IS million has been allocated to the
state by the federal government far the
program. The funds will be split statewide
among the eligible applicants.
Seminole Countians who believe they may
be eligible for the funds may pick up ap­

HOSPITAL
NOTES
Samurai. Mammal Maiarui
JvM It
ADM ISIION l

iw M
Harim N. Baa**
Opal M O Daman
Francat M Oananbtrt. OaHcna

BIRTHS
•arman* and Dabra V. Borman
a boor bar. laniard
O ltC H A R Q II
loafer*
Norma 1 Barttnkirdtar
l Canon K4ar
Karan L Owm t
Fowl C Palma
Morn B M a in
Jonn r Caurlnay Jr . Oallana
to* O Mr fail, Oaatna
Rarmand H. Hark. Oaltona
Elmar Wilton. Daitona
Bulba M
W illiam . Lam
Monroo
Uapron H logja. Orlando
Marpuariia E laopor. Otloan

plications at; the HRS center. 820 Live Oak
Ave. in the Live Oak Center, Casselberry; the
food stamp office, 103 Oak Ave., Sanford;
Imgwood Health Clinic, 178 W. Church S t,
Longwood; Seminole County Welfare
Department, 900 S. French, Sanford; Migrant
CUnlc end Community Health Center, 218 S.
Oik, Sanford; Federation of Senior Citizens,
837 Magnolia, Altamonte Springs; Sanford
Housing Authority, Sanford City Hall and
Community Action, 1101 Fine Ave., Sanford.

2 1 .8 8

Our Reg 28 88

C onvethO 'e 12/120-V 4 -c v c coffee
maker kit for vox* horrm. car. or van

Wonlenay Hid those eligible must apply
before June X.

B la c k a D e c k e r .

In our Ju n t 14, 1981 “Gifts For
Dad" Color Insert Section, we
have Incorrectly described the
Black 8 Decker V«” Drill as
h a v in g a V a ria b le S peed
Function and being Reversible.
Correct description should read:

k Decker »/." Electric Drill

We regret any Inconvenience
this may have caused our
customers.

OutRag 2288

Travl-Pork ‘ C o fteem o k er Kit

Anyone unable to pick up an application at
the above offices, may call 3398200 and on
application will be mailed to them.

ATTENTION &lt;
Kmart SHOPPERS

Black

Save *6

Coupon
q h

4 -cup Pork, Popper Or Fry Ran
12/120-V peri I qt touce pan/poppor
or 6 V fry pan for cor. von or Ivv

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- t at no t i t o charge w*h w i r a i a ) tanar

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�Evening Herald
tuswi « i m i

Around

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD. FLA. 31771
Area Code 30M22-26U or H1-W93
Sunday. June 14, 1901—4A
Wayne D Doyle. Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managlnq Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, 11,00; Month, H 25; 6 Months, 121.00;
Year, Mi 00. By Mail: Week, 11.25; Month. 15 25; S Months.
*30.00; Year. 07.00.

Rights Of Accused
Getting Ridiculous
(Reprinted by permits Ion of the Scrtpps-lloward Newipapers)

As far as wo know, no judge has yet thrown out a
case against a defendant because the police failed
to wigght their ears and balance on one foot while
reciting the Miranda rule to the defendant. But we
seem to be getting to that point.
A New York State Supreme Court judge has
r u le d a s iiid u iiiia s ib lt* lilt* c o ilf e s s io tl u f a 1 6 -y e a r-

old youth who, on the advice of his lawyer, had
admitted to the Queens district attorney ... he ...
participated in the murder of another youth.
...said the judge, "... Any lawyer worth his salt
will tell the suspect In no uncertain terms to make
no statement to police under any circumstances."
A competent lawyer, said the judge, would at
least have pleabargaincd for a lesser charge in
return for the confession.
Without the confession, says the D.A., it’s
doubtful if the case will gu tu trial.
A man comes in with his own lawyer, we read
him his rights and with his lawyer present, he
makes a statement. What else am I supposed to do
to protect him? Give liie man's lawyer a bar
exam?"
Either that, or try wiggling your ears and
balancing on one foot next time.

Don't Make South
The Whipping Boy
1ItrprlulrJ by
lnteUlgeaerf)

permlntMl

of

the

Wheellog,

W.Vt.,

There Is no justification for the notion that the
Voting Bights Act of 1965 should continue to apply
to only selected states and areas of the nation. It is
discriminatory and not consistent with the
original purposes of the civil rights law for it to
perpetuate the idea of assumed guilt.
The a d at first applied to only a few states,
mostly in the South, and later was broadened to
include oilier portions of the United Stales. We
never liked that approach; federal laws should
apply equally to oil states. The fact that school
integration has been carried out more effectively
In the South than in other areas should be suf­
ficient cause to cease making that region the
whipping boy of civil rights legislation.
The Voting Bights Act will expire next year, and
Congress is debating whether to extend It. We're
not sure that's necessary. But if ... (it) is ex­
tended, its scope should be expanded so that it
applies equally to all 50 states.

Supreme Court
Must Stay Coequal
I Reprinted by permission of the Providence, K.O., JournalRulDUn)

...Unhappy with recent Supreme Court rulings
on such emotion-saturated issues as abortion and
prayer in public schools,... (some Congressmen)
are pushing bills that simply would declare such
matiers off limits lo federal courts.
... Each of the 50 state legislatures, and each of
the 50 state court systems, would in theory be
freed to pass and interpret its own brand of law
regulating abortions or whatever.
...Even to some who believe ... courts exert
more influence than 1b sound, these moves in
Congress are stirring concern... beyond the
substance of any substantive issue at stake...
It involves ihc separat ion-of-powers principle at
the heart of American government for two cen­
turies. If Congress can declare one issue off limits
to the federal courts, many legal scholars reason,
then it could rule out judicial review of any issue.
...The court's role os a coequal branch of
government would be eroded. No longer could the
Supreme Court be held up as the final arbiter of
difficult constitutional questions. Its ...balancewheel function would ...be supplanted by a
legislative will that mirrored the popular
majority of the hour.
...Trying to humble the Supreme Court in this
fashion is no way to keep the branches of federal
government In balance.

BERRY'S WORLD

“Supply-siJe economics. Dow I love yi, how I
towys..."

1-4-#-m

0K-,4*

H

» «#**«fc4**

The Clock
By DORIS DIETRICH

About this thing called the middle-aged
spread...
Since when la that wad of fat hugging the
middle ot one's anatomy ctnf Ined to middle age!
From where 1 stand, age has nothing at all to do
with one's build, obeaely or petltely - period.
During my adulthood, for the most part, I have
been slim. Well, not exactly. Skinny and acrawny
are more like It.
People used to ask, “How do you stay so
slim !"
Believe me, It wasn't easy. Allhough I smoked
like a furnace In the dead of winter, I ate exactly
what I wanted. The funny thing is. I never
wanted much to eat. Cigarettes satisfied the
appetite—maybe killed it—sus well as absorbing
all my energy.
Then came that d ay-lhe day I abandoned
cigarettes, AGAIN.
It didn't lake long to discover I had gained an
ounce here—two ounces there, which eventually
added up to a pound here, and several pounds
there.

But I was tickled ptnk. My clothes were
beginning to fit. The pants had no slack and the
dresses didn't droop. The reflection in the mirror
didn’t lie. But I concluded I was getting stylishly
stout or fashionably fat. Who wants to be lean
and mean, anyhow?
Frankly, I think a bit of plump on the rump
may be pleasing —but not tf It won't fit Into your
pants.
So what now? A new wardrobe? Forget It.
With a grudge, I nudge and nudge, but the
bulge won't budge.
As my grindsddy might put It, "The chickens
always come home to roost." 1call It eating crow
or things getting even.
1 used to pooh-pooh the Idea of people being on
diets. So what? And who cares, anyhow?
And now, look who's watching l.er food intake.
But It’s not really that bad.
Are you what you eat? Don't look at me. I keep
eating m ore-bul enjoying It less. Nothing that
I'm consuming these days seems to be sticking to
the ribs.

Just last week, I purchased a pound of that
vegetable oil spread that's supposed to be as
good as the product from Elsie the Cow which I
previously used to dunk and aouse everything
In—very generously.
Granola bars were substituted for the usual
chocolate snacks. Trouble is, those bars are so
hard they could direct a person straight to the
dentist's chair to add bankruptcy to the existing
problem of hunger.
I mentioned to a friend that my husband and I
devoured about IS worth of fresh fruit one
evening and wtre still scratching [or snacks
before curfew.
The expensive fruit didn't begin to do the job of
a 25 cent chocolate-coated peanut butter cup—
which is a lot less trouble, too.
With Just a little effort, I dropped five pounds
and two Inches—you guessed it, around the
middle — in eight days.
And now my clothes fit.
But I'm still hungry.

ROBERT WALTERS

ROBERT WAGMAN

CPSC
Marked For
The Kill?

Red Ink
In Pension
Fund
WASHINGTON INF.A| — After sU the Gap
over the Reagan administration’s proposed
changes in Social Security, members of
Congress and their high-level aides sre afraid
to bring up problems In another petwWi
fund: Uveir own.
The pension system for federal workers is
In trouble — perhaps even worse trouble than
Social Security. The system Is under-funded
to the tune of almost a half-trillion dollars —
which can be made up only out of the tax­
payers' pockets.
One estimate ts that the military and civil
service retirement programs are together
committed io paying out In the future a
staggering Ml* billion more than they are to
receive In employee contributions and In­
terest.
The system has grown almost incredibly
over the yean. Benefit payments Increased
more thin 300 percent over the past decade.
For every *7 that a federal employee now
contributes to his retirement, the taxpayers
contribute *30.
Between 1970 and 19K), the federal government'a annual contributions to the system
grew from H I billion to *25.1 billion. Federal
retirees now receive 5 cents out ol every Us
dollar. And the government's annual con­
tribution to the system will exceed *50 billion
by the end o« the decade If growth continues at
the current rate.
The reason for all of thta ts simple: Few
retirem ent program s can m atch the
Uvlshnesa of the federal system.
And the situation Is getting worse. Today
the federel government annually pays Into Its
retirement programs an amount equal to 30
percent of the federal payroll. This contrast!
with the 15 percent of payroll that mot*,
private employers contribute annually to
their employees’ pension funds.
Nevertheless, the federal government Is
falling farther and farther behind each year
by putting tn only 30 percent. Some have
estimated that adequate funding of the
retirement system see*! require s esr,trtbutlon of at least 41 percent of payroll; that
amount would have to increase by severs!
percentage potnta a year because of inflation.
So, what Is to be done? The Carter ad­
ministration proposed to make a modest start
by cutting the cost-of-Uving adjustments to
one year. The pensions of federal workers
then would have lagged from six months to a
year behind the rate of Inflation.
But the federat-employee lobby showed Its
muscle. Organisations representing federal
workers and retirees quickly amassed a
mllllon-dollar war chest and defeated the
proposal.
This ts one hot potato that no one on Capitol
Hill wants to touch.
But this problem ts not going to go away. In
fact, It Is becoming worse wtth each payday.
Congress ts eventually going to have to bile
Uve bullet and find some solution lo the in­
creasing Insolvency of the federal pension
system.

JEFFREY HART

You Just Can’t Say It
In a recent debate at Dartmouth, 1 made an
aseertton which teems to me self-evidently
true — but which represented such an assault
upon academic manners and assumptions
that It ted to demands that I be dismisasd
from my position as a tenured member of the
faculty.
My debate was wtth another profewor,
Elite Boulding, who Is a sociologist, a (Junker,
and a pacifist.
The outrageous thing I said was this:
1 asserted, first ol all, that the Soviet
regime ts self-evidently evil. That It ts at war
with Its own people. That If, perchance, the
Soviet cops went home and stayed there, we
would see an artistic and intellectual
renaissance tn Soviet Ufe.
Potts would come out of (heir cellars.
Faiuieis Mould rxliitiil iiitu s u i u .
literary and political Journals would
commence publishing.
People would play Mick Jagger and the
Beach Boys without (ear of being sent to the
Arctic Clrda.
Thus, I asserted, the Soviet regime ts selfevidently evil.
At the same time, I further asserted, the
United States Is — equally self-evidently — ■
virtuous polity.
Thus, the Untied States is the ntost stable
self-governing state tn the history of the
world. It has shown Itself remarkably
adaptive to changing conditions. Its dtixens
are free men and women.
In comparison with the Soviet Union, this
polity ts self-evidently a virtuous one.
These assertions did not seem to me to be
intellectually surprising — but tiiey caused
complete consternation.
Professor Boulding, tn her rejoinder, poopoohed them with the argument that all states

are a mixture ol good and bad und that we
should not make easy claims to moral virtue
(or any state.
This led to the counter rejoinder that, yes,
states are a mixture of good and evil, that yes.
Hitler's Germany and Churchill's England
were Just such mixtures, and that the regime
of Pol Pot and the Swiss regime were also
such mixtures — and that, yes, it ts so dilltcult
lo nuke moral distinctions where good and
evil are so mixed.
But what do 1 next read In the student
newspaper, but a letter from someone named
Beth Dingman- "I would like to know how
Dartmouth can lake itself seriously as in
Institution of higher learning, as a college
with credibility among educated people, when
tt gives tenure to a professor who espouses
such aiiu-uneiiectuat, ethnocentric, narrow
minded view points.” Jeffrey Hart "Is
obviously Incapable of complex thought and
has to reduce the world Into simple-minded
good and evil dichotomies,"
Even my defenders were themselves
defensive: "I agree wtth you that Professor
Hart's views tend to be somewhat simplistic,
but most certainly defend his right to express
them."
With defenders like that, you don't need
critics.
However, the original assertions about the
Soviet Union and the United States were, yes,
simple, but also self-evidently true.
It ts a curious thing that they caused any
opposition at alL
But tt teem s to be the case that tolerance of
communism has become part of our In­
tel!ecutil manners, to the extent that it
tuggesti a capacity for "complex thought" lo
ignore the Gulag and the monstrous mesa of
the system that created it.

WASHINGTON (NEA| - One of die most
productive and responsible federal
regulatory agencies Is in danger of becoming
an innocent victim of an overxealous cam­
paign Ui reduce gut eminent intrusion into Uie
lives of the country's dtixens.
Acting tn the name of efficiency and
economy, lobbyists representing the
manufacturers of potentially hazardous —
and lethal — products are waging an In­
tensive campaign to destroy the effectiveness
of the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
After a shaky start in the mid-1970s, the
CPSC has emerged tn recent years os an
especially valuable agency, acting
Judiciously yet (Irmly lo reduce or eliminate
the threat of injury and death posed by scores
of unsafe products.
One example of the commission performing
an Invaluable public service occurred last
year when the agency learned that at least
seven infants had strangled to death when
their necks became wedged tn a dangerously
designed crib headboard.
With an estimated 7,500 identical cribs in
use by families throughout the country, the
CPSC required the manufacturer to conduct a
massive publicity campaign to warn parents
of the serious danger.
In another case, the commission took
similarly decisive action after receiving
reports of 23 explosions — resulting tn five
deaths and II serious injuries —involving hot
water heaters whose faulty dest/,n allowed
liquid propane g u to escape.
In the eight years of Its existence, the CPSC
has ordered more than t,000 recalls involving
not only cribs and water heaters but also hatr
d ry ers, paint strippers, coffee pots,
snowmobiles, toys and a host of other items.
The commission estimates that those
recatls of more than 170 million potentially
defective units may have prevented 1 million
or more Injuries during the past three years
alone.
In addition, the CPSC has promulgated
mandatory rules to Improve the dealun of
entire product lines — Including refuse bins,
antennas for dtixens band radios, power lawn
mowers and gas-fired space heaters.
Working tn cooperstlon wtth Industry
groups, the commission has helped to develop
safer uniform design standards for bathtubs
and show ers, Udders, pU ypens, Infant
strollers, extension cords and Christmas tree
lights.
Finally, the commission recently has
Initiated investigations of chronic h a u n ts —
products that appear lo be harmless but are
likely to produce long-term toxic or c ar­
cinogenic effects leading to cancer, birth
defects, genetic damage, Irreversible Illness
or death.
Decimation or destruction of the cvn&gt;
misaton will only deprive needed protection to
consumers who already suffer approximately
21,000 deaths and 33 million Injuries annually
when dealing wtth the products under the
CPSCs Jurisdiction.

JACK ANDERSON

Hatch Puts A Lid On The Pushy
WASHINGTON -T h e heroes tn the drama
of government are sometimes damned by the
press and public along with the rascals. But
the honorable men and women in public tile
deserve to be noticed.
Such a leglxUtor Is Sen. Orria Hatch, RUlah, a feisty lawyer, a former construction
worker, a card-holding member of the AFU
CIO and an erstwhile bishop in the Mormon
Church.
Though an unabashed conservative In his
political philosophy, his sense of person
rectitude has made him Just as lough on
Republicans u on Democrats when he
luspecti wrongdoing by government officials.
But apparently two Senate colleagues,
Roger Jepsen and Charles Grassley, Loth
Iowa Republicans, had the Impression that
Hatch belonged to the "goalong-Uvgetalong" crowd.
According to my sources, tt took a stormy
face-to-face confrontation in Hatch'* office to
Instruct the two aenalon from Iowa that
Hatch won't back off an Investigation merely
as a senatorial courtesy. Here's what hap­
pened:
As a power on the Senate Judiciary Com­
mittee, Hatch has teen looking Into the case
of Jack Nard, a Pittsburgh contractor who
was Involved In a civil suit with Armour Co. A
Judiciary Committee stall report concluded
lhat a federal Judge may have been pressured

politically to rule against Nard, and that the
contractor's com plaint to the Justice
Department was Ignored.
Hatch received a stall recommendation that
noe of the witnesses at the Judiciary Com­
mittee hearing on the Nard complaint be
Investigated for possible perjury. The witness
w a a Evan “Curly" Hultman, a fanner U2&gt;.
attorney from Iowa who directed the grand
Jury In the Nard case. Hultman la a political
buddy ol Jepsen and Grassley
When they learned about the adverse staff
recommendation, the two Iowa senators
marched Into Haleb's office to protest.
“All hell broke loose," a source told my
associates Jack Mitchell and Indy BaJhwar.
"Those two thought they could stout Orrin
Into dropping the case," s Hatch staffer
reported, adding, "Boy, were they loud!"
But Hatch refused to bit moved by the angry
entreaties of the two lowanx. He kept his
temper, but Informed Jepeen and Grassley
firmly that his Investigation into their pal
Hultman would go forward.
Footnote: A spokesman for the Iowa
senators insisted they weren't trying to
pressure Hatch Into dropping the In­
vestigation of Hultman, but simply wanted lo
Inform him that his staff had done some
"sloppy homework." The spokesman said the
lowans believe Hultman is an honest man
who ts being unjust!v pilloried without

** ***-

p

adequate opportunity to defend himself.
WHOM. FIGHT DRUG PUSHERS?:One
of the bitterest bureaucratic lights In
Washington lately has been over the
overlapping Jurisdiction of agencies involved
tn the war against the drug smugglers. The
Reagan administration so far has resisted
suggestions that the troubled Drug Enfor­
cement Administration be stripped of Us
duUes.
As early as the transition period, Reagan
Intimates were being briefed on the failures of
the anti-drug program. William Casey, now
CIA director, was given a particularly
gloomy appraisal of DEA In an eyesonly
transition document.
“The Drug Enforcement Administration ts
generally recognised as a (allure," the paper
stated. "Its basic approach — to stop drugs at
It* source — has not worked and cannot
work."
The analysts recommended instead a sixpoint program that would, they claimed, save
the government *200 million a yeuer —and be
more effective against the narcotics traf­
fickers. The suggestions Inducted giving back
to the Customs Sendee responsibility for an'JamuggUng efforts employing the Internal
Revenue Sendee to attack illicit drug profits
.through the tax laws and using diplomatic
pressure on nations that produce drugs or are
transit points tn the international traffic.

■•»-. **-«***

Dolens of narcotics experts have repor­
tedly been urging the administration to
simply abolish the DEA and return Its func­
tions to the FBI, CIA, IRS and Customs. But
hign-level Justice Department officials In­
form me that there are no firm plans even to
shake up the beleaguered drug agency.
Although DEA has had tome spectacular
successes in its covert operations and the
seizure of millions of dollars' worth of nar­
cotics, tt has suffered recently from federal
investigations, discrimination suits and poor
morale.
WATCH ON WASTE: There are cola"
landers tn Congress who a rt mating the
taxpayers millions each year. Ih U “cola" Is
not a soft drink, but COIA, an acronym for
"cost-of-tivirg allowance." To be (air to
government employees stationed In such
expensive locations as Alaska and Hawaii,
Congress legislated cost-of-living allowances
that supposedly bring their pay up lo lhat of
Washington, D.C. But unlike the Pentagon
and Stale Department, which compute their
COLA on the basis of take-home, or spen­
dable, Income, the other agencies use gross
income a i the yardstick. It's illogical because
deductions for incams taxes and pensions
can’t be spent in either Washington or
Waikiki It aim costs the government an extra
*23 2 million a year to compute the COLA
baaed on gross Income.

I

�OPINION

Evening Htrakj, Sinlord, FI.

Sunday, June H, i m — JA

OUR READERS WRITE

A New Era In Public Transportation Is Underway
On March 16th, a new era tn public
transportation got underway in
Seminole County. Due to thg per­
sistence of County Commissioner Bill
Kirchhoff and the continued prodding of
People's T ran sit Organisation of
Seminole County, the Orange-SeminoleOsceola T ransportation authority
(OSOTA) extended the existing bus
service from Seminole Community
College to Seminole Plaza in
Casselberry. Existing sen-ice In the
north and south ends of the county was
connected. It became possible for
residents of Sanford to go to work and
shop in South Seminole and Orange
counties. People living in South
Seminole and Orlando now have access
to the county seat tn Sanford. We
predict eldership will boom as a result
of this connection.

established. The report also identified
area-wide, local and rural service
areas. The plan will cal) for county
funding of the countywide routes and
discuss funding participation from the
various city governments of the
area wide and local routes under the
Urban
Mass
Transportation
Administration grant formula.
Our organisation has decided to ask
the County Commission to purchase 10
coaches during the coming year —five

immediately, which can be paid for in
the coming budget year, and five in
September, which can be included in
the 1983-83 budget. Buses take 1-2 years
to arrive and can be paid for on delivery
rather than in advance.
Please congratulate county com­
missioners for their recent action and
tell them we need to continue this ex­
pansion as quickly as possible. Please
call your district commissioner to say

Kum m oF

that you want to see a viable public
transit system In Seminole County and
what about a bus and better service for
your area? If you don't know who your
commissioner is, describe where you
live to the secretary in the Com­
missioner’s office. She will tell you who
to speak with on better public transit.
The telephone number to reach the
Commissioners is 3ZH330, Extension
289
Members of Seminole PTO are very

e Coplay New* Service

We will do our part to help promote
the service. We understand that local
businesses will sponsor a “Nickel
Days" promotion where it will cost only
5 cents to ride die bus in the near future.
This route is a good beginning or
"backbone artery" from which a viable
public transit system can be built
serving other areas of the county.
The Seminole County Planning
Department is finishing up work on a
Transit Management Plan lor Seminole
County. It will be presented to the
Commission for comments and-or
revisions and approval sometime soon.
The North-South connector between the
Sanford and South Semlnoie service,
now established, was the first of sever al
county-wide routes Identified where
transit service needed to be

Interested In working towards a system
in which people drive their cars to a
central location, such as the malls or
shopping centers, and board buses to
get to jobs and shopping.

This Is a way to provide service to
many more residents, especially those
in outlying areas of the county.
Sarah Bilderbeck
People’s Transit Organization

The
NEA'Pot' Calls
KKK Kellie' Black
The article In the 6-4-61 Evening
Herald, "NEA Worried about 3-K's"
seems to me a typical case of the Pot
calling the Kettle black. Neither one
observes the message of the angel, in
I’hilllp Wylie's book, "The Answer,"
that message being "LOVE YE ONE
ANOTHER".
I hold no brief for the 3-K’s, for that
reason, but by the same token the
NEA’s position is equally BI-ACK, for
they have promised to change the
educational system in the U S in the
tw enty-tint century to make us
amenable to becoming a member of the
Global Community.
To do this, they propose to take the
child at two years of age-AKTA
proposes three years- by means of
compulsory schooling i Kindergarten)
where the child will be taught liberation
from parental authority. Humanist
psychologist Richard Parson gives his
vision of the "liberated" child as one of
the future advocating children's rights,
freedom from physical punishment,
freedom to vote, total sexual freedom
and economic freedom , Humanist

educators and psychologists seek
content of the minds of pre-school
children lo instill humanist values
before parents have "bralnwushed"
them with belief In God, family and
country.
These are the goals of the NEA, ami
they were well on their way when Pres
Carter got them In exchange for their
help In his cam paign. President
Reagan has thrown a chock under their
wheel by appointing Bell to be head of
D O E., instead of NEA's Hufsteadler.
This attempt to put the child !.n kin­
dergarten at two years of age is being
phased in by pushing back the age limit
for compulsory attendence a year at a
time— the old bologna tactic.
North Carolina is implementing this
with their, "A Child Health Plan for
Raising a New Generation."
II is just possible that these are the
reasons why the private schools are
burgeoning so prolific-ally.
I say: "A pox on both their houses NEA and KKK "
S.ll. “Jim " Crowe
Sanford

A Sales Tax Increase May Be In Seminole's Future
Do the people of Seminole County and
the other counties in Florida want sales
taxes increased in the individual counties
by onc-haif cent per II?
The Florida Legislature this coming
week will be debating the matter. Giving
counties the option of levying the ta t Is
seen by some as an answer to the
financial problems of county and city
governments and law enforcement.
If the law, as it ia being discussed now,
pastes, the county commissions of each
county will be making the decision on
whether tn levy the tat. The Issue will not
be pul lo a vote of the people themselves.
.State Rep. R obert Hattaway, D*
Altamonte Springs, held a meeting
earlier this week with local officials to
get their input on the proposal.
Those present al the Altamonte
Springs City Hail gathering unanimouslyfavored the proposal. Among the group,
however, were only four elected officials
— County Commission Chairman Bob

Sturm, Sheriff John Polk, Altamonte
Mayor Hugh Harllng and Oviedo Council
Chairman Steve West The others at­
tending included: Sanford City Manager
W.F., " P e te " Knowles, Altamonte
Springs City Manager Jeff Etchberger,
County
A dm inistrator
Roger
Neisw ender, A ssistant Administrator
Jim E aston, County Public Works
Director Jack Schuder and others.
None of the officials claimed to be
representing the views of the respective
governing todies or even the majority of
their respective governing bodies
Hattaway said a one-half cent sales tax
would bring revenues of $3.5 million
annually to Seminole, lie said the money
would be split on the basis of 13 million lo
the county and $500,000 to be shared by
the seven cities. And Polk said half the
revenues would be designated for law
enforcement
Of the 1500,000 for the cities, with half
the projected funds going to city police

true after Etchberger was able to clear
up the budgetary problems Altamonte
Springs was suffering such a short time
ago.
When Etchberger becam e city
manager of the south end municipality
Donna Estes
less than seven months ago, he found a
deficit of 1636,000 looming out of a 65
million operating budget. The 12.7 per­
d ep a rtm e n ts, allocations have been cent waa cut out.
designated as follows- Sanford 1367,045;
If any services were cut its a con­
A ltam onte
Springs,
1116,014; sequence, few if any persons are aware
Casselberry 137,646; lake Mary 199.037; of It.
I/m u wood 126.650: Oviedo 113.794: and
A common complaint of citizens is that
Winter Springs SS.6M. These figures may elected and appointed officials become *&gt;
be changed as the new census is taken enmeshed tn the politics of their offices
into account.
and the services they believe should be
given the public that they Forget the
It's going to be difficult for any government they are operating belongs to
Semlnoie County governing body, really the people. The people themselves for the
intent on holding down expenditures and most part have no desire to become in­
keeping U ses al a iiiuiunum, lo leU in
volved ui government. They want the
credibility with the public if they say the men and women who sought office to do
task can’t be done. This is especially the job of providing necessary services

Parties &amp;
Politics

The Geopolitical Importance O f The Sea
By WAYNESCHROKDER
Special to the Herald
Throughout the course of history,
control of the seas has played an unportant role in determining both the
outcome of military conflicts and the
conduct of international relations.
Seven-tenths of die world's surface U
covered by wsler. It Is estimated that
some 90 percent of all international
commerce today is transported over
the oceans. For the Western world, it is
imperative that the sea routes and
ocean passagew ays which these
cargoes must traverse be kept open.
For the U.S. and Western Europe, oil
tankers transit from the Straits of
Hormuz, go around the Cape of Good
Hope below South Africa, and then pass
on to their final destinations, either to
the Caribbean or up to the North
Atlantic and into the Baltic and North
Sear For Japan, the great industrial
and commerdal power of the western
Pacific, ita maritime commirce must
pass through the Straits of Malacca,
through the South China Sea and up to
the Sea of Japan. Should these critical
sea lines of communication ( SlOCa)
ever be severed in time of conflict, the
West would find its Industrial base
severely impaired.
The domination of critical SIDCs Is
accomplished by the control of land
areas which guard these sea routes and
ocean passageways. These areas are
known as "choke p in ts ."
Each of these critical 'choke points"
has a special significance In the realm
of international commerce and
geopnlitirg The Straits of Hormuz
serve ss the oil artery of the West, from
which the oil of the Persian Gulf must
transit lo the industrialized nations of
the Western world. The Dardanelles
and Bosporus is the main route from
the Black Sea to the Mediterranean.
The Caribbean serves ss the lotding
pan t fer Western oU transfers to the
U.S., a s , giant supertankers offload
their oil at ports in the Bahamas,
TrWdad and the Virgin Islands lor re-

shipnienttoU.S. refineries and parts on
the eastern seaboard and the Gulf of
Mexico. The GIUK (GreenlandIccland-Unilcd Kingdom) gap serves os
a primary Soviet SSBN (designation for
strategic missile-carrying submarine)
exit. The Baltic Sea and ita approaches
are important staging areas for both
Soviet and NATO naval operations in
the North Atlantia. The South China
Sea, which is currently being exposed

VIEWPOINT
to an increased Soviet naval presence,
is the route through which commerce
must pass to Japan.
Control of entire seas and oceanpassageways is also fscilitsled by the
development of a basing infrastructure
on the roasts of nations adjacent to
these seas and oceans. One need only
witness the U-S.-Sovlet competition
over obtaining access to naval and air
basing facilities In the Indian Ocean
and Persian Gulf to underscore this
point
In the past 15 years the geopotttici of
this area has radically changed, in
large measure due to the Soviet ability
to obtain naval basing or anchorage
rights at crucial locations in tl« region.
The UJULR. now has such rights at
Aden in South Yemen, at the entrance
to the Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea; in
Ethiopia at Massawa, just above the
Gutf of Aden and Djibouti; in
Mozambique, guarding the Mozambique-Madagascar channel; in Angola,
north of the Cape of Good Hope route;
and also tn Libya and Syria in the
M editerranean. Moreover, its oc­
cupation of Afghanistan places it only
400 miles from the Straits of Hormuz.
This shift in the geopolitical balance
precipitated the US. negotiation of
basing access agreements with the
governments of Oman, Kenya and
Somalia this past year. The major
naval and air facilities to be available

to the U.S in these regions will include
Maairah tn Oman, Mombassa in Kenya
and Magadlshu and the Soviet-built
facility at Berbera in Somalia.
Islands are also of critical
geopolitical importance in the deter­
mination of geopolitical control of the
•eas and ocuaippassagewya. The tLS.
maintains Ita naval headquarters for
the Psdfic fleet at Pearl Harbor in
Hawaii and has B-52 bombers stationed
in Guam. The U.S. also lues the base at
Yokonka in Japan and depends upon
the use of Subic Bay in the Philippine
Islands for basing and logistics pur­
poses tn the Indian Ocean and the
western Pacific. The US. is currently
upgrading ita naval and com ­
munications facilities al Diego Garcia
on the Indian Ocean, and same Pen­
tagon planners favor widening ita
runways to give It a B-52 landing
capability. Hie Australian government
has offered ita naval base at Cockbum
Sound for use by the US., but thus far
the US. has not responded to the offer.
In the Atlantic, the Azores Islands
were of critical geopolitical importance
during the 1973 October War. The U.S.
used the Azores to refuel lla C-SA air­
craft resupplying Israel during the war.
Western control of the Azores is ab­
solutely essential, for should these
islands ever fall into pro-SovUt hands—
which might very well have happened
had Portugal gone Communist tn 1975—
similar airlifts to the Middle East
would be impossible. Western sur­
veillance of Soviet submarines in the
Atlantic would also have been cur­
tailed.
The ocean floor la also of con­
sid erab le geopolitical im portance
because of Its oil and mineral wealth
and strategic value. Certain offshore
a re a l are rich in potential oil finds. The
North Sea has become a very valuable
oil source for the British. Both the
U.S.S.R. and the People'i Republic of
China are attempting lo develop their
offshore oil potential (off Sakhalin
Island and in Po Hal Bay] through the

• a***#*w

r *

* m * *■#—

V**-

acquistltion of Western offshore oil
drilling technology. And of course,
offshore oil production Ls extensive in
the Persian Gulf, Venezuela and off
Texas and Louisiana in the Gulf of
Mexico.
Most students of geopolitics would
readily eckr.crledge the existence of
offshore oil as one of the most Im­
portant geographical attributes of the
seas, and certainly one which has
geopolitical ramifications. However,
the ocean floor also has economically
valuable minerals such as manganese
nodules (composed of m anganese,
copper,
cobalt
and
nickel),
phosphorites, tin and magnesium.
While active strategic uses of the
seabed and octan floor are regulated
under a 1970 treaty, (he seabed ls used
for passive defense purposes. The U.S.
has emplaced sonar listening devices
and hydrophones on the seabeds off its
coasts in the passages m ar llie GIUK
Gap under the SOSL'S (Sound System
for
Underwater Surveillance),
PROJECT CEASAR and TASS (Towed
Array Sensor System) programs. This
is used for submarine detection pur­
poses. Because of this im portant
military use of the ocean floor, the U.S.
haa
opposed
the
com plete
demilitarization of the seabed. The U.S.
also uses the seabed to conduct naval
re ie a rc h and to test non-nuclear
weapons.
The seas are therefore important not
just to the geographer, but also to the
navel strategist, the economist, the
marine biologist, the policy analyst,
and the business executive. What
happens on or rear the seas will have
the utmost Importance for international
politics during the next twenty years.
For these reasons, it is advisable that
both the scholar and the layman In­
crease their knowledge of the political,
economic and strategic importance of
the sea.
( Mr. Scbreeder Is editor ol the Heritage
F o u n d atio i's '• National S eesrlty
Record.")

while k eping the cost of those services
at a minimum
An even more common complaint is
the number of governmental employees
whom the public perceives to be spending
a good (leal of their time enjoying
themselves mi the job or resting rather
than working.

The rumor persistant Casselberry City
Hall that three-term Councilman Frank
Schulte plans to run for mayor of that
rily this coming December. "1 have no
aaplrallons for any olher office than die
one 1 now hold," Schutte says everyiime
someone mentions the rumor to him.

County Commisslcner Sandra Glenn
was out of state most of the pail week,
attending the national conference of
regional planning councils at Niagara
Fails, N Y.

IJltle has been reported statewide
about the financial trouble the motor
vehicle Inspection program was in as the
legislation was being considered to phase
out the program. H ie state program is to
be phased out Oct. 1.
Neiswender told county commissioners
aeversl limes that tf the legislature did
ce* raise Uw tees it would cost ftemlnole
County money in Use new budget yeai to
continue it here.
In years past the program hid made
rowiey for the county. Ihoee resulting
excess revenues over opersting costs
were channeled into road improvements.
The county budget for the current year
shows the county will clear about $5,000
and nest year the red would have popped
up.
It is almost a certainty if the county
decides to have its own motor vehicle
inspection program the fee charged will
be somewhat more than $3.

Keep Cool This Summer
We know that winler chill can kill. But
to can summer heal.
Records far high-tcmperature days
were set serosa the country In 1980.
Dallas had a stretch of uninterrupted 190degree weather from June 23 to Aug. 3.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration estimated that the heat
wave — which, of course, could be
repeated in 1961 - caused $20 billion In
property damage and more than 1,200
deaths.
Most ot the Fatalities occurred among
the elderly and the poor who couldn’t
afford air conditioning. The body tem­
peratures of some of these heat-wave
victims reached 106 degrees.
Many of them simply had not
recognized the symptoms and taken the
necessary precautions.
Heavy sweating isn't ths only warning
that the human body is being affected by
the broiling sun and the summer heat.
Other indicators are sudden and extreme
fatigue, insomnia, a high pulse rate,
labored b Tithing, flushed skin, muscle
spasms, nausea and fainting.
Unfortunately, physiological responses
slow down with age. The sensation of
feeling hot (or cold) becomes teas acute.
The University of Texas Health
Science Center in Dallas reports that
people over age 60 suffer 60 percent to 70
percent of all heatstrokes - and M
percent of all heatstroke deaths.
This problem Is exacerbated by fear of
crime.Maiiy tidtily people are afraid to
leave their homes. They keep their
windows closed tightly, som etim es
nailing them shut to keep out intruders.
The hoi sun and Ihe heat (ill Ihrlr homes,
and they become heatstroke statistics.
These are a few hints to fight oft the
heal;
— Wear looae clothing.
— Avoid alcoholic drinks.
— loss of wster and salt are
dangerous. So, drin k w ater more
frequently. Unless you are on a salt-free
diet, use additional salt while cooking or
nibble on salted pretzels or peanuts to

Growing
Older
Harold Hlumrnfeld

replenish some of the important salt lost
by excessive sweating. Don't use salt
tablets, however.
— Cook your meals in the early mor­
ning before the sun heals up the at­
mosphere. Eat your heavy meal at night.
— Slow down your normal activity.
Don’t do anything that requires unusual
exertion.
— Buy a small electric fan If you
cannot afford a ir conditioning. The fan
will at least circulate the air and can be
moved from one room tn another.
— Buy inexpensive roller shades,
especially for those windows that catch
the direct rays of the sun. It's been
estimated that the shades will block out
5t percent of the sunlight and hot air.
This investment can save up to 21 cents of
every dollar that It costs to cool a typical
residence.
Mild exhaustion can be treated by
taking a cool bath, resting In bed away
from the heat and drinking cool liquids.
But take heat seriously. Don't Ignore
danger signs such as dizziness, nausea
and extreme fatigue. You may need
medical attention
It's important for the elderly to get cut
of their hot homes before the sun and the
mercury In the therm om eter rise,
usually at midday.
Perhaps you can temporarily move
into the air-conditioned home of a
relative or friend. If not, go to a movie,
museum cr public library. Or just stroll
or ill in an enclosed air-conditioned
shopping mall.
These are Inexpensive ways to cool oil
when the sun makes things too hot (or
comfort anu good health.

�i A — Evtnlng Herald, linford, FI.

Sunday, Ju n e K IM I

And Showing Its Age

BUSINESS
IN BRIEF
UCF Schedules July
Real Estate Courses
l)CF — Six real estate courses are offered during
July by UCF's College of Extended Studies. All are at
off-campus sites, with three at Winter Park high
school, one st St. Mary Magdsleif school In Altamonte
Springs, and two at the UCF South Orlando Campus.
Included Is a course In resl estate residential
valuation and one In mortgage banking.
There are two Real estate 1 (salesperson) courses.
The first Is for tlx weeks beginning July 4. with classes
from 4 to 10 u.m. Monday and Wednesday at St. Mary
Magdalen school. A two-week course begins July 21 at
the South Orlando campus, with classes from S to 10
p.m. Tuesday and Thursday and 9 a.m . to 3 p m.
Saturday and Sunday. Tuition Is 490 and include*
books.
Winter Park high school Is the site for a Real Estate
11 (broker) course beginning July 8 for six weeks.
Classes meet from 4 to 9:30 o.m. Monday and Wed­
nesday, and tuition lx 1120.
A resl estate review course Is scheduled July 10-12 at
the South Orlando campus. Classes will meet 4 to 10
p.m. Friday and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.
Tuition is 430
July 1 marks the start of the A.I.R.E.A. residential
valuation course at Winter Park high school. Classes
will meet from 4:30 to 9:30 p.m. Monday and Wed­
nesday through August V Tuition Is 41M and Includes
books and other course materials.
The mortgage banking course begins July 14 tor lire
weeks. Classes will meet from 4:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Tuesday and Thursday at Winter Park high school.
Tuition la 4 » with materials.
Additional Information on registration for the UCF
real estate courses may be obtained by calling 273-2128,

Interstate System 25 Years Old
WASHINGTON, D.C. - The
Interstate highway system, marking
Its 23th birthday this July, has grown
to nearly 40.000 miles In every state
but Alaska since 1934.
But Interstate highways, after
giving work to thousands, boosting
the business of Interstate commerce
and making the three-day weekend
vacation a reality, are In for tome
tough times.
Interstate pavement Is crumbling.
I n te r s ta te
bridges
sre
deteriorating at a rapid rate. Heavy
traffic volumes ore causing un­
precedented congestion. And the
total system, first expected to be
completed by 1969, won't be finished
until the end of the decade, ac­
cording to the latest federal
estimates.
' ‘Tliete's nuiluuui Ihe system built

so far has been a tremendous suc­
cess. But success la one of the
problems," said Donald Knight,
executive director of The Road
Information Program (TRIP), a
highway research agency.
Americans are driving 300 billion
miles a year on Interstate highway *,
Interstates make up less than I
percent of the nation's highway
mileage, but they carry 20 percent ol
America's traffic.
"Uie of (he system is far above
original projections And all that
wear and tear la one reason (he
system needs so much repaving and
rebuilding already.” Knight said.
Over the past 10 years, the per­
centage of “ good”-rated pavement
slipped from 74 to 63 percenl Nearly
13,000 miles of Interstate highway
are now In some stage of disrrpalr.

The system has more than 40,000
bridges and 12 percent of them are
now rated as deficient and In need of
repairs, according to TRIP.
And almost half of the Interstate
travel In urban areas is conducted In
bum per-to-bum per, congested
conditions.
“Not only Is the system heavily
used but it’s simply getting old as
well. Many stretches of early
In terstates have passed their
original design life expectancies. By
the end of the 1980's nearly the entire
system will be well beyond the
normal life of a highway," Knight
said.
Maintaining the system wasn't
talked about much when the building
started. F ed eral construction
dollars poured out to states who
accepted them after putting up only

10 percent of the total coat.
Now that maintenance Is the
priority, many states can't afford IL
Federal repair dollars come only
after a state provides 23 percent of
the repair tab, a ratio many slates
say Is too high.
Meanwhile, state transportation
officials are left to do what they can
In trying to keep the system
operating.
Pennsylvania officials recently
covered a stretch of interstate 90
with gravel to fill growing potholes
and help smooth the ride lor
motorists until repaving money was
found.
"It’s a disgrace to see this high­
way system sink to such low stan­
dards," said Knight.
■‘Unfortunately we're convinced
that drastic measures like this will

Tax Workshops O ffered
Free lax workxhops lor new or recently established
im all business owners are held at the Orlando Internal
Revenue Service office In Orlando at Room 398,
Federal Building, 80 N. Hughey Ave„ on the first and
third Thursday of each month Iron* 9 a m. to 4 p.m. For
more Information call 422-2330.

Seminole ('m in ty Commission C h a irm a n ilob
Strum lends a helping hand in recent ribbon
cutting ceremonies marking opening of the
T h ra trr-O fflc c Really In Weklva at the Hunt
Club Corners Shopping Center by the Aumus
Corporation. F ro m left, model Jetta M c F a d d rn ,

Ed Bookbinder, executive vice president of
m arketing. C r a i g K o ld in ge r, d ire c to r of
promotion production, (ienerul Manager E d
\Vrrner, Sturm , M anager Hob Heed and model
Christina Allen.

Executives of Publix
Super Markets. Inc.,
Lakeland,
re c e iv e
A m e r ic a n
D a ir y
Association's
(A D A )
"Slice ol Life" A w a rd .
F ro m
left,
R a lp h
L in d s e y ,
ADA
marketing consultant;
John R. Young, direc­
tor of dairy operations,
I’ublix; Joe Blanton,
president, Publix; and
Te d
Cook.
ADA
marketing consultant.

The Horn* Builder* Association of Mid-Florida la
sponsoring a five-week pre-apprenticeship training
course In the electrical trade from June 22-July 24. The
program lx a combination of classroom Instruction and
practical application with trainees receiving Job
placement s mil lance upon successful completion of
the 200-hour course.
AppUcants must be 18 years of age, ■ high school or
GEO graduate, In good health with own transportation
and a desire for a career In the trade.
Interested Individuals may apply al Home Builders
AaaoclaUnn of Mid-Florida, *2* N la k e Formosa
Drive, Orlando.

*

CLEARWATER, Fla. - Jack Eckerd Corp. said
today it achieved record operating results for the third
quarter and the nine-month period ended May 2.
Sales for the quarter were 4437.8 million, up 14.2
percent over sales of 4374.7 million last year. Net
earnings for the quarter were 414 9 million, up 17.4
percent over last year's 414.1 million. Earnings per
share were 79 cents versus 48 cents, an increase of 14.2
percent. These earnings were calculated on the UFO
Inventory accounting method.

Contest For Datsun Owners
Mors than two million Datsun owners nationwide are
being urged to "Team Up With Datsun” this summer
In a unique consumer direct mall and dealer parts and
service program launtk-d by Nissan UB.A.
This la the first time a consumer merchandising aid
dealer promotion have been combined in a single
campaign.
Former and current Datsun owners will be able to
enter the sweepstakes and win a new 280-ZX Turbo or
210 Hatchback from Balrd-Kay Datsun In Fern Park.
“Instant" prises Include racing Jackets and "Team
Up With Datsun" T-shirts.
Owners of 19M-1979 Datsun* will be notified by mall
about the contest as well as receive coupons good for
reduced prices on tune-ups, oil changes and brake Jobs.

Doing Ihe ribbon cutting honors at recent
opening of the Lake Mary Travel Agency at
Driftwood Plata was Dave Joswlck. center,
m anager of personnel resources for NCR. On his
left is Melissa Petsos, general manager of the

travel agency, and on his right, Anne Petsos,
president of Petsos, Inc., owner, and her
husband. George. Other well wishers from left,
Frank Filippelli. Ho Speir, Dan Stebbins,
Chester Pierce and Daryl Md-aln.

"T he philosophy behind the
gasoline tax system lx that the users
who benefit from the highways pay
for the highw ays," explained
Knight.

TALLAHASSEE, Fix. — "Florida produce transportation
must evolve toward# a more energy efficient and lower priced
system for the Florida produce Industry to remain competitive
to the marketplace.”
That Is the overriding conclusion of a research report
sponsored by Commissioner of Agriculture Doyle Conner
under the Service Through App’lestJ'Ti of Research (STAR)
Grant* Program. Principal Investigator of the transportation
problem was Dr. Gary Long of Uw University of Florid*
Transportation Research Center.
In order to make the transportation of fresh vegetable* and
fruits to Eastern and Canadian market centers mors efficient
so as to retab a competitive advantage over produce
originating In ihe West, the report heavily favor* adoption of s
rail-truck combination — the piggyback system.
The 273-page report examines the state of the system which
moves perishable fruits and vegetables to market, dissects
problems which tend to Interfere with the orderly working of
the system and comments on strategies to Improve Ihe system.
Generally, II finds that the exempt trucking industry, which
hauls 99 percent of Florida’s fresh produce to market, has
served the produce Industry well. However, problems which
were minor In the past now have become "major threats
because they result In Inefficiencies In fuel conservation and
higher than necessary freight rates," the report says.
The fact that Florida production seaaooally coincides with
national production and Iran* porta lion needs often results In a
shortage of trucks to transport fresh vegetables and fruit with
a resulting loss of produce, the study finds. Because trucks
captured practical &gt;all t’« produce-hauling business while
fuel prices were to*. fie railroads serving Florida lack
refrigerated equipment to ease the shortages.
The report notes that "competitive producing areas In the
West a rt moving to more energy-efficient and less cosily
blmodal transportation systems. Unless Florida growers find
similarly efficient modes of tpv u p o rta tty , they art to danger
of losing their longstanding competitive advantage to most of
the major markets.”
The "blmodal" system refer* to a combination of two
systems — in UiU IruUnce, rail and truck, or “piggyback”
with the loaded produce trailer hauled long distances by rail,
taken off a flatcar and pulled by a tractor to Its destination.
The "piggyback" method, the report suggests, Is the most
rational alternative to trucking as It combines the efficiencies
of the long-haul rail movement with the flexibility of collection
of mixed cargo to Florida and delivery at multiple receiving
points at the Journey’* end.
Another hybrid nwda of transporting fresh produce caCetl a
road-railtr, equipped with flanged wheels for railroads as well
as highway wheels, Is still undergoing testing.
The report Includes a number of suggestions which would
require government Intervention; however, It noted that
Imposition of new regulations la contrary to current govern­
ment policy, which Is to de-regulate. The produce Industry can
effect some changes to remove certain Inequities, such as
paying the trucker (or out-of-pocket expenses involved in
loading and unloading, adjustment of truck rates to canpensate truckers for multiple stop* and waiting time, and
adoption of standard package and pallet dimensions.
The report also calls for establishment of a grower In­
formation system so that production can be anticipated by
area and ttme-epan, i freight Information system so truckers
can find cargo more easily and smooth out the surpluses and
shortages of trucks, tnd shuttling of commodities among
markets so that truckers picking up mixed loads would not
need to visit more than one loading point to secure the desired
cargo.
Recommendations which would require governmental
action would be to eliminate gate fee* and loading charges at
stole farmers’ market!, and Impose the road users' tax on ■
graduated scale by the load. The road user tax based on weight
would compensate the stole for damage to the highwiy to
proportion to the tocrexxed weight of the toad, the report say*.
Governmental actions are recommended, the report says, to
"provide the catalyst" for development of and transition to
more energy efficient and leas coally transportation system for
ti e produce industry.

Space Center Sets Record

State Economy Climbs
Florida’» economy dimbged for the aeventh straight
month In Fcbmary, according to the Florida Tren­
dline, a compoalte business Index prepared by Florida
Trend magatlne.
The Trendline, adjusted (or seasonal and In­
flationary swings, was up 1.0 percent In February from
January and 4J percent from the year before. Latest
figures were released In the magaxine’s June Issue.
Florida Trend reported that services, real estate and
m anufacturing Improved m ost rapidly during
February, with strong gains In utilities and com­
munications. Trade and construction were deem
modestly.

Three years later, In 1939, the tax
rate was hiked to four-cents-#-gallon
where It remains today.
But as the Interitate system
swelled to Include more than 40,000
miles of highway, the tax system
that was paying the bills began to
falter.

Produce Transport

Electrical Training Course

Eckerd Earnings Increase

When the In teritate highway
system wss legislated Into being; a
federal motor fuel lax of three-centoa-gallon was set to generate the
billions of dollars needed to build the
system.

Change Needed In

AREA BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT

Foreign Exchange Facilities
The Sun Bank, N.A., branch office at Altamonte Mall
will be one of the millions of foreign visitors traveling
to this area.
While Sun Rank handles In excess of 43 million an­
nually In foreign eichange transactions for foreign
visitors, this figure Is eipected to double or triple once
they learn they can bring local currency to Central
Flurlda and receive fair exchange In U.S. dollars
Multi-Ungual tellers are receiving special training on
foreign currency and pubUc relations.

be happening arroas the country In
the years ahead," h i said.

GREATER SANFORD
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
BEAUTIFICATION AWARD

Davis Citrus Chairman
LAKEUND, Fla. - Joe L Davis Sr., of Wauchula,
la the new chairman of the Florida Citrus Commission,
succeeding Arlen N. Jumper of Ocala, who held the
position the past two years.
Davis, unanimously elected here June 3, by the other
members of tht Commission. Is a grower member of
the body representing Citrus District Sis. Jumper U
the grower representiUre from Citrus District Three.
Elected again to the position of vice chairman was
David O.Homrick of Bradenton, an at-large growerhandler (processor) member.

Grttlng ready to plant
sign designating Semi­
nole County Court
winner of the
June Greater Sanford
Chamber of Com­
merce Beautification
Award are (from left)
Vic Arnett, committee
Troy Ray
Jr..
county
tax
collector, and William
Hauser Sr., employee
of the County Parka
Department, who la
rourthouse gardener,

For the fourth month Kennedy Space Center Tours
has broken attendance records, reports H.B. Cham­
bers, vice president tnd general manager, TWA
Services, Inc., operators of tbs Kennedy Space Center
Visitors Program.
April was 24.2 percent ahead of Iasi year, with 138,931
taking the bus tour. Over 191,488 cams to the Visitors
Center.
Chambers pointed out the record was broken set to
1979, even though the Visitors Center was doted two
days due to the launch of Space Shuttle Columbia.
"This Is the best January, February, March and
April we have ever had,” stated Chambers. Over

327,000havt been to the Kennedy Spue Center VUltot
Center so fir this year.
The Kennedy Spece Center Tour* opera toe every day
except certain moaned launch days and Q rlstm ai
Day. The Visitors Center, with a two-hour Involvement
lime, ie free.

Supervisors Academy
ORLANDO, FL, — The fifth annual FBA Florida
Supervisors Academy, sponsored by the Florida
Binkers Association to cooperation with the CoUegt
Business Administration a t tht University of Sou
Florida, Ttrnpa, FL, will be held on the Univeni
campus, June 14-19. One hundred twenty-five studen
are expected to attend the one-week i

' Y

f

' r

�Evening Herald, Sanford. FL.

Survivor Tells Of 'Human Guinea Pig' Experiment

PEO PLE
IN BRIEF
Curseaholics Anonymous

..

Ban Public Profanity

n|

•I

Paul White Jr. haa a cure (or cursing. He wants to
make public profanity a felony.
Wlille, 22, the founder of Curseaholics Anonymous,
said Tuesday that Congress should pass a law banning
fwblic use of swear words. He estimates Americans
utter 1 billion curse words dally, or more than 700,000
times a second.
"Chronic curseaholics swear on impulse and cannot
hold a conversation without cursing," said White, a
salesman fora computerized automobile sales sendee.
He defined curseaholics as "persons who normally
swear out of thin air for no apparent reason."
"Once this organization gathers enough support, you
will find us picketing the s tm ts , the highways and a lot
of state capitals," he said.
"We will constantly be getting signatures on
petitions and working toward the day when we can go
to Washington and urge Congress to make It a felony
to swear in public," he said.

NOTASULGA, Ala. (UPIl — There was a confused and
slightly embam wfd smile on Charlie Pollard's face when he
posed shirtleas with seven other black men In a 1936 photo­
graph.
Today, a smile still comes easy to the 73-year-old retired
farmer. But he's still unsure why he and 622 other black men
were used as human guinea pigs in a government sponcored
study on untreated syphilis.
Pollard, who lives with his wtfe In a small but neat brick
house in rural east Alabama, likes to show visitors the faded
photograph of himself and seven buddies who participated in
the study.
And he’s kept the "certificate of appreciation" he received
from the U.S. Public Health Service.
"I'm not bitter," says the soft-spoken Pollard. “ I Just think
they should have told me about i t They should have told me
something."
Pollard is one of the few men who participated in the Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment who is still living.
One of the last chapters in the experiment may be closed
soon when a federal Judge derides whether to extend the sixyear nationwide search for the last seven men who may share
in a 19 million settlement of the case.
The deadline has been extended numerous times since the
settlement was readied in iw .

The government agreed to settlement after the NAACP
charged In a t i l billion suit In 1973 that federal and state
agencies induced blacks to Join lhe experiment In 1932 with
offers of free medical treatment, food, rides, cash payments of
$23 and cheap burials.
About 400 men were deliberately given no treatment to cure
their disease even after penicillin was discovered as a cure In
the 1950s. At least 28 died from the experiment, which was
discontinued in 1972 after it was made public.
While medical journals made frequent mention of the study
and its results over the years, there was no public outcTy
against it until it was revealed through news reports.
Pollard, who has a seventh grade education, still remembers
the early morning trips to the nearby Shiloh School where he
thought he was being treated for "bad blood” with shots, white
pills and green liquid medidne.
"They told us we had lo take some blood tests," he recalls.
"Then they started putting some of the men out after the tests.
"They didn't say what it was for and we never did ask any
questions."
During the first couple of years, Pollard said he was treated
weekly. Afterwards it was quarterly and then annually.
"We had to come tn and take those shots. You couldn't eat
anything before we took them. I'd always vomit when I got
home.

Emily Harris haa won a prize for writing about her
adventures with then-fugitive Patricia Hears! Mrs
Harris and her husband, William, were convicted uf
kidnapping, armed robbery and car theft after their
Los Angeles spree with Miss Hears!.
The award comes from PEN, an international
writers' association that hands out annual writing
awards to Inmales In U S. prisons. Actorwriter-director Ossie Davis and ex-priest and political
activist Daniel Berrigan will hand out PEN'* Writing
Awards for Prisoners tomorrow. Mrs. Harris's "On the
Open Road," recalling how she and her husband were
nabbed by the FBI In San Francisco after their travels
with Miss Heirst. won third prize in lhe nonfiction
category.

Rlngo's Response
Former Beetle Ringo Starr isn't one to take
"palimony" lying down. Apparently he’s prepared to
stand up and fight all the way to the California
Supreme Court. Ringo, who recently married actress
Barbara Bach, is being sued by his former live-in
girlfriend, Nancy Andrews, for 13 milli&lt;'i.
He went to Los Angeles Superior Court to say that
Ms. Andrew's attorney, Marvin Mitchelson, had not
served him properly. The court ruled he was properly
served, and now Mitchelson says he understands Starr
wtU appeal all the way to California's top court.

H Pays To Advertise
Her press release states that “Dorit Stevens Is an
exciting new face in town who can be as sultry as
Sophia Loren, u sexy as Marilyn Monroe, and as
brooding as Uv UUmann.”
Some Hollywood Insiders say she’s "the hottest and
fastest rising new actress to hit the entertainment
scent.” Dorit may be all these things, but the big trick
in Hollywood Is to gel noticed, to get past the recep­
tionist and see the casting director. Dorit's publicity
people erected ■ large billboard on Hollywood’s Sunset
Strip that showi the leggy, scantily-clad Dorit with her
manager and a phone number.
Did it work? Dorit is now scheduled to star In a
television sitcom pilot called "Some O i l e . "

Valedictorian Twins
The only difference between the Bye twins is that
Kerri wants to be an attorney and Kathy wants to
marry one.
The blonde 17-year-old students finished their senior
year with identical 4.0 grade averages. They officially
graduated from high school Wednesday sharing
valedictory honors. “ I wouldn't have wanted it if II
was Just me." said Kathy. “ We did it together. A
couple of times 1 almost got a "B " and Kerri felt like •t
was her almost getting a "B ” too."
Added Kerry, '1 sometimes fell sorry for our friends
who had to study alone. 1 can't Imagine studying
without someone else there."
"A let of twins hate each other,” said Kathy. "They
don't appreciate what they have. 1 doubt that they can
accompUah as much aa they would if Ihcy worked
together."
The identical twins say Kerri wants to be a lawyer
and Kathy wants to m a m one, but both girls plan to
continue their college education together at U CU ,
majoring to political science.
“We have the same likes and interests and look for
the same things In ■ school, so why go to different
colleges Just to separate! ' asks K ent

Gray says it's generally conceded the experiment provided
no useful medical benefits.
"As far as making any contribution to the medical
profession and learning anything they didn't already know, 1
would Hot Uuiiit
Kuud mine uut uf it,” lie said.
as an aide to Red-bunting Sen.
Joseph McCarthy in the 19S0«.
I Penthouse)
"People are fasetnated with
the extremes. It's a m atter of
orientation, but It's alsg part
of the
natural
com­
petitiveness that most of us
have."
— Norris McWhtrier, editor
of the "Guinness Hook of
World Records,"

W hat people a re sa y in g ..
going to turn back along that
road."
— I^rrh Walesa, announcing
his desire to step down as
leader of Poland'a 10 millionmember Solidarity labor
union.

"I was so psychologically
prepared for this change, It
'T m not overly fond for was like getting on n trolley
some of my fellow lawyers. 1 enr at one stop and getting off
don't like the usual pay-by- •1 the next."
the-hour, keep-your-cllent-in— Maksim Shostakovich,
thr-dark.
then-sell-hlm-out conductor and son of lhe
methods that I’ve seen so lamed composer, reflecting
on his defection to lhe West
often."
LECII WALESA
"The Poland we had before — Hoy Cohn, a New York from lhe Soviet Union.
will nol reappear. We are not attorney who made his name (Newts eekl

What Price Supports

Penned Writers

The task of locating participants in lhe experiment or their
h»irs fell to Tusk egee lawyer Fred Gray, a former state
legislator who received more than $1 million in legal fees in the
case.

QUOTE/UNQUOTE

Buckingham Palace admitted today that Prince
Charles stood on a box to tower over laidy Diana
Spencer during photographs for the official wedding
postage stamp, hut loyally insisted he Is really taller
than she.
A palace spokesman explained that the Pari of
Snowdon, who look the photo, had the problem of
leaving a space in the upper right hand corner far the
traditional silhouette of Queen Elizabeth, which goes
on all stamps, and the price.
He solved it by having Charles stand on a box with
Lady Diana resting her head on his chest. The queen's
silhouette was placed directly opposite Charles' head,
a symbolic reminder that he is heir to the throne.
The spokesman took the occasion to claim Prince
Charles Is Sfoot-11,1 Inch taller than his bride-to-be,
and doesn't have to stand on a box in real life. The
Implication was that Lady Diana only looka taller when
lhe wears heels, although she has mostly worn flat
shoes since the engagement.

The scene was London's biggest and grandest art
auction house, but that wasn't Gainsborough's "The
Blue Boy” that was going under the hammer. Instead
it was Marilyn Monroe's pink mesh 36-D bra. The bra
was snapped up for 11,040 at Sotheby Parke Hornet by
an anonymous American bidder.
The entire transaction took only 40 seconds. It was
probably a record price for auctioned underwear. Back
in 1978 stripper Gypsy Rose Lee's mink G-string went
to an anonymous London banker who phoned in a bid to
New York's Plaza Art Gallery for tiOO. And that Gstrlng sported a mink head, complete with glass eyes,
surrounded by mink tails. A belly dancer bought a gold
sequinned G-string at the same auction for MOO.

"I'd have this feeling to come over me like you could smell
the blood. Sometimes I’d have as many as three needles in my
arm."
Herman Shaw, 79, who now lives in Tallahassee, says he
recalls the nurse or doctor would draw blood for tests, pat him
on the back and say, "You’re going to live to be 100."
There were no whites in the experiment, said Poilarti, be­
cause "I was told they'd get the best results from black men."
Pollard's portion of the out-of-court settlement was $32,330,
but he says participants weren't adequately compensated. "It
wasn't enough," lie says. “I always told them 1 thought we
should have gotten at least $100,000.”
Pollard, who tends about a dozen cows on 60 acres of land,
paid $6,000 for a new car, gave his wife $10,000, paid off a few
debts and put the rest in the bank.

r

Royal Snowdon Job

ii

Sunday, June 14, I t l l —1-7A

Connie Stevens is ready to make a comeback.
" I ’ve been out on the road for so lon^ that the
producers don't think of me a n y m o re ." she says.
" B u t I'm trying to Jog their m e m o rie s."

"I've never thought of a
man as a convenience
because I’ve never known one
who was a convenience,
frankly. They're mostly In­
convenient."
— louri-n linen II, actress.
I People!

LAUREN HACALI.

P A R K M G LO T

Connie's
Comeback
HOLLYWOOD (NEA) — Picture Hollywood as a place
where all the available actors are lined up, walling for their
time in the spotlight. And If one of the actor* haa to leave for
any reason he loses hts place In tine and haa to go to the end
to start over.
Certainly, that's on over-simpliIleatloo, but there’s truth
in it. And, says Connie Stevens, she haa lost her place In line.
Connie was, for a time, on her way to stardom. Warner
Brothers, for whom she did the TV series. "Hawaiian Eye,"
had her under contract and slipped her Into several movies,
none of which were very good.
Still, she sang and danced and was certainly as
goodlooking as a woman can be. So everybody figured she
was going to make the world forget Monroe and Mansfield
and Harlow and (hose other ladles.
She had her place In lhe line, and there were only a few
ahead of her. Bui then she left and did la s Vegas and Lake
Tahoe and all those other watering holes. She made a
fortune, she says, but she was almost totally away from
Hollywood for a decade.
"And I lost my place in line," she says.
But now she has come back, and she’s begun to elbow her
way up, because she looks as gorgeous as ever aitl, the
says, she It a better performer than she ever was
"I've been out on the road,” she saya, "foe so long that the
producers don't think of me any more. But I’m trying to Jog
their memories."
She wants to come back, settle In, stay home more so her
two daughters — Jolie is 13 and Trtcia is 12 — can go to the
fine -rlvale school to which they were recently admitted.
Until now, the girls have always traveled with Ihelr mother,
gettli g local tutors wherever they stopped.
And the girls lov ed the life, and, apparently, thrived on 1L
When Jolie w.is four, she learned how lo call for room
service — pretzels and Fresca was her first order.
But they are fast approaching high school and Connie
realizes they need something more than room service,
nightclubs and tutor*. They need the good old everyday life
of girls and boys and dates and proms and education.
She says she recently realized, for the first time, that her
daughters a rt different from her.
"I was thinking about Ihelr school." she says, "and 1
realized that they will be going to a school now with mostly
affluent people s daughten. Until now. they were in a
Catholic girls' school, and there was a cross-section of girls,
but here they will all be affluent kids.
"And It made me ralixe that my daughters are rich kids. I
was always a poor girl, an 111gave me a start to realize that
my daughters are rich."
They a r t Eddie Fisher’s children, of course. And, Connie
says, Fisher Is not very visible in the girls’ Uvea. She
recognizes that he has his problems, and she says that the
times he does spend with them are wonderful ones.
"Those times," she says, "are Joys to them. He Is their
hero. And I like him vf,y much, too. There is no bitterness
between us at a ll"
Jolie and THria art, then, haL'-alsters to Carrie and Todd
Fisher, Eddie'* children with Debbie Reynold*. They are
good friends, although separated by 10 years.
Connie herself has several other irons In the fire, besides
the ones she has already mastered — music and acting. She
has become a writer. She la s written the treatment for a
western - "War Shaman" - which Is being considered as a
mini-series.
And she has written other things, and she is continuing to
write.
She says the thrill of living is to try new things. She has
several things she hopes to accomplish before she calls It a
life.
You might nol expect it of her, but one of her big goals,
which she expects to accompUsh, is to build a piece of
furniture.
She might start while she's waiting in line.

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IA— Evening Herald, Sanford, FL

Sunday, June H , 1411

ALICE BENNETT ...Sanford's

National Champion

S a n fo rd ’s n a tio n a l 400-m eter
re la y record h o ld e r A lice
llennrlt goes through the paces
Frid a y at Seminole Com m unity
College. Bennett, a sophomore at
Florida Stale, will compete at
the TAC T r a c k
M eet
at
Sacramento, C a l. Ju n e 19,20 and
21.

Photos By Tom Vincent
While S an fx d 'i Alice Bennett ranks
running third on her priority list, Flxida
State's speedy sophonixe wss anything
but third when she turned the comer on
the third leg of the Lady Seminole* 400meter relay team at the National A1AW
track meet a t Austin, Tes.
When she stretched gracefully forward
id exchange the baton with Randy
(itvens, Alice handed her more than a
baton. She handed her a national record.
Givens zipped the remaining 100
inclara lo give Florida Slale a italiutiai
record with a Ume of 44.33 seconds. It
broke the existing mark established last
year by California State-Nxtluidge.
The relay team vlctxy was one of the
reasons the Seminole* had their best ever
finish — third — at the national outdox

my father was very muscular. I guess 1
level. They were picked to finish 18th. In turned 20 year old.
was Just mixed In there together,"
And doing "well" lx something the
the Indoor season they again won the 400chuckled the smiling sprinter.
mcler relay and Bennett also took fourth physical education m ajx and articulate
Bennett has always been a sincere
in the long Jump. The Semlnoles finished English m inx has been doing since the
Baptist, but when her mother passed
first began to move those fast feet.
second In that meet.
away during her Junlx year In high
"1 remember at Goldsboro I was one of
"I was Just thanking the Lord that we
school, she rededlcated her life to
made all our handofts," said the deeply- the fattest,” u ld the modest lifetime
religious Bennett about the predrion Sanford resident,".] Could always run. 1 making something of herself.
1 "When my mother passed. I got Into
m ovem ent, ol E lm eraid . H a rris. , guess II was Just natural ability."
Die church even m x e because I knew 1
Natural ability along with perfectly
Marita Payne, Bennett and anchof
had to be strong," said Bennett.
developed, sprinter's legs. Bennett
woman Givens.
"Hevrrand (Andrew) Hamilton helped
"My heart stopped beating until Randy resem bles a "black w hirlw ind" of
me a let and so did the rest of my
hit
fuilali line," recall. Alice. "We pumping arms and legs when she cranks
family."
knew UCLA would be our biggest com­ up her perfect and smooth running style.
Which is one of the reasons Alice's
"Everybody always thinks that i lifted
petition and II was great to beat them.
prixitles are God, family, running and
"Our relay team was one of the best In weights," laughed Bennett about her
friends. Her in ter Johnnie la a threethe nation befxe the meet. There's muscular calves and thighs. "But t
sp x t standout at Seminole High entering
pressure to do well when everybody didn't. They were always that way.
her last year.
"My mother had pretty big legs and
expects you too,” pointed out the Just

Player Ejection
Hands Kiwanis
Second Halt Title

Throw out the pitching records.
Toss away the batting averages.
Klwanls didn't need either to win
Ihe second half championship In the
Sanford Ju n lx League.
With Klwanls leading 3-1 Friday
and batting tn the bottom of Ihe
second Inning, Knlghta of Columbus
catcher Lee Frederick was ejected
while dlsputlng a call by the home
plate um pire and Knlghta of
Columous had to fx fe it because It
didn't have a substitute.

Klwanls Is 9-0 In the second hall
with one game to play, while Knights
of Columbus fell to 7-2. However,
Knights of Columbus won the first
half and the two teams will tangle In
the best of three d ty championship
series beg liming June 23 at Chase
Park.
In Friday’s other game, Elks best
Moose 17-10.
F.lks put a pair of runs on tht
scoreboard In Die top of the first,
using a walk and two errors that all

came with two outs.
Moose responded with three runs
In the bottom of the first after Roger
Hall and Jedel Williams opened the
Inning with singles.
A three-run homer by starting
pitcher Donald Grayson keyed a
live-run second Inning f x Elks, but
Mooae scored (o x runs In Us half of
the second to tie the score at 7-7. Hall
and Williams also had tingle* In the
second Inning.
Elks scored fo x runs on fo x hits

Players, Owners Meet
Again Monday Or Tuesday
NEW YORK (UP!) — Striking major
league players, mired with owners In a
stalemate over fret agent compensation,
kept the diamonds empty (or a second
day today and disappointed fans left
without any weekend baseball to watch.
The baseball strike —which took effect
before Friday's scheduled 11 games —
will keep players off the diamond at least
until early next week because the parties
will not be called back to the bargaining
table until Monday or Tuesday.
“We're pretty deadlocked right now,”
said federal mediator Kenneth Moffett.
“The next meeting will be held next wrek
— poaalbly Monday or Tueaday —
depending on the availability of ihe
partiea and alto In hopes of some
movement in negotiating positions."
The thorny issue which has utienated
players and owners for mure than II
months is the question of compensation
for a team losing a free agent to another
dub.
Owners feel the system that allowed
free agenta to aign with the highest
bidder — with only an amateur draft
choice as compensation - had pushed
salaries out of control and hurt com­
petitive balance.
A chief concern of both players and
owners alike Is the possible disillusioning
effect a prolonged strike cou|pl have on
fans.
“The people that are getting hurt are
the fan*," said David Huilon. a Howie,
Md., resident and Baltimore Oriole
rooter. " I really hate to see this come

Rut not with a baton, she was carrying a *
basketball.
When It came time f x track, no one
gave her much of a chance aa a walk-in to
make the team, much less form a nucleus
( x a national record.
No one, that la, except Alice Bennett.
“1 was very determined," said Alice.
"Track w as tlwayamy Ural love. 1 really
worked hard to make It. There * a lot of
pain that goes into becoming good at
sports."
And that pain paid off f x Bennett and
track Coath Roger Smith. “I was sur­
prised how well Alice did,” said Smith at
the awards banquet. “She has proven
that she can run on a level with
anybody."
— SAM COOK

in the lop of the third and went In
front to stay. I-eroy Richardson had
a two-run tingle and Reginald Hayes
drove In a run with a doubleSteve Dennis was the winning
pitcher In relief of Grayson. He
finned nine over the final five in­
nings while giving up Just two hits.
Grayson was two f x two with a
home run and double f x Elks. The
home run was his fourth of the
season and gives him the league lead
In that category,

Richardson also had a pair of hits
f x Elks.
Williams had three singles f x
Mooae and Hall added two safeties.
Elk!
7S4 »cj I— is to ;
Mao to
Ml no O-IO I 4
WP — S1»v* Dam n &lt;4 41. LP - jttlrl
W illiam ! 10 SI. H lt.T E R J: Elkt Donald O ri»to n j | homo run. doublo,
L*vov Rkbornon i 1 Orion Brinion 11
aovbio. Dorrtil Grohom 1 1 , Antoino
Cochornom I 4. Chr •* Htnr, 1 4. Dirrtll
Woodtn 1 4. Dontrol Knigfil I S Moot* X M I Wllltlffll 14, Ro*or Moll 14,
Vornon Ro m in o r t ) doublo

Holmes Knocks Out
'Neon Leon's' Lights

near Ihe middle of the
Pearl Sandow,

the players strike has “taken the
of baseball."
“ Ml Just go and pull my golf
out," she said.
la s t February, In accordance with the
guidelines of the Basic Agreement Ironed
out In May, 1910, owners unilaterally im­
posed their own compensation clause In
which a team losing ■ ranking free agent
could select one of (he signing d u b 's lop
play ers. The signing team could
“protect" from 13 to II players In Its
organization, depending on the "quality"
of Ihe free agent.
but the players said UUs system would
restrict the movement of tree agents
because learns would be less likely to
sign marginal players If they were forced
to give up their lith or 19th best player as
compensation.
The players have proposed a "pool"
concept In which every team drafting a
free agent would designate os many a*
four players from Its tO-man spring
training rotter for a compensation pool.
The team losing a free agent then would
be able to select a player from that pool.
Ray Grebey, chief negotiator for the
owners — none of whom have personally
attended the latest round of talk* — u ld
the p lay en ' walkout Is ill-advised.
" (Compensation) I* really not a strike
issue," Grebey u ld . "This problem has
to be and will be solved at the table."

"1 feel that God makes everything
happen. We pray before every ra x ,"
confided Bennett. "Even when things
were going bad f x me, I have kept my
faith."
Thoat bad ihlngi. In the form of In­
juries, occurred during her high school
career where B ennett excelled In
beakelbeQ more than track.
“ I don't know what It was, but every
time track season came around t got hurt
tome way. In my freshman year it was
ligament damage In my right knee,"
rtmembers Alice.
In her aophxnxe year Bennett hurt
her kneekrig Jumping. In her Junlx year
she twisted her back running.
So after her senior year, Bennett
packed up her shoes and headed f x FSU.

Hoavywalght chomp Larry Holmoi hammorod
Leon Spinks in the third round.

dilS/.

DETROIT (UP1) - luury Holmes
doesn't wsnt to think about Gerry Cooney
— until he signs a contract to fight him.
"I'm not interested In Gerry Cooney,"
Holmes snorted Friday night after
hammering ‘Neon Leon' Spinks into
submission a t 2:14 of the third round of
their World Boxing Ooundl heavyweight
championship fight.
Del Williams, crx of Spinks' three
trainers, told Dale WUlianu to throw in
the towel while Holmes was pounding
lefts and rights Into Spinks’ (ace and
body virtually unmolested.
"The towel didn't atop the fight, I did,"
referee Richard Steele said of his
declaim to award the fight to the 31-yearold Easton, Pa., resident. Holmes has
now won all 31 of h it pro fights, 21 by
knockout.
The next stop for Holmes could be a
multlmiUlon-dolkr payday with Cooney,
provided the No. 1-ranked WBC contend­
er defeats WBA heavyweight champion
Mike Weaver when they fight later this
year.
Promoter Don King, who said In his
hyp* for tht Holmes-Splnk* bout be had
|17 million "reserved f x Cooney,"
renewed his drive to bring the two top
heavyweight name* together by offering
Cooney f t million lo fight Holmes.
"I signed a contract (to fight Cooney)
months ago," Holmes said. “I'm not
Interested In Gerry Cooney — until he
signs.
"If he shows up now," Holmes said in
tht middle of a post-fight monologue,

"I'll punch him in the mouth f x free.
"Gerry Cooney La a deformed kid with
a left arm ," Holmes said. "Cooney never
fought anyone. He's a white hope. If he
was black he'd be a nobody. You know it, 1 know it. We all know it.
“1 say, get the man to sign a contract,"
Holmes said, "then I'll talk about him."
Holmes, who entered his 10th title
defense already angry at Spinks f x an
incident Involving Holmes' wife last
November, was livid In his comer
following a nearly 30-eecond exchange
with the challenger after the secondround bell.
Early In the third and final round of the
nationally televised fight. It appeared
Spinks stepped Into a solid Holmes right
hand. He acted like he'd run Into a hotel
room d o x . At full speed.
From that point on the fight was over.
It Just took a while f x the previously
aggressive Spinks to get the message
A flurry of left-nght combinations to
the head and body tank Spink; to the
canvas tor a count of nine. He rose
staggering and bleeding from the fact.
Michael Spinks, Leon's brother and a
top-ranked light heavyweight, screamed
and tried to climb into the ring to get th*
light stopped but was restrained by the'
boxer's handler*.
Spinks then lost (he race between
Holmes' hands and the bell that never
came as the champion backed him Into
his own com er and methodically drilled
him with both fists f x approximately 34
seconds.

�Evening H traM . la nferd^Fl

Sunu«y, JuneH, |»lt—fA

Hagier Plans Painful
Night For Antuofermo

Unified Middleweight Cham pion M arvin Hauler has vowed to
destroy Vito Antuofermo when they meet Saturday at the Boston
Garden.

Spec lal From IIBO
•'There will be no love lost in this fight
with Antuofermo," sBid WBA-WBC
middleweight boxing champion Marvin
llagler shortly before leaving for his
Provincetown, Ma. training camp to get
ready for his title defense against former
middleweight
tltleholder
Vito
Antuofermo. “Although I’m going to
destroy him, at the same time I'm giving
him the opportunity to fight for the
championship. I hope he appreciates it,"
crowed the champ.
The scheduled li-round slugfest will be
shown live on Home Bos Office
SATURDAY, JUNE 12 (9:00-11:00 pm,
EDT) from the Boston Garden.
The two combatants have met before.
Their roles were reversed then with
Antuofermo as champion. On Nov. 30,
1979 (hay fought to a draw. Many who
saw the light thought llagler came out
the winner and got a raw deal on the
decision. Now the boxing pendulum has
swung in the other direction and Hagier
finds himself defending the crown
Antuofermo once wore. It was Britain's
Alan Minter who snatched the title from
Antuofermo which paved the way (or
Hagier to put away Minter in three
rounds with a knockout punch in l,ondon's Wembley Arena on Sept. 77; ‘.380
"There will be no draw this lime," the
champ affirmed. "It will be very clear
that I have won and painfully abvlous to
Vito."

Hagler's comments on the fight came
Just after he had returned from a fourround exhibition fight in Bermuda. The
bout was a benefit for the "Year Of The
Handicapped" (the same cause fee which
Muhammad Ali boxed in an exhibition
match in 1966).
Hagier, (SI-14; 41 KOs), won the
WBA-WBC middleweight championship
from Britain's Alan Minter with a thirdround KO punch in London's Wembley
Arena on Sept. 77, 1980. It was Minter
who had taken the crown away from
Antuofermo.
Hagier and Antuofermo met only
once before, when Antuofermo was
champ, fighting to a draw on Nov. JO,
1979 in Las Vegas. There were those who
saw the fight and felt that Hagier was
robbed of a win and the middleweight
crown,
Antuofermo, (47-5-2; 20 KOs), was last
in the ring against Maurtcio Aldana In
Chicago on April 1 of this year, winning in
10 rounds. Just five m m ths before that
fight, Antuofermo underwent facial
surgery to shave down parts of a bone
called the supraorbital ridge above his
eyes. Throughout his boxing career
Antuofermo had been plagued by con­
stant cuts and heavy bleeding in the area
around his eyes which impaired his sight.
Prior to the Aldana bout, he lost a
rematch with Minter for the mid­
dleweight crown on June 28. 1980 in
lamdon.

Vito Antuofermo, a form er title holder, battled M arvin llagler to a
draw in their Iasi clash in 1979.

Steinbrenner Miffed At Miller Miss Of Bargaining Session
By MILTON RICIIMAN
UFI Sports Editor
DETROIT illP li — George Steinbrenner
has shown unusual talent for motivating his
New York Yankees with an occasional verbal
blast and perhaps he’s hoping to get the
baseball strike talks rolling by using the same
technique.
His criticism Friday of Marvin Miller
ranked among the most severe ever levelled
at the executive director of the Players
Association.
Steinbrenner, speaking from Chicago, said
Miller had acted improperly in staying away.
"I've always been one owner who lias
praised and admired Marvin Miller and his
great ability as a representative and

negotiator, for I believe I can respect and
admire an adversary like him," said the
Yankee owner.
"But as a baseball owner who is totally
Interested in getting the game back together
for the sake of the fans, I have to ask myself,
'What the hell is going on when I am told that
the chief negotiator fur the players is not
concerned enough to be present at a key
negotiating session with the owners and the
federal mediator?’”
Don Fehr and Peter Rose, the Players
Association attorneys, attended Friday's
session with 10 players — Don Sutton. Joe
Niekro and Bob Knt-pper, Houston; Bob
Boone, Philadelphia; Phil Niekro, Atlanta;
Rusty Staub and John Steams, New York

AAajar L cifo a Slandm«t
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tdM l

Wlien Tommy Fonseca and Al Un a to took over the reins of
the Mayfair Country Gub, one of their prime aims was to
promote youth golf.
Monday the pair takes the first step toward that goal by
hosting the Orlando-land Golf Association’s first annual
tournament.
Director Richard Eckstein estimates the membership at 275
players. CompeUUon for each tournament should average ICO175 performers.
Beginning July 6, PGA professional Lovato will initiate a
two-week Junior golf clinic from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. every day,
Registration Is July C a ts a.m. Coffee and doughnuti will be
served. The cost of the Instruction is a mere IS. Prises trill also
be offered. It is open for anyone from age seven to 17.
Call Lovato or Whitey Eckstein al 322-2531 for information.

Twins' Split Maintains Bulge
Aftrr splitting a double-header Friday night with
Savannah, the Twins have Just eight games left to play in
the first half ot the Southern league schedule. They lead
second place Charlotte by five games.
Saturday night the O-Twlns play Birmingham at 7:30.
Scott Bleckel, who fashioned a two-hitter In his last start,
will climb the hill for Orlando.

7 D A Y L IQ U O R S A L E
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CONTRACTORS

canceled.
"It reminds me of a ship captain who has
guided his ship across the ocean and Just at
the crucial time when the ship is approaching
New York harbor and the strategic docking
must take place, he turns over command of
the ship to the crew," said Steinbrenner.
"U is inconceivable tome —and I (eel 1 can
speak from experience since In the past 20
years I Itave probably negotiated more labor
contracts with more different unions Ilian
anyone else In baseball. Including Marvin
Miller — that the man who heads the players
union choose* to absent himself from
meetings at this crucial Juncture with the silty
statement that he’s leaving II In the hands of
the players."

Mayfair Plans Clinic

Standings

Pttlla
Si Lou
Mil
PUbQN
NY

Mets, and George Foster. Bill Bonham and
Paul Moskau, Cincinnati. Bay Grebey
represented tlte owners,
Frhr, in captaining Miller's absence from
the session, said: "Marvin Miller said he
would not attend because he said the strike
already had begun. The players are here to
represent themselves because the strike has
started. They are the real people Involved and
we feel they are capable of representing
themselves."
Steinbrenner did not argue with that. But
the Yankee owner, who heads the American
Shipbuilding Co. of Cleveland and Tampa, felt
Miller should have been present at what
turned out to be the final session before
regularly scheduled games actually were

PASS YOUR FLORIDA

$]995

Complete
Dual Jets
• 1 3 3 00

8

�ISA— E vtnln g M trald, Sanlord, F I.

Legal Notice

Sunday, Juno 10. till

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

11

H t lp W d id E d

CLASSIFIED ADS

A— Ouplc*es

Large New 1 Bdrm, Air Heat,
NO TICE OF
IN T E N T
TO
NOTICE
OF
IN T E N T
TO
9*vpomit»ii« ptfiofl tor to^p
Carpeted, appliances No pets
VACATE POBTIONS OF CER
PORTIONS OF CER ­
NOTICE
OF
IN T E N T
TO
lavwn And pool c*rt. prlvtto
Clirv» cetfCiv* Soifftitriy, u d 1 TA IN P LATS IN S E M IN O LE VACATE
UIS m o, SIM dep m i n i
TA IN FLATS IN S EM INO LE
VACATE P OR TIO N! OF CCB
Sem
inole
O
rlando
•
Winter
Park
rtiFtfenct. f*c wrorijf*® c&amp;nd
jinnth!
H
M4*4“ }
Eve
COUNTY, FLORIDA
COUNTY. FLORIDA
TAIN P LA TS IN SEM IN O LE
snd
p
*
f
123
1712
* from the c«*t#r of m k * cufvt. 1
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
TO WHOM I T MAY CONCERN
COUNTY. F LOR IOA
La***) For a New Mom*? —
322-2611________________
831-9993
thence E iiU f if eicng the #rc of I
T*fc# nolle* th.l * petition thill
Taka notice That a petition shall
Check lha Want Ads for heuses
TO WHOM IT M AY CONCERN
m &lt;J curve, hevtng e r«&lt;j»ut of
bt tiled, pursuant lo Chapter
T*k* rsottc* m il * petition shall be JSOMIttf ende centril engle of I t ! b* tiled. purtu*nt to Ch.pttr
of .v ary slit and prut_______
RATES
ITT 101 of th* Florida Statutes,
CLASSIFIED DEPT
Med. pursuant to Chapter ITT.101 ' &lt;*grm or 00". for 40f If feet to : ITT 1)1 04 th* Florid* Slttuttt.
LAKE MARY 1 bdrm. air. kids
with the Board ol Cosasty Com
w th the Board ol Cotmty Com
I Tim*
»0c B lint
°* **• * tor‘do StOtwtev ertth the | the ponf of tenoencv; thence S
ULS Super area ))* TTOO
mitt«n*rt ot Stmlnol. County. m.turners ol Seminot# County,
H O U RS
Boer Pol County Covnmistionartot
1 cons*cutly*Tim*i 50c a lm*
SAV ON RENTALS, REALTOR
F W W . to v . d . portions o. Florida, lo vacate portions ol
I f ya rn i ra fts a r t ) our |
(eminol* County. F lo rid ., to
1
conM
Cullvt
tins*)
41c
I W A M. — 5 I ) P M
certain plats ot th* subdivision
,
certain ? '&lt; » « ' »&gt;• _subdivision
« . « &gt; . port.«nt ol ttf t..n p l.lt ol
Jtufcfty. n o w ) i n t « jtt I
Deltona Duple* 1 Bdrm. 1 Bath
tuf»*
concave u
N ofttiwttlorly
.tt.rlY
_ __ _
Northw
known at Sepal Point, according to known at Sabal Point, according to
M O N D A Y thru F R ID A Y TOconMCwOvgtlmM i t c e IIim
tn« subdivision known . t label
m m S JS to S 5 0 u r
|
UIS ♦ Ofp
thtnet E.tttrly and Nortftrlr
its* Plat I her rot recorded in Piet th* Plat I hereof recorded in Plat
S
A
T
U
R
D
A
Y
f
Noon
Point, accordng to in . P l.t
SI
M
Minimum
.long me arc ot u d curve. having
ni«Me
rnrjry p t r i /j i b y
j
Book 11 Paget TO thru TO, and Iho Boo* ll, Paget) ) thru T*. and th*
trwrnt recorded in P l.t Rook II.
) Uln*s Minimum
.r u t usotSSOMI**# t n d . c t n t t . l 1
J r 1 4)711)1 I77|/l J J t w
LONGWOOD Lk trf,) Rmt. kids
P.gtt TO thru TO. .no th» P l.t ot *nglt ol I0T d tg rttt SS' 00" . tor Plat ot Sabal Point Second Flat of Sabal Point Second
Revision accordmg to the Plat
hours Jnnustsirailiit
Revision according to th* Plat
SIN dn . UCO mo IIS TIN
DEADLINES
1*6*1 Point S.cono Rnr It Ion «
Ml T) ttf! to . point ht.ring N IT tharanl recorded In Plat Book !», fharaol recorded in Plat Book If,
our beautiful itllt hen I
sa v o n r en tr ls r ea lto r
cording to l h . P l.t Ih .rro t
dtgrttt IP 14“ E trom tht ctnitr
Pi get at, a*, an) at. Public
Paget AT. 4). and At, Public
Noon The Doy Before Publication
recorded in Pl.t Book IT, P .g tt IT,
ctji/iri/loH
|
of sad ciave. Usenet N 0S dtgrttt
Records ol Sfmlnol* County.
M. .no IT. Public Rfcorot ol
I f l ) W fer let II feat to • point Rtcordt ot Seminof* County.
Call
Sally
FavsnlgM
I
Florida,
which
lots
art
described
M Houim Unfumf*t»d
Florida,
which
loti
art
described
Snmnot. County, Florid., which on . circu l.r cur*t con c.v.
Sundoy- Noon Friday
*1 H A IT I'
at follows to wd
kitt art described *t lonowt to Southvtilvf11, ttid point beating at lonowt lo wit
I
f
t
r
A
LE0AL DESCRIPTION
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Winter Springt! vt*r old, 3 2 I
•t
S M dtgrttt W »4" W Irom the
I
Personal laltrvNw
SABAL G LE N A T SABAL
Cir girig#, fam rm , util rm
SABAL BEND A T SABAL
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
tenter ot t.id curve, thtnet
POINT
POINT
•it 0077. l i t 03V
»
SAtkL PALM DRIVE SOUTH
Northerly .nd Northamterly .long
CREA
ril’E
Legal
Description
Legal
Description
Legal Description
n — HelpWErrtEd
th. .rc ol ttid curve, having «
I
LXPRESSt()\S
Brkh, 3 Bidroom,
Bath
Portions Tract “ K ” . Tract “ 8",
Portions Tract “ J". Tro d " K “ ,
Portion* ol T r .c t l " L " . "O",
4 -P m o f n h
f adult ot MS 00 I vet «nd « ctnlr.l
S77S M
Traci"C". SectionT. Section), end and Sactdn 1 at SABAL POINT,
"P". .no " R " . Section 1. A i .l t .
Household Help I day per oft*,
mgiv ol IS d tg rttt at' 00", tor
Call
373
2142
Loblolly Road 04 SABAL POINT,
according lo th* plot thereof as
Drift .no D.hoon Holly RotO.
rat a mutt taper hour,
let 41tret to .point bearing N )!
WHY BE LO NELY I Writ* C*t
SABAL POINT, according lo lh* dtgrttt SV *»" w Irom the center according to the p u l thereof at itcorOrdinPiat Book 1), Paget 7)
I t ) *14)__________
A
Mare'
Dating
S*rnc*
All
CONVENIENCE s t o r e CASH
recorded
in
Piet
Book
II.
Pagti
TO
ihrouspi
It
ol
tht
Public
Rtcordt
ot
landlords
plit thereof . t rtcordtd in Plot o4ted curve, ttwnct N IT dtgrttt
ages. PO Bo* MM. Cloar
lERS Good salary hospital
Srminoie County. Florida, mor*
Scrtpmrtal buyer — mutt b*
Book II. p .g tt TO through 71 ol Iho *V 11“ E lor IIS 01 lett to • point through it ol the Public Records ol
Qualified
tenants waiting
nation.
1
week
pad
vacaidn
wtter,
FI
US
I
t
______
Seminole County, Florda; more particularly drsenbed as follows
n p . Rrply Boi t) C O Evening
Public R tcordt ot Stmlnol* on . tire ul.r curve conc.v* North
Hot** It* 7TOO
every a months Now looking
parlKutetly described*! follows
Lonllv’ Wr.iv ISr rsg.ng jwoavv
Begin at th* Northeast corner of
Hart Id. P O. Bo* MSI. SanCounty, Florid., together* with .
wttltrly. ta d point bearing S S!
SAV ON RENTALS. R* ALTOE
tor **p*ri#ncod peopit ready
together Doting Sw vlrel" All
Trod
tak) plat ol SABAL
Beg n at th* Northaatl comer at
lord. Ft
potion of th. f . c .t .d right ot w .y
dtg rttt!!' 4»" E Irom th* ctnltf
ro work For interview phon#
POINT, Iheesc# S 0) degrees l t ‘
ages k Senior CHHont P O
Tree! “ K", tad plat ol SABAL
ol Weklv* Sprlngt Row) eccordng ot t.id curvo, thane* nor
O
K Tabby have a litter cd kit
lh* management at:
POINT tnence 1 Ft degrees Tt' TT“ W eking tn* Norsn tine irwenst
IBB), ifrifittr H»v*n. T lv DIAS,
lnt#nteii|f Photography n rrji
l* lh.1 certain Nnuiulnrii ul liw m tm triy .long in. arc ot Mid
tens) S*H them wtin a Iasi
Airport Bivd
hit*1)1
Board ot County Commissioners ol rurvt having . r.diut ot 11)00 n “ W along the North line I her eel lor US ee feet. fhknr# S St lUurvvv
Moaeit All types, mo. actors
action Clataii'ed Ad Call UT
Will Social Security pay when
Castetberrv
D? IDS
tor DSMIeet. IhenceS 1* degrees 40' gi“ w lor ttl It teet, thane* S
Itminoit County, Florid*. d.tM Ittt an* . ctn lr.l angle ot It
Raas Portlolio WT IMI
you're *!&gt; Supplement your
1611 or lit P m
Cttery Ave
H7 4D)
71degrees 4 f I f W tor tlS tt feet
40 o r W for tt) M in t . IhenceS
Ftbru.ry II, ITTB, .nd rtcordtd in dvgrttt i p I I" , lor I I I 11 feetr
Saleslady
Eiptrtfncad
in
ladies'
ratlrement
111
411T
lor
Lake Mary
111BUB
71degrees 4Y 14'•w lor 4)1 4* leer lo a point on in* arc ot a circular
OH K 1*1 RKordt Book II ST. P.g* thence 1 IT dtgrttt 10’ 11“ w lor
ready
lo
wear
Apply
lit
St
Johns River Estates 1 bdrm.
to a pom on the arc of a circular curv* concave Southwesterly, sad __ Suradin.
JIJ ot tn« Public Rtcordt ot 1010) Ittt to the Pom! ot Begin
nar ton No pnon* cans Ro Jay,
1 b . CHA. 1S00 mo . 1st. last,
COMPAT A OATE
curvt concave Southwesterly, Mid point bearing N 4) degrees Of SP'
Stnunolt County, Florid.; .11 rung
21—
Situations
Wanted
li
t
E
1st
S
I.
Sanford.
FI*
sac , H I 114$ inland Realty.
Tak* | mlnutt to litlan to
point bear ing N M degrees Of SP' E trom tho center ot M d curve,
lying in Stction ]4, Townthlp TO
Containing 1 11 *crn. m or. or
Inc
recorded metug* - I WJ 471
E Irom th* cmttr of ta d curve, thence Southeasterly along lh* art
South. R.ngt It E .tl.o n d Sections Ittt
Retponsiblt
young
lady
avail
Help
Wanted
—
Warehousemen,
MSI
MSI
or
writ*
Compel
A
thence Southeetler ly along lh* arc 64 M&gt;d curve, having a radius ot
1 Bdrm. 1 Ba'h. Gar*ge
I .nd 4 Townth.p I I South, R.ng.
Tint pttition mould be tub
able
at
sitltr.
Frl
thru
Sim.
heavy
work
Ability
to
'tarn
Date
P
O
Bo*
It
!)
Sum
*10
00
tret,
and
a
central
angi*
ol
in Dalton*
TTE.tt, Seminott County. Florid.. milted on twh.it ot Sabal Point ol u d curv* having a radiut of
•Hernoon H I Till. K im
Full
Benefits
Apply
in
person
mwvillt.
SC
lt*tl
____
..
1
7
degrees
W
11".
lor
IT7
ft
I**#;
TIOMteet,
and
a
cantral
angle
ol
•nd btmg m o r. p .rtlc u l.rly Praptrlltt, Inc, . Florid, cor
0614)1
United Solvents 1107 Airport
thence
N
IS
degrees
M’
W"
E
1
7
degrees
»
'
IT",
tor
177,’et
tee*
to
dttcrlbfd . t lollowt.
every
day
is b a r g a i n
porotion, daird Iho II day of June.
Bled
th* Point ol Beginning of th* along • line radial to th* last
Commence *1 lh . NorlhtMl HI I
Garage
to
Tutl there's no room
DAY IN THE WANT ADS V I
• ABORTION •
htremelttr described p*rctli described curve, lor I N 01 tret,
cornet ot Ir.&lt;t " K " , tt.d pl.t ol
tor th* car? Clean II out with a
M il or ail m s
A w .lttr Tempt., Jr
thenceN
71
degrees
IF
IE
'
E
tor
thence Southeettevly along the
Needed Immediately
1st Trlmetltf abortion T 1) wkk ,
SABAL POINT, thine. S t l
Want Ad In tha Herald PH
fret idem
continuation ol Mid curv*. having 41) 17 11*4; thane* S 41 degrees 14*
Companion Atd# to t any it*&gt;*
degrees TV &gt;1" W .long th. North
IM O-M edlcald H M j Tl 14
S T U IItrn in t)
Sabal Paint Properties. lot.
)!-E
lor
S04
1)
tret.
thence
S
It
Thre*
sports
minded
people
to
part
time
position
Santord
a
radiut
ol
*10
00
teet.
and
a
round*/r ol t.id Tt.cf " K " lor
wks.SI4S~M*d&gt;caid|11S.
Gyn
Pott OHiC. Boa KM
degrees 41“ IT" E tor I t llS l*et To
E
*
p
.
matur*.
ret
H
l
t
l
U
Casselberry
1 Bdrm. 1 Bath,
lilt
vacancitl
created
by
cantrtl
angi*
6t
07
degrees
t
f
04".
TTSTtltH; thtnc.S IT degrees 40
Clinic
SW.
Pregnancy
lesli
Longwood. Florid. 1TTS0
promotions Applicants should
lanced, kid* OK. U00 JH TJOG
lor Dl 01 teet; Thtnc t S 0T degree! th* East lin* el »&gt;d Trad " K " f
male
starllialioni
free
01“ W lor TIT II lt d , thence S Tl Publith Jun* H, It, ltl|
Will
do
typing
in
my
!h«nts
N
00
degrees
IT'
41"
E
bt
witling
to
work
hard
and
ba
SAV
ON
RENTALS.
REALTOR
OO'Ol"
W
lor
IK
M
teet,
IhenceS
dtgrttt i f 11 “ At lor TTS tf ltd lo O E JM
counseling Protntionat car*
noma Reasonable Hates
« long t&lt;d East lin* lor 111! 00 lett
naal appearing Work will bt
0} degrees It l e w lor 104 441eel
supportive atmosphere,
.point on .circular cur*, conc.v*
Call
9101)6
in Sanford area. Infer views in
lo the point o4 curvature of a to th* Fomt ol Beginning
Watlerlv. sad point bMring N M IN THB CIRCUIT COURT FOR
confidential
Containing 1) 11 acral, mar* or
11— Houses Furnished
AIT*more* Springt Call Mon
circular curvt conc.v* Nor
dtgrttt 6T' !T“ E Irom Iho ctnitr 1EMIN0LE COUNTY, FLORIDA
CENTRAL FLORIDA
p
r
o
b
a
t
e
OIVISION
Ms*
tneattertyi
thence
South*esttrty
and Tout T l) 1H0
04 it'd curve, thtnc* Southtfty
WOMAN'S HLALTH
This petition should b* sub
34-Business
along tht arc ol Mid curv*, having
dung lh . ore Ol Mid CtrlU«. h.fUig **'* Number It It* CP
ORGANIZATION
HSLP WANTED, Home Sewing
CASSELBERRY LahefroM *
a radiut ol AM M feet and .central milled on behalf of label Point
.rtd lu lo ttlS 00lt d .n d . control I D u n * .
OpportunillBS
NtCokm.ai Dr .Orlando
100
People
in
this
area
to
do
IN
PC
ESTA
TE
OF
DONAIO
Properties
Inc.,
a
Florid*
cor.
rmt, air, kids, U N . II? 'Nd
angle ol It degrees IS' 0)“ , lor
angle pt 1! degree! ) f I V , lor
tot 6t)l
sewing
In
thair
horn*
Good
SAV ON RENTALS REALTOR
EDGAR
BROOKS
purat
ton.
dated
in*
11
day
ot
Jun*,
447
17ftet
to
th*point
o!
langenc*.
M04 let! to . po&lt;nt bearing s I .
Toll Fra* I • « n l ISM
would
you
fife*
a
bu%
nAi»
of
income All ages accepted
Deceased
ihencv S 1* degrees OS' 4*“ E tor IMI.
dtgrttt .O' it ’ E trom rh. ctnl.r
your own? You don't
d on
ir r v intormaldn, writ* CSC,
A Waiter Tempi*, Jr
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
III M leaf to lt&gt;» point ol curvature
61t.id curve, thtnet S 0T dtgrttt
Lontiv Chr Itllan Sing1*)
oMicttottart B*d-n ot torn*
J 4 — Mobile Homes
Jim
and Cralt Oeu* . TO) N
PrttkWnl
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
ol a circular curv* concert South
OO’ OV W lor ItO 11 tf«t, thtnet S
Meet Chvitllan ingles m your
Full or P «n tlm« lOrji for
Mam S t. Corbin, Kentucky
label Point Properties. Inc
OR
DEMANDS
westirlyi thtneo South*.lively
01dtgrttt IP 14“ W for tot aa tret CLAIMS
art* Writ# Southern Christian
hu%b«nd
And
wilt
Itam
No
40701
Pott Office Boa KTI
along th* arc ol Mid curv*. having
Winter livings 1 Bdrm. 1 Acres
to the poml ol curvature ol a AGAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE
Singlet Club. P O Boa 111)
oCihflAtion
C lll. lor ip
Longwood. Florida H7S0
aradiutot aM M fttf and a central
circular curut conc.v* Nor AND ALL O THER PERSONS
Kids, pets t)0« )1» 7» 0
Summervlll*. 1C Mat) or ctll
potntmtnt
373
tl
1
7
.
angia oI 44 dtgrttt IP 14“ tor Publish: Jun* M, 11. HIT
SAV ON r c n t a l s r e a l t o r
tht.tltrly; thtnet Southerly and INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE
REAL ESTATE
I t o 471 44)0 14 hrs_________
O
E
JT
I
YOU
ARE
H
E
R
E
B
V
11)41 le*t, thane* N »» degrees
loulhtMltrly along lh* arc ol Mid
For lil# Liwn momrng V*fvtc*
ASSOCIATES
that
the
ad
SO' I f E lor 174 IT tret, thane e N
ll you don't batiste mat want sot
curvt, having a r.diut at AW 00 N O TIF IE D
tquip ind iCCOunfi 574 30(11
4-Chi Id Car*
I. degrees SP gt“ W lor S70 1) IN TH EC IBC U IT COURT IN AND
bring result*, try on*, and
left and a c tn lr.l angi* ol IT ministration ol th* tt la tt ol
•fltr III.
fipatHkctd at lust nctottd.
listen to ybur phon* ring Dial
teet mere* N 40 dvgreet 10' 11“ FOR SCM INOLE
dvgrttt IP 00 *. tor i l l IT fttl lo DONAIO EDG AR BROOKS.
Jain Santoro s !a l«t Ltadtrl
C O U N TY ,
deCMttd.
Fit*
Number
01
It*
CP.
W tor 101)14 feel, thence S II FLORIDA
I need t babysitter in my home
H I tall or UT ret)
the point ol langenc v. thtnc. S 1.
W*04l*rt
25—
Loans
Is
pending
in
th*
Circuit
Court
tor
degrees
at’
It"
w
for
el
IT
teet,
lor
two
small
children
SI)
par
otgctttop at" E tor 1)1 M Ittt to
• L*rg*tt listing invtotory in
CASE NO. ft ItM CA 11 K
Casselberry, Kids, pets. I Rmt
thence S OS degrees H ' B " W tor
week Musi havt own transp
lr&gt;« point ot curv.turt ot a circular SaminoteCounty, Florid*. Probnlt
S*mtn«l« County MLS l* r
GREAT SOUTH SUPPLY CO,.
Furn Air S ill lie 7)00
1?) ADI llltf I
DO 01 feet lo th* Point ot Begin
curvt concave Weslvvlv; Ihtnct Division, lh* addreti ol which ll
loans
a v a il a b l e
any
uMtu
INC , fit ft 41
SAV ON RENTALS REALTOR
King
SouH.Mirrly and Southwetttrly Seminole County Courthovta,
worthwhltt
project
conPlaintiff,
SPUR OF THE MOMENT
•■atv/niv* Training
Containing T l !! acres, mor*
along lh* arc ol t*&gt;d curvt, having Sanford, Florida. D IM Th* par
tittered. SS9.W0 up Mr
vs
BABYSITTING
•Fullhma Dtlica Sutpart
or lets
a lad u! ol I K DO 1**1 and central tonal rrpretvnlaliv* ot In* tttde
Donald 1)141 14) MAS
DR
LEW
IS
FA
G
A
N
*nd
K
ltM
*
26— Resort Property
• IR A Naliaoal Rtltvrtls A
this petition should be tub
angle ot 44 d tg rttt IP 14“ . tor it DONNA LOU WE SSEl S, whom
VIRG INIA FA G A N . Kit wit*,
•Ham* Warranty Program.
mined on behalf ol Sabol Point
11I4T Ittt to th* Point ol Begin addrett tt P O Boa IN I. Sanford,
residents
ol
Dade
County.
Florida,
Special Summer Program tor t
25—Apts. Arouses
•SaminaN, Orang* A Vtlukl*
Properties, Inc, a Florida cor
Hutchison Oceantronl apis lit
ning ot th* hertin.tltr deter ibtd Florid*, DIM Tht name and
VIOLET K McE LB R E a TH, as
t) yr , oW including weakly
•MLS Savvict
ol
lha
personal
portluas. dated th* II day o4 Jun*.
To Share
parcel ihtnct conlinot South addrett
S Allantic. Daytona Dels, FI
Trustee
S H E ILA
JE A N
swimming,
skating,
and
•Daminaal TV. Ntwi*a**r A
IMI
M ss R U Hutchison IT) 4644
wttltrly .long tht arc ot tho latt representative's attorney art tat
LABREE, KATHY JOY LABREE
movies i n tael
•
Magauna
Advertising.
forth
btlsw
A
Waiter
Tempi*.
Jr
dvtcribvd c irc u it curve, having .
Willllhirt my houl#
and MARY LIS A L A B R E E ,
.Fmtsl
OHIC*
Facilill**.
All
pertont
having
claims
or
Pretdent
tadnci ot 410 00 lt d and a ctnlr.l
l U ) M i p ir t iii
raiidenli of Sam .not* County,
•Pr*l«tsi*«*l. Ctagtaial A
14 Hr Babyt&gt;H Ing
17— Business Property
Sabal Poml Pcope'lies. Inc
angle ot It d tg rttt I0‘ 6 V . lor demands against lh* ttlatt are
122 t ilt
Flocida. and BILLY B LABREE
•Successful A itK M ttt as yevr
In My Horn* Low Rates
Pott Ottua Bov 1ST I
W IT H IN
TH R E E
Ittat Ittt to « point bearing S tt required.
and MARGARET A LABREE. hi*
Carttv
Partners.
111
141)
F
tm
ilt
winft
to
mart
my
hom#
MONTHS
FROM
TH
E
D
A
TE
OF
Longwood. Florida D IM
oegrett I t a." E trom lh* ctnitr
Commercial Building, Rent pr
wlta, tasidrntt of Samlnoly
II yau want ta list tnd sail,
with t i n t «t»#rtncit
Publish Jun* tt. 1), H it
»t Mid curvt, then** l M a ig 'n t THE MUST PUBLICATION OF
Lease aoi French Ave .
County. Floetd*.
Haba*y Dots II Batter I Celt
o e it f
n t f iii
Tt I f W 'or t t l 01 latt to « Point THIS NOTICE, la III* with th*
Detandoiqi
laniard. I.70D Sq FI Carpet,
4A-Health A BMuty
Herb tt**ttr*m *r L**
— ~ ••
"■
on . circular cu rvt concovt Clark at lh* abar* court a wnttvn
Cent air and n**t Inessa
am ended
C11T OP
Albright *i i n 1*7* Nr a
loutMailtrly. Mid point bt.rlng Haltmmr ot any c &gt;aim or demand
29—
Rooms
n
o
t
i
c
e
OP
ACTION
ALTAM ONTE APBINOt.
friendly and canltdaatial In
N I) dtgrttt IP 4." w trom lh* they may have Each claim mutt
SHAKLCe HERB TABLETS
TOc VIRGINIA FAOAN
lirvlrw Inday and aitcavir lha
FLORIDA
cmttr ot Mid curve, Ihtnct South 6* in writing and mutt ind'C.ta th*
WE d e l i v e r
37D-Industrial
Address unknown
A H u e u tl
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Room #or ran*
wtilarty and Southerly almg l u havt lot th* claim, m* namt and
m
i
t
n
NOTICE IS H ER EBY GIVEN
□ * LEWIS FAGAN
lor Rem
f*r(¥a»i#nlrinc#
arc ot t.id curv*. h.vmg . cM ul addrett vf lh* creditor or hit a*vnt
STENSTROM
Last know add'eu
by lha CHy Commit non ot th* City
372 m i
04140 00 h r l and . ctnlr.l angi. ot or attorney, and th* amount
Spying Fever Sal*
7140
S
W
D
i
li
Street
of
Altamont*
Sprlngt,
Florida,
claimed
II
the
claim
it
not
yet
lldrgrtel 4P00“ , lor ITT 1J let! to
Realty-Realtors
NEW WAREHOUSES 14 Hr.
Welkins Products
SANFOND Nets wily £
Miami. Florida
a point bMring S IT degrrtt IP due. the date when it will become that u id City Commit*ion will
Security, 14 Hr 4ccttt i f
m sot
IMS Park Drive
ITI Id a
monthly rafts Util Inc. Kit WO
YOU ARE N O TIFIED that an
14“ W trom tht ctnitr ol Mid due mail bt titled it the claim it hold a public hearing
overhead doors, TO&lt;40 at slid
Oak Adults B4I I N )
action to Quid Till* hat been Iliad
(a) To consider annevalion ol
curve, Ihtnct S HI degreesOV ) l “ contingent or unliquidated, lh*
ms Longwood art* Call
Full lima CotmttKian Local
against you and you are rrquirad
W lur tat IT Irtf to . point on a nature c4 lh* uncertainly shall be tho following deter,bed property
Sharon (SS S441_____________
t-Good ThJrsgs to Edt
Store Good company benefits
to teevt a copy o4 your written
curv* cone art Northwttl#fly. tad ttattd It th* claim it secured th* lying and being In Seminole
JOApartments
S
days
wk
No
nigntt
or
Sun
detente*. II any, on Rob*rt B
County, Fiord*, lo wit
point beaemy H 40 degrtvt IP 14” security shall m deteribed The
day Good salorv and com
Unfurnished
40— Condominiums
Wormtn. Esquire, Post Oft lea Bov
Lott let. ISO. )*4, MS. If*. MO.
E (com Ihv cvnlev o4 Mid curv.; claimant thall dtllvtv sufficient
BUTTERBEANS
mission All rtplitt held In
w*4. Orlando. Florida U N ), an or
1S4 A MS Altamonte Land and
Ihtnct Soulhtcly and Westerly copies ot the claim lo tht clerk to
You
p*cK.
tlrlcfconfidence
Sandraplyls
bator* July fth. IMI. and th*
Navigation Co Subdivision. PB I,
var .ner t Vi!l*gt an Lake As*
.long lh . arc ol Mid curv*, having •nabi* tha dark to mad on* copy
Large 1 BR. 1 B condo Equipped
H I 647)
Boa No *T c o Evening Herald.
Pg » , Public Rtcordt ol Seminoi* original with lh* Clark ol lh* Court
11 tadroem Apts. Ir»m IHO
aradiutot ctogoIttt a n d .central to etch personal teprettnlativt
kit., LR. sep DR. CHA, pool
P
O
Bo*
I4S7,
Sanford.
Fla
tilhar
before
service
ot
Mid
copy
County
Located
IT
P)
lust
South
of
All pertont inlerttied in Iho
angle ot 1)1 d tg rttt SP 00". tor
UTS mo Ret Req 110 w
D
i
li
ol
sad
del
ms
es
on
plain!.Hi
Generolly
fixated
at
th*
NW
etlale
It
whom
*
copy
ot
this
Airport
etvd
in
Santord
All
TOO II l t d to th* point ol lingtncyi
Airport B Saves H I 1000. Deyt
ZELLWOODCORN,
or
im m tdiottly
Adults UlkalO
thtnc t N II d tg rttt &lt;1 *4“ W tor NotN* ol Administration hat been corner 04 Center Sirwi and Lake altornty
n)ho
Experienced htatino A d r
M.50 Bu.
therein re. otherwise a Default
Avenue across from Lave Florida
III t l l t d to lh . point ol curv.turt marled are required. WITHIN
c o n d it io n in g
t i r e Ice
Sandiewood
Dtfust &gt; Bdrm. )
will
be
entered
againtl
you
tor
lh*
1
6
1
To
consider
alto
tha
guest
ion
Farmers
Market.
I4M
French
1 bdrm, ) b Sandiewood. ap
ot . circular c u rv . conc.v* THREE MONTHS FROM THE
mechanic. Old ettablithad
Bath Condo Pool, Ayailaoi*
piiancrs including washer and
04 designing and assigning lh* raltel demanded In lh* Complaint.
Ave, Sanlord D I lM t
OF
TH E
FIR S T
Soutlwely. ’htne. Watltrly along O A tE
Santord company Good pay A
immediately SIIS perm o.il)
Tht properly upon which lh*
toning datt'flC*l!*n 04 R 1AA to
dryer, swimming pool Lees#
OF
THIS
th* *rc ot Mid curvt. having a P UB LICATIO N
fringe benefits Apply wall
(411 or I t ) H40
M&gt;d prooerly ailnat tiatiihcaHon Duiel Till* action it being brought
SMC V dtp f H 1TIT
rad lot 61 110 00 lt d and a ctnlr.l NOTICE, lo lil* any obiattioni
Plumbing A Heating Inc INT
1
1
—
Instructions
they
may
havt
that
challenge
lh*
is
described
in
th*
toning
or
Is
legliiy
descr
ibed
as
follows
angi* 61 tl drgvtft Ot 00“. for
Santord Auo
Santord New. Furnlshtd. I
1 Bdrm Apts from m l ) 4 I
100 TO Ittt t o . point Mar mg N *0 validity at lh* decedent's will, tha (),nances ol th* City ol AHomont*
Loll I and E Tra d I. as legally
Bdrm 4 Bain
Kltcntd
Bdrm tit* eva i Pool, imnit
Springs. Ftorido. lo Wit Or
dvgrttt 14 *4 w trom th* center qualllicaliont ot tha pactonat
deter bed per survey. Sect tons 7,1.
Twuiii Instruction U S P T A
•quipped, washer, dryer in­
court H iaa iB
Vldao Electronics
dmancaNo Tie t ) end as amended
and 17, Township 10 S Hang* n E
ol tan) t u r n . th*nct S 4tdtgrt*t representative, or th* venue or
Cvriiivd Group or Prlyat*
cluded Pool, near shopping,
LAKE JEN N IE APTS 1, liy 4 1
and svppiamantad
Semmol* County. Florid*. * 0 *
IP 10“ W lor 111 IT l t d to o point luritdsction ol mo court
lessons Children a tpeciaHy.
Rental and Sales Co.
no pets Security, I Yr Lease
Bdrm on Lake Jenna In
Tha peasant toning clattilicatMn
ALL CLAIMS. OEMANDS. AND
Lott I and 1, Tract I. unrecorded
onacircwlar curve concave North
0 m « Malicmwskl D l l K t
$74 1)11
Sanlerd Pool, rtc room,
ol uid properly tt R*t&gt;dfnli*l.
is opening S new stores in Can
wttltrly. Mid point bad mg S 40 OBJECTIONS NOT SO FILCO
plat ol St Johns Ranch Ett ui
Single
Family
at
that
outdoor B ■ Q, Iannis courts 4
i will tutor tiudvnti in Hem
Iral Florida Ml lh* natt Hire*
SectionI. Township 101, Rang* )1
dtgrttt t r 4." E Irom tht ctnltf WILL BE FOREVER BARRED
41— Houses
disposals Walk N shopping
classification it dttcribtd m th* E. Semmol* County. Fiori*
main or readmg Coll V I I I I )
Dale ol the first publication ol
years and It looking tor man
ot Ma) curvt. Ihtnct South
Adults only tarry no pets
Mon Frl I M am a 00 pm
toning ordinances and regulation*
and woman to Halt its slores
wttirvlt along lh . arc ol t.id tnit Nolle* ot Admmitlralion
Witcwts my hand and seal ot this
V I till
ot Semmol* County, Florida
D E L T O N A - Like new. real
Store Managtrs, R rn td
cutvf. hiving a r.diut cl taOOO Jun* I t logs
Court on 4th day ot Jun*. IMI
When you place a Claim led Ad
The Public Hearing will be held (S EAU
bargain by owner ) Bor m. 1 1
Managers tnd Sales parson*
Oonn. LOU Wet Celt
lid and « crn tr.l angi. ot IS
M
Th*
Evening
Herald,
stay
Santord
lovsty
I
Bdrm.
*
Dan,
in
In*
CHy
Hall,
Altamont*
Bath, tcraws poren, family
needed now Pleat* tppty in
At Personal Represent alive
Arthur H Beckwith. Jr
degrees u O0“ , tor i l l 14 lt d to
dot*
to
your
phon*
because
Ad.
rtrartuc
bait
4um
r m . tiv. din, kit, garage
Springs.
Florid*,
on
July
M.
IN
I.
person
It*
Commercial
S
I,
ot
the
Eifet*
nt
• tht point ot l.ngtncy thtnc* S l l
Curt ot th* Circuit Court
something wonderful II about
141.600 11 \m tg or rent IMS
•I 7 00 P M or at toon lhartatftr
Santord. FI# College Grads
OONAIO EDGAR IIROOKS
avail U is Adults 4tt lau
By. Eleanor F Buratto
dvgrttt IP IP* w lor 1 T1 IS ltd .
to happen
14*41 TN 41SS
at possible, at which timt In
Preferred
Deceased
Deputy Clark
Ihtnct S Tl d tg rttt H ‘ OS" W lor
VkNPORD
)
Rmt
KMl.
hv»s.
itertied partial and cltiiens tor ROBERT B WORMAN. ESD
I M !) lt d lo a poml on . ocular A TTO R N E Y FOR PERSONAL
Mrdevnlim*
your Home) Sell no
SIM
Down
IMS
W
T
M
Want
mor*
out
*4
lift?
A
lifll*
and
againtl
th*
proposed
an
REPRESENTATIVE
curvt conc.v* SowlhMttfflv. Mid
P O Bo* ITU
longer needed but useful items
e*tr a money can m**n a lot of
SAVON B B N TA Lt REALTORS
ntitlion and toning will be heard
Orlando. Fla IIM1
point b illin g N IS d .g r t .t MICHAEL E GRAY
■nth a Class died Ad
aniro living Earn tilr* In.
Sad hearing may be continued Publish Jun* T. la. }t. la. Ittt
AVON
REPRESENTATIVES
60 it W
trom
the center C lE V E l AND A BRIDGES
■ *t*r tawdry living) I
com* at neighborhood Amway
Irom tun* to lima until linal action O E jS t
laniard TarriMrset aeaHaM*.
o4 m u ) curve
Ihtnct Scum P 0 Drawer {
Apts.
Olympic
t
l
.
P**l.
distributor
ol
Nallonolty
OSTEEN
Small ) Bdrm hom*
it
takan
by
lha
City
Commitkion
act
Ittt
caitact
t
111
t7M
wttltrly along lh* arc ol Mid Sanford. Florid* D i l l
S4**n«n***K VNlag*. O p n l L
known products For Ap
Nrwly remodeled, new ap
This notice than bt potted tl lh*
curve, having a r.diut of MON Telephone IMS! 1)1 D ll
H
U
T
U
.
____
IN
THE
CIRCUIT
COURT.
IN
pomlmanl Call )H t ill
ptiancas Fgpctd, Lot TI*1S» S
City Hall within th* City ol
Ittt and . c tn lr.l angle ot 11 Pubhth Jun* 14. 11, ItOI
Sit.$00 H )0 4 l)
Aitamonl* Springs. Florida, and in AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
dtgrttt 14’ 4t -.lot M U lt d to OCJBI
L U Y JR Y
a p a r tm en ts
FLORIDA
Help
Wanted
Day
shift
Peru
a
Hues other places within lh* City,
the point ol l.ngtncy, Ihtnct S SI
F amily 4 Adults s*clldn'
CIVIL ACTION NO II IM CA t t
akitmbttrs Saw operator*.
Hay
* ids Looking tor an ealra
and
pubtithed
Nt
th*
Evening
drgr.tt 14 H ” W tor If) I I Ittt to
Foots *)* 1 Bdrtns. MaUar's
TtlcpboM SoSdton,
C ITY 0 ^
I
General Labor A j«iy between
dollar? Aik Mom 4 Ood to 1*4
Htvatd. a newspaper ot general
tht pond of c u rv.lu tt of a circular
Cou* Apfs 1OTN0 0p*n on
ALTAMONTE SPMINOS.
hours
1
S
p
m
American
Wood
IN
R
li
TH
E
M
A
R
R
IA
O
i
OF
you
havt a d a liiH td ad
circulation in the City 01
curv. conc.v* Northtcly. thtnet
FLORIDA
Port-Tim e
Products Mill otflci. 100
JOHN DOUGLAS VARNEY
gar*g* sal*
Altamont* Springs, tnd Seminote
f louthwttttfly and NoTthwrtt.rtv
NOTICE OF ru B L IC HEARING
Mure ip A v t . Longwood
Patiltonar
Crunty, Florida, at laatt M days
along m« .re ot taidcurve, having
SANFORD 1 Bdrm. Kdk Pets.
n o t i c e is h e r e b y g i v e n
Evtnlng Hown.
and
ST JOHNS RIVER (C * n * l)-I
a rid'vt ot M W l t d &lt;"d a central by th* City Commission ol tn»City prior to the dot# ol public
UTS SIN Down )J t TIN
Font
Bertenders A Cocktail
S
h
EANEE
F
VARNEY
bdrm. l bath, cwstral Isttl air.
angi* o4 to d tg rttt 00’ 00", tor o4 Aiiamoni* Springs. Florida, hearing
SAV ON RENTALS REALTOR
w
*itrttt*t
Mcktnntyt
now
Ratpondanl
wall to wall carpet, I car
DATED this )nd day *4 Jun*
4T I] lt d lo lh* point ol tangdlcy licet Mid City Commission will
wider new mgi Call or com*
NOTICE
OF
ACTION
garag* immaculate con
NIC*
1
Bdrm.
1
block
tram
with lh* Normtatlttly right ol
A D K it
hod * public hear mg
be TOO Sanford A rt D l 444)
TO:
SHEAREE
P
VARNEY
E
v
e
n
i
n
g
H
e
r
a
l
d
O'l
&gt;on U0.1W Principals only
Phyllis
Jordahl,
CMC
Shopping,
ttmor
cltiiens
bruy
wet tin* tl Wtklva Springs Road
Iti To consider armtaation ot
r e s id e n c e
unknow n
mimor h i not
SIN month 11)474)
City Clerk
according to
that
certain i»* following described property
Housekeeping supervisor Full
LAST
KNOW
ADDRESS
Nttolulion ol th* Board ot County lying end being In Seminole Publish Jun* I t IMI
llm* day thin Send resume to
wanted LPN I I 1 Shin Full or
Santord 1*0 Ft on Lak* O™
FR O M II714UP
UNKNOWN
DC JIT
Ctm m ltlionart ol Stminol* County. Florida, to wit
P O Bo* 1S4J. Santord. Ft
port llm* Apply Lakeyww
Attractive
older
hen
(M c u n te L I 4 1 Bdrm Aprs
YOU
ARE
H
E
R
E
B
Y
County, t lor id. hartin dttcribtd
Generally located IM leal North
Nurt.ng
Centsr
t
i
t
E
Tnd
St.
Property can be split u r.
Shown by appr Call H I l l M
MOTIF i EO that an action lor
NOTICE OF FUBLIC HEARINO
Ihtnc* S M degeevt U ' IT" E
o4 Slate Road 414 on the East t d t
By
owner
I
If
)
Tltt.
dissolution el mdrnaga hat baan NEED A SECOND INCOME? I
FOR TH E CONSIDERATION OF
along ta d Normtaitarly right ot
ol Groca Boulevard
Mellonvill*
Tree*
Apis.
i led agamtt you, and you dr*
, way l.n* tor 140 00 lad to lh* point
Lak* Mary '-y Acr*. ) Bdrm
Lo4 1 and South IS latt ol Lol 1. P IO FO S iD USES FOR T M l
Hrs or I n i par wttk. could
Spacious, modem 1 Bdrm, I
required to itrvo a copy o4 your
HEWHOSNOOZES
g
e
n
e
r
a
l
r
e
v
e
n
u
e
s
h
a
r
in
g
d iu tp ot a circular curv* concave Shady Oakt p b 11, Pag* 14. Public
Bath with Rock lir*pt*&lt;o, w
a
a
rn
S
M
v
per
mo
D
1
7
M
.
Ba'h
apt
Carpatad.
kit
writiin drfaitet to II, 14 any, on
FUNDS
FOR
THE
C
ITY
OF
Easterly, ihtnc* Northwttltrly
to woll carpet Cent H
Nicordi. Seminole County
,
LOSES!
*quipp*d,
CH4A
Ntat
CARROLL BURKE, Allern«v lor
C
A
S
I'L
R
IR
R
Y
.
FLORIDA.
FOR
and Norihtatitrly along th* arc ol
Auum.bl*
» t * \ Mortage
Lata
Mi*
P
.llv
ra
The Public Muring will be held
hospital 4 las* Adults, no
REGISTER EARLY
Petitioner, whoa* address is *1)
Midcurv*. having a radiut of K 00 ■n the City Hall. Altamonte FISCAL YEAR IM I
Waitrvttas Wanted
111 (H I
pw
s
utb
in
nu
Sanfovd
Allard
K
Sana
Building,
NOTICE is H ER E B Y GIVEN
ltd and a c tn lr.l angle ot TO Springs Fiord*, on lh* July 11
MONDAY MORNING
Apply in person D I TOC*
laniard. Florida, and I.!* lh*
oegrett WOO", tor 4T 1tl*el loth* IMI *l J 09 P M or at toon mat a PuMk Hearing will b* Isetd
GO TO WORK!
R O B B irs
ongnai with th* Clef I *4 Circuit
pant ol langenc*. thence N II ihweatter at pott-biu. as whiett at th* Casselberry CHy Hall, ts
IM— A p a rtm e n ts Furnishes
Need Eitr* Income while you
C A L L 323 5176
Cour*. ARTHUR H BECKWITH.
' t'rg'ees TP » ” E tor ’ TO tl fed TO lime in itia lle d parlies end late Triplet (Vive, to consistf
or* ot homo) FS m«y o* in*
M ALTY
JR , an or btforo lh* 111 day *1
Int point ol curvature ot A circular cllllent lor and againtl tha proposed uses lor th* Revenue
AAA EMPLOYMENT
aniwtr. I t t t dtta.it Enclose
REALTOR. MLS
Furniihed aparlmmtt tor Senior
July, A D . IM I c'herwit* *
Curvt concave S o u fn tttttrly . propoifd annevalion and coning Sharing Trust Fundi
stamp*) fnveiop* French
HB1
I Branch
Clttram 1W Palmatt* kvo., J.
OtlavH will ba antavtd againtl you
Unappropriated mill lament
SECRETARY
1440
IhmceNortheatlerly along metre
Hrl*. Bos 4(441. NiNt, lllmoit
will be heard Sad near mg may be
Suit* 4
Cowan No phone celts
tor
th*
r*4i*«
demanded
HI
th*
funds
in
Its*
revenue
FIO
UR
ECLER
K
i
s
m
of sad curve, having a radiut ot continued trom Hmo to lime until
10*41
Saalard
PaSitwn
Sharing trust lund plus
RECEPTIONIST
14)5
’
TO Hr* and * central angle el I I
Isnai action it taken by the City
Its test to ptac* * Classified Ad
WITNESS my hand and oMiclal
CASHIER
opws
TYPIST — Fast and accurafa
utivetl
MS SM
drg'rrt 14* IP ', lor ](J 4t lad I* «
Commitkion
We'D even help you word
seal an this th* Itth day of May.
SALESCLERK
us
Handle phon* orders M*o.cal
Anticipated
• po nt b**rmg N IS degrees 06 *6“
24 HOUR0^322-9213
this net ice thall be potted at th*
tl. Call m sail
A.D. IMT•ntillament
run
TRAINEE
US
an* retirement btnelits.
W Irom lh* center ol M&lt;d curv*.
City Hall within the City 04
(SEAU
Total
IN
,
to*
CUSTOMER
SERVICE
UM
up
uruled
Solvtntt
m
1400
thane*N ll oegrett 10 ) ) ' l tor Altamonte Springt. Florida, and in
No qualifying ) bdrm. H i bath,
Partly lurnithed adults, no pats
Arthur H Backwilh Jr.
w o m e n s WEAR
ut
Citiitnt .Handing risg Public
IM I) lt d . ti.enc* N 14 Urge ret Hire* ofher placet within th* City,
SIN A month. SIN deposit IIS
torn.rut. C SA, lavseed yard, as
CNrk ol Circuit Court
)♦ I C E tor IT! 11 led loth* poml and published in tha Evening Hearing shall h*v* tha right to
French Ay* H I M l) or US
•s U*.OOP down e asSum
S*m,noi* County, Florida
provide wtillan and oral com
MANY MANY MORE!
•• Curvature ol * circular curv* Mvfalg a newspaper at Altamonte
aaU
ttkino ) \ k&gt;*n i m i m* p*,t
By Corn* E luettner
intntt and suggestions respecting
CMCav* North wetter ly. Ihtnct Springs, and Seminole County.
RN'S AND LFN'S
all Own*r IT? 1710
LOW F E E -T E R M S
Deputy Clark
Lorge 1 Bdrm F ur rushed
B* * pari *1 ear success Joes *
Northeaster ly along th* arc 04 MuJ Fiord*, at 'M il M days pew I# possible uses M entitlement funds
Public hearing will b* held an CARROLL BURKE
team mal ll meting us new
Apt Adults Ohff STB Week
Cure*. c..vmg a radiut ot 44)00 lh* data ot public hear mg
Near a | acreas. *
1917 FRENCH AVE.
Aitomay lor Petiliorvr
Tuesday. Jun* 11. till, *1 4 » PM
tPrtsliont with new concepts
fed and a central angi* el 11
O ATEDihiktihdar o4 June A D
bdrm, ) b. hilly asium ts*/
t i l Sanford Ailantic Bonk Bldg
or as soon inaraatlar as push air
and new perspectives Medical
degrees $4 00". tor ) 0t 11 ted lo a IMI
mtg*
No
escalation Owner
FRANCHISES AVAILABLE
Santoro , f tot id* 11711
Garage s*i*s art M season T ill
Mary W Hawthorn*
£ r*
Caneapis 141 nil.
pent hearing S 4) d tg rttt 14* 4*“
Phyllis Jordanl. CMC
lilUVK mg with uo 000 down on
CALL CAROL
tew
people
about
a
with
a
Phon*
IKS)
V
I
71*)
CHy
CMf*
I Metn lh* c*n)*e ot u&lt;4 curt*,
City Clerk
rtmainder Asking S1U40P
PubiiiA AAay I I A Jun* J, la, 11,
Classified Ad ut Th* Herald
Pubhth Jsas* I). IMI
J
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
theme N )i d rg rttt IT' O f’ E tor
Pubtfth jun* 14, IMI
Owes*r * slot 1*41 H I TtO)
IMI
DEI ID
m » iii nt m i
D C Jtl
) l ) It led to • poml *n a circular DEI I I

I^eedlectafis

"

NEEDED

Cal 322-2611

■

M

Ijpt*

�t o e v e r y t h in g
t
ttfrm, J bath, * t rtptare,
fence. carpeting, CHA. unly
UI.SOO

close

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

41— Houses

4IB— Condominium;

Harold Hall Realty

For Seta

REALTORS, MLS

Sandiewood villa 1 M rm . 1 b
III floor corner unit All ap
pi encev. screen** porch, pool.
I ll TOO M114J0

41— Houses

O U P lE X - 1 M rm , I bath,
furnished apis, came illy
located. good &lt;nv UJ iuO
- trom i
to !'• Acre parcrts, owner
l.nancmg and easy farms Call
today
S ;FM P ER AGENCY
REALTOR ' l l 1111
1,11 M l 540*. 111155*. M i M il
Multiply Listing Service
a c r e a g e c l o s e in

A Acres. (k ilt &gt;&lt;i. qykI terms
VS1.000
To soltl# nlate 1 1, dn.ng rm,
Itm ilf rm, with eiira lol
Asking H i VM
t l . OIL. taroorl. It'll H corner,
rue* neighborhood. m i x

B A TEM A N R E A LTY

333-5774

See Our beautiful new BROAD
MORE, front i rear BR t
GR EO O R YM O BILE HOMES
IMS Orlando Or
M l SIM
VA I F HA Financing

S O y E L Y Ceunlry Hama I
Bdrm, lly Balk. Attumablt
martgagt. Large daakla
tuad yard 544,55*.

1*9) down a M rm . I'v bam w
teal privileges, goII course,
lake, many ait re I 111 S ilt

100 F T WIDE CANAL FRONT
LOT leadng to S' ionnt
Rlvtr E ic lu v rt arta 1 H sea

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR

K C C O A S iA v lC lM A N tY e v K
fiftd him tinted in ©uf Buvnn»
Soviet D«rtctory
SPLASH TIM E kov#ly, cool
pool turrounded nvlfh i*rg#
♦tnc#d y*rd end 22*14
Kr##«#d p8l»owfitti Brick B#r
B Out Gnll ) L#rg# Bdrmt, 2
fl»ih Forma* dining and
Living rm ♦ 2fm*4 Game
Room on u o .n o ft lot Price
177.500

ISMS French A «t
J im u i
Attar Hour* Ml 0111 or US MOO

Cal IBart
REAL e s t a t e
r e a l t o r , m rare

HAL COLBERT REALTY
Ik .
M U LTIPLE LISTING SERVICE

323-7832
Eras M l 0411
101 E ISIhSI

G E T t h o s e l u x u r y it e m s
FOR a FRACTION OF THEIR
COST FROM TOOAY S WANT
ADS I

U 000 Dn, lie to. I acre Morses
Needs cleaning Sorrento, i n
1044 AM E ut
4X1 JlH 0. A C TM O B
S Acres, Longwood Markham
Rd A ria Nicely woodtd
iaa oqo n i i i w ____________
Deltona Lekefront 10 acres on
pared Rd
SIS.W0
Wm
Malictowskl Rtailor Ml IN I

44A-Industrial Pmperty
FOR SALE
Primt
Butinaai Inutftmtnf
proparty in Zadwood Fiat
(♦ ) acrat. io**4 tndu%tr»«i.
11.000 »g ft In ifUcai A wart
hout•, rail faciKHat, now
avaiiabia Principatt only call
M« aaif or 272 5442

47— Real Estate Wanted
Investor
Buying
Income
Property Principals only No
trokers Algrekn. Boa 4*41
Wilder Park, FI 111*1

JUKI
POKZIC MALTY

o p en house

Rat Real •slate Arekar I
m in i
i n iiiiiu
Nka Neighborhood 1 Bdrm. }
Bam Homo. Fruit Treat Just
110.000 Dorm UI.SOO

SAT I 4 p m. — SUN. I Sp m
I11ME LISSACT
114 M l LISSA CT.
G HO V EV lEw VILLAGE
I 0»» L i Mery Blvd )
111 M E LIS S A C T . H*
mac (Mali I Bdrm, 1 Bern hem*
on quit! cvl dt-iacf CM!A.
WWCa L « Bdrm i. Scr Pit*.
L « Lendtceptd Vardf Late el
E .tra il Aiwmabif Mtg Law
Down Payment! ISLtQtf
Com# By*

111 MELISSA CT. — levtty 2

STENSTROM
REALTY

-

REALTORS

O P E N HOUSE
OPEN SUN II N I : M
MAYFAIR VILLAS
ON W U *
ACROSS—MAYFAIR
COUNTRY CLUE
IM lfM lel I A S BR. I I cpnda
SamtL. toaturing laiue* appi.
fenced part. A « fleer plenc en
beaylllul weeded tats. a city
canv. adiacant la Maylax
Cawnlry Clakl Oualily canil
ky Sktemtatr.
ASSOCIATES N E E O ID I Na*
or pipariancad Call Hark
Sttnilram ar Lea Alkrigkl
today A ducouar ivccttii

CALL ANYTIME
IMS
Par*

322-2420

R EA LTO R S
Multiple Listing Service
K
l{K .U

j s i r
I 'S T V I I
i:

311 0041

M LS

PRIVACY P LU S ! Bdrm. 1 Balk
Split plan, Family Rm Deck,
SSS.SM
PRESTIOIOUS AREA I Bdrm, 1
Balk. Panelled Family km
frlck Fireplace SIlLkkk

Bdrm. 2 Bath, Noam W L«
Pen Fft. W PPL, Split Bdrm
Plan, MBR Sulla, CHA A,
WWC. Pali#ana if laadtcepad
loll Law Dawn Peymant
Auumebla Mtg f 111,100 Step
A VlflV Ed Korfan. It IA, your
hotf A taa if yaw quality t

CALL ANYTIME

322-2420

mi
Park

R E A LTO R S
M ultiple Listing Service
Sanford Hidden Lake I
bedroom. 1 bain, family room,
151.500 Have IVi % attumable
mlga Owner consider help
with financing Call MI 1101
for appoint manl F leave no
Friday *»• or Saturday callt.

th e ter r a c e

1S90 R idgewood * »*
Model Open T im
Thru Sun Id X loA
1 Bdrm. I*y bath. Central air S
heal, lull* equipped kitchen
with mkrowaee FHA. VA A
Cony low down parmant. low
monthly
payment
with
graduated mortgage MI IN I
or I I I k04f. I t ) I 1 »
LAKE M ARY Duple* 1 Bdrm. I
bam. t u 000 Genr Realty 111
15*1 Alt hrs ITS *111
Santord V ltd eg* 4 Bdrm. 1 Bath
on Lge Lot SSS.tdC Wm
Melicrowvkl REALTOR MI
m i . Etav MI I X i

MANE OFFER &gt; Bdrm. I Balk
New Kitckin Appliances
Aum g tM.Mt
Om I e e l la BUY Rtal litaia
BUY Radi Itla la and walHIt
LAWANAKISH
r ea lto r

321 0041

STENSTROM
REALTY - REALTORS
Sanford's Salts Leader
W t LIST ANO S ILL
M O R I HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN T N I
SANFORD A R IA
JUST L I S T I D I t Edrm, t Betti
home yen ceuid ceavert to
eflice beee&lt; WWC. duung area.
1*1 M hlichen I Ilk* tq tt.l
JUST FOR YO U) 1 Edrm. 1 Balk
name in Lack Arkar aa a
kaaetifnl toll Lais at ts tritl
Just IM .tH I
LOTS OF CHARMI Older I Mary
1 Edam. I Barn Same atC H 4 A , 1 F P L ’i . tpslalrs
kilckan tad. DR . parckn
•atorei Vear's tor MLHkt

LA K E M ARY
313-test
Sat W LataMary Bled
IN OR IF T WOOD VILLAGE

MOVE R IO H T INI Furnltkadl
story 4 Edrm. I Balk keeit ■
FFL. pantry. DR, 114 la kit.
pair# I H U M I

C A L L A N Y T IM E

mi
Fprk

I eert. wifcvnwt arae, » it.
lihr-ngi fm » tvaplitt
1700 H tf 0n»» 144 MB
Attorn#*#
r
v m ha**.
&gt; twdrm. f i ham. ■ •• . , aem.
«eu#wrr rm, twx#. rwer tw#'el
and meraip pr « t •*# M * »
Owt »wvw &gt; HWm, I hem am 4
a.nmg rm. m uM c »d . peed
W fprw* na* e*W( W
lamp w ir l**i Mawaa Ill.M

.

Exchange J Bedroom. IN I Elm
City. North Carol me House I
fireplaces, paean trees, a
beauty 10) llla O tl
h a v e CASH
FOR YOUR FARM
OR B U ILD IN O IO TS
lutes Car par than me 11IIM4
ar III M lt

Don't wanttrk Whet havk yout
Need 1 1 Bdrm Horn* Price
and terms negotiable Hlaaai
art 5

47-A— Mortgages Bought
_______ &amp; Sold
/.'i pay cash lor isl A Ind
mortgages Ray Legg. Lie
Mortgage Srokyr I l f Hat
HUMS u w n iK k Money now
lor bill consolidation, home
im p ro v u m e n tt
C re d it
protlamtT May not be a
problem Ro Bull Mortgage
Company
Bally
Veras
Licensed Mortgage Broker
10S 1500 Okily ••

Rattan O im t Sal Glass topped
tabta A a chairs, teoo. w ckar
shelt unit. S ix , Rattan bar
ttoPlt (I I . U0 •* * » **•*
one p h o n e c a ll s ta r ts a

C L A S S IF IE D AD ON
r es u ltfu l
end
n u m b e r is m i n i

ITS
TH E

Original Oil Paintings M u tf
liquidate stock, hen price
Cavalier Motor
If.
sterling Sllunrsyare. otd mailer
by Towla S*Tuic* for • SHO
Call H i tile
Cam tria l icnal P i t - l i places,
tartnron# natural fabric
kotchguardad. StSd iMaett
Hare ■ room to ranll Let *
classified ad rind a Itnart tor
Aduatarnum IS gal aquarium
sat into larrarkxn. includes
plants, graval. lights and
custom bum stand S100
Various mg only Danny or
Darltn* 111 f i l l I long wood I

Ml.Siil

ASSOCIATES. INC. REALTORS*
DOIlfcat Throughout
Can'ral Florida

People who Ilka money use tow
cost da Milled adt to buy. sail,
or trade

youl

FAM ILY HOME a Edrm. I Balk.
Family Rm Firaplec*. Kitthan Equipped IIT.Skl
I E ST OF BOTH WORLDS
Charming Old I Slary 1 Edrm,
I Eatk Hama wlm sparkling
Peel and Hvg* Gama and
Screened Rm and Fenced
Back Yard WT.tM

We buy equity In Houses,
apartments, vacant land and
Acreage.
LU C K Y
IN
VESTMENTS. P O Boa 1500,
.Santord, Fla. 11711. Ml UAL

SO -Miscellaneous tor Sak
O P E N HOUSE

322-2420

C A L L A N Y T IM E

mi
French

323-2222

llfl
LA. Mary
Bird

323-6363

R EA LTO R S
Muttipl# Liltin g Service

68-Wanted to Buy

80-Aulos for Sate

Akrmloum. cans, copper lead,
brass, silver, gold Weekday*
l i M. jai t l xokoMo Tool
Co H I W 1*1 51 1111150

E Q U IP M E N T A U C T IO N

JUS r L IS T E D . Attractive
Pmecrati area Neal ] Bdrm
Large yard. Kltckan equipped.
, happing and tchooll FMA VA
financing 541.55*

____ 311-0751

Sunday. Jun* 14, 1**1— tT A

Aniiqurs
Diamond)
Oil
Paintings O nanist Rugs
BtidgesAnl Iguas
M l 1101

« A Farm Equipment

42—Mobile Homes
. - I Aida I t . 41-, 1 Bdrm .: Bam
at IS N inlarttt
Down
payment and lake Otar
paymanlv Call alt J 10 M l
MW

C A L L 323-5774

Evening Herald, Sanford. El.

42-Lawn Garden
FILL DIRT A TOPSOH
YELLOW SANO
Can Clark I H ff f 272 7510

Xidv gone, but the twing val In
the back yard itn'l? Sail II with
a want ad Call 111 3411

COUNTRY ASSUMPTION Na
qualitrihf, la* dawn. At
'ra c iia t l
Bdrm. Lake
Marakam ela* Dtlachad
oarage, warkikop 41tn1k
Acre lenced I U N I

L*c rt«i Esiatt Bfok*r
JMO Stntord A ,»

LOCATION LOCATION LOC*
TION Sp&gt;c and Span, 1 Mrin.
I’ i Bath, privacy Itnca Graal
aitumpilon Call lodar to irt

Day or Night

G R E A T A S S UM PTIO N la *
down plus owner tlnancin|
Loral*, large I Bdrm. super
.(.cation, ipartnng pool,
•am,i, rm with huge .brick
Nraplact. amenities is) 50*

with Major Hoopla
T]

UtadG E l u t y R i l *
BawAMppitok
C a lln a llW a lta r 5

Assume Payments
Oahu* !&gt; b 2*g A Bulil m
Buttonholes Pay balance of
Ml or I payment* ot SI Hoover
Convertible Vacyvm Cleaner
with Art Pay balance d |ai or
* payments ol I* Call Credit
Mgr m e a n
Stereo Combo Console AM FM
Frvitwood tlnish Like new nol
a keraleh S IX M l a m
Ready m li tone rat a, camant,
car itopa, spiasn blocks, e tt
Hocks, potto stones, slaps.
Heck*. prt&lt;d-i itlto to price,
brown root rock
Mtrocto Concrete Co
100 Etm Aye
M l Sill
Wooden interior A erterlor
aoorl Double hung, casemwil
A curved gles* bow windows
Clew toot boihiubi. toiiels.
basins, porch rollings A
He rwer* Other antiques Old
red watenouse Soulhaid* N
No aa (H I W III I treat)
Santord A T p m Friday, t l
pm Sol , A l F m Sun

Starling Silverware Strousbourg
by Gorham Sarvico tor I Lika
new with boa l « 111 1454
Man s Shirts S a lt llt f E *
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
li 0 Santord Av a
M l IN I
IA Ft. Bool Motor and Iroiluy,
MOP or otter. Slvu truck
•epper | l « 1 Raob.ts U ta
M l la tl Aft * 10 PM

- 1 '

» — M is c e ila n c c u s ( o r Sate

S S -B o a ls A A c c e s s o rie s

Sears Xenmora ClassK Propane
Gas Range Upper and Lower
Broiirr Sail Cleaning Oran
EscHlanl Condition M l 1145

I4to FI Bass Baal and Trailer
Guide 1 Fool control trolling
motor, Iw lyal seals, belt
casting decks, and storage
comperlmtnl*. S#00 Firm ,
Mom Ml 0114 Evas M l 1»5

50A- Jewelry

St— Camping Equipment
Qiamcnd Ring, Ladica Solitara
V)K. Appm ifd , *400 Must
tttl 1150 Catl B)1 IB54
Diamond Ring Ladies 14 K
engagafnanl U K Diamond,
appraised I t 25. ashing 121S
111 H54
Ciatiifiad Ads ara fba smaliast
t&gt;a news Hams you will find
•flYwnara

SI— Household Goods
1*11 Singer Future Fully aula,
rtpossanad. used vary wort
lime Original t)*l. abl S ill or
Ml mo Agent l i t I**

51-A— Furniture

Cuc^p-ng * N#*ri# n#w 10 ft k 14
ft F•Hilly Iw f
l(r t«
howl# combo p*ir. fiMvy cN/tY
#.f f f ii!lr « u i Gitor boof
frail## for 14 ff t&gt;o«t 222 4112

72 -Audions

r es u lts

S O U TH ER N
F ib f f Q la f i
Product! %pYCiii«!i m boat A
cor&gt;ette repa»f! ♦ ail other
type! of fiberglati work
L oweit price! in Central
FI * quar work Eitateton
the ipot that will no! ebanqe
when job i! finnhed Can ) ; i
I I 31 or m i l t l Santord
anytime for an 4pponfment,
"U lu aily 74 hr iervlce”

JCA SH VISA m c $
1215S. F R E N C H
M O R E INF0323 7340

1970 Maver«ck. 2 Dr , 4 Cyl, )
Hick, Yellow » Black trim
Very nice car not) m i j j #

For Eslair Commercial or
Residenlial Auctions A Ap
praisals Can Dell s Auction
jj j 5*75

For your car or truck, reqar
d ie t! of cand Prefer running
Free lowing i l l 1UI Aiffil

D AYTO N A A U T O
A U C T IO N

75— Recreational Vehicles

A U C TIO N
M O N J U N E 157pm
Piano. ¥»a‘nuf dmmg room iu«f
wrnd kitc'hfn («b&lt;n#tl. n#**
tht*H o* draw%. cedar cbPkf.
taNfl and cna&gt;rt. antique
reproduction!, TV*** and mueft
more

Hwy n Daytona Bch Ph (4041
1551)11

1i;« Podqa Trave© Camper
Sleep! 4. loadad w n lr a i
121 OAJlor 22)4449

45— Peh Supplies

77— Junk Cars Removed

Poodil# PwRI AKC Show quAiity
Small miniature Black Mat#
Sacrtfict 125 Sf&gt;ott, 22) ta il

BUY JUNkCARSA TRUCKS
From t»0 loISO or more
Ca H 222 1*44, 222 4440

C ii u T i i i adt WrYtTK'tbdvTnfl 1
Mitinqi cdfnmunifY t v tr f Oaf
R»ad l wt# tb»m o*»*«

lop Dollar Pad tor Junk A
carl, truck! A heavy eqo&lt;p
ment U7 Sf*0

66— Horses

62— Lawn Garden

CLASSIFIED AOS ARE FUN
ADS READ A USE THEM
O F TE N YOU LL LIKE THE

Sal, June M, IS *.m. it) I arm
tractors, 14 lntern‘1turbo alee
Arctic 4WO farm frartor A C
MSArct'C 4WD Ito yd shovel.
It BTO I Bulldoitr. 1 loading
shovels. SSI Oaliofi Grader.
Gaiiond&gt;rsalir*ft&lt; roller. IS l
Ion dump irvcki, Intrm'l 4WD
1 Ion dump, Ford 15 fl buckrt
truck. Casa backhoa loader.
Ford school bus, Davis Iren
char, worlhlnglon com
pressor. Jaeoer pump. CMC
Sltpvan, pickups. Irailar
omaretor tomprassor unils, a
td dump bodies. Bush Hcrg.
pang mowat*. Hail mower,
truck A frame l ion noisl. olio
mttc firms, many more item*
arriving daily Contignmtnts
accepted al

57-Guns &amp; Ammo
Gun Auction. Sunday. Jun# 21
Sanford A uction, 1215 I
F ranch Mar* info I I I 2240

Cam for Car! and Trvckl
Martin Meter Siltt
I f llf f t R C f c
H A IU I

68— Wanted to Buy

It you'r# In fht bwiinafi ©I
buildinq four but I M S - w5*
tM Claw iflad Ada c#f«n

A N TIQ U E A Modtrn dolls.
Ktwpl# dolll A figurrnrt.
Ai#nar»d#f doill aatiAJl

Mo No money Down 701 I
French 22) 71)4

Tf 6 POOLLARI

T»f i Chevv **iCk t*P Af*3TtIt.t.
Small VI. Run! good, need!
pa&gt;nf 11195 131 1224
NO MONEY DOWN Payment!
175 month Monte Carlo, PS
PB, Auto. AM F M llerro a*r A
many otn*r eifra! i l l 9t£0 or
134 4405 Dealer
1971 Old! CuflatL
two door. S400
__________ 123 &gt;203__________
O Lincoln 4 dr. Town car. Eitra
clean, 7KMXI rmlet, new bat
tery, new enhauit, air ihockt
trader hitch flit! 321 0477
72Vega 1200
223 SRl
After 4pm

78-Motorcycles

USE YOUR MORSE SENSE
Complet# coupon from Mori#
Cavalry or Han# A Pony for
SOcoH par baq on ail V lfilltf
preKfucfi,
oner good Juft#. Iff 1
WllcaSaltt-Hw# 4a w (M i
w of I 4 5#nf#nJ J2J 6170

LAWNMCWER SALE ) Slot
Special Aval la b ia n « m r i
but W n ftrn Aufd, Sanford

H Ford Granada I C&gt;i Air iff

llVamahaGTIO
Good condition, 1200
12)4)40
Yamaha fcndura 100
Suruki 250
MlhlQtlff 27) 1444
n —

Trucks-Trailers

'14 Ford ftinotr XL I
1Owner It SCO
m in i

71 Toyota Coroda
Etc condition.
Call 222 1741

• ; .v

v ! S»a y TON A AUTO AUCTION
y*vvy 51, 5 milt wrsl u ScxvU
way. Oayfotva Btath. wxlhoie
a public AUTO AUCTION
rvary Wrdntsday al • p m. If i
th* only ona In Florid* You svs
tha rrstrvad prlca Catl W 4(
U S U I I (or luflhar .&lt;vla.lt

WILSON MAIER FU R N ITU R E
1U4WE FIRST ST

CONSULT OUR

Ml MU

Petto Furniiura Glass loppad
labia witti four chairs, swivel
l*.iito chair, alum inum glidar
SII WBI alter U*

52— Appliances

AVID LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

Washer repo GE detuie modal.
Sold orlg 1400 IS, used short
lime Del H ie 14 or lie JS mo
agent Maiiaa

To List Your Business...

kenmore parts, sarytea, ustd
washers MOONEY APPLI
ANCES IMMYT

Dial 322-2611 or 831-99-93

HErr REPO. lacu tt frost tree
Orlg, U21. now 110* or l i t ms
Agent M l lit*
w ritin g h o u s e t r a i l I r t e
ratrigardtor, (111 Fngidalra
rttHgerator, I I I ) TT4 M il

Air Conditioning

Ranoa r. E 40 in. wlda 4 Bur
nar, 10 Inch oven, 1 drawers.
White Good, clean worllng
cond . 1100 or oiler H14N1

ChrN will irfY.ce AC*k. refrto.
fretieri, water cooler!, miic
Call 2234727

M IC R O W A V E
Brand New. push button control
has probe Origxsolly MIT,
balance U K . I l f monthly

Lit IJU
SJ— T V Radio Stereo
T S L l VISION
*
RCA. IP'lelevillon XL lOOloiid
Hate
Color
Porteble
warrenty Pey Hat or 114
Monthly Financing No Down
Payment
BAKI 11*4 N. Mills Av*. I l l Ml
Orlandwixm-saM
tV rape I f Tenlih Sold orlg
14Y1 IS Bel 11*1 I* or t i l mo
Agent 1 » H I A
Good Used T V '!. I D A up
M IL L E R !
HIS Orlande Dr.
Ph M l OMI
T V ’s FOR RENT
Color A Black A vehlla Free
dillvtry A pickup. Jimmy's
■TV Rental Phone Anytime

H4tvt some camping equipment
no longer utef SetI it ail
with a Clauified Ad in The
Herald Call 322 2411 or O l
wfj and a friendly ad vitor
will help you

Aluminum Siding &amp;
Screen Rooms
Atummum Application Service
Alumn A vinyl tiding, loffit*
screen room!, window!, door!,
gutter! 2341754 e*rt

Tha "Good Oto Dayk" h*v#
rwvar tail lha Class,liad Ad
t
Th# Buys are sflll Tha
Basil
_______ ______

Boarding A Grooming

m rm

1 MAN QUALITY OPERATION
f y n tap PiHot, Dnvewafi,
etc Wa»ne lle«i n r ij7*-

Cypress Mulch
Top Quality MuKn dativarad la
ftomaor bustqass ) I Yds t)S
I H C M D t f i l B Ilia

Ekctrical
ig yrt a&gt;p aii
Iypasc4 alaclrial work al lair
pf.cas 11)4)14

e l e c t r ic ia n

Window Uuerdi. Dour G wwmJ*.
Sliding Gletl Door enclMurei,.
Petto and Peel filling*.
Fence!. GAlft* Fire tu 4 P # v
Steel S»eif% Omemenlel iron
Fgfnifu#tr Etc Come m our
di!p1ey. 1001 E ISthrigM here
in Senfordl Ability ironwork!.
223 3400

Spring Yard Clean Up Mowing,
bads mulched, thrtlb pruning,
weeding, basic yard car*
Monthly refry
Calf lor
ett John u l toad Am Pm .
LARGE T R E IIN IT A L L b R
Landscaping. Old Lawns R*

La w n ! Garden
Service

Hauling &amp;

Yard Work
Hauling b Yard Work Id \ a l«
with Ad 111 till no ant » )
14*1 Larry, Joyed Bryant

54— Garage Sales
earner Willow A ism Sal Sun I
S Tooto. lire*, lamps, silver
medals, housadtold flams
Saturday and Sunday t 4 Baby
Hams, furniture, lol* of misc
1*1 Wildwood Dr Rambtemwd
Subdivision
Big Yard Sato: Glassware,
furniture, books, cameras and
mile Thursday and Friday
*11 W lit St.
Garage Sale - Sat and Sim
Trundto Bad tram*, starao
stand, mite . adutl. maternity
and children * clothe* Many
Dinar Items *11 Belh D r .
Ravenna Park,
Btg 1 family Yard Sato. Elec.
Supplies. Toots. Clolhas. Cite
Gu.lers Amp . alt Frl . S al.
Sun T A I IP Randolph

5rtowh.ll x annals proud Id dn
nounc* th* addition of Larry 1
Batty, lor marly with Animal
Harare 14 Hour Car* Full
iarvka M5S1I1

CENTRAL FLORIDA HOME
iM P R O y lM lN T t
Painting, RooJ mg, Carponlry
Lie Bonded fc Guaranlavd
PraaEmaiataa 1151*4*

Home Repairs
Brush Cutting
CUSTOM WORK
RtStaqabto
H alts
Fra*
EaHtiHto. Call Early A. M. or
Eva H I 1511 or (toll M 1 H 4

Building Contractor

House Cleaning
■ill Cart*. H a l* C arlllltd
Buil di ng
Cgnlrdtlor
Rastdaniial or Commarctol.
New or H*mo&lt;s*4*d 111 be*a

P A W Cleaning Strvlct Hout*
CWaning Nothing over MS TS
UB 411*_________ ___________

insulation

55-Boats &amp; Accessories

E nergy a d ollar s:
M U A Blown PRONTO IN
SULAT ION CO H I 4111or H4
Ita Fit# Ctllmeltt

save

Carpet Cleaning
Interior Decorating

S O U TH E R N
F &lt;barglass
Produd* sptctolisl in boat A
corvttt* rapdlr* a dll Other
types ol llb tr g la il work
Lew ttl prices In Ctnlrdl
Florid* a guarenlaad work
Etiimaiason Ihaspb*. ir.al mil
m* charg* whan fht Mb to
l.n.yhad Cell ft » ) 1UJ
or n l dive S*n*ord. *ny*ime
tor an appowdmm* "Usually
14 hr. S * r » « t "

Shampoo A Deep Slaem, Ltv,
Dm Rm. H ill, i n SIS aa
additional rm M l 6*05

dock Repair
a/isirocrat. I I *T. 109 Honq
Mercury Galvan,led HIT
traitor, flaady tor tow wrier.
H AM or best ottor S I M

CMalxig with Wxsdow and Wall
lr»# lm tn li and ar* at
(tu o t tt Bator* IL H I je ll

Ceramic Tile
M E IN TIE R TILE
Nrw or rapew. Irak a showers our
WtCtotty. IS yrk E»p M Tttk l

g w a ltn ey je w e l e r

104 S Park AV*
MIASM

C om plete Home R e p ttrt*
RemodtHhg, Punt ng roo*
eOd iiom. dryweil* etc N yr
r . p Cell i n W*; eve!

Remodeling Speclalls
Wa handle lha
Whole Ballot Wti

B. E . Link Const.
333-7029
Finenc ing Avkileble

Roofing

Lawa Mewtng
laaaq* Ctaan v*
BraSk^ Removal
,T . LACK I V
05*541

M nlU-Lock

Writ* Way Rooting and P*«i
ling G uaran ittd work Fra*
E stim ates Ph 1114*11
ROOFS. taaSsrepaireA- Rtplac*
rs lla n a iv ts and ikfnqlt w ait.
I lt a a s td , m su rtd . banded.
Mika 111 Ain

NEW Concreto BuHdtngs. all
tirak. UO * up At I 4 A SR 4*
14 induUrlal Park D I K I I

Sjisdbiasling

Nursing Center

SANOBLAITINO
DAVIt WlLOINO
1114155. IANFOR0

O U R R A T IIA R C l Ow ER
Laseri*w NurttngCanlar
515 E Second I* . Santord

Sewing Machine

HI »to)

Odd Jots
J A B Home Improvtmant —
Carpentry wots 01 any lypt
Roc* rapaxs. gutter work,
pamling l.nirttof or eiitrtorl,
plumbing, spacialil* to mobilt
hqmt rapaxs A roo* coating,
and wood polio decs* * ter
asiimalt 11514*1

Service *ny ^4k# or model
M«vtrvg m ithlri# Iff youf hOITfV
By factory irtineO periof'i'*!
Fret pickup A del 12)412!

Tex &amp; Accounting
Services
Gr

TH

w

r

Busmtss and Indivlduato
ElliabalhA GnndieC P A
11) HAS

Quality work Fra* Ett Disc
lo Santors 114 Alto Ralar.

your
CHI Ability Irenwqrki
tor Window A Door Guards
FreoEs* m / t o t

Remodoling

ni •)»)

Pointing

Burglar Bars

Mobile ffomet, Moulw. Reef!,
Truck!. Tre.ier, Etc Parfeble
Unit HereW Renkin 22) 2751

CrocIwYt La
Btauffflcalionand
M*i«'5t'anciS5r*iC5
Thecaftonal Iw c h l

O U A LIIT A TA F A IR PRICBl
Gan Rapoirs A improv 11 yrt
locally. Senior Disc H I 1*0*
Carpentry A Ramodallrw
Ha |ob too small
Ml 145k Attar a IQ

Pressure Cite ning

Compla** lawn car* 1151751

___________________

A U PHASES R IM O O IL IN O I
Plumbing, E lac . Carponlry
11 Yrt E&gt;p Oualily Wort
Rrtt jUtoS Fra* E ll 11)0)1*

PONSEtA PLUMIINO C«V
iffucf'on, RepkifL Emergen
cy Lie * Bonded. •*! 223 407!

Carton Lawn Service

You Call w* Haul. Small to*
dsar.nq Rubbish removal
Ml 1115 Altamonl* Spgt k5!

Animal Havari Buarding and
Grooming Kannali Shady.
Iniulalad. scr**". H* prool,
Innto*, oullid# runt. Also AC
cagas Wacatar your pats Ml
5/51
___ _______ ___

P lum b in g
Freddie Robinion Plumbing,
Repeiri. f«ut#fi. w C »
S«Ktnkler» J7J iiio, )72 0704

Landscaping

Horn* Improvement

3NE PHONE CALL STARTS A
C LA S S IFIE D AD ON ITS
R E S U L TF U L E N D
TH E
NUMBER J l M l 1*11.

the sooner yrer piece
.-ttttittod ad. me i
will gel results.

Cone fete Work, footer!, n o o n m
pool! Landftcaeinq A, *od
work Free #!t 322 7103

BoRuty Cara
TOWER S B E A U TY SALON
FORMERLY Harrialls Btauty
Nook 515 E Isl St, 111 5IJ1

Ironworks

Concrete W dH c

ironworks
A ll Ornanwnial Wfoughiireet
Window Bars and Satuniy
Doors O l 144A. Orlando

I S easy to MAC* A ClassXtad Ad
., writ rren help you word
N. Cell m t o ll.

PAINTING
Inltrtor tiltrior 11 S dikcounl
on comptft# interior or
comp let a eiitfior lobs For
Irte tllitnato (All 111 15TS

TopSoil
TOPSOIL
Fill Dirt,IqltCtoarad
Altar I p m H I 410)

TERRY'S INTERIORS
WAlipaptrlng. painting Low
, W N tl Guar work. &gt;15AIM
House Paxiter -Is* Clast WoiS
raasonaoi* prxas IS ytars
r«p kannam Holt m 51S5.
anyf ma allar )
Proltiiional
iiim l.v ,-# ^
larior IMarior
k tmod. MteEi
I N Ins Free ts M .A II j t i f

Painting!
Pressure Ctaani,
2 —
interior Eattrigr Pro gua.My
Local fa* Fr Esl. ra ti Large
ar small 111 M il. H I 1)51

Tree Service
HARPER'S TR IE S IR V IC B
Trimming, remunng A Land
scaping Fret Esl HI0M 1
Th* waalhar to porlan lor «
backyard
l*i* —
sail
tv try thing last with a want td
Can H11SII qr 111 5551

Wallpapering
Small

Comm

Waiipaptf'ng

and

R«g|

Fra* Ett

||

__Vre. Cqp Call A L. (Mod
McKtonov in A A M Ja m to m

�OurHeritageOfFreedom
This symbol of American independence, her Liberty Bell, was cast in London and
was rung for the first time upon the occasion of the first reading of the Declaration of
Independence. Inscribed prophetically on the huge iron bell are these words:
"Proclaim Liberty throughout all the land u n to all the inhabitants thereof."

Al Ponig Plumbing
7H I. French A n .
(11111701 Unferd

Sanford. H I 0*71
Sanfon' Electric Co.
1S11 Pa,it Dr.
Sanlord. TMIM1

All Florida Realty of Sanford
Realtor l l i n n

Sanford Dry Ckanon

Chaim Title A Guaranty Co.
ttt W. lit It., Sanford, M l «1*4
1W E. Altamonte Dr.
Altamonta Springs. I11S1S1
Sanford Auction
IIIS S. French Avo
Sanford. Ml-7140

set-eooa, ni-ioii. m am

Pronto Imulatlon Co.
Save Cnargy A Dollaro
Fro* Eli. IIS alts or Ma-IMI
Doll's Auction Cantor
West lit St.. Sanford

m-sait
FlagsMp Sank Mambor FOIC
All the Sank You'll Ivor Nrod
Sanlord. FU.. 111-1774

A OK Tiro
! « ll French Avo.
1717*00, Sanford
The Evening Herald
Mt N. French Avo.
Sanlord. Florida 11771

A.J.O. Locksmith A Sons
M il French Avo., Hwy. If-tl
Sanford. Florida, 1111414
Cttlsons Bank of Oviedo
ISA Genova Dr., P 0. Boi 71*
Oviedo. Florida
Member F.O.I.C.. las M il
Geo. Willmer Assoc. Inc.
1117 E. Hwy au
Aflamonto Springs. I ll atoe

Sunshine TV Sales A Service
SO* W. *th St.
Mr. A Mrs. Roy Green
100 West Airport Sfvd.
Sanlord, Florida

Edward A. "Nad" Yancey
City Commissioner
City of Unlord
Seminole Cablovtslon
lit* French Avo.
Unford. Florida

n ia *n

Leon P. Duftoy Pvl. Co. A 145th Inf.
Replaced to loth D. (Rainbow Dlv.)
Wounded St. Mihiol. Franc* M M I

Osteen Bridge Fish Camp
Calory Avo. A Hwy. 41S
Boat Rental*. Balt. Tackl*. Refreshments
Unford. 1711*71
Bridge* Antiques
Antique* Oriental Rug* Music Beit*
Unford. 111-1M1

Dynamic Properties
S. V. Hardwick, Broker
Dolton*

Marty Trencher
Councilman
Winter Springs. Florida
Jim Hartman
Winter Springs City Council
Hartman A Sons Construction. tll-Met
Wilfred "Hap" Arnold Jr.
Councilman Seal II
Winter Springs. Florida

Army-Navy Surplus
li t Unford Avo.
Unford. 17117*1

John V. Tor case
Deputy Mayor
Winter Spring*. Florida

Tower's Beaety Saien
Beam Tewers Apartment*
H1-S741. United

Wall Plumbing A Healing Inc.
It07 Unford Avt.
Unford. M IAM I

Disabled America* Veteran*
Chapter No. N
ISIS Orlando Dr. Meeting* 1st
Too*. 7:10. Ul-17It

Lots' Place
li t E. 1st St.
Unford, M1-4IM

Kennedy Tractor Company
MOO W. Hwy. 44
Unlord, MM7I7

Miller's Radio A Appliance

Meureon Boyd
City Council
Winter Springs, Florida
Sgt. Harold E. Ratliff USAF
Europoan Theatre KIA
Magdesburg. Germany, IMS
Peggy A Richard Packard
In Memory of Laved Ones
•e sure and fly your flag on June i«th

~ rr

�Briefly
Parent-Child Co-Op Program
Begins Summer Session
The summer session of the Seminole Community College
Parent-Child CO-OP Program will begin Monday at Christ
Episcopal Church In lcngwood. This parenUng education
program, officially entitled Development of the Preschool
Child, Is designed to Instruct the parents in areas such as
discipline, sibling rivalry, cresUve activities and readiness
skills.
The parent participates !n hts-her child's laboratory
school located at the church. The laboratory school
operates from 9.30 a m. to 12:30 p.m., Monday through
Friday for aeven weeks. Cost of the course it $10 plus a
sm all materials fee.
For information, call Edit Herota at 862-3205, or Suxanne
Tesiniky at 30-1430, Ext. 07.

Decorating Course Opens
A non-credit course In Housing and Home DecoraUon
(Interior Decorating) will begin at Seminole Community
College. T V classes will meet for 8 weeks. The instructor
will be Mrs. Sandy Snipes
This is a beginning class where the student will learn
some basic skills of a decorator. Furniture groupings and
arrangements, color coordination and selections, drawing
at v," scale, and period furniture styles are some of the
items to be covered.
The classes will meet on Thursday evenings, from 7 to 10
p.m., June 18-Aug. 8.
Cost of the class Is (10. For more Information call 323­
1450.

Cheerleader Camp Slated
Cheerleaders at area Junior high schools, middle schools
and high schools are invited to attend summer camp July
11-18 at the University of Central Florida.
Participants will receive extensive instruction in new
cheers and chants, pom pon routines, partner stunts,
pyramids, and tumbling. Each squad also will have the
opportunity dally to work privately with on instructor.
Ribbons and spirit sticks will be awarded nightly.
Further Information about tlie UCF camp can be obtained
by calling toll free 1-800-23M286.

Seminole High

50th
Class
Reunion
By DORIS DIETRICH
OURSELVES Editor
Henry H. Witte Jr. of Lake Mary, seems typical of a
fellow who always has a good time—the “for he's a Jollygood fellow" type.
And Friday, June 5 was no different for Henry and his
Seminole High School classmates of 1911 who gathered at
the Holiday Inn, Marina Isle, Sanford, for a golden
celebration—the 50th SHS class reunion.
Henry, who was chairman of the event said,
"Everybody Including myself never had *o much fun
during the two hours before dinner. I never had so much
fun IN MY LIFE!"
He added, “You never saw so much gabbing, hugging
and kissing In all your life."
Take 85 people. Including 12 class members who have
not seen each other for many years, and a lot of nostalgia
c»n b* stirred up. Memories. Oh, those wonderful
memories of yesteryear.
The private dining room was decorated with pages from

C an ’t believe it's been 50 years since we graduated from high school— Kdwin
Shinholser, from left. Henry Witte, chairm an, Sara Maxwell Harrison, Hoy
B ritt and Wallace Philips.
the yearbook, "Salmagundi (Sally/* and earh name tag
featured the picture of the class member from the 1931
Sally.

Red Cross Needs Volunteers
The Central Florida Chapter of Uie American Red Cross
needs volunteers to drive tnaxlvans, disaster vans and a
bus. The only requirement is volunteers must possess a
valid Florida driver's license.
For information, contact the Transportation Office,
American Red Cross at (305 ) 894-4141, eat. 18.

Honor Society Inductee
At the recent student honors dinner at Maryville College,
Maryville, Tenn.. the new Inductees Into Alpha Lambda
Delta national honor society were announced by MC
President Dr. Wayne Anderson.
Named to membership was Kay Hughes,
and Mrs. Forest I. Hughes of Longwood.

Phi Zeta Accopts M iss Hardman
Paula Ixn-fland Hardman, daughter of Mrs. Doris
Loveland of Oviedo, has been selected for membership lu
Phi Zeta, national veterinary medical honor society.
Miss Hardman, a fourth-year student In the toulslsna
State University School of Veterinary Medicine, la a
graduate of Titusville High School.

fry Tvm Vine*!

Sharing a humorous incident from t h e ' Sally" with their wives are from left,
Griff Scholfleld and his wife Catherine and Ruby Hall and husband Harry
Hall.

There were lots of giggles and the name lags showed
that the wearer had changed—quite a bit, so to speak, In
some cases.
Roy Britt gave the InvocaUon before the banquet-style
dinner. Henry introduced the spouses and guests with A.
Edwin Shinholser conducting "In Memoriam" lor 21
deceased classmates.
Each member gave a brief rundown of his tile during
the past 50 years. Please—only two minutes per person.
There were some who got long-winded, but others had
little to say, so s happy medium was struck in the long run.
The committee called a Ue for two classmates who
traveled the greatest distance: Ethel Gates Trues,
Middletown, N.Y., and Ruth Martin Symonds, William­
son. NY.
"The longest continuous marriage" award also ended In
a Ue between Eunice Horton and Frances l/isatng Wilson.
Nellie Fryer of Sanford captured the title as the
"alumnus with the greatest number of lineal grand­
children and great grandchildren."
The senior class president in 1931 was Jane Leroy
Clayton of Sydney, Ohio. Mrs. Mae Fort, a favorite
teacher who taught the class science In 1931, also attended
the reunion fesUvtUes.
Table decorations were under the dlrecUon of Gertrude
Vtnlng Woods and Donald Anderson.
The chairman said that all but three classmates were
finally located.
Highlight of the reunion?
Gabbing.
Hugging.
Kissing.
Reminiscing.
Just being together...afler so many years.

Adaptive Aquatics: Swimming For The Handicapped
By SYBIL MITCHELL GANDY
Herald Staff Writer
From pre-schoolers to seniors and every age in between
Red Cross swimming Instructor Marion Eggers takes the awk­
ward non-swimmer and creates aquatic grace and know-how
!n Just a matter of weeks.

general population that a person's defect should be ac­
cepted...that a handicapped person is not Incapable of lear­
ning."
.
The Instruction, then, becomes adaptive Swimming is a
kind of therapy for these students, Marion says. It's good for
muscle toning and emotional stress.

"Not only do I teach my students to swim, they learn what to
do in case of emergencies," Marion said. "Water safety is very
important."
Not unlike other swtm Instruction classes that have been
developed, Mrs. Eggers esters to people of all sixes and
aha pus.

Specially handicapped students often have more than one
disability to contend with, but Mrs. Eggers says if there is
some degree of mobility, she can teach the person to swtm.
"I'm certified in instructor training. And that means I teach
the swtm Instructors to teach. So my years in the instructing
field have helped m e develop this adaptive concept."
"I've taught the blind, the deaf, victims of cerebral palsy.
Down's Syndrome, paraplegics, amputees, and Just about
everybody you can name," Marion said.

But a new concept has been developed for the handicapped
called adaptive aquatics.
"1 guess it started back when public schools began on a large
scale to push education and social acceptance for handicapped
children," she said.
"T hu mainstreaming started to create an awareness in the

"The whole Idea is that everyone can learn how to swtm.
Instruction must be tailored and adapted to meet the In­
dividual's needs."

"Many heart patients over the years have been In my water
therapy sessions. It's good exercise without too much exer­
tion." "The same Is true with emphexema victims," she says.
"The breathing gels better as the lungs beewne stronger."
For seniors, swimming ts ideal therapy, not only physically,
but water relaxes stress for senior swimmers.
"The bones are brittle at this stage of Ufe. Swimming keeps
the muscles vitally active. Besides getting a chance to enjoy
the children, seniors get to commune with each other. Swim
clast It good social therapy more than anything," Markin
declares.
Barents get Involved with the adaptive aquatics program
too! The official Red Cross card Isn't issued to the student
marking course completion unless the mother has gone
through the basic water safety class.
"AH students ages five and up learn mouth-to-mouth
resusllatlon," Mrs. Eggers says. "It's the most Important part
of learning to swtm.
"Many of the homes have swimming pools and moms don't
generally worry because the neighborhood children are able to
swtm to some degree. But anything can happen, she said.
Knowing what to do In case of emergency or accident can
mean the difference In saving a Ufe."
Besides working with Individuals who are handicapped,
idaptlve aquatics focuses a lot of Its attention on the children
n the pre-school yean .
These youngsters, ranging In age from two and a half to six
ears, are given special attention, says Marlon, because that's
stage when mobility can take the child out of the mother's
tuned late reach.
Children are able to go out Into the water, but they are not
eveloped enough tntellectuaUy to know that the water can be
ir more dangerous than It ts fun, she says

Eggers goes into the Seminole County public schools with basic
water safety concepts as well as swimming, for fun. "This
peaks their curiosity about learning to swim and water safety
tn the summer program," Marion said.
“And after 18 years o( teaching, I still love every bit of It,"
she added.

"Just because they are drown-proof doesn't reaUy mean
•ry much. Learning the proper techniques In swimming can
islify the child to handle emergency situations In the water
hen he gets to be a Uttle older.
More than anything else adaptive aquatic] encompasses a
-estiva variety of techniques in the total learning process.
For instance, deaf children cannot respond to voice comand They respond to sight command.
*T don't know sign language, but the children respond to my
m. I use a lot of hand motion. My palm straight up In front of
e face means to 'stop Immediately.”'

VlacMt

Marlon Eggers, Hrd Cross sw im m ing instructor,
process through blowing bubbles.

watches while youngsters learn a swim m ing

"With blind children, voice command of course is a
eminent technique. I have to physicaUy move them so they
m feel motions of the muscle and remember where to stretch
d where to draw back," the said.
Marion, who teaches swimming at her 74 sere Lake Howell
me home requires that the mothers of a 11 handicapped
oldren are present tn the water with the child. Any (ear or
nston Is usually rased by her presence.
Surprisingly enough, Marion's handicapped students are
mostly under 3 years of age this summer. And, she says,
they're doing Just great! Classes a rt on-going until Aug. 14.
But during the winter months, from October to May, Mrs.

Come on In. the water’s fine.” 3-year-old
Rebecca Smith might be silently teasing Herald
photographer Tom Vincent while Instructor
Marion Eggers keeps a watchful eye on the young
swimmer.

K f U O ? ;2 2 !

�7B— Evtnlng Htrald. Iintefd.fi.

Sunday.

J u n « 14, m i

In And Around Sanford

Doris

Dietrich
OURSELVES

“Oh, to be 100 attain," might be tome of the thoughts of Mn.
PrlKlIla Hodges of Chuluola, who celebrated her lMth bir­
thday on June I.
The festivities took place at lakevlew Nursing Center
where M n. Hodges has been a resident for the past few
months.
The honoree was honored by members of her family and her
Sunday School class of the First Baptist Church of Chuluota.
A sing-along was the order of the day when all gathered
around the piano and sang Mrs, Hodges' favorite hymns. She
sang right along, not missing a word.
Csks 2nd tee cream were served. Mrs. Hodges was all
dressed up In finery and Jewelry and wore a white corsage,
compllmenta of laikevtew.
Affectlonally called Aunt Cilia, Mrs. Hodges was bom In
rhulunia and was away for a brief time rmlv She was married
to the late Isaac Hodges.
The couple had no children, but their nieces and nephews In
the area Include; Mrs. Margie TUlia, Sanford; M n,' Evelyn
Fore, Chuluota; Mrs. Verlle Kamil, Chuluota, Mrs. Haul
Webb, Jackonvllle; W.O. Jacobs, West Palm Beach; and O.M.
Jacobs, Orlando.
Mrs. Hodges was a h&lt;»'*-wife and a devoted church worker.
She taught a Junior Sunday school class for 25 years.
A spokesman said abou' the 104-year-old Priscilla Hodges,
"She la always sweet, pleasant and always singing."

[ m tU ir t

TO O TH P A STE

HAIR S P R A Y
..ounce - | 0 $

Priced . . . . m

Pilead ........

Qc

Price reflects 30* off
label Limit 1

I

Aerosol. C h o ice of
2 types Limit 1

RAZOR B LA D ES
tSPACK

Shirley Hosier, a nurse's aide at l.nkrview
Nursing C en te r, “ pins" Priscilla I lodges on her
loith birthday.
family and friends. Her mother, Wylene Griner said, "We miss
celebrating this birthday with her."
But Debbte'i family and friends want her to know they are
thinking of her—on tier big day.

Ruth Hall Bryanl, daughter of the Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Virgil
Bryant, received a B.A. degree from Southwestern At Mem­
phis, during the college's commencement on June 5.

Robin Elisabeth Shafer received a B.A. degree in political
science and International relations from Newcomb College of
Tulane University during spring commencement ceremonies.

Marva
Hawkins
W ill*

of women from Sanford, tongwood,
Altamonte Springs and Maitland whose
purpose Is to promote civic and cultural
activities In the Seminole County area for
the enjoyment and enlightenment of the
community.
The goals of the organisation are to
help have better health and medical
forums In the community and motivate
Broadway came to the Sanford Civic voter registration, among others.
Mrs. Eloulse Ststrunk la the president.
Center where over 700 supporters of
North Central Florida Friends and This group and SEKDOO will sponsor
SEEDCO attended the dynamic play another enrichment program In the near
future.
"Pur lie."
This play was sponsored by this group

Mrs. Haltle Mae llankerson, Walter
Mosley and Clarence Royal were recently
honored with a birthday party. Family
and friends gsthered to Join In the fun
and wish these three a beautiful evening.
The Ortando Alumni Chapter, Kappa
league Program had the honor of
w llneiiing the B accalaureate and
Commencement Service of Morehouse
College, Atlanta. The services were held
in the Martin 1-uther King Memorial
Chapel.
The young men were taken on a tour of
the Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit
Authority. They toured the campuses of
Atlanta University, M orris Brown
College, Spelman College and Booker T.
Washington High School.
Over twenty-one young men of this
community were In attendance. Brother
E.L. Blacksheare, Bruce A. Scott
(Scroller, *81) and Kellh Witney were
counselors.

Choice of Fruit or
Mint. Limit 2

12 INCH

Q 3 S

j

Qi

Miurosrnooth l* ln blade
cartridges. Limit 1

Baked enamel fire
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PEPTO BISMOL
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MMM W H A T A TA N
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label Limit 1 pack

R e g u la r ? »

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Congratulations to Gregory Williams,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Willie (Jeannette)
Williams, East 20th Street.
Gregory recently received his Juris
D octorate degree from Southern
University, Baton Rouge, la .
The Williams motored to the
graduation along with other family
m em bers, Mrs, Carolyn Graham,
Derrick and Elaine Crumity, Mri. Betty
Robinson, Coppella, Robyn and Michael
Robinson.
While there, the group went on a
sightseeing trip to New Orleans where
they saw Bourbon Street.

29

IVORY
BAR SOAP

&amp; / S K .T G

Sata f t lead . . . . — *

C h o ic e of 3 ty p e s .
Lim it 1
Rome, Ga., for the second semester of the 19SM1 season.

ELMER’S
BUBLETS

TABLETOP
B-B-Q GRILL

ATRA

K.

Debbie Griner Robinson depends on The Herald to keep up
with what's going home In hrr hometown. But Debbie Is in
Torre Jon, Spain, where her husband, First U . Dennis
llcbtnaon ta stationed at Torrejon Air Baae. They have lived
there for sis months
Debbie will celebrate her Uth birthday Monday away from

PROTEIN 21

'.r

Congratulations are In order to Mr. and Mrs. H.W. Goodspeed who celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary on June
Harlow W. Goodspeed moved to Milton, Fla. In 1920 from
Ohio. He met the farmer Alice Aldey of DonalsariVlUe, Ga., and
they were married on June 11,1R1. In Pensacola. They moved
to Sanford In July of that year.
Mr. Goodspeed retired In 19(5 from the Atlantic Coast line
R ailroad Mrs. Goodspeed worked at R o Jsy In Sanford for
many years.
The couple have one daughter, Mrs. H. Wight Klrtley, who
has Just recently moved from Miami back to the area where
her husband is pastor of the Community United Methodist
Church, Casselberry.
On their 50th wedding anniversary, the Rev. and Mrs.
Klrtley entertained her parents at a lavish celebration at the
Sanford Woman's Club. About 400 friends and relatives at­
tended the Sunday open house.
The Goodspeeds, who are members of the First United
Methodist Church, Sanford, have four grandchildren and two
great grandchildren.

7

PEPSODENT

Saval.11

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instant-on sound.

.,1

REPLACEMENT FILTER

M E N ’S C A N V A S
CASUALSH OES

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Regular
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Brass fittings.

Slip resistant solos.
Choice of 2 types.

TURRET
SPRINKLER

F L E X -O -M A T I C

SNORKLE
No.11M
091
Sale Priced

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” *

5 sprinklers In one
Covers 36 ft. circle.

Vows Exchanged For Visa

ne is not yet qualified to
practice his profession In his
home country. In order that
he might stay In this country
longer to earn his professional
ratings, he U nurrylng an II'.jw aM ld American d tlien
This girl workj part time with
both your husband and the
: *oung foreigner, and U head
over hecU In love with him.
: She h ai accepted his proposal
^ n u r r i a g e and U planning.
. big church wedding fa- the
;e n d o fJu n e .
. Your husband tells y o u lh il
Ihe young foreigner has told
.him thal he l» marrying Ihe
girl only &gt;o he can sUy In this
.country a while longer, and
has no intention of taking her
home with him when he
O tum s to his native country .
-You have only a speaking
acquaintance with IhU girl,
vet you are upset to know of
her
fiance s
Irss-than-

honor.ble intentions toward
hw what would you do, If
anything?
NAMELESS
DEAR NAMELESS: l
„ uld lb J d f by , be , | d
C1„ all , . u , , be bu, fr
Bui first I would
||sd ^
way u make the
„ b(1)fr..
b rldt|
|WMfc
DEAK ABBY: m e n my
granddau£htcr ts k e d m t
when ^
wolik) be 8 4 . 1
counted Ihe months a id days
*tth her. We celebrated with
^ , cake and , u and a hall
r t ndif f i
| „aVf t e r ^
, birthday
ctrdand my husband put In a
half-dollar We sang "Happy
^ .B ir th d a y "
The next year she reminded
^ ^
h w half-birthday
( t | du(| in d her brothers
all0 m arked lh e ,r h , i f.
birthdays on my calendar.

Now my granddaughter li
Iteming to play "Happy HaUBirihday" on the piano.
My husband says 1 was
foolish
to
s ta rt
this
celebration. I claim the kids
enjoy it and It does no harm.
What do you think?
FLORENCES.
DEAR FLORENCE: I think
ft’s clever and lu a. Tell
Graadpa U he doesa'I want to
go along with It, h r doesa'I
half to.
DEAR ABBV: There Is this
guy on my husband's ship who
Is the quiet type. When the
ship goes out to sea, he siti
back and observes all the
men. When he gets home, he
tells his wife every move the
men made, right or wrong.
Well, the wife goes to the
wives of these guys who
messed around overseas and
spills the beans. She and her
big mouth have already
caused two m arried couplea
to split up. Abby, no wife
really wants to hear that her
husband has been unfaithful
to her.
We need a solution.
NAVY WIVES IN VIRGINIA
BEACH
DEAR WIVES: A slip el the

\

tip can sink not only a ship but
a mirrtogr. I don't condone
fooling around, but let all
concerned be forewarned.
DEAR ABBY: Ju st before
hunting season last year 1
read about an organisation
that Is anti-hunting. The day
before hunting season starts,
members go out and spread
“ human odors" around so the
animals will leave the area.
Do you know of any such
organisation? 1 would like to
get In touch with R.
B.H. IN HOLLAND. PA.
DEAR M L : I've never
beard of It, but I'll do some
saUllag around. Readers?
l)« you hale to write le ttrn
brrouve you rinat't hn«w what
la say? Thank-you D o le s,
sympathy
letters,
congratulation!, how to
decline aad arrepl Invitations
and hew to write aa In­
teresting letter are Included
In Ahby's booklet, "Haw |a
Write L eltera (or All
Occasions." Send II and a
tong, stomped 115 cental, selfaddressed envelope to: Abby,
latter Booklet, IK l-asky
Drive, Beverly Hills, Calif.

mu.

GALAXY
OSCILLATING

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SOFTENER
ItlH U T lA I
Flit ad

Price reflects 10* off
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12-INCH FAN

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H elps c le a n c a r b u r ­
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A dd to tan k

GALAXY

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a 26” a 24”
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Provides concentre
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�Engagements
Taliferro-Privett

M cGr/ff-

Mr and Mrs l i s t e r Hush of Orange City, announce the
engagement of their daughter, Cynthia Marie Tabaferro, to
Robert \Va&gt;ne Prlvett, son of Mr ami Mrs. Denrll Privett of
Sanford.
Born at Blakely, Gw.. the bride-elect Is the maternal grand­
daughter of Mr. and Mrs Alvin Hi'ming of DcBary. Her
paternal grandparents are Elton Bush and the late Mrs
Martha Bush of Sanford.
Miss Taliaferro is a June 1978 graduate of lie land Senior
High School. She is employed at Daytona Beach Community
College.
Her [inner, who was born in Indiana, attended high school in
Tampa. He is a carpenter.
The wedding will be an event ol June 17, at 3:30 p in., at the
First Baptist Church, Dot .and.

McMillan
Mrs I.unite McGnff, ol
Sai.fnrd, announces
engagement of her iWughter,
Audrey Vonclle, to Je rry
Lyiui MiniiiuUl, MU of Mr.
and Mrs. Cozell McMillan,
2233 Muntlcello
Court,

MIIS. ROY ALLAN JACKSON

Lesa Cook,
R.A. Jackson
Repeat Vows
Lcsa Gayle Cook and Roy Allan Jackson were married
June 13, at 10:30 a.m., at the First Presbyterian Church,
Sanford. The Bev. Dr. Virgil Bryant performed the double
ring ceremony
Die bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs Bobcrt M.
Cook, 114 E. Airport Blvd., Sanford The bridegroom is the
son of Mrs. and Mrs. Howard P. Jackson Jr., Bir­
mingham, Ala.
Given tn marriage by her father, the bride chose for her
vows a white Qiana gown fashtngrd along the empire
silhouette. The lace yoke extended into cap sleeves. The
controlled skirt gently swept into a chapel train.
A Juliet lace cap secured her fingertip lace-edged veil of
illusion. She carried a cascade of white roses, miniature
carnations, stephanotls and baby’a breath showed with
Ivy.
lee Hart of Huntsville, Ala., attended the bride as maid
of honor. Shari Brodle of Longwood, was the matron of
honor. The bridesmaids were Clndl Horton, Key West, and
Katy Nesmith, Winter Park.
They wore Identical gowns ol Emerald green QUiu
styled with gathered shoulderi and draped necklines.
Each carried a nosegay of white spider mums, yellow
miniature carnations and baby’s breath.
The bridegroom’s father served as best man. Groom­
smen were: Rodney Cook, brother of the bride. Sanford;
and Edward Jackson and Jerry Jackson, brothers of the
bridegroom, Birmingham.
The reception was held at the Sanora Club, Sanford.
Following a Caribbean cruise, the newlyweds will make
their home in Birmingham where the bride la a school
teacher and the bridegroom ti employed by Westinghouae
Electrical Supply.

Tour Open To Public
In stride with the growing
trend toward international
study, Seminole Community
College is offering an
educational tour of Russia.
The 9-day lour, August 14-22,
will visit Moscow, IenIngrid.
Suzdal, and Vladimir.
Tour participants will
depart Orlando for New York
where they will board FINNAlit for Helsinki, Finland.
The lirst stop in Russia, is
Moscow.
The tour can be taken for
one semester hour of college
credit, and is open to any
Interested member of the
community. It is not limited to

students of SCC. A knowledge
of Russian is not required.
Dr. Ann Bachmann, SCC
instructor of Russian and
Spanish, and tour conductor,
will give a free 3-hour lesson
tn the Russian alphabet.
In that way, tour men.herl
enjoyment of the trip will be
enhanced by the ability to use
a Russian dictionary to find
the meaning! of words they
will encounter on various
signs, menus, etc.
The tour price of 81,495.00 is
all inclusive: air fares, hotel
accommodations, meals. Ups,
visa, etc.
For Information, call Dr.
Bachmann at (45-3030.

Ikirn in Sanford. the bridefleet is the maternal grand­
daughter o( Mrs Hrnlgel
Mi Grill J t.r-.s. n. Sanf rd
Mi.cs MiGnll is ,t U76
graduate if Seminole High
S. hi»&gt;l »la-re she was avtue
In the Seminole Marching
Concert and J a n Band and
Chez Nous French Club. She Is
a 1960 graduate of Florida A
and M University where she
was vice president of Delta
Sigma Theta sorority Inc. and
was a member of White and
Gold Honor Society. She is a
former employee of Jordan
Marsh, Miami.
Her fiance, who was bom in
Titusville, is a 197$ graduate
of Titusville High School
where he was active tn track
and wrestling and was a
member of the Society of
Distinguished High School

■

;
;
!
!
ti m n i e v m .r - in c te
A UD H EV M c G ,U F F
Students, tn June 1960 he
graduated from r lorida A and
M University where he was
president of Alpha Phi Alpha
fraternity Inc., and a member
nf Sludenl G overnment
Association and was King of
the Orange and Green He Is
employed as a Xerox sales
representative,
The wedding will be an
event of June 17, at 6 p m. at
St. Paul Missionary Baptist
Church, 813 Pine Ave., Sanford.

Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
lawson, 2381 Doiarway Ave.,
Sanford, announce
the
engagem ent
of
their
daughter, Vanessa Ann
Walker, to Kenneth Kerry
King, son nf Mr and Mr*
Willie H. King, 141 Bethune
Circle, Sanford.

Her fiance, who was bom in DcUnd, is the maternal
grandson of Mr*. Henrietta Hardy, BOO Meltonville Ave.,
Sanfud. His paternal grandparents are Mrs. Lou Baker, 305
Airport Blvd., Sanford, and the tale Mr M E, Baker Sr,

The wedding will be an event of Aug. I, at 4 p m., at the
Central Baptist Church, Sanford.

DENTAL INSURANCE

F R E E M A N 'S

e

[ ^ 7, F A B R I G S T t t J
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n
C O N S U LTA TIO N

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HINT OF WEEK
Good PH DsUnco ihtmpoo li a
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filings uf Ii;i
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'

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^
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:SEMIN0LE PLAZA
CORNER 436 8 17-92

3 Miles East 1-4

E v e n in g H e r a ld
Seminole County's Only Doily
Newspaper

B n joy the most complete L O C A L news coverage
in Seminole County pi its F L O R ID A in brief, NATION
In brief anti W ORLD in brief
A ll Ihe current events the latest in fashions
what's happening on the sports scene ...you’ll
lin d the information you're looking for right in
your local newspaper the Even in g Herald.

CALL

IM-SJtSwr
331-7443
31

Join the everdncreoslng

i Enter Mj Subscription To The Evening Herald

nvimbor of Evening Herald

Tt*a colorful stora that coma* to y o w c

well Informed subscribers.

PHILIPS

Docorating Own tti Jff
In Iwsbiwti Sinew 1981

.J "

JI9 W*tt Util St.

4

Sanford

)
V

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•SCHUMACHER • W A V ER LY wCOHQAAA • JOHN WOLF

M oney can't buy
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MlUt,

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Built H #

Mood, s ty le , p ace-ch anger, a n y

?

or several of Ihese Blouses, Tee Tops, T w in
Tee I ops, can create that rest, versatility and
stretchablllty of wardrobe. In great sun-loving
brlqhts and cool, shady paslels, plus always
wonderful whites. All pleasantly priced.

Mr. Baker is a 1977 graduate of Seminole High School. He
attends telephone cable splicing classes at Seminole Com­
munity College and is employed by H.H Kastner Co.

Her fiance, who was bom in
Puerto Rico, is the maternal
grandson of Mrs. L iu Ann
Vann. Gilmer, Teiaa. Ills
paternal gran d p aren ts are
Mr. and Mrs. Sam King,
Ludowld, Ga.

The wedding will be an
event of July 4, at 6 p.m. at
Zion Hope Missionary Baptist
Church, Sanford.

Mr. and Mrs J.T. Justice, 1811 Chose Ave., Sanford, announre the engagement of their daughter. Sandra Jean, to
Charles Price Baker, son of Mrs. Elizabeth Ann Clements,
Sanford, and Manassah ElUston Baker Jr. of OrUndo.

Miss Justice is a 1978 graduate of Seminole High School. She
is employed as bookkeeper at EaiU ni Gamers and snippers

Bom in Sanford, the brideelect Is the maternal grand­
daughter of Mrs. Eva
Ferguson, 3400 Rightway
Ave , Sanford. Her paternal
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Brown. E ast
Geneva Avenue, Sanford.

Mr. King is a 1976 graduate
of Seminole High School. Re
attended Seminole Com­
munity
College
and
graduated
from
Southeastern Academy In
1979. He Is presently serving
in the United States Army, Ft
Leonard Wood, Mo. and will
be stationed at Ft. Steward,
Ga.

Justice-Baker

Bom in Sanford, the bride-elect is the malemal grand­
daughter of Mrs. M ade Beatrice Stacy, Orlando, and the bite
Vaughn Vernon Stacy. Her paternal grandparents a re Mrs
William Leonard Justice, 3403 Willow Ave., Sanford, and the
late Mr, Justice.

Walker-King

Miss Walker is a 1975
graduate of Seminole High
School where she was active
In the Hero Gub. She attended
Seminole Community College.
She ti employed as a teller for
the Atlantic Bank of
Seminole.

S A N P R A F E A N J U S T IC E .
C H A R L E S P R IC E B A K E R

Fill out coupon and mail or
coil 322*2611 today I

I (Ywar S43.ee. 4 Months 833 W; 3 Month) 17 401
I

t e l e ph o n e

M in im i

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TMf S I VI NTH ORT
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...THE HOPE OF OUR COMMUNITY,

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CHURCH OF CHRIST
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CONOR I OAT ION AL
CMRISTIANCHURCH
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Presbyterian

CHRIST U N H ID
M f THOOlST CHURCH
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And mutt of u* need iornething.., something bigger than we t i e . something we can
. someplate w h e r e w e c a n b e In peace, lor a time and know sancluary.

Try your pla&lt; r ol worship It s the place where you can gather the courage today to face
tomorrow
Gopyr^gr*

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FIRIT FRISRVTIRIAN CHURCH
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THI LIMB MAR* UNIT t o
FRtSirTBRlANCHURCM
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Moil ol u&gt; wuufdn t In fait. &gt;rry few ol ui could take total levelation. Life wa* meant to
be lucd a day at a tm v. without too much looking forward, without too much looking back.

Congregational

if M* m

ta p *
Nwf RRF* FtRNK&gt;* H* HI ll* **«•«

If you had a iryUal ball would you uie it? Would you realty want to know what %ahead
lor tornottaw. n n t wrek, neirt month, new year?

larrscf

IBMINOLI M IIBH II
BAFTIIT CHURCH
Or JavT Betmate
Filler
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OH NOT TO H E

Church Of God

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FIRST F lN T lC O S f AL
CHURCH OF LONOMOOO
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Christian Science

L AM| MART RAFTlIT M lfflON
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Filter

FA IM ITT O A V IN U I
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SANFORD CHRISTIAN CHURCH
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Evangelical
Congregational

Christian

CO UNIITHOC IIFTH ICH URCH
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UFIALA F I ■SR fIC IIA N CHURCH
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FIRST UNITIO
MITHOOlSr CHURCH
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VOU CAN IIATURI
*0utCHURCH
IN THIS IFiCI rot
II l i a s * M i a

CAU 11111"

________ \

'The Following Sponsors Make This Church Notice And Directory Page Possible'
C E L E R Y C tTY
P R IN T IN G CO . INC.

T H E M cK IB B IN AGENCY
In s u ra n c e

L. D. P L A N T E . IN C .
Oviedo. Florida

GR EGO RY LUM BER
TR U E V A L U E HARDW ARE
500 Maple Mve. Santord

P A N T R Y P R ID E
D IS C O U N T FOO DS
a n d E m p lo y ees

O SBORN 'S B O O K
and B IB L E S T O R E
2599 Santord Ave.

A T L A N T I C N A T IO N A L B A N K
Sanford. Fla.
H o w ard H H odges a n d S ta ll

M E L 'S
G U L F S E R V IC E
Mel Dekleand Employees

HARRELL &amp; BEV ER LY
TR A N M IS S IO N
D av id B e v e rly a n d S ta ll

F L A G S H IP BANK
O F S E M IN O L E and Stall
200 W First St
3000 S Orlando Dr

W ILS O N E IC H E L B E R G E R
M O R TUAR Y
Eunice Wilson and Stall

P U B L IX M A R K E T S
and Employees

S M IT T Y 'S SN A P P IN
T U R T L E M O W E R S , INC.
Mike &amp; Connie Smith
C ^ n e rs

K N IG H T 'S SH O E S TO R E
D o w n to w n S a n to rd
Don K n ig h t &amp; S ta ll

S TEN S TR O M R EA LTY
H erb Stenstrom and Stall

W ILS O N M A IE R F U R N IT U R E CO.
M r and M rs Fred Wilson

S E N K A R IK G LA S S
&amp; P A IN T CO., IN C .
Jerry &amp; Ed Senkarik
and Employees

J .C . P E N N E Y C O M P A N Y
E C E Ise a a n d S ta ll

W IN N -D IX IE S TO R E S
and Employees

SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY
4IIIMRV9 0* 000

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RELIGION
Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Briefly
New Pastors Welcomed
At Community Methodist
The United Methodist Women of Community United
Methodist Church, Casselberry, will be in charge of a get
acquainted tea In honor of the Rev. and Mrs. Wight Kirtley
and the Rev. and Mrs. David Hodges, the churches new
pastors and their wives, this Sunday, W p.m., in the
fellowship hall.
The Kirtleys came here from First United .Methodist
Church, Miami, and the Hodges from Wilmore, Ky., where
he recently graduated from Asbury Theological Seminary.

Singles To M eet
The Singles Aga in-Single Patents Class of Lite Ravenna
Park Baptist Church, Sanford, will hold its monthly sharing
meeting ni *'Vn p m Saturday, June Iff, at the tsxoc af
Mary McCarty. 440 Mellonville* Ave., Apt. 12, Sanford. The
potluck dinner will be followed at 7:JO p.m. with a sharing
time. Dating will be the subject for discussion this month.
The class Is open to all divorced, separated, widowed
persons and unwed mothers. For information, free tran­
sportation or bo by sitting call 323-2791 in advance.

Victory For Conservatives

Southern Baptists Re-Elect Smith
I OS ANGFI.ES ( U P l l - The Rev.
Bailey Smith, an Oklahoma minister
who set off a furor by saying God
does not hear the prayers of Jews,
was re-elected president of the
Southern Baptist Church — the
country's largest
P ro testan t
denomination.
Sm ith's decisive victory in
Tuesday's election was viewed as a
triumph for the conservative faction
within the 11.4 m illion-m em ber
church.
The 11,515 "m e sse n g e rs" a t­

tending Ihe three-day convention
gave Smith 60 percent of the vote
over Dr. Abner McCall, chancellor
of Baylor University, who had been
nominated by m ore m oderate
leaders of the denomination,
McCall was nominated by his
supporters as "a tatter-day Lincoln
who could unify this union" and
"lead us back Into the mainstream
of Baptist life." His supporters
worried about what they sec an an
attempt by ultraconservatives who
want to make belief in literal

First Baptist Church of lak e Monroe, County Road IS at
Church Street, will hold a Vacation Bible School from 9:30
a m. to noon, June 15-19 for kindergarten through high
school.

C/fy Of The Sees
The Moody Institute of Science film "City of the Bees”
will be shown at Central Baptist Church, 1311 Oak Ave., at 6
p m. this Sunday. It has taken over tO years of painstaking
work with especially designed photographic equipment for
the Moody Institute of Science staff to obtain the footage
upon which "City of the Bees" is based.

Vacation Bible School

Mess/oh Sets VBS
Vacation Church School at Messiah Uitheran Church, 515
N. Hwy 17-92, Casselberry, will be held June 15-19 from 9 to
11:30 a.m. The theme for the school will be "All God's
People." There will be classes for Nursery through 6th
grade. Those desiring transput la tiun should call the church
office at S31-0028.

Family Focus Film
"Shaping the Will without Breaking the Spint” Is the
topic of this Sunday's film from the Focus on the Family
Film series by Dr. Jam es Dobson to be shown at 7 p.m., this
Sunday at Community United Methodist Church,
Casselberry. This series is open to the public without
charge.

Graduates Honored
First Baptist Church of Sanford honored Us graduates
with a luncheon, last Sunday after church In fellowship hall.
Sherry N. Cook, Marcia Lynn Brorup, Dan McIntosh, Mark
Bose, Patricia A. Austin, Deanna J. Brorup, Tracy
Reynolds and Beth llirt, and their parents were guests.
Billy Wells served as master of ceremonies for the
program which consisted of a charge to graduates and
presentation of gifts by the Rev. Paul E. Murphy Jr., in­
vocation by S.J. Davis Jr., and benediction by Don Knight
Special music was presented by Elaine Drake, Shirley
Ryan and Andy Denmark.

Men's Prayer Breakfast
Deacons of First Baptist Church of Sanford will sponsor a
Men's Prayer Breakfast this Sunday. This is open to all the
men In the church.

Children's Awards Day
An Awards Day will be observed Sunday In the Children's
Worship at II a.m. in the chapel of Community United
Methodist Church, Casselberry. Parents, relatives and
friends of the children are Invited to attend.

Backyard Bible Clubs
Seminote Heights Baptist Church youth will conduct
Backyard Bible Clubs, the first being June 22-26 at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Paul, 102 Ramblcwood Drive.
Sanford. The daily sessions will be open to neighborhood
children, three y e a n through sixth gnde. A training
session for the youth wJJ be held June 20 beginning at 1:30
a m. led by Jennie Billingsley, director of Outreach and
Evangelism.

Ice Cream Social
The Women of the Church of First Presbyterian Church of
Sanford will sponsor an tee cream social at 7:30 p.m.
Monday for the church family. Each family is asked to
provide a topping for a sundae. Ice cream and beverages
will be provided. Following the dessert, group singing will
be led by Dick Aiken with Otlie Hunter sccompinytng.

Youth Day
Youth Day will be observed at St, James African
Methodist Episcopal Church al Ninth and Cypress Avenue,
Sanford this Sunday. The Rev. Thomas Poole of Kurils will
be the speaker at the 11 a.m. service. A Fashionrama will
be presented at 5 p.m.

Music Machine
"The Music Mschine," a family mimeal will be
presented by the combined children's choirs of the Prairie
U k t Baptist Church, 415 Ridge Road, Fem Park, this
Sunday at 7 p.m.

translation of the Bible a test of
faith.
Smith, 42, of Del City, Okla , set off
a storm of controversy during a
Dallas political rally last year when
he remarked, "God Almighty does
not hear the prayer of a Jew." Ho
has since apologised and entered
into a program with the AntiDefamation League aim ed at
fostering understanding between the
faiths.
Asked again about die remark
Tuesday, Smith said, "I need not go
hock over and discuss that, that has

had enough publicity."
In his speech Tuesday, Smith
denied that Baptists are in danger of
splitting over whether the Bible can
ever be in error. And he said he did
not see McCall's challenge as an
indication of disunity.
“l e t ’s quit telling Ihe world what
we don’t like about each other,"
Smith said, " l e t ’s tell what we like
about Jesus.”
Southern Baptists generally have
been content with the 1963 Baptist
Faith nnd message statement as a
summary of beliefs. Smith may

have reassured moderates in his'
address when he added:
“I don't think we can unprove on
our statem ent, which expresses
adequately the Bible is truth without
mixture of error."
F u ndam entalist Baptists have
argued that the original manus­
cripts of the Bible arc without error,
but m oderates have said that
reaffirming that is a misleading
criterion for faithfulness since the
books of the Bible are only available ]
in later copies.

Ola Gospel Songs Still Favorites

Bible School At Lake Monroe

This Sunday at 9:30 A M. marks the beginning of
Vacation Bible School a t Central Baptist Church, 1311 Oak
Ave., Sanford. There will be classes for those in 4-year
Kindergarten through Grade Six. Sunday sessions will run
from 9:30 a.m. • 12:15 p.m. and Monday through Thursday
from 9 a.m, until noon.
Three buses will bring boys and girls to the daily sessions.
Parents are asked to call 322-2914 foe details regarding
transportation. The school will climax with a Parent's
Night Program on Thursday at 7:30 p.m.

Sunday, June 14, H it— SB

H t r t lS root* t i M * r »»

CHURCH DONATES TO FUND
M rs. Joni Faison (rig h t! presents Mrs. M a ry
Smith a check for 1100 on behalf of Mother
Blanche Bell and the Rescue Church of God. as a
donation for the sculptures of Timothy Wilson,
president of (he Good Sam aritan Home, and the
late Mother Ruby W ilson, founder.

Methodists Welcome
New Associate Minister
The Rev, Richard S. Vllolo
of Fort Lauderdale will
assume his duties as new
associate pastor of F lra t
United Methodist Church of
Sanford this Sunday. The
congregation will welcome
him with a reception in
Fellowship Rail hosted by the
United Methodist Women at
12:15 p.m., following the
morning service. The Rev.
Leo King, senior pastor of the
church, will be welcomed
back for his ninth year in
Sanford.
A recent graduate of
Asbury
Theological
Seminary, Wilmore, Ky., with
a Master of Divinity Degree,
Vitolo has a Bachelor of
Science Degree from Florida
Southern College in lakeland.
He will give special at­
tention to Youth and Young
Adult work and will assist the
senior pastor. Be is tingle,
and has had a variety of
ministerial experiences. He

Whenever 1 ward to do myself a favor (as long as every body
is out of the house), I open up the player piano and put on a roll
of some old-time religious favorite and sing out to my heart's
content.
I teamed to love the old-time revival meeting songs like " le t
the lamer lights be Burning" or "Will the Circle be
Unbroken" when I was a boy. Whenever we visited relatives or
they raine to our house, towards the end of the evening my
father would sit down at the piano and start singing "Juanita"
or “My Old Kentucky Home."
Every body else would begin to gather 'round. The ladies
would sing lie melody, Uncle Ben sang whiskey tenor and
those of us who couldn't carry a tune pretended we were
singing bass.
Pretty soon somebody would break into "Bringing in the
Slwutes" ui ‘When (lie Roll is Called Up Yonder "a n d we
would be off on a whole host of Gospel songs. The evening
would always end up with, "God Be With You Till We Meet
Again."
My favorite pastime at a party or gathering today is to sing
the old-time songs. Singing for me can be more of a religious
experience than going through a ritual or hearing a sermon.!
am drawn to those churches which ting Gospel songs rather
than to those whose theological position may be closer to my
way of thinking, but whose singing leaves me cold.
I have often said that If I am ever "bom again," It will be as
a result of listening to George Beverly Shea sing rather than of
listening to some evangelist preach.
1 am not alone in my tastes in music. A poll on the best-loved
hymns today shows the top five to be: "How Great Thou Art,"
“Old Rugged Cross," "Amaring Grace," "What A Friend We
Have in Jesus" and "In the Garden."
A proposed new lutheran hymnal raised the Ire of many
laithcrans because the committee in charge of the hymnal
announced It planned to drop 35 old, familiar hymns. Mean­
while, a survey conducted by the laitheran Church In America

The honor choir will be
computed of outstanding high
school singers from Baptist
churches throughout the
state, according to the an­
nouncement
Selection of participants in
the honor choir will be made
by the churches based on
Christian c h a r a c t e r ,
mualcanahip and loyalty to
the churches programs.

G eo rg e P lag en z

revealed that the two hymns receiving the largest number of
votes by l aimer an congregations for inclusion In the new book
were "How Great Thou Art" and "Amazing Grace."
As one stunned Lutheran commented, "Take that, Johann.
Sebastian Bach!"
Ail this fuss over what hymns to Include In authorized
hymnals Is unnecessary. The solution Is to let the music pros
pick whatever hymns they want for the church hymnals. Then
ict die congregations augment this hymnal by purchasing
copies of “That Old-Time Religion," a Harper tk Row paper­
back that contains 100 of the old favorites.
The answer, in other words, ts two hymnals In every pew.
Many of the most popular Gospel songs are In the Harper
book along with some you may have never heard of — like
"Wicked Polly" and "Down in the Licensed Saloon."
"Wicked Polly" is supposed to be the true story of a gtr! from
Kingston, II.1 , who lived a frivolous life and died at an early
age. "Down in the licensed Saloon” Is also known as, "Where
Is My Wandering Boy Tonight?"
You, of course, know where he w as—"learning new vices all
the night long, tempted to all that's sinful and wrong, listening
to the harlot's foul song, down In the licensed saloon."
I don't Imagine many congregations will choose to sing of
Wicked Polly or Use Wandering Boy — but Yve sung some
worse songs In some churches.

R IC H A R D S. V IT O L O
has served as a hospital
chaplain, a chemist, and
hospital lab technician. He
has organ tied coffee-houses
and vacation Bible schools.

BRIGHT
NEW WINGS

Th e Youth Choir of Edenton Street United Methodist Church of Kulei|(h, N.C, will
present concerts In Sanford on Monday at 7:30 p.m. at F irs t United Methodist
C hu rch , 419 Park Ave., and Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. at F irs t Haptlst Church, 519
P a rk Ave. Th e 41-volce choir w ill sing B uryi Red's arrangem ent of "Bright New
W in g s." Dean Barley from Sanford. Kdenton Street youth director, will bring the
group here. The concerts are open to the public.

Stetson Honor Choir
Workshops Scheduled
DELAND - The first an­
nual Stetson Honor Choir will
assemble
at
Stetson
University on June 17 for
three days of workshops and
concerts, it was announced by
Dr. Paul Langston, dean of
the school.

Saints And Sinners

Allen Pate, nationally
known composer, conductor
and clinician, will conduct the
workshop on behalf of the
university. Pste Is the
minister of music of the
Lover's
Lane
U nited
Methodist Church in Dallas,
Texas.
Pate Is a
American Choral
Association, ASCAP, the
Hymn Society and the
Choristers Guild.
The workshops will include
work on tone production,
diction, note reading and
Interpretation. The la s t
session will take the form of a
Festival Worship Service on
Friday evening.

Vacation Bible School
The 13th annual Vacation Bible School will bo held June
15-26 at First Baptist Church of Deltona. The church Is
located at 1200 Providence Boulevard. Classes for 3 years
old through 6th grade will be held weekdays from 1 a m. till
noon. The program will include Bible lessons, ilortes,
games, handcrafts, refreshments, recreation, music, con­
tests and prizes and all young people are welcome to attend.
There is no charge.
For more information or for bus transportation please
call the church office a t 574-1911. This year's theme will be.
“Exploring God's Answers.” Junior High and High School
students will meet evenings from 7-9:30 p.m.

livm Ttfn'Otfl That Easy

SEMINARY
GRADUATE
.laniurBne Thompson,
iluughlrr of Mrs.
George Thompson. 105

fin e l-akr Drive. San­
ford, rrceived (he
master of divinity de­
gree from the .Southern
B.iplist
Theological
Seminary, laiuisville.
Ky.. in the seminary's
Ifltli commencement
June 5. Miss Thomp­
son holds a previous
degree from Universi­
ty of Central Florida.

Pm appalled by the amount of strain just
plain living today puts on some people. Some
folks can stand the strain of life, but an
awful lot of others can't. AU along Ihe road of
life there la the litter of the wrecks of human
life. The routine of living Is just too much for
some. Some go down in youth; others in
middle life and others In old age. It Is sad but
true that many people falter, fall, and (all.
Why? We can be reasonably sure that the
amount of strain one person receives is not
particularly different from another, even
though It la quite human to think so.
Generally, all of us are put to the same testa
and temptations from the outside Face two
people with the same stumbling blocks, and
one will let It stop him; divert him and turn
him back; the other will find some wsy to
overcome IL He will find some way to keep on
keeping on. The difference see nil to be, not
what comes to s person from the outside, but
what's on the Inside.
A character out of fiction once said: "There
ain't nothin' that walks that can lick us
O'Haras: Not hard times, not high taxes nor
even downright starvation. But we esn be
licked from the inside. W hit the world can't

Pastor's
Corner
By REV. WIGHT KIRTLEY
Community United Methodist
Church Casselberry

do, our own hearts can. That weaknets that's
incur hearts can lick us in the time it takes to
bat your eye. Everybody's mainspring Is
'.'■((treat. Folks whose mainsprings are
busted are better dead.”
That's all very well, but what about the
mainspring of your life? Surely It "ain't
easy" getting from one end of a day to the
other. But many have found that If the d ay
begins with the Lord and If It Is given to Him,;
It stays in His hands and ends up the same
place. When Ihe grace of God gets a chance,
and keeps on getting a chance of getting Into
your heart, nothing can weaken your inner
life no m atter what the outward dreumilances may be.

Father's Day Program
The Greater fit. Joseph AME Church, Sparr, will hold Its
annual Father's Day program, June 11, at R a.m. with the
guest speaker the Rev. Abner Jackson Sr. of Sanford At 1
p.m., the guest speaker will be Brother Roland V. Williams,
vice-chairman of the Seminole County School Board Music
will be rendered by Ih e Sanford Male Chorus. The Rev.
Thelma S. Young of Sartfcrd Is pastor.

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By B E R N IC E B FilEO SO L

For Sunday, June 14, 198 1

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B E E T L E B A IL E Y

by Mort W alker

by Art Sansom

rH E BORN L O S E R

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you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
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about (or quite some time Today, If involved In any type
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cooperative
with shoo’d not be based on hun­
21 JiCkit I 2nd 21 Author
14 Word) of unchlonda
ches or "maybes" today.
Flaming
coworkers
today,
but
draw
hulbind
dantandng
(3
31 6*iab*ll*r
Judgments fUmsily contrived
24 Cott
27 Ntwip*p*&gt;
the
line
If
you
feel
(heir
wdl)
Cobb
26 Arrang*
man
11 Gluing laid
suggestions a rt foolish or could prove extremely un31 Wham
27 6ri«klait
30 Famad
17 Actor Farrar
40
Annul
against
your best Interest. wise.
food
33 Dautachland
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19
Mia
Wait
43
Tima
ton*
21
Taka
out
They
could
propose un­
l*t&gt;br|
latbrl
34 Young k*
Itbbr)
workable schemes. Find out 19) Avoid companions today
36 Colorido
more of what lies ahead for whom you know from ex­
1 2 1
4 i « |
1 i 1t M
tributary
you In the year following your perience sometimes do things
37 Smooth14
12
12
birthday by sending for your deviously. Stick with pals who
t pot in
36 Giatnblui
11
It
copy of Astro-Graph. Mail II keep everything rtit in the
tl
color
for each to AatroGraph, Box open.
II
It
41 Long lith
13
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
189, Radio City Station, N.Y.
42 Til
&gt;1
21
44 Clothing
10019. Be sure to specify birth 19) There's a chance you’ll
have difficulty In achieving
lupport
date.
I T i.
Jl 21 It
46 H*r Mijiity •
your goals today. Your target
CANCER
(June
21-July
22)
&gt;4
thip |ibbr)
1)
Allow yourself time for en­ may not be well-defended, or
47 Priion room
.0
41
IT
joyable pursuit! today, but you may aim at too many with
48 Inlormil lilt
SU Sno* part
iLa't neglect ycur r»sp«v too few shells.
44
&lt;«
II
12 Songltkt
“
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marcn an
albilities in the process.
16 Jack-tn-tba4«
Feeling guilty will spoil your Don't let yourself be drawn
pulpit
into one-upsmansbi p
to
12
ii I T M
•1
fun.
18 African land
60 National
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) The situations today. In a t­
12
to
II
ii
It
monogram
welcome mat will be out at tempting to overcome your
6t Raip
•1
1)
ti
your place today ind you competitors, you might say or
62 Suppot.ng (2
61
44
could get some drip-mi who do som ething you'll later
•6
wdl)
'1
63 Praciouk
don't know when to go h^ne. regret.
Display
your
clock
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
prominently.
Take nothing for granted
VIRGO (Aug. 2Mept. 22)
today businesswise. Double­
This may not be an opportune
check all terms and con­
day to talk to persons whose
ditions. Probe deeper If you
j'tction authontiei who really help you're seeking to further
lack facta.
learned contract bidding
NORTH
Al l l l
He got Lieutenant Allred your career or ambitions.
♦ KJ
TAURUS I April 20-May 20)
M Gruenlher to come from Their promises could lack
TA»!9
Don't let yourself be trapped
substance.
West
Poinl
lo
direct
It.
Gruen6 A1919
Into a situation today where
iher did such an outstanding
LIBRA (Sepl 23-Octt, 231
♦ AJ1
job that he was asked to run Be very careful today that you
you feel you can't bargain
WEST
EAST
numerous later events. He don't discus the material
from strength. Negotiating
♦ 109171
bill
established tournament direc­
from weakness could be
VJ1I
VR7J 1
tion to the extent that the things you possess in the
♦gin
*72
presence of persons who are
costly.
director
became
a
major
part
♦7
Agth
ot administration and made
SOUTH
Ihe success of bridge leagues
♦ AQ4
teTv (or the For Monday, June 15, 1981
possible. Fortunately
TR l«
country, he stayed in (he
♦ KJJ
pansive thoughts with little
Army and would up at head of
YOUR BIRTHDAY
♦ kloan
minds.
NATU
June IV Ittl
Vulnerable Both
Hath was one of the first to
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221
Two old friends with whom
Dealer South
use point count in contract
you haven't been too closely Be helpful today to persons
bridge
The
Reith
count
was
6*
R nl Norik f'jil
sw l
4-1-1-1 Very accurate, but associated in the past couple who are truly in need of your
1 NT
very complicated
of years are likely to re-enter aid. By the same token, watch
I ’m
Pau
Pan
Today's notrump slam your life now. All will be glad out for a “taker" who's
Paw
would be routine. Rack in to gel together again.
merely looking for something
1929 It got Reith a top score
for nothing.
GEMINI
(May
21-June
20)
that helped him win nts own
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23pair event George Imowed Be aupporliv* of friend*
Opening lev! ♦ 10
clubs the right way. but the 4- today. They In turn, will back Dec. 21) Agreements you
1 break Irll him with a club
work out today with friends
loser anyway Al Ihe end ol you u p If for some reasons
the hand he made hu contract you compete against them, it who have stood by their word
trick by fmniing against will jien be a case of every In the past wiU do so again at
West for the diamond queen.
By Oswald Jacob/
person fer himself. Find out this time. One who didn't stiU
In planning ihe tournament more of what lies ahead for won’t do so.
and Alan Nontig
George forget to get a partner
CAPRICOHN (Dec. 23Jan.
until the last minute when he you in the year following your
George Keith, who ran the got an unknown youngster birthday by sending for your 19) You have the ability today
1929 Goldman pain as the
named Oswald Jacoby to atart copy of Astro-Graph. Mali tl to achieve difficult goals and
first major contract event, is off Jacoby’s tournam ent for each lo Astro-Graph, Box make this look easy. This
a forgotten man today. He career
could arouse jealousy in an
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN 1 189, Radio City Station, N.Y.
was the only one o( the old
10019. Be sure to specify birth associate who is not as skillful
as you are.
date.
by Larry W right
KIT 'N' CARLYLE"*
YO U R BIRTHDAY
June 11,1*91

■
a
■ '

11
1

P
■
■
J■
‘
■

WIN AT BRIDGE

ACM'S NOT FEELING
WELL. 9 0 IM MAKING
BREAKFAST t h is
WOW4ING. CARLVLE/

VOU PO N T KNOW
HON TO MAKE
BREA K FA ST/ J

IVE GOT FROZEN
CHANGE j u i c e , e g g s
ANP BACON / MOW
ABOUT SO M E JUICE
-7
F I R S T ? /- ,______

ON E SLICE
OR TWO?

CANCER (June 21July 22)
You'U be very productive and
Industrious today, provided
you don't have anyone looking
over your shoulder telling you
how to do this or thal Avoid
klbitxen.

CKAY/

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
You’U be rather determined
to do things your way today.
Your ideas will be good ones.
However, someone could step
In and disrupt or challenge
your plans.

BUGS BUNNY

'IP 19NK1WIS EASY PUTT. 1
WILL FINISH UP WAV
UNDER PAC. T— J

,VWVDONT&gt;OU6IVE UP STREET
SWE5P.NQ AND "AKE A CRACK.
ATtr€WO60LF0eCUrr. r—

VIRGO (Aug. 23-SepL 22)
Give top priority today to
m atters important to your
security and thal of the
family. Don't let unrelated
lames gel you off on an unpradurtiva-tract------------------

•RWtKS

LIBRA (SepL 23-OcL 23)
Unfortunately, not everyone
today will be as broadminded
or philosophical as you are.
Be wary of discussing ex-

C 'm*mkrn

F RANK AND E R N E S T

by Bob T f u v e s

f it ]

by Leonard Starr

s* c y ?

-

. '^ s

T B R K l g L B 1.

- u .!«•»-

Th *&gt;«J

UMBLFWEEDS

FLETCHER'S LANDING

VERY &gt;
s T F W ie e
a m a z in g

TAURUS (April 20-Mav 20)
In joint venture situations
today, don't act inpuliiveiy
without the consent of those
Involved. You could be held
responsible for what you
initiate.

PEASES cell* .

H0UMP, THEN-

V A C A T IO N , EftNffc...

r

ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Associates will strive to be
helpful today, provided you're
not too pushy or demanding.
Rather than dictate terms, be
tactful and diplomatic.

- I - if IT HASN'T
HrtJ CW5 UP THAT

NV,_ J L you MUST HAVE
1 r e f] HAD a TEfcPlFlC.
L O oK

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
you're very patient and
skillful today at handling
persons Important to you
financially or careerwise, but
perhaps not so adept with
family members.

ANN E
ti

v o o

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Be patient with your longrange hopes and plans today.
Trying to speed things up
before their proper lime could
put you behind schedule.

UNRllEVAPlEl

PEEN STANPIIU'THERE
ALMOS'/IN HOUR, AM'AIN'T
v ORPVRED A W O r i J

'C O O t WANT TO X O J M RS )
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Sun day. Ju n e H , I W I — 76

E v e n in g H er* Id. S in lord. FI.

TONIGHT S TV
6:00
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M R!

)BK»«C WOMAN
') ALL CREATURES GREAT
ANO SMALL I

630
O I NBC NEWS
1 tJCBS N EW S
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7.00

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Chartealon Blue' |C|| 1977) Godfrey
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introduce m * a in n u * magic
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12:00
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O m a r o " |!M1| Marry OutrdmO
Santa 0#rg#r
12:30
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1:00
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1:30
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(1 CAROt. BURNETT AMO
FRIENDS
( D O new s

2:00
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2:05
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Ouuwi

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SUN0AY,

is i AOAMST THE WIND
(10)

MEETING OF MINDS

»'«»• A-#»l M i «.Ut

Theodora Thorn** j*n*rton S o ­
li and Ru i m * in ) Sami Auguaiin*
(ParttllR)

CD O

6'30

MOVIE
Th* Oi**a
Tycoon" 119781 Anthony Qumo.

0:00

505
IX ( 17) WORLD AT LARGE
5:30
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5:55
( D O DAILY WORD

6.00

ffl SJ AND THE BEAR
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(10) MYSTERY RumpoM Of
8
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Th# B*U#y Rumpott And Th# Mar*
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0:30
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1000
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(I t (3 5) WOE PEKOE NT NETWORK
new s
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Alt*# And' Wan Aik *Living In Parti"
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Thraa ditpaojla eb#r#ci«rt «mg th#
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1 2 (1 7 ) NEWS
10:30
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1100
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i f (351 BENNY HILL
IX (17) TUSH Moil S S Tuih
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11:30
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L*on Radbon* |R)

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fcomt boul for fufnor ptij#rt
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900
f ) !T) J J .'S CLUOMOUSE
T i b SUNDAY MORNING
m Q KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO
I t (3 5 ) THE FUNTST0NES
ffl ( to MISTtR ROGERS (R)
111 17) LOS7 IN SPACE

2:30
1 } (4) LPGA CHAUPIONSMIP
O O iF FrukinYound ciMRfty# ot tb*
1150 000 LPGA CbvrHttvtilwe |bv#
from Ih# J#ck fockfout (iof# C#nt*r
kf Klngi ms«d OfoJ

9:15
0 3 ' OUTLOOK

(35) WRESTLING

© (T) IN SEARCH of .
(J ) O HEC HAW

0 Q ORAL ROBERTS
J t (3 5 ) JOSH ANO THE PUSSYCATS

O AGRICULTURE U S A .
(17) BETWEEN THE LINE*

6 30
( 3 ) 0 FAITH FOR T00AV
I D O VtFWRONT ON NUTRITION
6:50
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d a il y d e v o t io n a l

7:00
Q 11 OPPORTUNITY LINE
S O ROBERT BCHUUER
0 O PICTURE CP HEALTH
ilti (35) CHANGED LIVES
12 (W ) JAMES ROBISON
7:30
0 1 OOOONEWS. FLORIDA
(7 : O TOOAtr* BLACK WOMAN
(ft) (35 I J DANIELS
J X 1 17) i t is w r it t e n

8.00

0 (J V01C* OF VICTORY
1 J'l O REA HUMSARD
i f j O SHOW MY PEOPLE
(£t (35) JONNY QUEST
10) SESAME STREET |R)g
3X (17) TH R U STOOGES AND
f me n o s
8'30
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( J i O )cd a y o f d is c o v e r y

9:30
O 3 g o s p e l s in g in g j u e a .e e
iTf (3 5 ) THE JET SON L
09 ( 10) WORtO OF THE SLA

10:00
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(35) MOVIE
HU Th* ka
|BAN) ( 1* 4) I Abbott and Cooiako
Gmny Simms Bud and Lnu get mlo
trouble with bank robbart
CD (1 0 ) NOVA Massage in Th*
Rocs 1 ' Using sopitnticaiad doling
lachruquos and maihodt ot aoptorabon. modern gwotogurs have
imcovarad soma new answers
about Iho ongm ol our plant) and
how kta evolved upon d (R )g
I X (17) HA7EL

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10:30
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M, f 9YCWI1# Spy
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L*m«fi Hun Awrnrcm mtmtUrm'
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hit two tom

11:00
&lt;T) O THE LAW ANO YOU
O ) (1 0 ) VIC BAAOCN S TENNIS
FOR T H I FUTURE Cof*Jrtion»ng
VtC 'Brtdto d-trnoattrtftv fiw#
Irrsporlitni t ii r c i m ^u«fen)l«#d to
ft*# you from 1M I tr»d puff to
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(TJ O TONY BROWN S JOURNAL
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aty ' (BAN) (18411 Penny Smglelon
Arthur
A chtm^ion G#m 1
Don# cr##i«t pcobi#»hi for th#
Bumtt##dt
GD {10) F A IT FORWAAO
ATTERNOON

12:00
31 o SPECTRUM
0 O ISSUES ANO ANSWERS
ID (10) FLOROU REF JRT
12:30
O &lt;4 MEET THE PRESS
T O BLACK AWARENESS
0 O DIRECTIONS
U3 (10) FLORIOA FOCUS '10*1
Chr*i Dudley updelet h# imnwHgihon mlo th# eitag«3 mrtut# of fund*
by the V«e«hng Nurtat Aitoclahon

100
O
( D NBC MAGAZINE WITH
DAVID BRINKLEY H#(if Aeron
#aamine# th# Afgharatlen mm ion#

&gt; #i fore##. OougUi K*er k o H at
th# bixarta reaiAti of ecMnhxti
etudy 0« fong ##b#ret#d fwmt. Jack
Parkin# #*ptor#t th# eftevtt ol King
T ungo to lut# eiv##turft to hta South
___ » kingdom.
N O Y IC C O P PUBLIC H E A d lN O
IN T H E CIR C U IT CO UR T OP
( I ) O BTAR TR _
F E O B B A L R EVEN UE S H A R IN G t h e e i g h t e e n t h j u d i c i a l
i j ) Q MORAL IBBUU
P R O P q tB O U IC HE AM INO F O R C I R C U I T .
IN
A N D FO R
_a (35) M O W "larceny. Inc"
m i m i R B V IN U R THAR IN O s i m i n o l r c o u n t y , f l o r i o a
(Ib a i) tdward O nodmeoev Jan*,
i U O O B T rS R TH E C IT Y O F L S I * NO . 1 i n i l b l C A M f . K
Wyman An *• con bull a h-gjege
LOMOWOOO. FLO R ID A.
la rat L A N * HOW RLL W ATH R
alore aa a moans d eciaea lo Ih*
Th* C 'ty Administrator 0* Ih* C O N TR O L O IIT R IC T
bark neat door, but [Recovers h*
City »f Long wood, Florid* will N O T IC E OF P E T I T I O N T O
doean I have to steal to mas* mon.
hold public propowd u u hearing* D ISSO LVE A W ATER CO N TR O L
an* in* 1*91 't t l t r * r r it Hnrtno* D IS TR IC T
t il | 10) WAltUMLitUH W ttK M
Shat mg Budgal on Mom)*y, Juno
W W W (R )
To th* ownart. crad'tort and all
n . 1t il *1 ) 00 p m Th* haarlngi parsons iniarniad In ih* lands
1:30
m il M haid *1 Longwood City Half. (orporal*. and otriar proparly In
® O W BEETLING
Ill
W att
Warran
A v tn u * . and adlactnl la L*k* Hawaii
CD ( 10 ) w a l l i T R i n w rite
Longwood. Florida
Watar Control D itlrk i.
Th* Tachreca) Outtooa Guoal
Th* public will b* gw tn Ih*
You.and*a&lt;hot you. art htrtby
Newton O Emdar, aemor vrea praNopportunity to m*i* oral ant) noMiad I haI Ih* Board el Super
dent, technical anaiysia I F Hutton
w rittan tu fg ttu o n i r t g t r d m g visors el th* Lake H ow fl Walar
1 Company, Inc IRI
pott bi* utat 0) Fadarai Rhrrttua Control District, hat tiled m Ih*
IX
(1 7 ) BASEBALL Atlanta
Brave* at PMUdaiphi* PtuMi
Sharing Fundi
otfic* el Ih* Circuit Court ot
F E o r it A L r e v e n u e s h a r i n g
Saminol* County, Florida, a
2:00
budget
petition praying said court tor
O 3 ' CANNONBALL CRAZIES A
Ltnuiad lundt tviilibl*
parnvition to dutolva the Lake
baherd irwacanas look la tasan al
Anilelp*t»d *motinl or Frdaral Howall Walar Control District as
lha making o4 "Th* Cannonha*
R n w i u*
of Sap lam bar 10. IN I and transfer
Run ' starring Scat RaynoMi. Far.
Shtrma montr 10 M rocatvtd In any as sals to Sam mol* County,
rah Faercall and Dorn DaLuis*
th* coming
and you a rt noMiad to til* within
3 ) O M O W ' Flying High |C|
f i« * t y**r
S H .n JB O » days attar Ih* final publication
(19(41 Pal Kious, C u n Sanacca
Total Funds
SM.MS00 ol this nolle* tor tour (41 waakt at
Thraa alii active ymmg women earn
O L . Tw ry
required by law,at lha oil let ol Iho 1 that wmg* 10 become aukn*
atewarjeeaei
City Cl*r»
Clark ol lha Circuit Court ol
"Action In Tho
Publish Jun* II. 14, 111I
S tm ln alt
County.
Sanford. ] (7) O M O W
D E J4 *
Florida, any rattan why said ‘ North A d o n ic (BAY) (1941) Hum­
phrey Bogart. Raymond Mtuay
dstrict, at u t forth In u ld
Merchant marvwa kghl daaparsWy
patiilon. shall noi b* ditsoivad at a
F IC TITIO U S NAM R
SO keep tfvppav) lane* open durrnq
Nolle* Is htrtby glvtn m i l I am public corporation ol th* stale ot
Work) Wkrd
*ng*g*d In buslnris •• 1001 Florida Any mlarasiad party,
CD (1 0 ) TENNIS Ekfllar Bowl
Samoran
Bird ,
A lU m o n t* ragardittt ot ownership ol land
Junior Indoor Tcurnamanl" CoverSprings. Sam molt County. Florid* included in said ditlrlct. may tilt
ago ot Iho nolwn s moil prtaligiout
u n d tr m * llctlllous nam * ol h t or her obi ft Hons or relevant
com
mams
on
lha
dusotuHon
ol
lha
T O T A L R E CA LL SER VICES, and
that I M in d I* rtg iltrr said nan* district If no such olHocllons or*
with th* Clark of th* Circuit Court. liltd. Ih* praror ot taut pitnion
may b* granted without Igrthar
Saminol* County. Florida In *c
cordanc* with th# provision* «* tho notice or hearing
D ataottirsi publication June 14.
FHtitwuo Nam* stalu'n. T o w n
Saettan IAS Of Florida Statutas H it
-------------- m t ------------------------------------------------------- IS t A h t
A fTImf H atkkwlth, Jr.
SJg. Jamas R. Sttlnoar
Clark
ot
th*
Circuit
Court
Publish Jun* 1, U H . 1*. IN I
Saminol* County, Florida
O E JJI

Legal Notice

NOTICE
*1 A m iab ility *4 Finding *1 N*
Significant Impact (F O N S II
Th* Fadarat A viation Ad
ministration (F A A I. M iam i A ir
p o rn D itirk ) Oltitr. on Jun* A
I N I . itsuad a Flnd-ng ol No
Significant Impact (F O tiS II lor
th* approval a4 th* lias* at 10 0
plus or minus aertt of airport
proparty la Scatty's. Inc . at
Sanford Airport. Sanford. Florida
Capiat of th* FONSI art avtllabt#
tor r*vl*w by th* public at th*
following Rxaiiona
FAA Airports District O flko
Building M »
Miami Inlvrnational Airport
Par 1mat«r Road and N W ra n
Strati
Miami. FWrida

Oftlc* at mt Olractor 01
Aviation
Building 1
Sanford Airport Authority
If IS Mttwnvlllt Aranua
E.ntnrrl f U/utl
Publish Jvn* I t 14. IS. I N I
D E J 14

T h i f if U soiea o n H e ­
a r d wos T h o m is E d is o n ’i.
W h i t d&gt;d h* s»y7 " M w v
Had
a U ttlo
L im b ."

legal Notice

By Jun* Curils
Deputy Clark
Publlih Jun* 1111. Hand July i.
INI
DEJ St
IN T H I CISCUIT COUST. IN
AND F0N SIMINOLC COUNTY,
FLONIDA
c a s e n o . se ins c a it-e
IN N i l T H I MATTS I OF TNS
ADOPTION OF I
t e r e s a E l a in e a n d e r s o n .
SCOTT ALAN KOCHCR AN
0E R S 0 N . DARRYL THOMAS
KOCHER ANDERSON
N0TICS OF ACTION
TO : C A R T McKINSTRV
M t Far land. WUcorrtin
YO U ARE N O IIF IIO that an
adion for tht adoption of tho
minor child. SCOTT ALAN
KOCHCR ANDERSON, tuts bean
tiled and you art raquirad t* larve
a copy ol your oriltan datankt*. it
any, on William W. Farnandil.
Priilloner't Atlornay. who*o
address it Suitt B I, BradULiar
Building. 14 Eatl Waihlngtoru
SfrteF. Orlando. Playida D E I, on
or baton IhelM day ol July. IN I
and til* Ih* original with tht Clttk
a this Court tithtf before karvtca
on Patilwnar i AJIerntv or f
mediately thateanrr, otharwikt.a
datault anil b* antjrtd agtlntt you
tor in* ran*) oamandad at the
petition
WITNESS my hand and M i l ol
th.t Court on th* 17th day at May.
INI
(SEAL
Arthur H Stckwith. Jr.
Clark el th* Court
By Clearer F Burette
Deputy Clark
Publish May II A Jure 7, U, It.
INI
DEI III

3:00
I t (3 5 ) MOVIE
N v s P,entts)
(Cl (1E4T) Arm Shandar ncbari
Aida
3:30
(C (1 0 ) THE ORKliNAlS THE
WRITER IN AMERICA Tori Morri­
son" Tom Morrison reads her own
malarial and prennda* an msigrt
M o hot st)M and Matt)!* |R|
4.00
3' O
WESTCHESTER OOLF
CLASSIC imai iound conrago cl
this *400 000 PGA Tour event (kve
horn the Westchester Country Club
ffl H o i FREE TO CHOOSE Th*
Tyf#nr&gt;y Ot Conifer' Or MittM
Fn#dm#n
ho# Gr#«l Bnf
#*n «nd Japan pro«p#r#d und#» fr##
tr#d# and how by contratt India
cond«mn#d RlitOftt to po»#rty
when th# J flwRfliWill foeA control
ol aconomc activity iRj P
i i [ l?|LAST OF THf WHO

9:30
U O THE JEFFERSOHS
ill1(3 5 ) JIMMY SWAGGART

1000
): O
CBS REPORTS The
Dwt’MfiM1Of Th# U*n*1«d Sim## “ h 1a
WH'Nrt. Luifi Ratfw. W»ric#
Crook jI# #nd qitwi c^rrMpomfont#
•tamcrv# ih# Un&lt;t#d Statat eh#nc##
Of d#t#r&gt;## #rrd UJOI V#! in th# #v#nt
Of • nv#Ll#»E «#&gt; (Part 1)
O
® I I(1O0I)TTO THE MANOR BORN
T I(1 7 S
) fh e w s
10:30
31 (3 5 ) Jj(M b a r k e r
ED I TO)T
I THE OOOO NEIGHBORS
1100
o * $ n » o trw s
12 117| OPEN UP
11 30
Q f l COMEDY THEATER A trio
of com#dt#i - 'Living In P#rtdl&lt;«#.'
Tiahoimin I WHirf. and HitlOfih
•»" ••m# b# pr###nl#d (« )
J o THE NIGHT STALKCB An
m«##ligatton mto c »•»## of
ttr#ng# murd#r# fo#d# KoftcH## to
b#k#v# that Cbcago i# b##ig v**i#d
by ix*##f1ht» b#tf&gt;gt |WJ
(J O MONTE CAPLO SHOW

Jl) (35) rrs youp Bus»Nt ss
12:00

4 30

11 ( 17 1 M O W
tie Only Wiy ‘
(1971) Jan* Seymoce, Mans Potter

o Gl 1 MOVIE
AdgWitur## Ot
Shwtoch Hotm#i (B WI (1M9|
| DIALOGUE
&amp; (T7 ) MISSION IMPOSSIBLE

12:30
(7 0 M O W
A Pei tact Coupe
(B Wi (1979) Paul Dooley Hart*
Hen.n

m

5:00
(J l O AMERICAN SPORTSMAN
IU.Jk -.V-Rw i ;
tur%#y m AlAbAmt Ead Hc#im«n
vt»il« th# fun^N h#&amp;tii of th#
mountain gorms tn Pwandi Centra*
Atnca, Gregory H a r r ^ i lurti in
th# walari off th# kndonaiwm ittand
of Jaw#
I f (3 5 ) GRIZZLY ADAMS
tfi (1 0 ) F1FBNQ LINE -Th* Press
And The Law" Guests author Fred
Friendly attorney C. Dclwman
WERami
5:30
8X (17 )W R E S TU N a

12:40
MOV1C
Som#on# I#
U « (i*&lt;»i k,M«n nm Ion D#vh3 B#n#y

(| )

7:00
Q
3 1 OiSMf r 5 WONDERFUL
WORLD Th* Wild Country
A
trontler family move* to Wyoming In
search ol a new hi* (Pill II |Rj IJ
( } I O EG MINUTES
( ) i a ROOTS THE NEXT QENERATIOMS Wi* Palmer i daughter
Beiih* become* th* teat ol Munla
Kmi* a datcandanii to go to CO*.
leg* where lha meets th* young
and ambitious Senon Haley (Part Jl
im q
a I (3 5 ) WILD KINGDOM
4D (1 0 ) TOGETHER- WITH LEO
BUBCAGLIA Spaeheig baton an
audierica In Sariamenln, CsNomta,
IX 1 17) TUSH Moat (Ml Tuan
7:30
H J (3 5 ) SPORTS AF1EL0
600
0 3 ) c h ip s
( D ( I ARCHIE BUNKER'* PLACE
(TJ (3 5 ) OAT OF DISCOVERY
CD 110) PRIMAL SUN Bam* Tor
Commence (What make* soma
men leaders and ofhara tcaoworst
JX (1 7 ) M O W
Genie Gianl
419*7) Dennis Weaver, Vara UJe*
830
(1L o ONE DAY AT A TIME Ann
tod* a new yob and mealt hat com­
petition Ml «nturning man who
may land bar over lha edg* |P*r1
tllB)
1 1 (3 5 ) JERRY FAL WELL
900
o ® MOW
Audrey Rose
(t g r i) Mesh* Mason Anthony
Hopk el*
(1 )0 ADC!
( B O MOVif
snadoa 04 Th*
Haws ' ) 1971) Jan Mchaal Vincent
MarPyn Ha*tell
® ( 10 ) m a s t e r p ie c e t h e a t r e
F E S T IV A L
OF
FAVO RITES
Couern Beil* Baft* Fachar. a
harsh apmaler who raaanll fur
wealthy mat he* pmtt to datuoy
lha romance between her yeemg
niece and a Poteh sculptor (Part I)
iR jg

q

7
(ft
®
11

8:3 0
4 to o a y
Q OOOO MORNING AMERICA
(3 5 ) OAEAT SPACE COASTER
1 101 MISTER ROGERS |R)
(1 7 ) MY THREE SONS

9:00
E ) 4 HOUR MAGAZINE
J O DONAHUE
7 0 MOVIE
,11 (3 5 ) OOMER PYLE
® 10) SESAME STREET (R) O
IX (1 7 ) FAMILY AFFAtR
,
9:30
ill' (3 5 ) ANDY QFHFF1TM
11 (17)1 DREAM OF JEANNIE

10:00
BULLSEYE
f ) ffl
4 BULL!
o RICHARD SIMMONS
(3 5 ) 1LOVE LUCY
CD (tO MISTER ROGERS |R|
12 (1 7 ) M O W

qD
in

1030
0 1 1 BLOCKBUSTERS
5 0 ALICE |R|
iir(3 5)C B C K VANDYKE
tD | 10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

Q 4' NEWS
}!
t h e YOUNG ANO THE
RESTLESS
(7 O RYAN S MOPE
11 1,15) FAMKY AFFAIR
® ( 10) THIS OLD HOUSE (MON)
® 110) SLIM CUISINE (TUE)
LD 110) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC

o

r a , 8 POL FT O I t (THU)
ID (10) FAST FORWARO (FRI)

Q

(TUE)
tD (10) t h e s c a r l e t l e t t e r
(WED)
tD ItO ) WORLD OATHERtMG THE
FINAL DAY (THIS
tD (10) QUALE (FRO
1:30
ffl) o AS THE WORLD TUFLNS
2:00
( J 4 ANOTHER WORLD
l7 P ONE LIFE TO LIVE
t D (10) FOOTSTEPS (MON WED,
FRI)
2 :3 0
J O SEARCH FOR TOMORROW

2:3 0
(7 □ NEWS
3:0 0
(7 ( 0 MOVIE
I Died A thousand
t.mea (C) (I9S5I Jack Paianc*
Shakey Winters

S A T I I I I IF T V
h n W -ar M jir l.
CmniinniuuiHi
( ‘.llLlUy.l'y
CiKTunuriiiLsUuiiiii, |rkc

“ • y "»7 U Jts a j n Q t

A ll SEATS “

j

in t is iii
T H E N IG H T TH E
L IG H T S W E N T O U T
IN G E O R G IA

6:00

i
8l
;J 3

6:3 0
( S l O E O ALLEN
6:45
® (1 0 ) A M WEATHER

6:55
17 a GOOO MORNING FLORIDA

7:00
0 1 41 TODAY
( J O MORNING WITH CHARLES
KUWAIT
17 P OOOO MORNING AMERICA
11) (3 5 ) FRANKENSTEIN JR ANO
THE IU POSSIBLES (MON)
H I (3 5 ) BIROMAN AND TH I
OALAXY TRIO (TUE)
U 1 (3 5 ) SPACI GHOST 7 Ditto
BOY (WED)
■Ip (3 5 ) FANTASTIC FOUR (THU)

(f t (35 HERCULOtOSlFRn
(D (10) VILLA ALEGRE (R)
12 (1 7 ) FUNTIME

S
O
(T j
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tD

7:2 5
(Z) TODAY IN f l OhiOA
O OOOO MORN INO FLORIOA
7:30
I f ) TOOAY
p GOOD MORNING AMEIbCA
(3 5 ) SANANA SPLITS
( 10) SESAME STREET (B )g

8:00
( ] ) O CAPTAIN KANGAROO

5:00
35 ) WONDER WOMAN
S l :10 MISTER ROOERS(B)
i l l 17) OZHE ANO HARNETT

5:30
Q II I O
OKUOAN'
K U O AN S ISLAND
, J O M 'A 'S 'H
7 P NEWS
(0 ( 10) tlECTFOC
ELECTRI COMPANY (R)
U ( l 7 ) B BEVERLY
I V t R l ’ HILLBILLIES

TO N T RUStl
INSURANCI

l » * 'A

11 :

HOME OWNERS INSURANCE

Now O pen

P A H Y 'S PAPERBACKS
241 E. GRAVES
O RAN GE C ITY

SELL O R TRAD E FO R
LESS THAN H A LF PRICE
MON. THRU SAT. f-5

|j t i FVoyd ThOritrc s I

f ) n TODAY IN FLORIDA
} ) O THE LAW At&lt;0 YOU (SION)
(1) O SPECTRUM (TUE)
| BLACK AWARf NESS (WED)
O twin TV MtNUTIS (THU)
O ItHEALTH FIELD (FRF)
— ) SUNR4SS
.11’ (3 5 ) JtU BAKKkR
ftj j 17) HOLLYWOOD REPORT

4:30
ill (3 5 1 1DREAM OF JEANNIE
1 2 (1 7 ) HAZEL

3 2 2 * 9 2 8 5

12:00
O l CARD SHARKS
1 0 7 0 NEWS
1 1! (351 T H I WORLOOF PEOPLE
ffi ( 10 i COOKIN'CAJUN (MON |
ID (1 0 ) ROMAQNOUS TABLE
(TUE)
(D ( 101 MAGIC METHOD OF OIL
PAINTINO (WED)
ID ( 10) SOUTHBOUNO (THU)
11} ( 101 SAILING. SAILING |FR1)
12
(17) FREEMAN REPORTS

5:25
11 (1 7 ) RAT PATROL (MON)

5:55
Q E) DAILY DEVOTIONAL
7 O OAKY WORD
11 (1 7 ) WORLD AT LARGE (MON)

M (3 5 ) SUPEtSMAN
6D 10) SESAME STREET (R )g
12 ( W ) t h e AOOAUS FAMILY

with your InsurancBl

AFTERNOON

9 I2 X M 1 H

5:35
|)X (17) WORLD AT U R G E (THU)

(jhpMERV GRIFFIN

-C A L L -

5:05
I I (1 7 ) RAT PATROL (THU)

5:30
S O SUMMER SEMESTER
(11 (17) RAT PATROL (TUE. WIDI
t i (1 7 ) LOVE. AMERICAH STYLE
(FRI)

4:00
o 4 MOW
(I ) O J O IN DAVIDSON

DON'T GAMDLI

BJ 4 PASSWORD PLUS
7 0 THREE'S COMPANY (R)

12:30

500
(71 U
MARCUS YYELSY. M D
(TUE-fRI)

I J (3 5 ) I X (17) THE FVBFTSTONES
6D (1 0 ) OVER EASY

11:30

MORNING
4 55
(7 O MOVIE (MON)

3.00
O tP TEXAS
(J ) O OUtOtNG LIGHT
J ) Q OINERAL HOSPITAL
ill (3 5 ) LEAVF IT TO SFAVFR
ffl 10 POSTSCRIPTS
j j ( 17) FUNTIME

11:00
Q 4 WHEEL OF FORTUNE
J O THE PRICE IS RIGHT
(7 1O THREE'S COMPANY |R)
ITU (35) OLEHN ARHETTE
(D M Oi THE FORSYTE SAGA

4 DAILY DEVOTIONAL

1:55
IX (1 7 ) MOVIE
Auasatnaiion
119« 71Henry Silva Fred Bam

(D (1 0 ) D4CK CAVETT

3:30

100
Q 41 DAYS OF OUR LIVES
7 p ALL MY CHILDREN
1 1 (3 5 )1 X 1 17) M O W
ID (101 MISTER ROGERS TALKS
WITH PARENTS ABOUT COMPETI­
TION lUONI
tD (10) EVENING A T SYMPHONY

1:00

M O N D AY,

Q 4) TMF MUPPHS
I Q THIRTY M1NUTC9
f t ) Q ABC NEWS
ID (T O ) AQROHSKY ANO COUP AHY
12 (1 7 ) NICE PEOPLE H0*t Ofeid
Aa#n J#r\#«n

6:75
E ) 4 . TODAY IN FLORIDA
7 O OOOO MORNING FLORIDA

O

EVtMNG
600
o 4 S O 7 ONEW S
11 (3 5 ) B*ON»C WOMAN
GD ( Id ) INSlOf STORY Hoddmg
C#rt#r , format
ipuL#ii»i#(t f»Ai
th# dial* Daparlntaal. kmH tf Ho*
w#A th# n#w« con#jm#r # »«rv«c«d
by pr#« a cover eg#

I t (3 5 ) FRED FIINTST0NE ANO
FRIENOS
13 (1 7 ) LASSIE

lEMPLOY^ENT OPPORTUfTiY yI
V ID E O E L E C TR O N IC S R E N T A L AND
SALES CO. Is Opgning S Now Storss In
Central Florida In Tht Ntxl 3 Ytars And It
Looking For Men And Women To Staff Its
Stores. Store Managers, Ranfil Managers
And Sates Persons Needed Now. Please Apply
In Person 111 Commercial SI., Sanford.
College Grads Preftrred.

ih iv v iw

R A ID E R S ot 1h«
LOST A R K

MADAME KATHERINE
c m a H ia z D i
H#f ir « ? t

PAJM . (AH!) •IHYSTAL HA1I READING

Peel — Present — Fiihire

}/8f|T«

SUN D AY %
t A J U Y f
B IR D 5 0 t

LON# WOOD

BEEN IN BUSINESS FOR SO YEAHS
IN PRIVACY OF MY HOME
HOURS 8A M - 9 P.M Ctosed Sundey
1 B U K M f t O ir iH O r D OGTH ACK HO.

• 61 JAM | ft RYAN

KILL &amp; KILL AGAIN
•" GRIZZLY eg |

H EY! KIDS!
Don't Forg*1 To
Clip Th* Ad In Each
Mondays’ H i t s Id For
Th t

Kiddle Shows
a»( « W a

in m m A im e r o n a i i a f t a ih *
• L if t vtO V E • N A H R IA C r • B U B IN E M

twiw^

hey It 41 »1 7UI

E V E R Y TUESDAY

(3 0 5 )
8 3 1 -4 4 0 5

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I DO# lO# TMt #10 ##M I n o t#
Ufaee tv* kr«ai lie# tie AAC Ike* to #
Ilf Off Heafteag U ftft BO
fhte C#t&lt;

jurjrciurcw

WE NOWSERVE BREAKFAST
SATURDAYS
7 a.m.-11a.m.

MAYFAIR COUNTRY CLUB
la-mi

COUNTRY CLUB ROAD

�Sumter. June 14.1TI1

IR — Evening Herein. Senton), H .

O IR B E R 'S
R IO U IA R O R S T R A IN E D

C H IC K E N or THE SEA
IIO H T C H U N K IN O i l O R W ATER

S U P E S S S A N O O S A O . ’A ’

LARGE EGGS

J 'l

lOV WITH ORE F IlU O SUPER RORUS CERTIFICATE
1000 JURE 14-11. I N I
_____ _

I

(T T )

MAYONNAISE

BABY FOOD

TUNA

W*

DOZ.

NEUMANNS

9 69

29

)a.v

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“

WITH ORE FILLED IUPER RORUI CERTIFICATE
ROOD JURE 14-11, 1*1
•

WITH ORE FILLED IUFER I0HUS CERTIFICATE
S000 JURE 14-11. I N I

WITH ORE (ILLEO SURER RORUt CERTIFICATE
8000 JURE 1 4 I T , J M I ^ _ ^ _ ^

79

Q T.
JA R

Q U A N TITY RIGHTS
RESERVED
W IN N

on* ITOeti

INC

corm oecT— tt»i

A l l VARIETIES
W D BRAND
SLICED
LIBBY S
UUy)

DETERGENT

TOMATO JUICE

c

9

BOLOGNA

ORANGE JUICE

imkvT H

W CBOM S

H e re ’ s how it w orks!
Pick up free Sopor Bonus Certificates
&lt;Huur J kk Juju I COonfciS.

U

h ta m

N K II M TWt U iAI 1000 IR
THE roilOWIRI FLORItt COW!till ORLT!
UH citIUS. (HlllOTTI. tt’Otll. (OUHI. HI
onion a u i i u i ir Ninon count*
FOR ALL OTHER COURTIES
PHASE SEE TOUR LOCAL REWSPAPER.

ruu q u a i t i i u i x oe
tOINS JUCID u to

When you check out, present one Wtod
Super Bonus Certificate tor each Super
Bonus Special you setect.

BEEF PATTIES

PORK CHOPS

USOA CHOCI UNtMMMtO WHOU
io n iu m ii to n i i avo

Ybu get 1Super Bonus Stamp tor every
d you spend. Paste 36 Super Bonus
Stamps on each certificate.

PRKES GOOD
JUNE 14-17

otittoi siiimou. osciou m m o roiusiA

ROUND STEAK

HICKORY SWEET SUCID (1 I I H G

m o m o POU

VAtifTlCS)

use* GAAD* ■*■ MI1H

ie-M $1

Bacon.............. *1

Fryer W ings^^i^9^

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a j u _______
OONNW m
MAJO
M IA O TD

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&gt;2‘ &gt; S licfo BACON....................no • !»
p a g

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all' beef

TO RTILLA S.............
OtCAl Mftttl CHUM

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Wieners . . . . a *i«

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GATORADE
It 1 wltH S i 00 e r w n
n n h « t t i t L ( 1s t .

RIOUIAR OR IIOHT
l i m i t 1 mltK |1 00 w m e r e
p u r i K s t e m l «lg ..

po u sh s a u s a g e .................... ‘

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"knockwurst............ « *i"

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COUNTRY H A M ................. a

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CHE*
TH R IFTY M AID

ALL FLAVORS

PORK &amp; BEANS

CHEK DRINKS

PACK
12*ox.

32*01

CANS

SIZE

TH IlftT M A D HOt DOG

f .

SAUCE

DOG FOOD

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SAVE 10* • C R AC K IN ' O O O D
(RSOUIAR/SAITSD)

DRIP SOUTH RAR B-Q

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Pies
p ia v o i

12*oi.

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Chek Drinks . . ’ . T

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14*ot.
CANS

H A R V ES T FRESH

DANO
GOURMET

HARVEST FRESH

LBS

1 2 -PIC.

EACH

PKO.
SUetlUANO OAANC

HARVEST ll l l n

PUS*

Toffee Bon

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COUNT!* STAND H im

. . . . .

MUSHROOMS........... ^ ‘ r
MAMS HUf CMl I SI

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LETTUCE

P IZ Z A

YELLOW CORN

PEACHES

Cental

« i«

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BEER

MAI , I S !

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‘t«

W H O ltlig g SAUSAGE . a

LEM O N -LIM E OR O R A N Q E

f t lS K IIf M EAT

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uver sausage.........a

»1»

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«OS« BAANO * 0 * 1 0 » O N (lltS

CHICKEN PATTIES................ »

&gt;B » i«

SUCED BACON................. »

BRAUMSCHWESC-ER

WITH ORE FILLED SUPER I0RUS CERTIFICATE
0000 JURE 1411, IM I
.

®

O TtP IM R M

W D B R A N D U S D A C H O IC I
BONELESS P U ll CUT

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PKO.

15) WITH ORE FILLEO SUPER RORUS CERTIFICATE
0000 JURE 14-11, IM I
____ „

/ Q ) WITH ORE FILUO SUPER RORUS CERTIFICATE
V -S
SOOO JURE 1 4 IT, 1SSI

49

12-

49-ox.
PKO.

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DRESSING................... ii* *1" TOPPING . . . .
KARVIit FRtWt
iWANION
______
SPIH KH ......................FRIES CHICKEN
NARVtSf PMWt GACIN
_____________ 2 * 0 4 8 9 '

w5n5?S»

NOOtON (AUOTID FLAVOR*,

CREAM P « .................... «S9&lt;

0*1 DA CMIU CUT
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PORT
FNMWlPte •wore eoe^teAM Ot

__ ST99* LIMONADE......... 4 tt4lM
asioo booccou

.

_

..... 3&amp;*r

? 2 J ? -J unmAN0HJC®

SPEARS....................22 JJSi1
CHEESE...........................AT 99*
s s »!**
r
i. o h o n o* puun)

____

2 HZ %\ * °

lu n e U AND m» o or mipum .

CHEESE

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                    <text>SU N D A Y EDITION

Sanford
General
Recalls
Career

Tax-Cut Battle Seen

Senate Ready

Next Saturday, May Id,
more than 400 military per­
sonnel will participate in
special ceremonies honoring
Sanford's highest ranking
Army officer. Lt. Gen. (ret.)
Joseph C. Hutchison as a
representative of all those
fighting men who have served
their counti y. The celebration
will be part of the city's ob­
servance of Armed Forces
week. G eneral Hutchison
brought about the surrender of
the Japanese military forces Then Brig. Grn. Joseph C. Hutchison (scaled
on Mindanao and presided at left), followrd by left to right, Hrlg. Gen.
the ceremonies of capitulation
by those forces. His story of Thomas lllckey, Col. J.C. Duckworth and
that eventful occasion follows. interpreter Sgt. Yoshltas Shabala of the 31st
(Dixie) Infantry Division witness the signing

By DONNA ESTES
Herald.Sufi Writer
The date was S ep t 1. IMS.
World War 11 had ended on Aug. IS.
But the official surrender of the
Japanese Empire had not been ac­
cepted by Gen. Douglas MacArthur
until S ep t 2.
G eneral Johnathan Watnwrlght,
only recen tly liberated from a
prisoner of war camp, was dispatched
to the Philippine* to accept officially
the surrender of Japanese forces in
that American poaaearton.
Meanwhile, some S3,000 Japanese
troop* under the command of Lt. Gen.
Gyoaaku MorotumJ of the Imperial
Japanese Army on Mindanao, second
largest Island In the Philippine*, were
unaware the war was over and con­
tinued to raid native village* for food.
The commanding officer of the 3lit
Infantry Dtvision, which Included
National Guard unit* from Sanford
and other parts of Florida, had wane
weeks earlier been given a SSday
leave for r a t and recuperation. And
B rigadier Gen. (la te r Lt. Gen.)
Joseph C. Hutchison of Sanford was In
charge.
He was given hi* Instructions. “Our
division was given the responsibility
of effecting the surrender of the
Japanese forces on Mindanao," said
the M-year-old re tire d general
reminiscing at his Sanford-lndlan
Mound Village home.
"We prepared leaflet* telling the
Japanese that the w ar had ended and
that Japan had surrendered. Wc

To O K Budget

Mrf *1* PIMM* kv V#m VUKfftt

of the surrender document by Lt. Gen.
Gyosaku Moroiuml, (seated right) acting
commanding genet al of the 35lh Japanese
Army and commanding general of the 30th
Division on .Mindanao.

WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Republicandominated Senate Is preparing to put its stamp
of approval on President Reagan's slashedback fiscal 1962 budget, but a battle looms In
Congress over his tas-cuttlng plan.
The Senate, which rejected three proposed
twdgel intendments Friday, is expected to
take a final vote on the full package early next
week. When the count Is made, another White
Houae celebration Is anticipated
The 1699 1 billion budget In the Senate Is
very similar to the version approved In the
House Thursday by a vote of 233-176. lt had
unanim ous Republican support and the
backing of 63 Democrats.
Friday, the Senate voted, 4M3, not to
restore an 38 billion reduction In Social
Security funds, as It worked for the second day
on the fiscal 1963 spending blueprint.
It also rejected a proposal to transfer f 130
million from health care to veterans funds,
and turned down a proposal to cut government
travel and consultant fees by 33.1 million.
Sen. Donald Riegle, D-Mlch., sought to
restore the Social Security funds, arguing that
Reagan opposes changes In the cost-of-living
adjustments thal were proposed last month by
the Senate Budget Committee.
But Reagan, In a letter to congressional

leaders, has said he will come up with about H
billion In savings from the retirement
systems. The president urged the Senate not to
support amendments restoring the money.
The House triumph, achieved despite the
strong objection of Democratic leaders,
buoyed the White House for the fight over Its
proposed three year, 30 percent U s cut.
White House chief of sUff Jam es Baker said
Reagan U holding firm on the controversial
proposal. It calls for 334 billion In tax reducUons, moat of It through acrcaa-the-board cut*
In personal Income Ux rales,
“The president Is having absolutely no
second thought* shout the tax cut,” Baker said
House Republican leader Bob Michel, after
meeting with Ihe president a t the While House
said Republicans now will "be increasing the
drumbeat for the Ux component of the
overall" economic package,
But he conceded they would have a little
more trouble In winning the same Democratic
support for the tax pUn.
A United Press International survey of 40
conservative Dem ocrats crucial In the
president's budget victory showed only three
firmly support the president's Ux proposal,
Most said voting for the president's budget In
no wsy committed them to hi* U s cut.

TO D A Y
Around The Clark
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Itu&gt;tort*
C a le n d a r................
Classified Ad*
Contes
...............
Crossword
DeorAbby
Deaths
.................
Editorial
Florida

Hospital
NaUw
Opinion
llrllglaa
School Menu*
2B Sports
Tekvtoka
YVrather
World

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'Biggest Mother's Day Card'
d u rin g

servlcr In
dropped the leaflets and a radio over
the Japanese headquarters," Hut­
chison said
"Wt dropped the radio ao the
Japanese general could find out for
himself what had happened. And

contact was made. Wc sent a plane
and brought
him
Into our
headquarters.
“The general said he w u glad I
dropped the radio. They didn’t know
hat was w e t," Hutchison said.

The surrender document In both
Japanese and English was signed by
both generals. It Is framed and hangs
prominently in the Hutchison home.
Thedocuinentreads: "ToBrigadier
See SANFORD, Page t A

EAST PROVIDENCE, JU . (UPI) —
Joyce Miga of Warwick really loves her
mother and in proving II ah* won a local
radio sU llon'i “biggest Mother's Day card"
contest
Her Mother's Day card Is made of 110
sections, toUUng 6,000 feet long and lM e e t
wide — 9,000 square feet.

Contestants used trailers and moving
vans to cart their entries to the sUtion
Friday In their quest for the contest prise, a
3300 Jewelry gift certificate,
Mlga's card edged out a huge sheet of
printed plastic that covered the *Ulion's
parking lot. Must entranU took their cards
back home to give them to their mothers.

'No Sir, Trains Just Ain't What They Used To Be.,.'
By BRITT SMITH
Herald SUff Writer
Ones, In a time long sines forgotten, it
w u the only way to travel
It w u the g n a t Iron Hone, th*
revolutionary machine that welded a
ssctlonaltsed nation togsther and
brought 1U colonial peoples into a glided
HOBut that age la gone and the days of the
passenger train may have been num­
bered with IU passing. Today, the
lumbering locomotives a n Utile mon
than s vestige of a bygone e n .
In thi Seminole County a n a . Amtrak
Is the only passenger rail servlet
available, picking up and departing an
average of M0 riders a month at IU
Sanford terminal. Auto-Train, which
;ended people and their c a n between
Sanford and suburban Washington for
nearly a decade, shut down 10 days ago
under a mountain of debU.
Th federally-subsidized AmIn k , which
operates at a multi-million dollar annual
deficit, may soon follow Auto-Tram to
that g n a t roundhoua* in the sky. Should
President Reagan's fiscal 130 budget
p a u through Congress unaltered,
company officials say Amtrak service
nationwide would grind to a halt with the
lone exception of the Baeton-New YorkWashington run. That would Wave quite a legacy for a
country which once produced trains of
such magnificence that they moved
author Nathanial Hawthorne to exclaim,
"They splrttualix* trav el!"
While Amtrak stlU can 't match the 300mlle-per-hour F ren ch and Japanese
carriers for speed and comfort, there are
compensations. Foremost among these u
the p u n style and romance of riding the
rails; rumbling past g r a n and sundappled countryside, past rock-ribbed
dills, tala-bo Jeweled plains, twinkling
city H fhts, and tin-roofed bam s.

What's In Store For A m trak?
Things were Just starting to look up.
Almost aD of Arotrak's trains had new
equipm ent, w ere hauling more
passengers than ever, and were more
punctual than moat airlines.
Then along came the Reagan ad­
ministration with plana for doing away
with aU the trains.
Reagan has suggested to Congress that
Amtrak be allocated only 161) million in
fiscal 1963,3340 million less than Amtrak
President Alan Boyd says the company
nerds to maintain bare-bones service.
Should the Reagan forces prevail,
penetrating the most scenic and
dramatic expanses of our national land­
scape.
Besides being a pleasant way to travel,
passenger tra in s are a piece of
Americana as much a part of the national
folklore as the covered wagon. “To allow
them to disappear would be tantamount
to changing the colon of (he flag," ac­
cording to Amtrak President Alan Boyd.
With the virtual slave labor of coun­
tless Chinese Immigrants, ribbons of
steel wrere stretched west from Ihe
eastern establishment to open up the
Iren tier. From the windows of the Iron
Horse, great white hunters blasted the
buffalo Into oblivion, and painte n tike
Frederic Remington vet to canvas scene*
from the Wild West.
While Amtrak officials admit their
trains a re bu* symbolic monuments to
the way thine* once were, they em­
phasise many of their trains retain a
touch of railroading'* past glory.
Ob the New York-to-New Orleans
Orescent, for example, -you don't hare

Boyd Mid aU Amtrak trains, excepting
those making Ihe Boston-New YorkWashington run, will cease operation
Oct. 1.
“The country can no lunger afford the
luxury of paaMnger train subsidies."
said Transportation Secretary Drew
Lewis. “We would Ukt to see drastic
cutbacks, possibly as much as 73 percent
of the mileage of Amtrak."
That would render 334 new doubledeck
“Superbrer" cars Amtrak has recently
placed on western routes si useless
to pub oft at an exit or wait to arrive at
tome bustling terminal to eat," said an
Amtrak spokesman. Just stroll back to
the dining car and enjoy Ihe cushy am­
bience as white-jacketed waiters serve
your meal, mildly seasoned with a
sprinkling of down-home Southern
hospitality.
Before nodding off, lulled to sleep by
the rhythm of the rails, “slip your shoes
outside the door of your berth" and come
the dawn, “ they'll be sitting where you
left them with a mirror-like shine," the
spokesman said. “No charge."
While such amenities doubtless play a
part In keeping passenger trains on the
right track, there appears to be mors to tt
than that. As they stood on • platform of
the Amtrak depot In Sanford the other
day waiting for the 1:23 p m Silver
Meteor to pull in «It w u 13 minute* late),
some of hie passengers tried to explain
the lure of riding the rails.
To Roger White, 37, a retired plumber
heading back to Baltimore following a
two-rerek M tegi vscstluu, watcfung

because they could not run In Ihe east
because of tunnel restrictions. In ad­
dition , 313 other rebuilt passengers cars
and 339 diesel engines would be Idled
because they too would be unsuitable for
eastern corridor servlet.
Amtrak was termed on May 1, 1971
with the ambitious goal of saving the
country's deteriorating passenger rail
service Intended to be a money-making
operation. Amtrak to vasingly found
ItaeU relying on federal subsidies despite
burgeoning rider ship.
America watch Itaelf Is th* Important
thing. "Why take a plans?" he asked.
“There ain’t no hurry. You meet people
this way. titling here drinking with one
another. 1 stayed up with some 31-yearold kid till 1:30 this morning talking and
drinking It was great. That'a what life Is
sD a b o u t”
John Canto) and his wife Paula were
headed north to-vlatt their daughter In
Washington. "N orm ally, we'd fly ,"
Cantini u ld . “but wc can't afford It Just
now. One airline charges 3233 a person
roundtrtp. On Amtrak, U's only 3271 for
the both of us. You can't beat I t "
Everyone, however, is not so content
Standing alone In the doorway of a yellow
brick term inal his eyes dancing with the
undulating beat waves rising from the
hot steel rails. 39-years-old Paul Warner
openly longed for the good ole days.
"Trains am i what they used to be,"
Warner laid, spitting a wad of tobacco
Juice onto a tar-coated railroad tie.
"Years ago, giving good service was an
a r t The chandailers were alw ays
polished and th* sfim w are, rest stiver.

This is a typical seme at Sanford's Amtrak terminal...not Union
Station, but active nonetheless...

...This could be what It will look like alter Oct.l, unless Congress
approves a target subsidy than the Reagan administration proposes
was arranged on dean white linens Just
ao. The food was better and the service
friendJUr."
Warner fondly recalled that "there w u
time then for after-dinner brandy and
cigars. How, u s rash, rash, rush.

They’re not walling tables here, they're
slopping hogs."
"No sir," tw mused, a glob of tobacco
Juke hitting a hot rail and aiuling In the
« rtn g sua, “trains M ain't what they
used in be."

�3A—Evaning Herald, tswtord, Ft._____Swnday, May II, »W1

NATION
IN BRIEF
Tornadoes Rage
Through Texas
By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
Thundentorm* packing buebatU tee hall
and tornadoes raged through north-central
Texas today, causing millions of dollars In
damages.
Tornado warnings were Issued lor por­
tions of northeast Texas and western
loulatana today and resident*, keeping a
wary eye on rain-swollen creeks, braced for
more rain.
A thunderstorm that had moved through
Dallas before dawn Friday was thought to
have weakened a M oot branch on an old
oak tree that fell Into a group of spectators
at the Byron Nelson Classic, killing one
man.
Officials said tens of millions of doDira In
damages were caused by the Texas storms.

Carter Gets Award
INDEPENDENCE, Mo, IUPI) -

Former
President Jimm y C arter, visiting the
hometown of the "Man from Indepen­
dence,” to accept a public service award,
urged America to play a dominant role In
the cause of human rights.
“Our country has to be the leader," Carter
told reporters Friday after he received the
Harry 8. Truman Public Service Award. It
was his first news conference since leaving
office.

Hostage Escapes
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - A rifle-toting
man held a 17-year-old girl hostage at a
hotel In the Hollywood area before the
escaped early today, leaving the gunman
holed up In a room on the 22nd floor, [en­
ding police off with occasional firing.
The aelge at the Holiday Inn began late
Friday after police were alerted by mem­
bers of a volunteer group of radio operators
The hostage, whose name was not Im­
mediately released, escaped unharmed. A
motive for the Incident had not been
disclosed.
Predicted rain held off and the sun broke
through the clouds as Carter accepted the
brunts replica of the statue of Walking
Truman In Independence Square.

A Warning Flag'
ATt-ANTA (UPI1 - Discovery of a
pneumonia ■train that does not respond to
three major antibiotics used to battle the
disease should be considered "More of ■
warning flag” than a true health problem,"
federal health offlciali say.
"This la the first Instance reported In the
united States of a pneumococcus resistant to
all three drugs,” the CDC said.
The atrcplocococcua pneumonia strain
was found to be resistant to penicillin • the
drug moat widely used to lighLth* ailment •
as wall a s chloramphenicol and
tetracy clln a, the national Centara for
Disease Control said Friday,

WORLD
IN BRIEF
M ortar Hits PD
N e a r Irish Border
BEIJ'AST. Northern Ireland (UPII Suspected IRA guerrillas Uunched a mortar
barrage on a police station near Ihe Irish
border In what may be the beginning of an
underground offensive lo avenge the death
of hunger striker Bobby Sands.
British Prime Minister Msrgartl That­
cher said Friday In Scotland. Sands'
"(utile w aits or Ufa" and the continuing
hunger stiikra by other Inmates would
never eam political statuj for the IRA
convicts.
__
In Belfast and I-ondonderry Friday nlghl,
police and British army troops came under
the heaviest sniper fire directed against
security forces since the death of Sands
Tuesday.
"M o rta r shells landed on Nawton
Hamilton RUC station In South Armagh,” a
police spokesman aald.
"The building was struck a number of
times and w u damaged," ha aald.
A Belfast radio station said the Irish
Republican Army claimed responsibility for
the 10-round m ortar attack.

Probe Continues
RIVERSIDE, Calif. IUPI) - The In­
vestigation of 17 mysterious deaths at two
rural hospitals has been extended to several
Urge \ m Angeles area medical facilities,
Including at least four that employed a male
nurse who has been questioned In the case.
Al Aibergato, a spokesman for (he Lot
Angeles County DUtrlct Attorney, said
Friday Riverside County authorities and (he
district attorney discussed the case this
week and "several" hotpiUls In Loa
Angeles a rt under Investigation.

El Salvador Exodus
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (UPI) The American-baaed Catholic Mary knoll
order has told Its six missionaries In El
Salvador to leave Ihe country, reportedly to
avoid reprisals for (he "disappearance"
staged by a Maryknoll priest.
Church sources In San Salvador said two
male missionaries had left the country by
Friday morning. Two other male clerics
were at the UJ . Embassy Friday afternoon
with their bags packed where "they were
considering leaving (El Salvador) Im­
mediately," an embassy source said.

W a r Tapes M is s in g
LONDON (UPI) - A civil a r r a n t took
home daaslfUd caaaette tapes of Ihe
Defense Ministry's war preparations and
recorded pop music and language lessons on
them In a security breach that w u not in­
vestigated for 17 months.
Prim e M inister M argaret T hatcher
Friday said new security measures were
being Implemented to guarantee a belter
accounting of taped classified material.
A government security com m luion
reported u many u 111 tapes vanished. The
commission aald II accepted the opinion of
MIS, the Intelligence bureau, the tapes were
unlikely to have reeched any splea.

... Sanford General Recalls Career
(to e tinned From Page IA)
General Joseph C. Hutchison, com­
manding general, 31st Infantry
Division, United States Army.
*Capttulatlon'
"I, lieutenant General Gyoaaku
Morotumi Acting Commanding
General of the 33th Army and Com­
manding General of the 30th Division,
hereby unconditionally surrender on
this day all of the offlcen and men,
and all arms, military equipment,
records and supplies under my
command to (he Commanding
General, Slat Infantry Division,
United Slataa Army. I agree faithfully
henceforth to obey the orders of the
Commanding General. 31st Infantry
Division, and to direct all members of
my command to do so. I will use all
means that I possess to secure as
early as possible the assembly of all
troops under my command within
Reception Centers established by the
Uni tod Slates Army, and will take
action as directed by you to establish
liaison with units and Individuals who
have not yet surrendered. I will report
all known locations of explosive* and
mines, both land and water, whose
presence la a hazard to life and
property.”
Thus, General Hutchison's name
went down In history.
Al the festivities next Saturday,
May II, a parade will begin at 11 a.m.
al San Juan Avenue and march past a
reviewing stand at V eterans
Memorial Park where the general and
his wife, Anne, and other dignitaries
will be seated.
At noon a pork loin barbecue with
trimmings will be served In Ft. Mellon
Park with the military personnel as
special guests. Others wishing to
enjoy the barbecue luncheon may
obtain tickets at tha Greater Sanford
Chamber of Commerce office. Overall
chairman of the day's activities la Dr.
Bill Runge.
A native of South Carolina, Hut­
chison moved to Sanford In ItlS and
laughlMath and athletics al Seminole
High School. He coached tha football
and baseball lea ins at (he school a i
well as the girls' basketball learn.
Although a college graduate, he
enlisted In the UJS. Army as a buck
private In September, 1917 during

AREA READINGS | t am .I: temperature 17; overnight
low: S3; Friday’s high: SO; barometric pressure: 21.11;
relative humidity: S4 percent winds; northwest at 11 mph.
SUNDAY’S TIDES: DAYTONA BFJ4CH: high*. 2:10 a m ,
i;42 p in.; lows, 1:14 a m., 1:39 pm .; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 3:01 a.m., 3:34 pm ,; loin, 0:13 a m ., 1:30 p m ;
BAYPORT:highs, 1 20 a m , 1:34 p.m.; lows, 1:14 a m , 1:01
p.m.
MONDAY'S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 3:11 a m ,
3:42 p.m.; tows 9:13 a m , 9:44 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 3:03 a.m., 1:34 p.m.; lows, 9:14 a m ., 9:33 p m :
BAYPORT: highi, 9:33 a.m., 1:11 p.m.; lows, 3:38 a.m , 3:00
pm .
BOATING FORECAST: S t Augustine to Jupiter told, Out
30 Miles: Small craft should exercise caution. Winds northerly
13 to 30 knots becoming northeast around 13 knots later today
and easterly 10 to 13 knots tonight and southeasterly during
Sunday. Seas 4 to 7 lest decreasing to 3 to 3 feet by tonight
Partly cloudy.
AREA FORECAST: Varia We cloudiness through Sunday. A
alight chance of thimdenhoweri Sunday. Warm afternoons.
Highs In the mid lo upper 30* L o u tonight In the 60s. North to
northeul winds at 10 to 13 mph today, diminishing tonight
Rain probability 20 percent Sunday.

PATRICK BOGGAN8
Funeral service*
for
Patrick Boggans, 73, of 1973
Pendleton Drive, Foreat City,
who died Wednesday, were
held Saturday at the St.
Francis of Assisi Catholic
Church, Apopka.
Born in County Mayo,
Ireland, he moved to Forest
City from Fairfield, Coon. In
1973. He w u a retired defense
Inspector far Avco-Lycacning.
A Catholic, he w u a member
of Knights of Columbus and
St. Francis of Assisi Church.
He la survtved by his wife,
Uly Boggans, Foreat City;
ions, Partick, Foreat City,
Kevin, Westport, Conn, and
Robert, Wintar Springs;
daughters, Mrs. T h e re u
Zoffla, Apopka, Mrs. Uly
Tyrell, lake Jackson, Tex.
and Mrs. Ellen Flangan of
Altamonte Spring*; brother*
James, Bohcla County Mayo,
Ireland, Martin of Derby,
England and John, London,
England, Michael, London,
T h o m a i, M a n c h e s te r ,
England and Andrew of
Foiford, County Mayo,
Ireland;
siita rs,
Alice
Brtdahaw, London, England,
Mary Ellen Jones, Lester,
England and Eileen Gower of
HJtdvcn Herts England, II
grand children and th ree
great-grandchildren.
Baldwln-Fatrchlld Funeral
Homes, Altamonte Chapel
wu
In
ch arg a
of

ftm in e ttM tm e rie l H tiy .lil
M lf 1
ADMISSIONS
Sen lord
Fteerl A rth et
R etecca »'■—n
Cett&gt;e i McKee
liv e O glrtky
SI even L P « t.« o
Joen Flo*ere. Oiteen
o ts C H a R O is
John protMi
M rliet* p. Cerpenter
P e ril A. Smith

E w i i i n j p l i o n tic !

leu it* Thomas
tir te e L. Turner
B«fTh« w iiliim t
Voyff L. v ile r* * . C euetkeyry
Gertrude X. M ltchttl, DeSary
je m rt S e n n it', D*B*ry
Deltone;
thom el M. Pt Ittharil
6*«&lt;«0&gt;ct Smalt a
PetrKla V. Ivruso*
W trait S Soulup
Refer 1 « Renrwtl. Fern Pare
Ver t P. N ttton. lo rw « ™ i
Ruth E. Eebort, O ro ro t City
IUSPS &lt;11 IN I

S u n d a y . M a y 10. m t - V o l . 71, No 223
p .k iiek ed Deity end S*M*y, t tc tp l U tilise * k r Tk* tealf'W
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31

TTie execution of this surrender document on war ended on Aug. 15, IMS, Japanese 0?*
Sept. 8, 19(5 ended the resistance of 05,000 cupatlon forces In many parts of the Orle*l
Japanese troops on Mindanao, second largest were unaware and continued fighting.
Island In Ihe Philippine chain. Although the
World W u I and rose from cxrporal to
sergeant then second lieutenant In one
year. After he received his com­
mission he w u sent to the Saumur
Field Artillery School at Saumur,
France and upon graduation w u
assigned u an Instructor in a brigade
artillery school at Camp Hunt, near
Bordeaux, France.
He was later assigned u executive
officer of one of the batteries of the
333rd Field Artillery where he w u
serving when discharged In 1911.
Soon after moving to Sanford,
Hutchison met his future wife, Am*,
a native of the city. They got married
In October, 111*. "1 would have
married her sooner except far World
War I," be u y s. "I can't remember
when I wasn't m arried," she u y s.

promoted to brigadier general and
placed In command of the (2nd
Infantry Brigade, rem aining in
command until It w u disbanded in
1941
In the meantime, Hutchison, after
World War I, w u employed by a
farm er's cooperative marketing
association, becoming Its general
manager In 1930. In 1935, Hutchison
formed the J.C. Hutchison A Co.
distributing firm , dealing In
vegetables and he became known u
an authority on celery. In 1IM he
joined Chase A Co. where he w u
chairman of the executive committee
initially and later w u chairman of the
board

In 1MQ ha w u elected to the
Seminole County Commission and
They have two daughters—Helen was named chairm an by his
Tucker and Ella* Cornell—beth of colleagues. He served until 19*4.
Sanford and five granddaughters and
Bsck to Hutchison's m ilitary
one grandson.
career. The Florid* Natlunal Guard
When Ihe Florida National Guard unit was sctlvated at Camp Blinding,
w u reorganized after World War I, Florida on Nov. 25,1940. It w u later
Hutchison enlisted In Company D, absorbed Into the 3 !it (Dixie)
124th Infantry and w u elected a first Infantry Division. II w u named the
lieutenant at Its first meeting. Dixie because Ihe bulk of Its strength
Promotions followed: captain 1923; w u recruited from the stales of
major 1929; lieutenant colonel 1903; Mississippi, Florida, Alabama and
Louiatana.
colonel, 1940.
On Nov. 1*. 1940 he w u officially
Sent overseas in January, 1143,

Hutchison aerved In the Paddle
theatre of operation* for nearly three
yeirv.
Exploits of the 31st Dixie Divlstpn
were not chronicled with tjie
frequency of other divisions, but they
were in there fighting. In one of the
toughest assignments In the Pacific
war theater: the Philippines. General
Hutchison w u assistant divtxiodal
commander of the 31st. Press
drip* lebes said the Sanfordltes and
Floridians were living up to their
tradition u fighting men.
One group; which included 17
Floridians, was praised by the
commanding general of the 31st
Division for making possible the
dlvlilon’s 100-tnlle drive through
Northern Mindanao. This group had
17 Floridians u specialists.
laboring day and night under a
fierce tropic eun and In torrential
rains, they repaired the scores of
bridges which retreating Japanese
left In smoking ruins along the Sayre
highway.
E iposed lo constant Japanese
threat and guarded every minute,
these men and their battalion hauled
BOOtons of massive bridge equipment
over 130 miles of swampy roads and
caraboa-cart trails to span three
g«rg**-

D O N 'T G A M B I A

•fcZayre

with your InsuranceI
-C A L L -

WE RE SORRY
Oe P e t* l *e M r F if flin
S reM eric* l u u C in d e r,
i n d m n i d • if* iv rw k*try Um&gt;k »&lt; Vidl Cmm.
d m I i i w hw dtity d m * mend * c t* r* r t* dii* m il predict
e* time, me item d l l net ke
e te u ek le ter me cele a im
th e te e ere trellek le. Ate*. •*
Pee* te me eSeerfiteS M * »
• r u n a m i m Beat*. Tk*rest*
p e te re d li net me cw rtcl
mndel. H e tn v tr. me red*
e v e n e d * n e t e lite s in me c*.
»«f tried Cere AH* err P e p I,
• n ed ee rtn ed t e d AtrerkKh
Men * end S e r'i *11 C u r t Oiteed ton* Odd I* I let* eMp
men! *T tk* render me ikeei
m il err tie d*rln« m* eel*.
S e in d itc U tr* eipleM *. w*
ee*W elle I d env m cenved
•nee t* e ar c v ite m en

T
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TO N Y RUSSI
IN S U R A N C E

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HOM E OW NERS

T A MM # £
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BOOKKEEPING &amp;
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Qucrfify Service-Reasonable Rates
13 YEARS ACCOUNT1NOEXPERIENCE
1103 Hotly Avenue, Sanford

323-8581

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back-

REGISTRATIONS N O W BEING ACCEPTED FOR
arrangements. Burial w u In
Highland Memory Gardena.
HORACE F-DOWNEY
Funeral services for Horace
E. Downey, 73, of 1133 Second
St., Longwood, who died
Wedneaday, were held
Saturday morning at Baldwln-Falrchlld
Altamonte
Chapel. Born In Washington,
D.C , he moved’to Longwood
tram McLean, Va„ In 1999. He
w u a retired carpenter and a

member of the First Baptist
Church of Longwood.
He Is survived by hU wife,
C h ris tin e
D ow ney,
Longwood; lis te n , Mrs.
Dorothy
Kepart,
of
Washington, D. C„ Mr*. Helen
Orrlson, McLean, Va„ and
Mr*.
E lite
Ifvnler,
Washington, D.C.
Burial w u In Highland
Memory Gardens, Forest
City.

GRADES 9 thru 12

B E G IN N IN G JUNE I S
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THIS OFFER EXTENDED
Only limited Nwnbsr &lt;H Specs* Available

FALL CLASSES
GRADES* th ru 17

INDIVIDUAL REMEDIAL
INSTRUCTION IN

READING A MATH
ORADES4thrulI
STARTANYTIME
MON. THRU SAT.

2 SPACES
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READING &amp; MATH CENTER
A fUUV ACCREDITED EDUCATION
i »r truov rtooeue oe
ie (ovTiwviout irutMit

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♦ CALL 121-4141 For Information Al No Obligation

OAKLAWN f t
s ^ l M j n j MEMORIAL \
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IN TE R S E C TIO N OP C O U N TS V C L U S ROAD
. A N O R M IN lM A R T R O A O -S A N F O R D ,

• All T«ptl MbhV rirbH
• L*m»t»f» l iff•ring

y i

“ V

Promoters who failed In their attempt to build a harness
racing track in I a k a Mary filed a 11 1 million datamation roll
Friday In Seminole County Circuit (hurt against twa dly oL
(trial* who opposed the facility.
U k e Mary City Manager Phil Kulbes and Councilman Ray
are being sued by two Longwood companies, Mid Stole
Development Inc. and Harness Racing Inc. Filed by
Altamonte Springs attorney Michael D. Jones, the lull w u
Initiated by Frank J. Sobotka Jr., an officer of Harness
Racing, Inc. and Marc J. Robinson Jr., of Mid Stole
Development, who are seeking 1300,000 In compensatory
damages and II million In punitive damages.
Alleging Kulbes and F o i made accusations Ihe two firms
and their principal* were Involved In criminal activities, the
suit seek* Injunction* agalnat the two city officials demanding
tiwy either prove wrongdoing or be prevented Irom making
any further derogatory statements.
Plana were abandoned for the t i t million Shunahln* Park to
have been constructed on 1P0 acres at Lake Emma Road and
Interstate 4, after they were rejected by lak e Mary voter* In a
Dec. 3 straw vote.

AREA DEATHS

w t iv w m

( ■4W

Lake Mary Officials
Sued By Track Promoters

WEATHER

HOSPITAL NOTES

m

i m m Diicnwmerosv school
ow ret asm oe it*. **i. £ moica*

e*ci toco* iilioio « o*
'
nenoaeioeiameccoeoinptoeioiseii*
R A BRADLEY, PRES. 327-2324

�SunrUy.May II, 1W1- 3A

Evening Herald tanferd, PL

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
W o m o n W h o Kept Children

From School M ay Lose Them
FORT LAUDERDALE, (UPI) — A court hearing
may decide whether a woman may be allowed to keep
her two teen-age children that »he held out of school to
avoid busing to a predominantly black high achool.
Juvenile Court Judge Undo Vitale Friday scheduled
a June 24 hearing on whether the two children of
Ronald and Sandra Pohl should be found to be
dependent and possibly placed in foster homes.
"I am not an. unfit mother," said Mrs. Pohl "The
fact that I have taken my kids cut of school is because I
care for them 1 don't want them bused."
Scott Evans, IS. and his sister Michelle Martin, 14.
Mrs. Pohl’a two children by two previous marriages,
were charged by the slate with being truant and
therefore dependent after they stopped attending
Blanch Ely High School.

Juveniles Sentenced In Arson Case
By BRtTT SMITH
Herald Staff Writer
A 16-year-oid Lorgwood boy, who along with his two brothers
was found guilty of arson In connection with the Feb. 7 fire
which destroyed the Central Florida Christian School in
Maitland, ha'-e been committed to a stale juvenile facility.
Orange Cot My Judge Lawrence Klrkwnnd sentenced the trio
to the custody uf it** *t*ie Depertment of Rehabilitative
Services (or an undeterminale term which, depending on their
behavior, could last until their 19th birthdays. Mare than
likely, however, the boys will serve less than ■ year In state
care before being released, according to a cw rt officer.
Kirkwood also ordered that the youths be separated during
detention.
Still pending Is the question of whether the oldest boy will be
tried as an adult on a charge of escape. The juvenile escaped
April 7 iro n the Orange County juvenile detention facility

Action Reports
* Fires
* Courts
it P o lic e

when an accomplice unscrewed the window frame to his room
from the outside. The youngster turned himself In two weeks
later.
If found guilty, he could face up to five years In prison.
The brothers were convicted In mid-April of a total of 27
criminal charges, most of them dealing wilh auto theft. The
arson charge sprang from the youths setting a fire which

gutted the 6500,000 private church school at 1250 N. Maitland
Ave. Firefighters from three departments battled the blare for
more than two hours, but due to a lack of firewalls in the
building, the flames could not be contained.
RETIREE ARRESTED FOR SHOOTING AT KIDS
A 64-year-old Oviedo retiree has been charged wilh
aggravated assault for allegedly shooting at two young men
who were fishing on a lake near his home.
Joe E. Whitaker of E. Chapman Road was Jailed under 15,250
bond after being arrested at his home around noon Thursday.
According to records filed wilh the Seminole Circuit Court
Clerk, Whitaker Is accused of shooting at a neighbor, Dale
Caldegro, 15, and hia friend Michael Fanalaro, 23, on March J
while they were fishing at Lake Bath.
Aa the pair were sitting in a canoe, Whitaker reportedly
walked down to the lake and yelled, "You're on my property"
and shot toward the boys once with a shotgun.

Shop Sanford and Orlando doily 9:30 9:30, Sun. 17 6.

SUNDAY

Shop Leesburg, Dclond, Kissimmee doily 9 9, Sun. 116

-

M u r d e r e r Loses Appeal

The Saving Place "

TAMPA, (UPI) — Convicted murderer Willie Jasper
Darden, who escaped the electric chair by one day in
1171, has lost his appeal in federal court to have his
conviction and sentence set aside.
U.S. District Judge W, Terrell Hodges, who granted
Darden a slay on May 22, 117?, ovemiled a U.S.
magistrate's recommendation Friday and denied
Darden's petition for habeas corpus and dissolved the
stay

THRU

TU E S D A Y

Shop Mt. Dora, Clermont daily 9 9, Sun. 12 6

FILM
d e v e l o p in g

SPECIALS

A Se xy Eight-Year-Old?

O m llrn flE T

TALI-AHASSEE, (UPI) - - Eight-year-old Sarah
Simons says anybody who thought her picture in a hair
salon's newspaper add was kesy or suggestive has a
dirty mind.
Sarah's picture caused a flurry of debate when it
appeared in advertisements for a local hair salon last
month and prompted some people to accuse Sarah's
mother and the salon owner of eiploitation.
The photograph shows Sarah, an tunor roll student,
smiting playfully into the camera with loiiled, wind-,
blown hair and one eyebrow cocked.

A rlene's Out To Sea
MIAMI i UPI) — A strong upper alrstream blowing
out of the west grabbed premature and persistent
Tropical Storm Arlene today and carried It off into the
open Atlantic east of the Bahamas Islands.
Late Friday, Arlene was centered 120 miles eastsoutheast of San Salvador Island — where Columbus
first landed In the New World. It was moving at IS to 20
mph on an eait-northeait course with nothing but a
broad expanse of the Atlantic Ocean In front of it.

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Tax Boost Still Likely
I

TA1J,A11ASSEK. (UP!) — Taxpayers a rt not off the
book yet, according to same legtiUtiwa leaders
Senate Appropriations Chariman Jack Cordon said
Friday many w n a td s privately are admitting the
need for a t i l Increase to hind education, tranaportalion and law enforcement.
SANFORD PLAZA OPEN MON. SAT. IS t

Z A L E S

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ALTAMONTE SPRINGS
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Evening Herald
tu s e t 4 I I R I

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, Ft A. J2771
Area Code lOMU-Ml t or 8319993

Sunday, 10, IMl-aA

Around

Wayne 0 Doyle, Publisher
Giordano. Managing Editor
Robert Lov^nbury. Ad^trtiling and Circulation Dlrtetor
Home D e liv e r y : W e e k .lt O O ; M on th . M .J S ; (M o n t h * , (14 00;
1C.
By Mail: W ee k, fl.U ; Month. C2S; ( M onth*.

Y e a r.

CS.*, 7ti.- ZTK

War Clouds
In Mid East
Ijebanon, shattered these six years by civil war
beUecn leftist Muslims and rightist Christians
and increasingly, a battleground between Israel
a n d Syria, is paying the historic penalty for
military weakness.
It is difficult now to remember that bleeding
Iebanon before 1975 was described as Switzerland
with a Riviera. Beirut was the banking and
financial capital of the Middle East, and its
beaches were the playgrounds for the in­
ternational Jet set. Lebanese Christians and
Muslims composed their ancient differences in a
model dcm ccracy in which neither side
dominated and both collaborated. In brief, having
avoided the Arab-Israeli wars, Lebanon was a
tranquil, prosperous sanctuary in the turbulent
Middle East.
What happened to destroy all of this in 1975 was
the intrusion Into Lebanon of the Palestinian
Liberation Organization, with its army and its
terrorists. Having been cast out of Jordan
following an armed showdown with King Hussein,
the PLO descended on Lebanon because the
Lebanese were too weak and too supine to resist.
The disruptive PI-0 presence, a semi-government
and military force independent of its host country,
politicized Lebanon's Muslims and tore apart the
delicate balance with the conservative Christians,
who found themselves transformed Into an Op­
pressed and threatened minority.
The PLO engendered civil strife in Lebanon so
weakened the divided Lebanese army that Syria
found it strategically advantageous in Us con­
frontation with Israel to intervene in Lebanon
with troops as a peacekeeper for the Arab League.
Inasmuch as Syria and the PLO share a hatred
for Israel, and indeed consider themselves at war
with Israel, (heir fight with the Christians coupled
with PLO raids into Israel from Lebanese soil led
inevitably to a working alliance between the
Israelis and the Lebanese Christians. The
Christians who have coalesced In the southern
part of the country along the Israeli border assert
they represent Free Lebanon. Naturally, U is in
Israel's in te r e s t to m a in ta in th is C h rls tia n -b u tte r
tone against the PLO and Syrians.
Meanwhile, the Soviet Union has made an
.mormous armament investment in Syria, in­
cluding large number of fighter planes, tanks,
missiles and, most ominously, several thousand
Soviet military advisers. The recent escalation of
fighting in Lebanon is properly described as
dangerous" by the State Department because it
threatens to burst Into a larger all-out war that
could once more pit the Arab world against Israel.
Iho result of that, beyond the increased
possibility of another Arab oil embargo, would be
to disrupt the Hcagan administration's Midd'e
East strategy of a common front In that part of the
world against the Soviet Union.
Indeed, aggravating the conflict in Lebanon is
so advantageous to the Soviet Union and so ad­
verse to the United States that there Is good
reason to believe the Russians have been goading
the PLO and Syrians into action. The movement
of Soviet-made SAM-G missiles into Lebanon
together with reports of Soviet military personnel
there would bear this out.
In the face of this, the immediate challenge for
the United States and Israel Is to keep events in
hand. It is reassuring, therefore, tnat Prime
Minister Menachem Begin has been down playing
the crisis even to the extent of not confirming his
own generals' concern about the Soviet missiles.
Unfortunately, the degree of confrontation lies
largely with the Soviets and their surrogates in
Lebanon. And the Soviets could wish for no better
distraction for the West to cover armed In­
tervention in Poland this summer, if that is un­
dertaken, than another war in the Middle East.
I mloubtedly, the Kremlin remembers how well it
was served by the Ill-fated French, British and
Israeli attack against Egypt to regain the Suez
Canal in October, 1956 at the very time Soviet
iroops were crushing the Hungarian uprising.

BERRY'S W O RLD

..................

'You realty*. ot course the AVERAGE salary
tor professional baseball players Is 170000
tidlart per veorl? 1

The Clock
By DORIS DIETRICH

Mother'* Day I* being celebrated this
weekend.
! Identify with playwright John ran Drnttn
who wrote “I Remember Marne." The chertoed
memoriea of oar mothers arc all many of oa h a rt
left. Our mother* a r t Ju«t not with ui anymore.
The second Sunday in May is act aside aa
Mother’a Day in America, although "remem­
bering Mama” data* back to Greek mylfaologyabout SO y e a n before the birth ot Christ. Back
then spring ftrtivsl* ware dedicated lo Rhea,
mother of the gods Jupiter, Pluto and Neptune;
and the goddesses Vesta, Cert* and Juno.
During the IMCts, “Mothering Sunday" wsa
celebrated in England during L ent Servants
v a ra given a free Sunday off to "goemotbering" and visit their mothers bearing
gifts.
It was Julia Ward How*, who wrote the "Battle
Hymn of the RepubUc" rad suggested during the
Civil War that Mother’s Day be celebrated on
July 4 s j a holiday for peace.
There are other instance* in history of
"remembering M ima," but 11 n s Anna B.
Ja rris of Webater, W. Va. who convinced
Freanlcul Woodrow Wiiscn to ottosU y proclaim
Mother's Day on May », t i l l
The lofty sentiments expressed in the
proclamation aay it all: "The service* ren­
dered...by the American mother is the emeteret

source of the country's strength and inspiration.
The home la the fountainhead of the state."
In nominating her mother, Mrs. Nina V.
Messer, UI E. 17th S t, for the Herald's “Outstanding Mom," Lola M etier said, "My
mother—the unsung hero of uur home."
Loll continued, "She hasn't w ta national
acclaim nnr stood with the great in car nation,
but she has performed and continue* to perform
admirably where the U rd has placed h e r - In
Lota said Solomon best describes what a
wonderful person her mom really is in Proverbe
11; IMS. These scriptures fit somebody elaa'a
mom too;
Who can find a virtuous woman? For her price
is far above rubies.
The heart of her husband doth safely trust in
her, so that be shall have no need of ipotl.
She wiD do him good and not evil aB (he day* of
her Ufa.
She seekfth wool, and Rax, and worketh
willingly with her hands.
She Is like (ha merchants' ships; she brtngeth
her food from afar.
She rtseth also while it Is yet night, and gtveth
meat to her household, ami a portion to her
maidens.
She conaiderrth a field, and buyeth it: with the
fruit of her hands she planteth a vineyard.

She girdeth her loins with strength, and
strengthened! her arms.
She perceived) that her merchandise la good:
Her candle goeth not out by night.
She isyeth her hands to the spindle, and bef
hands hold the distaff.
Sha stretched) out her hand to the poor; yea,
she roaebath forth her hands lo the needy.
Sha Is not afraid ot lha snow for her household.
for aB her household are clothed with scarlet
She maketh heraelf coverings of tapestry; her
clothing Is kLlk and purple.
Her husband is known in the gates, when he
slttelli among the elder* of the land.
She maketh fine linen, and aefleth it; and
deliver*th girdle* unto the merchant.
Strength and honour are her clothing; and aha
ahaB rejoice In time to come.
Sha opened) her mouth with wisdom; and in
her tongue la the law of kindness.
Sha looketh well to the ways of her household,
and eateth not tbs bread of Idleness.
Her children arise up, and call her biesKd; her
husband also, and he pralseth her.
Many daughters hare done virtuously, But
thou ex c* licet them aB.
Favour is deceitful, and Beauty la vain; but a
woman that fearoth the Lord, she shall be
praised.

RUSTY BROWN

JULIAN BOND

Africa's

Entries

Forgotten

In A n Old

Refugees

Phone Book

It has been Just a year since the Cuban
"boat people" began arriving on the South
Florida coast. They have since been the topic
of considerable madia attention, aa were the
Cambodian and Vietnam*** refugees who
preceded them.
Most of the recent arrivals from the
Caribbean, Southeast Asia and other troubled
lands are being accepted into their' new
communities, although tom e ara en­
countering hostility in competing for Jobs and
social service* with Americans who have
forgotten their own Immigrant origins.
Bui Americans seldom ace or hear about
the vast majority of Ih* world's refugees.
These arc the homeless people of Africa who
can never hope to tee US. shores.
Their plight Is an International scandal, and
international effort! to assist them have been
shamefully meager,
Tha African homeless received only onefourth ot the monies spent during 1M0 by the
United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugee*. The United Nations and voluntary
agencies lari jr * r apent (SO a person on Asian
refugee* but oniy » a person on Africans.
F irs yean ago the world had 1 million
homeless people. Today it has more than 5
million. The figure* — and the deaths —
continue to mount each week.
This vast Increase la a result of famine,
drought and war. And it la being exacerbated
by Cold War politics.
The Soviet Union, for example, insists that
it h u little role to play in international relief
efforts. The current glut of refugees, the
Russians say, la a direct result of colonialism
and Weatern exploitation of the Third World
and therefore la not a n u tte r of Soviet con­
cern.
The Haitian* who fled lo the Uni'cd Stairs
at the same time as the Cubans were refused
Immediate entry partly becau» they had not
coma from a proSovtet state. H u Cubans
were welcomed became they offered proof to
the West that Fidel Castro's efforts to remak*
Cuba wi the Russian modal were bankrupt.
At a recent Geneva conference, the Reagan
administration pledged (03 million In aid to
African refugees, end U.N. S ecretary
General Kurt Waldheim announced that 1360
million had been raised by members of the
world organisation lo assist African reset­
tlement efforts. Next year, African refugee*
wlB receive half of the United Nations' funds
for refugee assistance.

S lmt liV H P I N |W $

NtA

JEFFREY HART

That Phony Pulitzer
The Wellington Post's major rivals are
being a bit smug about the Janet Cooke sting,
but there's a lot of poetic Justice in the Post’s
embarraument.
The ultimate downfall of President Nixon
tended to obscure the fact that throughout the
Woodward-Bernstein saga the Poet was
sailing pretty cioee to the wind.
Several major page-on* Watergate stories
turned out to be false and later had to be
“corrected" — the correction hardly ever
undoing the political damage that had been
done.
Bob Woodward, the Poet editor most
directly stung by the Cooke fraud, has had
plenty of criticism about his handling of
"sortreta" (or his recent book on the Supreme
Court, "The Brethren." And both he and
Bemateln, author* of "Th» Final Day*,’- an
account of the end of the Nixon regime,
have been convincingly contradicted by earn*
of the participants.
So, on the caw hand, you have to say the
Post deserved It. Lived by the award, etc. The
biter bit.
And, of course, the Pest set Itself up for the
current firestorm reaction by taking such a
high “profaaional" Una.
They, the Post, were the great “In­
vestigative Journalists." The Post became the
Mecca of a generation of aspiring reporters.

They, the Post, had brought down a president,
exposed the malefactor!.
Pride goeth before the fall. In the aftermath
of the Cooke sting, the Poet looks a lot leas
professional than advertised. It obviously had
an Inadequate fail-safe system, as one alarm
bell after another went unheard In the manylayered Post bureaucracy.
To experienced black Journalists, Cooks's
account of ghetto Ufa sounded phony. Many
doubted that a heroin pusher would waste the
precious stuff on an elghl-yrar-old. A massive
police investigation failed to local* Cooks's
fictitious "Jim m y.”
Despite all this, the Post's editor* went
right ahead and nominated the story for a
PuBtsar.
But not enough attention has been paid to
what then happened a t the Puutxtr Prts*
Committee, which aw ards “ the most
prestigious prise In Journalism."
Procedure* there ara sloppier than at the
Past, and, as a m atter of (act, when the Post
had to withdraw Cooke's discredited story the
Pulitier Prisa Committee gave the prts* to a
VUlaga Yoke itory which show* every sign of
being aa unreliable as Cooke's.
Cooks's “Jim m y" story was first entered In
the local reporting category. There It lost out
lo a story about ML St. Helens.

When I moved to a different town recently,
a neighborhood association gave me a nifty
personal phone book,
“G reat," I thought. "Now I’ll update that
old thing I brought along." My former Index
ti so ancient that the plastic-covered pagee
are cracking and the binding Is shored up with
Scotch tape. Besides that, half the telephone
numbers don't mean anything anymore.
On every alphabetised page are numbers
that, for one reason or another, never get
called. Take the B's for example. Of 13 en­
tries, only one had been dialed regularly In
recent years. That was my friend Ethel's, t
had been phoning her lo came to sweep the
fuxxles from under our beds for II yean.
What a valuable number!
Some arc number* that used to be called
frequently, but their owners moved away;.
«w to be an actress In New York, one to world
on a paper In Florida. I don’t h art their new1
numbers, but 1 look at the old and think; "D
hope they're OK. I hop* Ilf* goes well for
them."
One entry t* the home phone of a former
boat lor use In emergency on weekend*. Noj
reason io calf that now.
My cousin Bob's number Is there. I seldom
dial It though the fondness runs deep. He
moved to Alabama. Too far for weekend
visits. The less we visit, the le u we call, it
seems
One number la a complete mystery: D.
Buchanan. The name doesn't ring a bell, let
alone the number. I'm tempted to caB and
say: ‘T his is a voice out of your past. By tfta
way, can you remember our past?"
Another la the number of a long-ago neigh­
bor . The circumstance* that once pul us in the
same orbit and in each other's phonf books
■re different now. No hard feeling/ Just a
■pinning away In time.
"B ates" Is a name and rui -her that's part
of the past as well as the present Wa began
calling each other for bridge games shortly
after college. Some time later, when their
git la were small, I remember calling them
desperate for a home for an abandoned kitten.
They took it and named It "Boots." Over the
years, tbs bridge group fell apart and the
girls grew up, but Just recently they retw t to
t*U n* they were grandparents.
As I look at the number*, I realise that each
la a memory, a reflection, a part of me.
Flipping through the pages Is Uka a rerun cf
that corny old TV show railed "Thia la Your
Ufa,"

JACK ANDERSON

Aid Goes To Those Who Don't Need
WASHINGTON Ronald R eagan's
complaint that some government subsidies
ara gotng to those who don't deserve them la
more than Just poll deal rhetoric. One
program that h u gotten completely out of
hand la tha mulUbillioo-dolUr federal subsidy
for construction of new apartment buildings.
The huge subsidies ara made under the
"Section I" program — an unintentionally
evocative title to American* of a certain aga.
"Section I" w u the Army's rlnssifl cation for
mental discharges In World War II, and
certainly, in some of Its manifestations, the
Section I program la about u craxy u a
government project can be.
Only the moat heartless supply-aider would
disagree that millions of Americana need help
lo keep a decant roof over their famlUea'
head*. But the Homing and Urban
Development program h u committed Uncle
Sam to bUiiou of dollars' worth ot direct and
indirect subsidies lor rental quarter* that in
some cue* are more elegant than those that
can be afforded by many of the taxpayer* who
are helping to foot the bill.
In Hew York City, lor example, until
recently a family o! (our with an income of
11?,#9 could qualify for u much u KP90 a
year In Section I fund*. Subsidies of (3,000-L&gt;17.000 a year to a single family are com­
monplace, complain critic*.
The federal payment* aren't gung for
subsist*nce-kvtl cold-water tenement*, or
«,cTi U u&gt;w kind of ioi-S panan but iar-freen*

luxurious units In which many unsubeidlsed
families taming (17,100 Bve. Investigators
far Sen. Wtlllem Armstrong, R-Coio. have
shown my associate Ja c k Mitchell
photograph* of posh garden apartment* bull,
wholly or partially with HUD money that
many middle-income families could not’
afford without a federal subsidy.
Many of tbes* governm ent-subsidised
projects have swimming pools, tennis courts,
14-hour security service, billiard rooms,
underground g arages and other ap­
purtenances that would be the envy of a
working-class taxpayer.
Some of there luxury »pertinents In urban
a re u rent for (3,000 s month and up — but the
tenant who qualifies (or Section ■ aid may be
paying as little as (100.
The be sic trouble with the Section I sub­
sidies is simply that too many people can
qualify for them. Tb# result Is that the middle
class, which shoulders the bulk ot the federal
tncorne lax burden, is In some case* paying
for the bousing of other middle-class families.
Incredibly, many Section I projects require
only * small percentage of lnconunyi* lifted
tenants to be fully subsidised by the govern­
ment. Tb* rest of the apartments In the
taxpayer-built developments are rented out to
fim ihts who can afford to pay higher rent
Though Uxy earn too much to qualify for full
aovernrant awdstanre, there tenants benefit
from bargain rents made possible by HUD’S

generous low-interest loans to the builder.
HUD doesn't even manage lo collect the
modest sums It la supposed to be taking In
from qualified Section S tenants. On* recent
survey showed that the department tailed to
gat adequate verification (or 14 percent of
those renters who claimed to qualify for the
federal subsidy. In other words. Unde Sam
doesn't realty hare any idea whether almost
two-thirda of those getting government aid
a n actually entitled to It
Another audit turned up shocking evidence
that only cm out of 17 HUD regicnal offices
had bothered to check on possible duplication
of subsidy payments — in easily remedied
oversight that may hav* coat tha taxpayers
millions In ripoffs.
With the lax supervision HUD exercises, It
la not surprising that scandal* Involving
Section I bdlkni have been uncovered all
over the country. In Rhode Island, as Just on*
example, Influential politician and their
families and tr ia d s were caught profiteering
— hundreds of thousands of doBart were
diverted from housing Intended lor the poor.
Other examples of grots mismanagement
have been uncovered In New York, Boston
and otuer big dties. Each of there cases
naturally mean) teas HUD money it silible to
help the elderly, the handicapped and the
truly poverty-stricken who need government
help Just to survive.
One Nfi problem with tha Sectb a i pcugi aw
is n o rth in g HUD bureaucrats haven't told

Congress about: the mind-boggling tub
coats of completing many oullandtihly exf
penrive housing development*. The reason
they haven't b id Congress Is that they really
don't know themselves what the cost trill be.
And the big reason for this potential I
bomb Is that naive investors, lured Into the
construction business by Section I's glittering
subsidies and tax breaks, can get in ovtr their
heeds. They may maks It rich tf they can
eventually unload oa • private investor
apartment complex they built with HUD',
money. But they can also go broke If they
miscalculate their own coats, which are often
hard to compute thanks to HUD'S mas* of
paperwork.
"If* a lottery w han few strike It rich,'!
said one official. In other word*, tha tax­
payer* are financing a higbrtskes game of
housing roulette. Thera may soon be more
loecn than winners - and the government 1*
taking almost sB Uw risks.
Tha real tragedy n»Section l 'i mishandling;
cf co u n t, is that the program actually dock
help many families who would not otherwise
be able to afford decent housing. At a
when miUions of Americans can t sfferd
buy a home, this Is important But the fraud
and waste in Section I ’s administration m ay
k in g the whole program crashing down,
making those who deserve assistance suffer
along with mere who don't need help — but
got i t

�OPINION
Afghanistan: Geopolitically Crucial To Super Powers
Bjr JAMES PHILLIPS
Special Te The Herald
Wlille all America rejoiced at the
return of Its boatsget from their long
captivity In Iran, there la a dangerous
tendency to relax and pretend that the
Middle East and the Persian Gulf no
longer exist. To do so Is a disastrous
error for the United State* The Soviet
Invasion of Afghanistan, now over a
year old, serves aa a constant reminder
that this entire region continues to hold
great strategic significance for both

evidenced by the Molotov-Ribbentrop
Protocol to the 1939 Hitler-Statin Pact,
which asserted that Soviet territorial
aspirations lay in the direction of the
Persian Gulf and Indian Ocean. In
recent years the Kremlin's Incentives
far expanding Us influence to the south
have been significantly enhanced by
the growing importance of Middle
Eastern, especially Persian Gulf, oil in
the w estern economic system.
According to the CIA, Soviet interest
in the region Is likely to continue to
Intensify in the 1960b as Soviet oil
production peaks and the Soviet bloc
becomes a net oil importer.

Although Afghanistan Is a remote,
obscure country which ranks among
the poorest nations in the world, its
strategic location endows It with a high
degree of geopolitical importance.
Afghanistan has long been a major
crossroads of Asia astride important
north-south and east-west land routes.
Its control of the Khyber and Botan
passes has historically made It the

Seen from the vantage point of the
Persian Gulf, the Soviet intervention in
Afghanistan constitutes one part ol a
giant pincer movenent designed to
encircle Gulf oil re* .rves. The Kremlin
■beady has established s military
pr esence in Ethiopia and South Yemen.
It has signed military assistance pacts
with Iraq (19711 and Syria (1961) and
stands to gain considerable influence in
Iran due to continuing anarchy there.

VIEW POINT

Straits of Hormuz (through which pass
M percent of the western oil imports)
than if they were based in Teheran.
Using these bases Soviet aircraft could
reach the choke point at the mouth of
the Persian Gulf and remain on station
there for at least XI minutes Clearly,
Soviet access to Afghan airbases
significantly upgrades the Kremlin's
ability to block, or even sever, the
petroleum jugular vein of the West and
greatly enhances the Soviet ability to
neutralize American navi* power in the
Arabian Sea.
In addition, occupied Afghanistan
provides Moscow with an excellent
fulcrum which Increasei Russian
diplomatic leverage over both Iran and
Pakistan. Both states hare had troubles
in the past with ethnic separatist
movements and both are likely to (ace
more such problems In the future.

The principal focal pcinl for
se p a ra tist
sentiment
lies
in
Baluchistan, the tribal homeland of the
Batuch people, which encompasses
both sides of the Iran-Paklstan border.
The Baluch hare risen In revoll three
times stnee 1947 and are entirely
capable of doing so again. The last
uprising, begun in 1973, persisted for
four y e a n until Pakistan's General Zia
reached an uneasy truce with the rebels
in November 1977,
Today there are an estimated 300
Soviet agents working among the
«&gt;

j

r

Not only would a pro-Soviet
Baluchistan serve as a base for the
projection of Soviet naval and airpower
into the Persian Gulf-Arabian Sea
region,
but the
A fghanistanBaluchistan land bridge would afford
the Sovieta a direct warm-water outlet
on the Indian Ocean, a factor which
would vastly improve Soviet access to
their outpost in South Yemen, per­
ceived by many (Including the Saudis)
to be the back door to the Saudi
oilfields. Clearly, a pro-Soviet
Baluchistan would not only threaten the
viability of the Pakistani state, but in
the long run would threaten the Gulf oil
routes and ultimately the balance of
power in Ihe CTudal Persian Gulf
region, aa well. Afghanistan is both a
stepping stone for Soviet strategic
penetration of Ihe Persian Gulf region
and a stepping stone for Islamic
religious penetration of Soviet Central
Asia. Moscow needed to stop the
resurgent tide of Islam ic fun­
dam entalism which It currently
sweeping Iran, Pakistan
and
Afghanistan at the Hindu Kush In order
to Insulate its fast growing Moslem
population of 50 million from the
"Green menace” (ihe color green has
come lo Symbolize Islam). The Soviets
could not afford a humiliating defeat on
their own doorstrp since such a defeat
might revive latent national-religious
opposition movements in Soviet Central
Asia aa well as in Eastern Europe.

- -

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-

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"*

Iran and Pakistan. In return for Soviet
protection, the Baluch would probably
be only too happy to grant the Soviets
base rights at the excellent natural
harbor at Gwadar only 400 miles east of
the Straits of Hormuz.

Clearly, the Sovieta are laying the
groundwork for a possible war of
national liberation In Baluchistan. This
would be an extremely dangerous
development because the secession of
Baluchistan would give the Soviets ■
grateful client state dependent on
Soviet supoori to offset the emmtv of

y
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ussh

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At the other end of the pincer, the
Soviet invasion of Afghanistan con­
stitutes a flanking movement which has
doubled Ihe length of the Sovtet-Iranlan
frontier and opened up the permeable
eastern border of Iran to potential
Soviet military pressures. It has ex­
panded the perimeter of the Soviet bloc
to within ISO miles of long-sought warm
water ports on the Arabian Sea and has
established a common border with
Pakistan.
The Pakistanis have been subjected
to a covert Soviet campaign of coercion
meant to deter them from extending aid
to Afghan rebels among the more than 1
million Afghan refugees who fled
s c r o ll the border into northwest
Pakistan. In March, 1960, Pakistan
refused to accept MOO million In US
military aid for fear of anlagontrlng
Moscow.
The Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan
has also moved Soviet combat aircraft
500 miles closer to the vital sea lines of
communication emanating from the
Persian Gulf which function as the oli
lifeline of Ihe industrial West. Soviet
pLanes based in southwest Afghanistan
a rt now situated closer to the strategic

gateway which links Russia with the
Indian sub-continent and (he Middle
East with the O rient
The spine of this rugged Texaaolxed
country Is formed by the soaring peaks
of the Hindu Kush, a forbidding chain of
mountains extending from central
Afghanistan to the northeastern
reaches of the country. The Hindu Kush
forms the watershed between the Oxus
and Indus river valleys and Is the
natural barrier between central and
southern Alia.
Because of its pivotal geostrategic
position, Afghanistan has repeatedly
become the focal point far conflict
between rival empires, an historical
tendency which has earned It the
sobriquet, "cockpit of Asia.” In Ihe 19th
Century, Afghanistan's very survival
aa an Independent state was linked to
its role as a buffer between Cxsrlsl
Russia to the north and the British
empire on the Idian subcontinent to the
south.
The Soviet Union has exhibited a
long-standing Interest in Afghanistan
and Its other southern neighbors, as

Baluch, chiefly tn Afghanistan, and up
to 8,000 Baluch being trained in the
USSR. There are rumors that part of
this education includes g u errilla
warfare training by Cuban military
instructors. Even before Ihe Soviet
invasion of Afghanistan the Pakistanis
had amassed reliable Intelligence that
young Baluchi tribesmen were being
exfiltraled across the border to Sovietoperated
camps
in Southern
Afghanistan for political indoctrination
and advanced weapons training.

Because Afghanistan Is wedged bet­
ween Iran and Pakistan In close
proximity to strongholds of ethnic
separatism along the peripheries of the
two states, the Soviets could threaten
the Internal stability as well as the
external security of both states.

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MUSIW^

Afghanistan was a domino that could
fall either way. The Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan was therefore a product of
mixed offensive snd defensive motives,
it represents a qualitative change In ihe
balance of power in Southwest Asia, a
manifestation of the self-serving Soviet
concept of detente snd s possible tur­
ning point tn Soviet relations with the
Islamic world.
(Mr. Phillip. Is a National Security
Analyst with the Heritage foundation,
Washington, D.C.)

Will Hattaway A nd Brantley Square Off In 1982?
The 1983 elections could see Seminole’s
tiro resident legislators— State Reps.
Robert Hattaway, D-Altamontc Springs
and Bobby B rantley, R -Longw ocdpltted against each other for a newly
apportioned Florida Senate seat.
"That doesn't bother m e," Hattawsy
said. "There would Just be one less
Republican In TaUahasaee."
Brantley said nww*l» th« W w t o
a distinct possibility. Brantley said while
he wants to look at a Senate seal, he
won’t run unless he is convinced he will
win.
And, he indicated, whether Hattaway
seeks the seat won't be a deciding factor
one way or the other. "If Seminole
County gets a Senate seat tn Ihe re a p
portlonment, Hattaway and I may be
running against each other," Brantley
said.
Hattaway, in his fourth term in the
House, snd Brantley in his second term,
haven't been the best of friends. Not only
do (hey belong to different political
parties, their personalities clash
frequently.
In the I960 elections, Brantley blamed

Parties &amp;
Polities
Daaaa Estes

Brantley laid privately that he had
been promised a turn at the he tin of the
delegation which Is evenly split with two
Democrats and two Republicans. The
basis for Brantley's challenge to Hattaway’s leadership was his contention
(hat House members from Brevard
County also should be members of the
Seminole group. Tiny precinct 7A in
- G J s i l u i l i H t t t fk-c i rpcv»*ituiUVes Win)

Hattaway for encouraging Put South­
ward, former Lake Mary city coun­
cilman, to run against him. By bring tied
up In an opposed re-election campaign,
Brantley was unable lo step into a
leadership position in Ihe 1960 Reagan
presidential campaign. Despite Mrs.
Southward's hard fought campaign,
waged will. or without Hattawsy's
support, Brantley won by a landslide.
Some political observers felt that
Brantley's opposition to Hattawsy's reelection early this year to the chair­
manship of ihe Seminole County
legislative delegation was, al lease In
part, retaliation for Ihe Hattaway ac­
tivity.

live in Brevard County,
Haltaway said that he really hasn't
made up his mind which political seat be
will seek in 1963. It could be ■ Senate
post, the new congressional teal to be
forged out in Central Florida or he could
run for h it current Houae seat.
"It'a a little early to be talking about
reapportionment now," Hattaway laid.
"There are loo many other things to
worry about— such as roads, education
and transportation," he said. After the
1961 session ends in June, re a p
portionment will be taken up, he said.
While the reapportionment committee
haa not been appointed as yet, Hattaway
laid he has every reason to believe he
will be a member of the committee,

especially for reapportlomncnt of
congressional districts.
"I'll be playing a key role,” he said. "I
want to make sure Seminole County Is
pot carved up as it was in 1970.
Seminole currently has a population of
179,900, up 114 percent from the 1970
census of 83,000, Hattaway said "This is
tremendous growth. If I am on th*_
" feapporlidntiwnt committee I can make
sure that we have a Senate seat and
Seminole could end up with two House
scata as well.
Currently, Hatiaway's district Includes
an Orange County precinct while
Brantley's includes lake County and a
portion of Marlon. In the Senate,
Seminole shares two legislators— Clark
Maxwell, R-Melbourne and John Vogt, DCocos Beach— with Brevard. Osceola
and Seminole.
"Certainly we will have on« Senate
seat. That seat may be shared with
Orange rather thaq Brevard, because
"we have much more tn common with
Orange," Hattaway said.
Al the same lime Brevard might have
a Senate seat of Ha own and there la a

possibility that Vogt and Maxwell will be
pitted against one another for that seat.

D emocratic nomination only to be
defeated in the general election.

"Vogt and Maxwell could be looking at
each other for the Senate," Hattaway
said. Brantley said Vogt and Maxwell,
despite a difference in political
philosophy, are good personal friends.

Hattaway said McCollum "is certainly
going to have to improve as a
congressman or someone is going to run
against him. I don't see how he could be
gerrymandered oul of office. That's
tw U lnlx ~ a I- - - jg M «
Branlley said that currently both Ihe
Houae and the Senate are looking at the
possibility of scheduling Ihe 1913
legislative session to trgln In late
January or early February rather than in
April as is the practice now. The purpose,
Brantley said, Is to complete ap­
portionment early to give candidates
additional time to prepare their cam ­
paigns.

Anolhwr n o n lM U ty .le _ * h j—
portionm ent Is that seven-term
Democrat, U S Rep. Bill Chappell's
district will be recarved to permit State
Rep. Sam Bell, Huuvr majority lewder
from Daytona, to oppose the Incumbent.
Brantley said lit* talk tn Tallahassee Is
that a major effort will be made by the
Democrats to district freshman. U.S.
Rep. Bill McCollum, elected only last
November, out of office.
Brantley said the purpose would be to
give State Rep. Dick Batchelor, DOrlando, a clear field in seeking the
congressional seat. Batchelor Iasi year
announced his candidacy for the seat,
now field by McCollum, but withdrew
before the Democratic prim ary to
support David Best. Best won the

Seminole County Administrator Roger
Neiswender has been elected secretarytreasurer of the Florida Association of
County Administrative Officers.
The Florida 5th District Court of
Appeal wlli be holding a three-day
session in Sanford from June 29-July I.
Their session is to be held at the Sanford
City Commission Chambers

-------------------------- OUR READERS WRITE------------------'Head Walking Talkin' Chiles North To Mason-Dixon Line'
In reference to "Talkin' Lawton
Chiles (April 36) in which the writer
asks all doubting Thomases out there to
check Chiles' record good without a
chip on your shoulder. 1 would like to
respond tx&lt; as a Thomas but u a
concerned citizen. I don't have a chip on
my shoulder but 1 do have s splinter in
my heart for the sad position we find
our country in. Let's do check the
recced snd determine whether or not
Senator Chiles has done us good or not.
I well remember such disturbing
events that makes roe wish far the day I
can cast my vota lo rid the Stele of
Florida of Senator Chiles and Ms
politics] ahenanagbu.
First we witness Senator Chiles
voting to impose a complete blockade
on the then Democratic and Christian
nation of Rhodesia thereby cutting off
th e impertaiioo of high grade chromate
ore which la rilaCy needed in our
Military weaponry. We were then
forced lo purchase an Inferior grade of
Chromite from Russia at a higher
price. Where is Rhodesia, our proud
and Christian ally is aS cur recent
wars, obliterated because of such as
Senator Chiles.
Next we observe the record end again
- T lX ?-' —

without a chip on our shoulder but with
further shame we witch Senator Chiles
In his action on the Panama Canal
issue. My letter of protest against
giving away the Panama Canal was
among 12,000-15,000 letters handcarried into Senators Chiles' and
form er Sen.
R ichard
Stone's
Washington offices by a committee of
concerned citizens headed by Rufus
Shackleford, one of Florida’s out­
standing businessmen and pair lots,
asking that they vote against giving
away the Panama Canal.
I may add that a Congressional
Medal of Honor winner was also ■
member of that committee. Senator
Chiles ard Senator Stone voted for the
give-away. Mr. Stone paid for his
double-crossing and Mr. Chiles will rue
ihe day.
My advice is that we chip in and buy
Walking Talkin’ Chiles a pair of tennis
shoes and a walking cam , head him in
the direction of Tallahassee w hen he
can pick up 'T e x G raham " where
some good patriot can head them north
to the Mason-Dixon line via Plains, Ga.
When they puss over the line, take away
their compass.
Come soon election d a y , this

disgusted veteran can hardly wait.
Bonner L Carter
Sanford

A Rais© F o r C a ro le ?
I wish to repress my appreciation for
ths professional service | have received
time and time again from Carole
Klrchhoff,'
In my day-today work tn real estate
business I am constantly on Ihe
telephone talking with the multitude of
government agencies to find .out what
can be or must be done to develop a
parcel of real estate. Over the y tari 1
have found that Ihe "government
employee" can either make your life
totally miserable or m ike you feel like
you are on “cloud nine." Once you deal
with a professional, it is very difficult to
tolerate someone who is Incompetent,
or who docs not care.
Carole Klrchhoff is s dedicated
professional who goes beyond the call of
duty in dealing with the public.
Seminole county should be very proud
of her. (Mrs. Kirchhoff is unplojed in
the county property appraiser's office 1
I sincerely hope that when
promotion and p a / raises become

available, that Mrs. Kirchhoffs name
is on the top of the list for those in
consideration.
Georgs H. Kendrick
Realtor

Handicap Parking
I am a handicapped person that
requires a w heelchair for tra n ­
sportation. I complied to the Florida
lews and obtained a Handicapped
Parking Permit. This permit allows me
lo park in Handicapped Parking.
Evidently there are people who are
unaware of this.
A woman approached my car and
actually challenged the fart that 1 was
handicapped because I did ntf have a
wheelchair sticker. Even after showing
her rr,y identification card snd having
her look at my license plate with the
permit, the woman still did not believe
that 1 was handicapped and insisted I
move my car from the handicapped
spot.
I rvalue that liar re are propie who are
ignorant of some of Ihe Florida laws but
I feel U these people are going oul and
pretending they are policemen, they

should first find out what the laws are.
Of course the reason for her being so
mad could have been that I w u parked
in the spot she always used arid this
time she had to walk a little further.
Name withheld
on request

P la u d its For Police

named above performance and further
the others who assisted, I felt com­
pelled to publicly compliment them and
their respective departments, and to
again, thank them and their depart­
ments; since in this day and age, most
unfortunately, compliments are Ihe
exception and too often criticism is the
rule.
JackT. Bridge.'
Sanford

In this age of continuous turmoil snd
criticism. 1 for one feel that when a
compliment is deserving it should be
given.
On April 30,1961 a person attempted
to steal and m atch a purse from my law
office and when I snd my associate
gave pursuit, my office staff Im­
mediately ceiled the Sanford Police
Department. Literally within seconds,
Officers Miae Analey and Tony Brooks
were on the scene and in pursuit, snd
furthermore, Deputy Eddie Hughes,
though off duty, saw me running and
gave able assistance tn the ap­
prehension of the person.
The txAlom line Is that the person was
caught within ■ scant few minutes and
being so impressed with the offleers',

P L E A S E W RITE
L e tttr t to the editor arc
welcomed for publication. AO letters
m utl be signed, with ■ mailing
address and, if possible, a telephone
number so the identity si the writer
may be vert fled. The Evening
Herald will respect the wishes ol
writers who de sot wool their asm es
In print. The Evening Herald also
j reserves the right la edit letters to
eliminate libel or U conform to
space requirements.

------

I

�%

(A—Evading Heestdl tantord. PL

Sunday, May to, 1*11

A M E R IC A S FAMILY DRU G STO RE

EJERGIZER

ORCHIDS
TO MUMS

Iff inR In a hospital may not hr Ihr best way to sprnd Mother's Day, but at
least womrn patients at Seminole Memorial Hospital in Sanford will he
rem rm brrrd. Cach will be presented with a Vanda orchid, shown brlnR
unpacked by hospital employees Mary t'ohoon (left) and Frances Samuels.
The orchids were flown In from Hawaii for the special occasion.

PEOPLE
IN BRIEF
A ro u n d N ew York:
Singers, Actors, Writers
Singer Ella Fltxgernld look part in a gala benefil to raise
funds for the Animal Medical C en ter. . .Novelist Lcn
Doighton la In town promoting his new thriller, "XPD"...Roy Acult and Tammy Wynette wl'l appear In a Wild
Turkey Festival of Country Music at Carnegie Hall May
13 . . .Actress Colleen Dewhurst la turning director for the
first time, for an off-Boardway ahow called "Ned And
Jack." about Ned Shelton and John Barrymore set on the
1922 opening night of B arry m o re's Broadway
"Hamlet" . . Composer Aaron Copland was honored at a
"Halleluiah Party" marking 33 y e a n of tiracU independence.

RIGHT 110
GUARD

EXCEDRIN
TABLETS

SOLID
DEODORANT

98

BOTTLE
OF100 .

’M A S H ' O n The Move
Burt Metcalfe, executive producer of "M-A-S-H," is off to
Korea to get his first look st the wartime setting of the
popular comedy series. "I want to talk to s i many people —
both civilian and military - as possible and get the feel of
the people and location for story Ideas on our 10th season."
he said. Meanwhile, "M-A-S-H" star Alan Alda Is louring
the country promoting a movie and a book, Harry Morgan
la visiting Fiji and Australia for a "Love Boat" episode,
Loretta Swit is In Canada, and Jamie F arr (Klinger) la
learning to ride a motorcycle for a TV movie.

Priced . . .

JOVANTOUCHE

WITH EXTRA VITAM IN C

t.s -o u N c e

SPRAY COLOGNE

088

MONDAY, MAY 11
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS
Submarine Sandwich
Spinach
Celery and
Carrot Sticks
Juice Bar
Milk
MIDDLESCHOOLS
Submarine Sand Mich
Cheeseburger
Spinach
Carrot and
Celery Sticks
Potato Rounds
Juke Bar
MUk or Shake
SENIOR HIGH
Submarine Sandwich
Cheeseburger
Spinach
Carrot and
Celery Stkks
Potato Kuundi
Juke Bar
Milk nr Shake
EXPRESS
Submarine Saudwich
Cheeseburger
Carrot aud
Celery Sticks
Ju k e Bar
Milner Shane
TUESDAY, MAY «
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS
Ground Beef
I M anagrn Choke)
Whale Potatoes
Lettuce Wedge
Fresh Fruit
Milk

MIDDLE SCHOOLS
Ground Brel
l M anagm Choice)
Frank on Run
Whole Potatoes
lettuce Wedges
Mixed Vegetables
Fresh Fruit
Milk or Shake
SENIOR HIGH
Ground Beef
I M anagrn Choke i
Frank on Bun
Tuna Salad
Sandwich
Whole Potatoes
lettuce Wedges
Mixrd Vegetables
Fresh t rull
Slilk or Shake
EXPRESS
Frank on Bun
Tuua Salad
Sandwich
French Fries
Fresh Fruit
Orange Jake
StUk or Shake
WEDNESDAY, MAY II
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS
Turkey Pie
Mashed Potatoes
Tomato Wrdges
Firvli Tangerine
Cherry Cobbler
MUk
MIDDI.E SCHOOLS
Turkey Pie
Cheeseburger
.Mashed Potatoes
Tomato Wedges
Broccoli
Fresh Tangerines

Cherry Cobbler
Milk or Shake
SENIOR HIGH
Turkey Pie
Cheeseburger
Submarine Sandwich
Stashed Potatoes
Tomato Wedges
Broccoli
Fresh Tangerine
Cherry Cobbler
Milk or Shake
EXPRESS
Submarine Sandwich
Cheetehurgtr
Potatoes Rounds
Fresh Tangerines
Orange Ju k e
Milk or Shake
THURSDAY, MAY It
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS
Kish Sandwich
Macaroni A Cheese
Turnip*
Canned Peaches
StUk
MIDDLE SCHOOLS
Fisk Sandwich
Hamburger on Run
Macaroni A Cheese
Turnip Greens
Tossed Salad
Slewed Tomatoes
Canned Peaches
Milk or Shake
SENIOR HIGH
FUb Sandwich
Tuua Sandwich
Hamburger on Bun
Macaroni A Cheese
Turnop Greeni

Totted Salad
Slewed Tomatoes
Canard Peaches
Milk or Shake
EXPRESS
FlxhSaadwkh
Hamburger on Bun
Frank on Bun
Teased Salad
Fresh Fruit
Orange Ju k e
Milk or Shake
FRIDAY, MAY IS
(hen Baked Chkkcn
Whipped Potatoes
Green Pros
Fresh Apple
MUk

B A R -B -Q U E

SNEAKERS

GRILL

G

8

1■ I N C H

8

Regular M l

NO. 9313

MIDDLESCHOOLS
Baked Chkken
Fish Sandwich
Whipped Potatoes
Green Peas
Corn
Fresh Apple
Milk or Shake
SENIOR HIGH
Raked thicken
Fish Sandwich
Frank on Bun
Whipped Potatoes
Green Peas
Cent
Fresh Apple
Milk or Shake
EXPRESS
Frank on Bun
Flih Sandwich
French Fries
Fresh Fruit
Orange Juice
MUk or Shake

32-QUART
IC EC H ES T

LADIES’ SHORTS
orTANKTOPS
Regular 4.ft
088

Regular 17.f t
I yi
Save 3.11 ........ | " f

■ave 1.11 ............. O

w//A

Heavy duty polyethy
lone. Hinged lid.

Assorted colors &amp;sizes

M EGUIAR’S POLY S E A L A N T l

C A R PETFR ES H
RUG &amp; ROOM
DEODORIZER

W1IN API ClAl n ia A TI O H M ’

Regular 9.M

14-OUNC8
H 5 9
R e g u la r1 .lt........... |j

' Sprinkle oh AVacuum.~
Limit 1

RAID

¥
V J

Choiceof 14-oz. paste
or 16-oz. liquid.
• C M ftP t
M llM t C I
_ t WWWMO»W —
" MAIL IN nca ATI
FINAL C O M
A F T IA M O A tl

r
-----J

PVCSURF
RIDER

C R A C K A C R E V IC E

SPRAY
a a n n
J v o

W i4 S “

r

Regular I M S

w M ■ave TOO ............. mm
W//A

S a v a 1.11

Adjustable nozzle.
Limit 2

U

................ O

C a n v a s.
W ra p a ro u n d rope

CUT &amp; FIT
FILTERS
nog

a

I n t l - M ..............
E n a m e l tire bowl.

A sso rte d s i r e s

VALIANT

2/QQC

• f a s .......... FOR O

a**r

A great gift for Mom.
Limit 1

WOMEN’S BAL

11-OUNCC
Regula’ 3.SS

m q q

Reguler 5 00
S ev el.0 1 ................W

Children's chewable vita­
mins. Limit 1

9

V

FLINTSTONES
VITAMINS
S e le P r k e d ............... m *

Drivers Sought For Therapy Patients

QQC

Sale P ric e d ......... V

Choose Regular or
Extra-Body. Limit 1

•tegular a .M

School M enus

CONDITIONER
r-o u N ce

Microsmooth twin blade
cartridges. Limit 1

BOTTLE OF SO

4 !d m

Used for toys,
radios &amp;calculators.

SM ALL MIRACLE

GdeUo

S ilt P riced.............
riced ............

When Celia Johnson and Trevor Howard last met. it was a
"Brief Encounter” In the 190 film by the same name. Now
they've been reunited for ttu PBS Great Performances
drama "Staying O n," to air May 11, and Miss Johnson calls
the reunion "very Jolly." "We just hadn't met
professionally because he's done films more and I’ve done
theater more," Misa Johnson told UP1. "No. we haven’t
reminisced much about the past — we were too busy
thinking about the present." Their lateat drama is another
otfbeat, tad love story, this lime about a lonely British
mu pie In India.

3.7?’

Deodorant bath
soap. Limit 3

2 types. Limit 1

G ILLETTE ATRA
CARTRIDGES
PACK
OF 10
PACKOFIO
039

Jolly G o o d Shows

pool list, Mrs. Clara l-ee, another volunteer from Sanford, calls
(hem on a rotating basis to transport patients.
Mrs. I&gt;ee, 82, of H02 Oak Ave . Sanford, became involved as
a “ caller" in the program In August, 1978.
While attending an AAKP (American Association of Retired
Persons) meeting, she responded to a rail for volunteers to
telephone car-poolers. A resident of the Sanford and Enter­
prise area for the past 17 yean, she found telephoning a way
to help people.
"The patients appreciate the help from the drivers,” the
said. " I’ve enjoyed doing this work. Many drivers have had
cancer patients In their own families and know how much their
assistance Is needed," Mrs. Lee said.
Mrs. Cochrane said volunteers are the llla-bjood nf the
cancer society, " file society could not e ilst without Its
volunteers,” she said.
Contributions now being relumed a rt to the Sanford Cancer
Society office by the m art than 700 volunteers from throughout
Semlnnl* who sought funds door-to-door during April, Cancer
Crusade month.
The resulting contributions are to be used for educational
needs. The goal for 1981, Is MO,500, she sakL - DONNA ESTES

5 3/100

■

nave 1,11 ...............V

The Cancer Sodety In Seminole, which recently completed
Its drive for educations! fundi, Is now looking for volunteer
driven who can transport cancer patients to Orlando for
radiation therapy.
Mary Jo Cochrane, secretary In the Seminole County office
at 202 Oak Ave., said a week seldom goes by when some patient
does not need transportation (or radiation treatment.
The major qualification for a volunteer ilrlver Is that he or
she be ■ "caring" person.
The only two places In the area where cancer patients can
receive radiation therspy, Mrs. Cochrane said, Is at Florida
Hospital Orlando and the Orlando Regional Medical Center.
Hadlatlon therapy It usually done In o 20-treatment serie sfive times a week for four weeks.
******
lifwi
tpw A h w l
H
very difficult for them to drive themselves," she said. "Most of
the time the patients are Just recuperating from surgery."
If the volunteer drivers request It, the society can help with
the cost of their gasoline, Mis. Cochrane sakl.
"We don’t pretend to pay all their expenses, but we can
help," she said.
Alter volunteer drivers have their namea placed on the car

BATH SOAP

V;or
119
S als

Extra strength an
algesic tablets.
Limit 1

ENERGIZER
“ AA”
BATTERIES

DIAL

O

Save 1 0 0

Ready to cu* to your own
specifications. Limit 2

GALAXY 12”
FLOOR
FAN

No.

31S3
Rag.
29.99

Quiet motor A balan­
ced blades. Remov­
able grill for cleaning

TRAVEL IRON
Regular 7.91
C99
......... . . W

Detachable 8’cord &amp;fold
ing handle.

5” x 7” PHOTO
ENLARGEMENT
!

Q Q C
•ala P ric e d ..........W

W

j Just bring In your favorite
color print negative.
C oupon Good Thru
yod . May 13. 1981
V -----------------------COUPON

i f

W m r

ADULTS
SAVE
* 2 .0 0

AGES
1 I

SAVE
1 .0 0

COUPONS
AVAILAOLE AT.

The N e w

CYPRESS
GARDENS
Onset dally, only 30 mlnuloo horn
Oltnsy World oh UB 27 at
■tale Road S40 Waal.

O P E N D A IL Y 9 to 9 ,
S U N D A Y

1 0

to

7

S a te P r ic e s g o o d th r i
W ed n e sd a y ,

M ay

13t

We reserve the right to limit quan

�SPORTS
Evening Herald, San*ord, FI.

Sunday, May II. m i —7A

W alke r W h ip s SC C 4-1

Chipola Dead Ends Raiders
By BENTON WOOD
Herald Sports Writer
The SCC baseball crew ran Into a
dead end Friday afternoon.
After fading In the opener of the Hat*
JuCo toumamenf In Lakeland Wed­
nesday, the Raiders w en faced with a
long road home. But Chlpola pitcher Vic
Walker aet up the roadblock with a four
hitter as they dumped Seminole 4-1.
Walker, who was backed with a pair of
runs In the third, ant In the fourth and
one In th e sixth, w u never In serious
trouble. The Raiders w en held hlUest
until ■ Bob McCuDough single In the fifth,
and they w en haunted with thret
Chlpola double plays. They end the year
at 3511.
"This was the only game that we didn't
come back In, "losing coach Jack
Pan te Has said.

Dan Odgen led off the third with an
Infield hit off losing Seminole hurler John
Thompaon. Three more singles In the
Inning ended Thompeon’s afternoon and
gave Chlpola a two run lead that was
never In Jeopardy.
Second baseman Jim Jagnow led off
the fourth and sixth Innings with a pair of
triples Into (he right field comer which
eventually resulted In the other two
Chlpola runs.
The Raiders avoided a shutout In the
bottom of the sixth. Center fielder Tony
Beal started the Inning by working
Walker from an M count to a base on
balls. Jeff Blanton followed with a
chopper over first baM for a aingle to put
runners at the comers. Third baseman
Vince Riva hit Into a fielders choice to

lured catcher Jimmy Mee Into an Inning
ending double play.
The Raiders best shot at a big inning
was In the fifth. After McCullough led off
with a grounder up tl* middle for the
first hit off Walker, he w u gunned down
trying to steal second.
However, designated h itte r Tom
Clarke followed with a bloop single over
short and Mike Ripa walked, and Instead
oi having the bases Jammed with no ora
out, Seminole h id runners at tin t and
second with one down.
SCC couldn't manage a run u right
fielder Jeff O'Dell popped out and second
baseman Bob Parker fouled out down the
third base line to end the Inning.
Pete Kutsukoe worked the final six and
one-third Inn'ngi on the mound for
Seminole allowing Just two runs on tlx
hits. But Walker held the Raiders to an

O'Dell Infield hit over the final three
frames.
"Finishing fifth In (he state isn't bad
for a rinky-dlnk school," Pantellaa said.
"We’ll be back nest year."
Valencia remained alive Friday af­
ternoon by edging Florida J.C. 44, Ken
Joiner and Jim Ople had aolo home runs
for the Matadors while former Lyman
pitcher Jeff Kerr picked up the win
working six Innings and allowing two
earned runs.

Cklpsla
U m ln il,
* P - WalSof. I P -

00} 101 00 , -4 u i
000 001 000-1 4 I
T hom son

Ft* e m i t ,
JOO 000 110-1 1 I
Valencia
101 OM 000-4 It 1
WP - Karr. L P — Sot*

H oran Pkoto kr T im VIMifll

HAY WILLIAMS
. . . s t a i r sh o t p u t c h a m p

Tommy Clarke rips an inside fastball during SCC's 4*1 loss to Chlpola.

Bob Parker takes a cut,

Celery City Printing Co. Crabs Top Soccer Spot
and Winter Park (004) 3-1. Jason
When youYe averaging almost five Saturday.
In other “B" division play, Sanford's Helmsdollsr tallied the tone (001) goal
goals per game—It's safe to assume
Age 11 and Under
Burger King came away with a tie and a
something la going right.
Sanford's Boatworka dumped Maitland
And for Sanford's Celery City Printing lota in two games. College Park trinped
Co. 14 and under "B" division soccer Burger King 1-1, but Raymond Fosse 3-1 In "8 " division play u Shea
team, the goats have paid off for "going booted a penalty kick to salvage a 1-1 Whigham, Danny Rowe and Danny
deadlock with Maitland (MO).
Bacbrach each booted goals. Carry
right" into first place.
Age II and Under
Smith, Chan Tyre, Tim Deppen and
In the pest two weeks, Celery City has
Sanford's D ell'i Auction handed Brantley Robert led the defensive
knocked oil Pine Hills—to avenge Ila only
lo ti of the year M -a n d then blanked P. Winter Park (OH) a 14 setback u Greg charge.
C. United (400) 34 to take over the top Dean scored a first half goat and the
Despite three second half goals a week
spot In the Central Florida Soccer Auction defense made It stand up. A week earlier, Boatworka lost to Winter Park
earlier, Tim Walsdnen's second-half goal (203) 5-3. Matt Albert tallied twice and
League.
_ J * ta L * - k U k - * !ih M iW srf (I?!).
In the Pine |firia JhrilW ._
Mike Kenaud once for Sanford.
Dona van Tucker had ■ standout game Bachrack, Lance Broderick and
Richards turned In an unassisted goal In
the tin t half and then assisted Steve In the net for Dali's holding (he un­ Waisdnen were defensive stalwarts.
Sapp for the deciding goal in the second defeated Maitland squad to Just the ora Boatworka Is 4-3-1. They boat Pine Hills
half. Tom Chemestky w u also credited goals. 44-1 Dell's Auction plays Pine Saturday al the Airport.
Hills Saturday at the Airport
swith en assist
In other "B" division action. Rich Plan
Despite three second-hall goals from
la s t Saturday, the RichardtSapp duo
of Florida tied Winter Park 34 and lost to
Chuk
Roll,
Sanford's
New
Smyrna
again did In United. Richards turned In
Pine Hills (-1 to drop to 3-4-1 far the
two unassisted goals and also setup Sapp Speedway dropped a 7-3 "B " division
contest to Maitland (OM). Phil Cat had season.
for his boot. Celrry City Is 5-1-1.
Sheldon Richards scored both Rich
one assist. Charlie Butler and sweeper
Age Eight sad Under
Plan goals. Eddie Chaplin assisted on one
Mike
Aldier
turned
in
solid
games
for
Sanford's E liman Battery broke Into
goaL
the victory column last Saturday with a SNSS.
A week prior, Winter Park blanked the
In a "C“ division matchup, Nicky
M nipping of Maitland (Ml). After a
scoreless first half, Trivia Grover and Speedway 1-0.(011) Is M on the year and Paatia and Kim Machnic each booted
Jam ar Thomas banged home second plays F. C. United Saturday at the Air­ goals to give Sanford’s Kiwanis a 3-1
standoff with Downtown Orlando. Damon
period goals for Ellman. The Battery is 1- port .
In "C*' division action Sanfud'a (001) Tackett olaycd super defensively for 14I in "B" division action. They play
Southeast Orange at the A irport dropped a pair of games to Maitland 0-1 1 Klwsnls.

Age II end Under
Sanford's Joe CYesmons w u blanked
by Seminole (M l) 34 despite John
Fredricks shulout-goalls keeping In the
second half.
"Andy Wsrren played good defense
and midfielder Jay Sapp turned In a go d
game," said Creamona' Coach Steve
Gilmore. Creamona Is 1-7 and hosts
Msltlsnd Saturday at the Airport

W illiam s 60’/*
State Cham p
The Lion strongman has not
lost a match all yearenrouteto
the state's best. No one In 4A
has beaten Williams cither. The
4A state meet takes place
Saturday at Showalter Field.
Emory Blake's Seminole
The monstrous Williams thus girls are figured to finish in the
became the first shot putter in top five, which would be the
Florida this year to reach the best girls showing ever for
Seminole High School.
coveted 60-foot mark.
Oviedo's Hay Williams
reached down into his massive
26(Fpound body and came up
wilh a tremendous 601* effort
Friday to capture the 3A State
Shot Put Championship.

It Sounded Like Thunder.' Lim hJCilis G o l l
Spectator A t Byron N elson C lassic Friday
DALLAS t UP1) —Ora spectator exiled
II something oul of * movie xuddenty,
without wxmlng a giant tree Umb fell on
a crowd and no one could move to help.
"K sounded like thunder," laid Shane
Foi, 31, of the freak accident that killed a
golf fan Friday at the Byron Nelaon

Cludc.
Three other people were taken to
hospital* (or treatm ent while aeveral
other* received lacerations and bruises
In the first fatal accident during a PGA
tournament In almost 30 years.
A small knot of spectators had
gathered Friday morning under a giant

oak next to the third green of the Preston
Trail Golf Club course to watch the
threesome of Gene Utller, Charles Coody
and Pete Brown.
"There w u just a small group of
people, but when It itarted cracking
everybody started yelling. Look out,
look out,’" said Fox, who caddied for
Coody seven years ago and w u walking
with the threesome.
"You Just couldn't believe It w u
happening. It w u like something out of a
movie."
The 14-foot Umb broke loose from the
oak tree and, with no warning, fell 40 feet

onto the group below. Offtctall speculat­
ed II may have been weakened by a
violent wind and rainstorm that swept
through the area Just before dawn
Friday.
John Oils Clark, 43, oi Grandview, Mo.,
w u dead on arrival al Presbyterian Hos­
pital.
Clark's nephew, George Dahm, 33, of
Plano, T e x u , w u standing next to hia
unci* when the accident occurred.
"Somehow t managed to Jump Into a
sand trap and get out of It," u ld Dahm.
“There w u a large crack and everyone
started scram bling."

Sonford Junior League

Knights Trip

KiFor Title

Knights of Columbus nipped Kiwanis
4-4 Friday lo win the first half cham­
pionship In the Sanford Junior League.
It w u the ninth win without a loss for
Coach Alvis Whltted's team.
Fred Miller won his fifth game,
hurling a ihrye-hllter.
Rotary rallied for seven runs after
two outs In the top of the t u t Inning and
topped Masters Cove Apartments 10-4
in Friday's other game.
Kiwanis scored two runt without a hit
In the bottom of the first to take the
early lead. Knights of Columbus picked

Both teams scored once In the
seventh.

op an unearned run In the second and
then look the lead wilh four runs In the

Landress and Uggons had two Mia
apiece for thewtnners.

top of the third.
Brian Ashcraft led off the third with a
double and Glenn Landress blasted a
two-run homer that cleared the 310-foot
center Bell fence. Lee Fredrick singled
with one out and scored on a double by
William Carr. Carr scored the fourth
run of the Inning on a single by Theron
Uggons.
Kiwanis picked up Its third run In the
bottom of the fifth when Brian Dcboee
followed a two-out walk with a double.

Rotary w u trailing 44 going into the
last Inning. Mike Holcomb led off the
Inning with a walk, but the next two
battars went down swinging as
Holcomb stole second and went lo third
on a passed ball. Phi) Harris rapped a
single that scored Holcomb with the
tying run and moved up to second on a
passed hall. Darryl Taylor singled to
drive home Harris with what proved to
be the winning run. Joey Evans and
Holcomb also had an RBI singles In the
Inning.
Hunter Gividen was (he winning
pitcher, allowing just three hits while
striking out 11

Evans had (wo hits for the winners,
while Mike Cameron had a pair of hila
for the loser*
■CMakisatCaMmkos si* ooo »— a » &gt;
Kiwams

m oto i— * i i

W»* - Frau Miller (101 LO — tru e *
F ra n k lin i l l )
Milieus
K nigM t a t
Columbus - O larni Lanoress 1 1 horn* run.
Tear on L-goons I X Bilan A shiran I ]
Savoie. W illiam C arr 1 ] daub'*. Laa
F re a rk k I *&gt; K la e n it — Brian Oobost I )
•ru b le, D oilor Franklin 1 1, B rvta Fronklln
I J.
■ alary
ICO 001 I —TO 4 1
M ai tors Cava Aafs.
loi 000 * - a s j
WP - Mur*or Oloieon 11*1 LP — Lorry
Iham aa (041 M i t t e n s Ralar* - Jaoy
Evans ] a. Mika K akam b I t, Darryl Tartar
I ) . H unltr OirMen 1 4 Pull Morris 1 *,
M asters Co*# * 0 ts — Lorry Tkamas I I
triple, Mika Comoran j a

Clem Leonard Shell Pounds Kern's G arage

Kevin Smiih o f Kiwanis lo o s e n s u p

Clem Leonard SheU pounded Ken
Kern's Garage 114 Friday to move into
•ole possession ol first place in tie
Sanford Pee Wee League with a 34
record.
The winners collected nine hits
enroute lo the win, including a triple
and single by Michael Merthie and a

pair of singles by winning pitcher Bill
Shew.
Shaw and Merthie pitched two In­
nings apiece and allowed Just one hit, a
single by Scott Lewis in the first Inning.
The highlight of the game for Ken
Kern's Garage came In the lop of the
fourth when It pulled a triple play after

Clun Leonard Shell had loaded the
bases and had the lop of its order al the
plate,
Brian Grayson, Michael Cooper and
Bruce Taylor led off ihe fourth with
consecutive tingles. Michael Taylor
then lined out to Ihe lin t baseman, who
stepped on first to double off Bruce

Taylor. Grayson wu caught off third
for the final out.
Clam LaanarS tb a ll
LO 4 - 1 ) o 1
Mao k o ra 's O araaa
Ml » - | | a
WP - Bin Shaw LP - M ilk Armamti
M l t r e a s Clam LaanarS Shall — M kheet
M armia i S tr.pio. a m She* | X M kheet
Coopor l l, B rian O ra tio n 1 1. Michael
T*»ior ! I, jo tl Dorr 1 1. S ru cr t a r t a r I l i
a m Karri's o a ia s a - Scott L r « it l |.

�Seminole speedster Brett Von
lltrbulis (above left) ilklea
safely Into third base as Eau
Gallie's Phil Amlek awaits
throw . Above right "Von"
continues his tour of the bases
on an overthrow. At the right
Brett starts the downward slide
toward home plate and on the
far right he pops up with a run
and some dirty pants for Mrs.
Von Herbulis.
Htrald

Pkalai Sr Tam Vincent

Sweet Dreams' Seminoles Counting Days Until Next Year
Bobby Lundqulst must have been
haunted with nightmares earlier In the
spring. A J4 start is enough to give any
baaebaU coach night terrors. It looked
to be a long year far the Seminole
baseball crew.
The nightmares are guns now. But
the eveniigp will grow longer and
longer for the Tribe over the summer as
they count the days to next season.
You see, Sanford will return seven of
Its starting lineup that carried them to
the iA-4 district title last week. And
although they dropped a 23 decision to
Eau Cattle Tuesday night for the
Reglon-3 crown, one thing can be

Lundqulst brassed. “It'll give them
confidence that they can win the big
gam e.''
A four-run Commodore fourth Inning
Tuesday night put up the road block to
Sanford's comeback trail this year.
Isindquist actually believed he had (he
better teem, and he may hive been
right. But that's not the point,
The point Is. the Tribe will have IU
chance to prove It next year.
The Infield will be nlld with only a
gap to fUl st first base. Freddie Howard
came cnto Ms own lata tn the year after
lilting out the first half of the season
because of Ineligibility. He has all the

Iron and not just seen rest year.
“Winning the district has got to be a
tremendous booat for next year.”

arm, a solid stick *nd ribbll-bke
quickness,
The stats speak for Tracy Walker. A

Benton

I

W ood
Herald Sports Writer
.307 regular season batting average
with 13 runs batted in isn't too ihabby.
He was also tabbed as the second team,
all-Ftve Star shortstop.
A late-seasan change moved Brett
Von Herbulis behind the plate and Mike
llotundo to third base.
“We couldn't throw anyone out an we
” S i b i thnuga," Luadquiat MM
about switching Von Herbulis to cat­
cher. "He'll get used to It In time. He’s
our catcher for next year."

FERNANDO'S RUNAWAY

ROOKIES WAR

e ir n a n o o

Standings

AM
I

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Fan City

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The top three qualified for the Junior
National. Burris, however, captured
the rrown in fine fashion by pinning the
170 lb., 1A state champion tn :31.

Tf*c* utAA/rt r*e« me nx*r cic*

m il, M onlafvvo. BiaJlord It).
Camp (SI, Manly. (M l and
Seawdtrt w-Maniea II* ), L—
(■drg*
111)
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a tm I I). Atlanta, Hubbard

tctiniidi

The 170 pound Greyhound grappler
qualified for the Junior Nationals by
capturing the United States Wrestling
Federation title In hla weight class last
weekend In Dunedin.

C

VALENZUEL A ,

Giants 4, Expo* 2
Jim Wohllord and Bill North drove In a run apiece tn the
seventh to lift the Giants despite four stolen baeea by Expos'
rookie Tim Raines.
Reds 4, Astro* I
Tom Setver hit a two-run homer in support of hts 34th career
shutout Seaver, 3-1, outduelcd Don Sutton. 34, In picking up
his 341th major-league victory.
Breve* 4, Cub* 1
Glenn Hubbard hit hla first home run of the season wtth one
out In the bottom of the lllh. Rick Mahler pitched the final two
Innings for Atlanta to win hla first major-league decision.
ThlUk* 11, Pedros 7
Mike Schmidt drove In five runs with his ninth and 10th
homers of the year and Manny Trillo hit a three-run triple in a
five-run eighth.
Cardhals L Pirates 4
T un Herr, who leads the league In triple*, drove In two runs
with lot sixth triple of the year and Bob Shirley raised Ms
record to 44).
it t i.

Wrestling standout Jeff Burris ac­
cepted a scholarship to Phiefer College
In North Carolina, Lyman coach Skip
Pie tier said.

by Alan Mover

* /9 f / f * r n v £ '

t r UMttd F r a n IM arnaliantl
Manenel Ltatua
tan Fran
000 110 0 ) 0 - a II I

way off. But don't blame them if they
are day drtaming, because they don't
have to worry about nightm ares
anymore
Sweet dreams.

O f 7*£ £ 0 9 ARGUES P 0 D G E R 9 \ . \
H &amp; w f r fp o f f 4$ / f
in'* v

Valenzuela Unfurls Fifth Shutout
Raines Swipes Record Four Bases
UPI Sports Writer
Someone kiddingly asked Fernando Valensutla If he could
tall through his ma)cr-league career undefeated. With never a
pause he replied (through an Interpreter), "It would be very
difficult but not Impossible."
Despite walking more people than he ever has and giving up
a t many hits as he ever has In the big league*, Valentueli ran
hla record tn 7-0 Friday night by pitching the Lo* Angeles
Dodgers to a 1-0 victory over the New York Mats.
“in the first three Innings, I didn't have any control,”
Valensutla said. “I was hexing problems... Then I talked to
(pitching coach Ron) Perrsnoakl... I was mixing It u; very
weD after the third inning."
He certainly was. After stranding seven ru m e n In the first
three innings, he t Bowed Just four more baa* runners while
striking nut seven and walking Just one.
“This was the xstldaat I've ever seen him," said Los Angeles
Manager Tom Laeorda. "But he always seems to g tt the big
pitch xrhtn he needs I t I hate to keep saying It but this young
man la tremendous.''
It was Valcnxuela'a fifth shutout this season and lowered hla
league-leading ERA to 0.21.
ValenxueU has pitched nine full Innings tn all arven starts

There's no question that Von Herbulis a sophomore grow up fast.
Hill drew quick pratse from Eau
has the arm to handle the catching
chores He had a rough time catching Cattle coach Ken Campbell Tuesday
the bail the last two weeks behind the night. “He showed a lot of poiae out
plate, but he ha* until next February to there. He'll be tough the next two
years.”
solve that problem.
Even after Seminole's lousy start,
Alton Davis will return as a second
team, all conference outfielder with a they turned things around to finish tied
.303 mark during the regular season for third In the regular season district
standings (fifth in the conference). But
with 23 runs batted In.
Greg Register will probably find a next year look for Sanford to be In the
spot in the outfield next year. Limited Five-Star title chase.
"I think all the coaches agree that
to a designated hitter roVo most of the
year, Register swung a sweet stick winning the conference is the best in­
during the four post-eeason outings by dicator of who has the best ball club,"
tuindquist said last week. “We should
pounding five singles in 13 at bats.
i n e iruw HWuar nave a tough one- be tn pretty good shape when the season
two combination on the mound with a rolls around next year.”
seasoned Greg Hill and Walker. Over
Unfortunately tor Lundqulst and his
112 innings on the hill Is enough to make returning Seminoles, next year Li a long

1

UPI Sports Writer
Chicago Manager Tory LaRussa remembers the story of the
tortoise and the bare and Is hoping his White Sox xrill emulate
the tortoise and catch Billy Martin's Oakland A'a.
Relief pitchers Ed Farmer and Lamarr Hoyt are the basts
lor LaRussa's hopes.
It was Hoyt's turn to help bis team xrin Friday night In the
White Sox 1-3 defeat of Kansas City Royals.
Hoyt pitched four lnntngi of near-perfect baseball to earn hts
third save as Wayne Nordhagen hit a two-run homer tn s sixrun fourth Inning to more the White Sox Into third place, 7H
games behind Oakland in the AL WesL
“Both Hoyt and Farmer will be used tn pressure situations,”
URuxaa said "... they definitely compliment each other and
there is plenty of work for both of them.”
Mariners 2, Yankees 2
The Mariners won their third straight for new Manager Rene
U chem ann with rookie Bryan Clark, 2-0, pitching a xtx-hitter
to lift Seattle.
Red Sex 4, Blue Jey i 2
Glenn Hoffman stroked i tworun tingle and Tom Burgmeier
hurled 31-3 sparkling relief innings to notch hts third t a r t and
lead Boston.
Twins I, Indians 7
John Castino tingled tr. Sal Butera with two out In tha bottom
of the ninth Inning to give l)*&gt; Twins the victory.
T lg m I, Angels 1
Steve Kemp hit a tworun homer and Lou Whitaker added a
two-run tingle to pace the Tigers.
A's 2, B rrw rrt • '
Steve McCarty pitched a four-hitter for his fifth complete
game and second shutout to lead the A's. Mike CakhrtU. 3-3,
went Ute distance for Milwaukee, giving up seven hits.
HocOhegen 4S)
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�Evoniwg Herald, tonford. Ft.

RC. United Posts 36-4-4 Mark

Sundoy. May &gt;1.3WI-+A

Prog res so Gold Glitters Toward Texas Bullion
By SAM COOK
'Defensively, we /usf play
Herald Sport* Editor
j The realist that said, "everythin# that
much better soccer
glitters Isn't gold,” iparently never
meet Progresses F. C. United Gold
than anybody.'
soccer team.
Because this talented group of age 11
— Coach Pole K/nsfey
and under boys has glittered 3* times in
H outings this year going Into Saturday's
3:43 matchup with Seminole SO i t the
It made F C. United the first team in
Stromberg-Carlson Field. Four matches Central Florida ever to win a major cup.
srere tied.
The victory earned the Gold a trip to
F.C. United Gold has outacored the the southern Regional Tournament at
opposition a whopping 115-M en route to San Antonio, Tex. June 3,1 and 7, A
victory there would send them to the
three chamfltbnships this season.
One championship came in the Cape Nationals.
Cdral Invitational of SOteams Eleven of
As evidenced by the stingy goals-perwhich were in Progresses division which game average of one, the team Is built cn
they kicked their way through.
defenw "Defensively, wc just pUy
Another title came in their own tour­ much better soccer than anybody," said
nament — Progresso's F.C. United Coach Pete Kinsley, father of Peter the
Soccer Festival — held April II, 11 and midfielder.
Kinsley has teamed with le e Philips
U. The Ggld ran through teams from
United States and England for thig Sr. father of Jeff and Jerry to form a
crown.
solid team nucleus along with Dominic
The aforementioned championships Uicente, the team's third coach, whose
were only stepping stones, however, to son is John.
Kinsley, a former Casselberry
the "gold” that the Gold brought home
(C aaselberry, Altamonte Springs, Recreation Director, and Philips hsve
long wood and Eaatbrook) last Sunday. been working this "All In The Family”
Ilotlom row kneeling, from left to right, Progresso's F.C. United Championship
I P ro g raso captured the Florida State situation far the past four years.
Soccer Team, Alex Frangoulis, Peter Kinsley, John l.ucenle. Kric ('rail, Scott
I.ucente, who played keeper for
' Youth Soccer Association Championship
Kouolski, Doug Holmes and .Mike Moody. Standing in the back row are Jerryi 1-0 over a tough Coral Springs outfit In Argentina's World Cup team, has made
Philips. Todd Hamilton. Jimmy Guggenheim, Jeff Shlrkey, Jeff Philips, Bryan
the
trium
vente
complete.
; Tampa lor the Florida Cup.
Drore and Malt Beck.
"John laicente (left fullback) la a great
I The match went through two overtime
session* before midfielders Peter Kin­ man-to-m an defender," points nut
it was a defense that was already "two nujor defenders."
sley and Jeff Philips joined forward Jeff Kinsley. "And when we got Bryan Drore
10) were raised on socrer balls.
Jerry — Philips number 7 of the Casselberry's tattered softball fences
Shlrkey for a trio of penalty-kick goals in as a new addition. It helped solidify our pretty solid led by Jerry Philips and Scott
Kowolskl, who Kinsley calls Progresso's Identical twins — and brother Jeff (no have absorbed many a beating from the
defense."
the final session.

BOWL AMERICA SCORE SHEET

'John Lucenfe Is a great
man-to-man defender.'
— Pete Kinsley
%
"dynamic Duo" from Mark David A n .
Jerry P. is Kinsley's do-everything
fullback. When the game geta dow n to the
penalty kicka, Kinsley inserts Jerry In
th ejo al for keeper Todd Hamilton.
Hamilton, as the one-goai per game
avenge attesta, Is no slouch either, but
Kinsley can't pass on Philips' multi
talents. “He specialises tn the penalty
kick an he's very quick," said Kinsley.
The other Philips, Jeff. Joins young
Kinsley as midfielder* to control that
area of the game. The forwards a n
Shlrkey, Doug Hotmea, Jim m y
Guggenheim and Mike Moody.
Solid reserve strength Is provided by
Eric Craft, Alex Frangoulis and Matt
Beck rn the M-membcr squad.
Kinsley doesn't keep Individual
records and he feels that it's paid
dividends for his team. "If you em­
phasise goals, then they don't pass," said
the Springfield (Mass.) graduate.
“Some coaches say, TU give you a
nickel for an assist and a quarter for a
goal,' but we don't believe in that stuff,”
said Kinsley.
The "stuff” that Progresao believe* In
Is winning. The glittering kind.

GOODltYEAR

M&lt;Klbb*fl*nd M.k* Burk* 1*1 end
Harold I n 1*4
fa r id* ladles M ,rltm v*n
Duyn* MS, Loci* ****** 111
Metel Beudyr 1*1. Dulort* Bur**
It* R ow P i r i k t Its. F ram e s

Oi»n »"0 Barbara Kn*i*t It).

It Vrrn* Prfil J 10, T H P u d K I )
M H*l«n l*tPit*l ) II, Ruth Pour*
710. Ginn* M c tiIM n S o. Dot
B urhtnnt S 7. 1 1
■ ALL 4 CHAIM
St«no,ngt: D*mn*o II Wa Ctr*.
H.gh Roll***. Mu I n ’ t n . Moon
P&lt;*s. Bit* S I’.ecet Pin H i**,
All* Colt. Rog** * Dodgvri
High G*m«* C h flt Mull 777,
Srroni Hickson S* 707» Tom
T utont 171: Rog** Johnton 10*1
BoD S** It*. E rnie R..n&gt;on 70*.
Johnny L*wi|*nkit*r US Boo
Sivtc 17 Ij R letterd Holcomh is tj
Lvvonn* Drtnkwaftv i t ) , Out
W iton t o i , Peggy Moon I I I: torn*
Ticroru 110. Ann* i n it* Dr*

mart 1st: Fftnhie Vaufi#nhl*tr
U1

Owen St*)c 1*7. Ei*in* Kottl**l
III
Mign S*ri*v Ch*r* Huff I0)|
Roger Jennson MO G utt S**lon
&gt;00. Peggy M o n S)4 tool* Tic
coni 4I t i Clorn* K o t'i.tl 4*0
Star o» lh*
ton,* T.cionl
ft)
High Average* M*rk W htllrr
III. G ut i* iio n 170
BUCK'S LADIES
Mend ng* f i n i Place. Lambs*.
Second Rite*. N um bar On*. Third
p4ec*. tuck*'* c««*«
High Game* Peggy Towers, 111
High S*fl*»
M ard all Gon
l**m*n, S0», Ginn* Gaudreau. tot.
Ccmvrrrtd Split* SMfl«* But**!
S I M . H«l*n H trrlkon i f f ) Kim
Kllgo** 1 10, Glrni* Cooper ) M:
M ebel vog*l 1 7 10, C hartorr*
Budr* S I
Star or lh* Wr*k G led rt Do*i*
It)
WASHDAY DROPOUTS
Andy Patrick wa* the lop bonier
with • I I I 11101 then cam* Varna
Pohi It] 1S74I. Tad Foot* It), Bin
kw w i toa l i l t ) . L it id Miller l i t
Sam K ammakr *nd M*d Prichard
lit. Adrian Rot* I t) (Mat. Gordon
ta rn b and Jvd Light*** and Ol«
U««on lie. Phil Awgvtle and Al
Schuiti lit. j r r r r Loudon and
G*n* Ai**andrr IPS. Fr*d Wetron
t i t Jim A rroro 171, Harold P n
170. Tod P u c k tlt too. M at

DOGS
Super SemltteM
t*l Re-.e — H A C: IM S
7 Hi Ren*
1*0 1*0 7*0
I Me. Sin
* 70 7 00
S K 'l G rem lin
7*0
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li t — ra c e S i t B I Dodny
Oodad. 7 O S l Wl Greco: 7 L*
M art Ac*: 4 h ig h ' Scrupirs: S
Light Petrol: * Yorba Linda, 7
Sltm ltM SluO. • M .dwi» Elm.
2nd - race S i t D I K'l
(M irrors*: 1. B eetle* le siio t I
ProuO D t l l t : t . S tu g a n a tn
Wtutvy; S. In Action. I . Anrwan, 7.
Dollar Doubler: S Swanky Sitter
)rd - re t* S I t D I GE t Ur
chin: % U nmelchabi*. 7 O orun
A ltai* . 4 D r i f t D odge: I
Comanche Kid: t Jody R idler: 7.
PrViler Joanle: 0 K g Spoonful
4th — roc* M C I , A m a i B 'jck
ja c k : 1 Budget Bonus, 1. Twin
Effort. A K's Princes*. I. O E s
Gentle Jim : a CMOS Chow, 7.
Smoky Sneaker. I Seugewaih
Sin — r a c e s l* D I. Jad H t r t i
1. DR * ES Doea It. 1. PukTt: a
Butler UP. 1 Wm Coch **. a
Sundown F o rtu n e : 7 Q ua illy
Qua fie f, i Memorie: Jet Imp.
tth - ra c e S l* B I Do Be*
Alary. 5. D rita D a n . s w G T s i D a
T'a Judson. S aaorcedot Ben: a
Q uadran, 7. Coast to P e st; •
Party Sparklr
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tact S I* C .

LEADERS

I- Cion

Trurtl# tig h t* * * l i t . t u c l l l t
m archer It), M itu touoon, Mary
BeeHy end V el i#n Will** IU . Peg
Clegg IU ant) Matu» Pitnoud l if
Sours Con*rtl*d H a iti Bouev*
S ), fro n t* * Oiton * t It. Adrien
Rou t r i o . Hot** Bow0*r lO W
Trvdi* Light*** 1 17. 1*0 ro o t* 1
W. Ethel F »i*0 S t. Roth foot* t S
jin* A rroro t It. Dolor** Durt*
Mary
A ugusta
«nd
H«l*n
m m , n t t , ) it. and Wanda Row &gt;
Handing* a r t MooU t Curve*.
God Bell*. Viking*. S*a Symbol*
Hoi Short. M at* Up*, Pmch
P m . Shamrock*. Scan** P m i
Hill A M itW L Soap lud* H E W .
aii*» Car*. Splitter*. GoG*4i»r*.
Whit Kid*. Sunbirot. Drip Dr in .
Black Bu»l*r*. E 1 g o m

Come |oln our clearance celebration! I'm Sanford's
Goodyear Service Store Manager, and I've personally
selected our best money-saving buys on tires. And lols
more! Shop and save al the location listed below,

MOOSE (OWLIMO LflAOUE
Standing* jtm » Hi* 'N ‘ C elt.
t**1 Over* Luck* S u m . Sen*
R a id tr i, Dud*. Bull W in k lrt, i
Stampers. G amblers. Cool B ella
Epoch Mgml Monty b n . Horn*.
Harem Sc*r*m, Pour'* Company,
S » n n M * n - Lout* William*
71*. Louis Juens SSt. Jerry Couv.nl
S1L Glenn McCall 714. B R
Carroll *70. David RIChaed* lit.
John Younger* 44*
Woman- Carol G roat Tea Nil*
Johnton M . Cathy Appti 4SL
Snirlty Buliar 4*0. June Williams
is* w and* Hubbard 170. Lucy
H oagn ilO .T tm m r Can** 47*
Toni W lln e etll 411. O onnif
RiChardo *7L Linda Youngerv u i
High G am es
Men — Bub
RIChare* IM David RlChard* 7)7
Aaran Colo 170. Glenn McCall 1)4.
B u Carroll 707, Willi* W*ison
171, J te ry Cousin* 701. Wally
Im ilh IS). Louie Joan* 707. Jim
Johnton 191. Louie William* 14S.
Pat jam** 1*4. Roger Leri l i t
Women-0*11 Fleming 1)0. Toni
WithFtll IM. Keren Loruui It).
Jun* Wlilitm* 170. Wane* Hub
bard 717. Fay Carroll ItL Hurley
Bulitf ISS. Cindy Eden 177, Linda
Toung*r* IS)
lpl.it Roo*r L td &gt; 7 II, Cleudi*
B ene.m lo ) 7 M. Jim jneenon S
0 10. Lucy H odgti 1 7 * Kilty W*tl

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Star ol lh* W a t t - Wend*
Hubbard — pivt II pun. r reliving
TOOpatch lor 111 gam* - also 500
patch lo r STS *r* *** S s&gt;nt*s in i
rovrll

10th - race SI* A 1 Orlonl
King: 1 Skint G t G t: 7 K l
C l t r t r : 4 P a in t W ebber: S
Spectrum: * Slating M emory. I
Bet High, i Ktw atcha
l l t h - r a c e ! l* T ; I, BMoses: T.
Lucky Goldie. J WP Venoel)*: a
ft* ,liv e . S Sltvef Champ, A
W aitress Stud: 7. R IP'S Angia; ■
Demon's Djesllon.
17th — race ** A. I Jac k 's
Squraier. I. OHGS M ufuet, 7,
Win M r Way: 4 PJ'O Gym N
Trim. S K'S Blessing i * Al
rauiebt*. 7 HI Yankee: I Hondo

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362 00
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369 00
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PR O LO N G T IR E LIFE. BOOST MPQ

Lube,Oil Change &amp; Filter
IN C L U D E S O U R 9-PO IN T
M A IN T E N A N C E C H E C K :
• Transmission fluid • Power steering
fluid • Differential fluid • B&gt;ake fluid
• Air filter • Battery cables A wafer
level • Bells • Hoses • Tire pressure
&amp; conditions

Highwayman

llth — race S i* O I. K g
p laym ate, 1 T * Sleuea: L CE'*
Mellon Guy: 4 Strata P o n t. S.
Candy Hop*, a Mika Klrgy; 7
Fm*l E n e rg iitr. I Cathy-* valor.
In k . Sea
Acme*. Oak

SALE FOR LIGHT TRUCI

RADIAL SALE

Princes* J Vtgat Show GUI S
K's Calvin: 4 C*Mey Qua*". S
Tw,*t Ending, t . Gold Coot! M a c
7 OHi* Burg**. I Revery ole
Ph - race* ISA I W Id Otcar
7 K’S CtObi. I Hot Shot Alien. 4
El c*pi. S Jerwin Jim m y: A
k n oettbon* Sam : I. Sklnl Els*, I
SfiAter
rn
etc * H O C : I Dog N
BuHtrtly: 7 Yellow Hour
7
T uppeii*. t Runaway R*ggi*: S
I P » Hep*, t Abrupt ta g * . 7
Hondo Hoodoo, • C m Louro

IS IM 70 M l
IS 117 41 ISO

* Inspect all four tires • Corrocl air pressure
• Sel front wheel camber, caster, and toe
to proper alignment • Inspect suspension
and steering systems • U S cars and
imports with adjustable suspensions. In­
cludes front-wheel drive Chevetles.
trucks, and c a n requiring MacPhorson
Strut correction extra

Please call for appointment.

Aimer
Park,rv*. SO
■ ainoAMH
C ount- Cm
Rasa Phil
Medlock. Pu
Yngblood NY
Easier. Pit

* !* * « * . NY
VotylO*. O o
Johnson. Chr
Grubb. T n

Just Say 'Charge If
•V JM ew I ;

M arry ol lh*M ether way 7 to buy

luTOwnCustomer OrH Plan
MafterCord • Vita • AArgncan
ic r ts a Card - C arte Blanche
Orier*Out) • Cash

O D Y EA R SERVICE STORE

\ ^ m

te a ;

•SVLnU**'»)

SERVICE^STORES
J im

H e m p h ill, M a n a g e r

335 W Fir it Street

MON. THRU PHI

4

�)4A-Cv*wlng Horald, Unford. FI.

U nder, May It, IWI

BUSINESS
IN BRIEF
Equal Opportunity Housing
W orkshop Set In Altamonte
A workshop on Equal Opportunity In Housing wil' be
presented Thursday at the Kastnvonte Civic Centei In
Ahamonte Springs, Co-* pan sored by the Seminole
County Board of Realtors and the Orlando-Winter Park
Board of Realtors, the program will begin at 3 p m. and
Is free to the puUk. th e civic center is located on the
Longwood Aveflue, south of Highway Of.
A short film will be featured followed by a panel
discussion by community expert* In various housing
concerns Scheduled to participate in the panel
discussion are:
Copley Johnson, Realtor, whose topic is Realtor
obligatlons; Ted Miller, Mortgage Broker, who will
explain FHA and VA funds and Ihe new Orange County
Bond Issue; Gordon Warner Past chairman of the
Equal Opportunity Committee of the Orlando-Winter
Park Board of Realtors speaking on Realtor
obligations to the public and owner responsibility io
show property to all Interested persons; and Treena A.
Kaye, Central Florida Legal Sendees, explaining the
new “Sweat Equity" Program In Seminole County.
At the conclusion of the panel discussion, (here will
be an opportunity for those iRending (he workshop to
discuss their individual housing problems snd con­
cerns with the panel members snd local Realtors.
Refreshments wlil be served snd children sre welcome
to sltend.

Service Excellence Aw ard
TORRANCE. Calif., -C itru s Country Toyota, Inc. in
Sanford, FL has been singled out by Toyota for
maintaining one of Ihe finest automotive service
departments In the country.
Owned by Robert Motlneri, O irus Country Toyota,
Inc. Is among the top 10 percent of the company's 1,013
dealerships throughout the UJ&gt;. that earned Us
prestigious National Service Excellence Award from
Toyota.
Molinart and service manager Ron Jones received
handsome walnut plaques In recognition of their
outstanding performance.
“CUma Country Toyota, Inc. ha* displayed In the
past year Its total commitment to providing Toyota
owners with quality service." said Robert W.
Schrandt, corporate service manager for Toyota Motor
Sales, U S A . Inc. "The award ts Toyota’s highest
recognition of concern and capability tn service to
owners."

Pan Am Reports Loss
MIAMI — Pan American World Airways reported s
net lost of $114.3 million (or the first quarter of 1981,
i &lt;nntwred with * net loaa of 174.9 million In the first
three montha of laat year.
QonacUdaled oiieretlogrwvetiuea e tre WJ7 J million,
■ S t per rent increase ever the licit quarter «f 1MO.
Consolidated operating e*peases were up L0 percent to
*1,011.3 million.
The company said Its first quarter results reflec
poor airline passenger traffic experienced by Ihe in­
dustry as a whole and Pan Am’s continued difficulty tn
Increasing International passenger revenue yield —
the amount of revenue received per revenue passenger
mile flown.

Dial STAC At UCF For All The Answers
UCF — A project engineer or
researcher wants to review (he
state-of-the-art for a new product
development program. A Florida
businessman needs market research
Information to back up Ms com­
pany's latest sales proposal. They
have several optima. But tliere'a one
that wtll same precious time, It
probably cheaper, and lets someone
else do the work.
They could make extensive
Inquiries, or spend a week or more in
a library doing research. Or they
could call their nearest STAC office.
STAC — S tate Technology
Applications Center — practices
what the name implies. Operated by
the Florida State University
System 's
Engineering
snd
Industrial Experim ent Station,
under contract to NASA, it consists
of a computer network with access
to nearly 230 data baart. (A data

base la a compilation of all the
important publication and articles
tn area* such as technology, science,
medicine. Industry, governm ent,
e d u c a tio n ,
m a n a g e m e n t,
marketing, economics, and many,
many others.)
STAC t u acres* to the millions rf
documents that are stored tn such
data bases. The Information ts Just
wailing for someone to lift up a
phone and call tn their request, sakl
Dr. At Powfaky, the new director of
the STAC office tn the College of
Engineering at the University of
Central Florida. It's one of five such
centers In Ihe state. The UCF office
serves 10 counties in Central Florida
(Including Seminole) through Its
link with the main data retrieval
source tn Gainesville.
"The Information explosion has
crested the Deed foe STAC," said
pozefsky, whose own background

includes more than 20 years with
G eneral
E lectric,
managing
Research and Development and
engineering operations and as a
director of product development.
"We want to assist the competitive
growUi of Florida business and
tndurtry tfcm gb thsass of the latest
technologies m getting at needed
information,” Poxefsky observed. "I
are our Job as a two fold one. Find, to
make the community aware of the
power of computertied Information
retrieval, and secondly to offer
service and assistance through
UCF. In addition, the STAC program
provides an interface with the
research activities al the Colleges of
Engineering throughout the State
University System.”
Poitfiky plans to take to the rood
over the next several months with
visits to businesses, laboratories and
service groups in the lOrounty

service area, "preaching the word”
on STAC. One of his targets will be
lib raries that may not hare
necessary references or search
capabilities and which tn turn could
refer ctienta to the UCF center for
help.
"We're not problem solvers,"
Poxefsky emphaslxed. "The mission
of STAC Is io s e n e a middle-man
role. We get the Information so our
clients can make their own analysis
and derision." Typical fees fur In­
formation range from *33 to *400,
depending upon the extent of Ihe
search.
"T he inform ation available
through STAC la almost limitless,'
Poxefsky explained.
Pozefsky can be reached during
normal working hours weekdays by
calling the UCF STAC office at (J03|
273-2706
It's as easy as lifting the phone.

ABBOTT POZEFSKY

Beware: Spring Tim e Is Sting Tim e In Florida
GA1NESVHJE - Spring time Iv sting time
in Florida. Insect bites kill three times more
Floridians than snake bites each year, ac­
cording to Dr. Philip Koehler, an entomologist
with the University of Florida's Institute of
Food and Agricultureal Sciences (IFAS).
With spring in the air there are going to be
more Insects tn the a i r . . . and in the lawn and
the shrubs. Koehler estimates that as many a*
1,000 severe injuries from Insect bites
occur each year tn Florida.
The best protection is prevention To
prevent insect bites you need to know what
kinds of insects can bite or sling you and where
those Insert* are likely to be found. Koehler
said.
Florida has several xpcrfci of biting and
stinging insect*. Honeybee* and bumblebee*
are usually found In the spaces between walls
and under sla'j foundation*. Hornet*, wasps
amt yellow Jackets nest tn shrubs and under
the eaves of buildings. Yellow Jackets ere also
found in nests underground. Scorpion* and

Florida has two types of stinging cater­
pillars. The saddle back caterpillar is greenish
with a brown saddle-like marking on its back.
The other stinging caterpillar is greenish with
red stripes.
The brownish-gray wheel bug Is found
throughout the state. Koehler describes the
bite of the wheel bug s i. "worse than that of a
fire ant, a very painful bite." Despite the In­
sect's sire of only about an inch and a half the
biting part of the bug, Ihe proboscis. Is thicker
than a straight pin, according to Koehler.

Florida'! wheel bug (Arllus C r i i t a l u s ) preys on other Insect*.

In addition to avoiding the areas In which
Insect* are found Koehler suggests keeping
things that attract Insects away from places
where you will be active. Yellow Jackets and
wasps are attracted by garbage cans and bees
are attracted by sweet* such as those In empty
•oft drink can*.

F L O R E N C E

tf you are bitten or stung Koehler advises
capturing the insect If possible; tf not, try to
get a good description of I t If you develop an
allergic reaction to the sting your physician
wtll know what to do tf he knows what stung
you.

spider* are commonly found tn wood and
brush piles and under boards. The brown
recluse ipkler ts also found tn boars and
furniture, especially those which have been
recently brought Into the stale from the
spider's natural habitat tn the Mississippi
Hiver Valley region.

Persons with allergies, hayfever or asthma
should notify their physicians immediately tf
they are bUtrn or stung. The doctor can then
warn of symptoms to watch for and be
prepared to treat a reaction If tt should occur.

Fire ants build cone-shaped mounds In
lawns, usually about two or three feet tn cir­
cumference. Wheel bugs prey on other Insects
and can be found almost anywhere around the
house or In the woods.

Koehler also suggests that parents warn
Uielr children of dangerous insects, encourage
them to wear shoes when playing tn grassy or
clover covered ares* and to stay away from
wood and brush plica.

DENTURE CLINICS, In c.
N o w in
ORLANDO, FLA.
( 305 ) 644-1753
Dr. J o h n R. P arry, D.D.S. 8c A s so cia te s

A R E A BUSINESS ~
S P O TL IG H T
" C ' 3&gt;

■j —

3 - j J £ ± * 1**

Announcing

Flagship Declares Dividends
MIAMI '-T h e board of directors of Flagship (tanks
Inc., declared a regular quarterly dividenrd of *.23 per
share of common stock, payable June ID. 1911 to
shareholders of record May 13,1961.
At the same time (he board declared the regular |.S1
per share quarterly dividend on Flagship's *1.48
Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock, payable June
JO, 1981 to holders of record June 18.1981.
Flagship Banks Inc., with *14 billion In total assets
and 94 banking offices and 81 automatic letter
machines ts the fourth largest bank holding company
tn Florida.

Under new ownership...

Branchwood Com plex Opens
Branchwood, a 117-unit multi-family rental complex
of 17 buildings located a half mite north of Atoms on
Howell Branch Road, has been opened by Cardinal
Industries, Sanford based manufacturer of factorybull: modular apartments and single family homes
The complex Is the 11th project to be constructed tn
Um Orlando metropolitan area and the 89th In Florida
during the past four and a half y e a n by Cardinal. Since
1979 Cardinal has bean the largest apartment builder
and developer In America.

Atlantic Tops $2 Billion
JACKSONVIIJi: - At the Annual Shareholders'
Meeting of Atlantic Bancorporation, B. J. Walker,
president and chief executive officer, reported that
Atlantic had a record year In 1980 with Income Before
Securities Transactions of $17,703,000 up 11 percent
from that of the preceding year, or per share earnings
of *1.18 versus *2 98. Net Income was *1.98 per share
compared tn $2.88 the prevloua year, an increase of II
percent also.

John Mercer, past president of (he Greater
Sanford Chamber of Commerce and senior
vice president or State Hank of Forest City,
(second from left) cut the ribbon at the grand
opening for Second Image Consignment
nothing Store, Slot S. Sanford Ave., Sanford,
owned by Margie and Aubrey Combs (to his
right) as friends and area b u s i n e s s people
Joined in Ihe occasion.

We're open to serve you
with the finest Gulf products,
tune-ups, brake jobs, wheel
alignment, air conditioner
recharging and convenient
road service.

SANFORD
2518 S. FRENCH AVE.

Sturm Attends Conference

ujfj SERVICE
SANFORD

PHONE 322-4924

(FORMERLY DEKLE'S GULF SERVICE)

R. J. "Bob" Sturm, 201 Morning Glury Drive, Lake
Mary, haa recently returned from Plnehurst, NC
where he participated In a Sales Leaders conference of
Sentry'* top sales representatives He Is a local sales
repm cnlallv* for Sentry and quabfted for the con­
ference through high standards in sales and customer
service tctivlUy during I960. The group represented
the lop II percent of Sentry's direct sales force.

We have several familiar former
employees to serve you.

Real Estate Sem inar
The Keyes Company, large South Florida Realtors,
will sponsor "Career Opportunities tn Real Estate" et
the Kcrrard Jcissca': (30! X C sktial Drive, Cri«M , i
et 7:30 P.M., Monday.
Guest speakers at the seminar will be Theodore J.
Pappas, Keyes Co. chairman of the board who will
speak about Real Estate as a C artel, Company
President Fred Stanton Smith, whoa* topic will be
Getting Started tn R rtl Estate, Jack C. Faria, vicepresident and genera! salts manager, who wtll discuss
Salts Management Opportunities, Phil D. Clrdgo,
director of training, discussing Professionalism in
Real Estate and Phyllis Mirmsn, raining coordinator.

Fred Bauer. 823 Eagle Circle, Casselberry
t right) was named a "Sales Representative of
Distinction" by Hal lloitt (left), president and
chief operating officer uf Sentry Insurance a
Mutual Company, at a three-day conference
at the world headquarters in Stevens Point,
Wii. Bauer, who represents Sentry in this
area was one of eight to qualify for this
designation from more than 1,000 represen­
tatives &gt;n tht United States.

Vtg |ii

~ T

PA PPY, MANAGER

j
if i
/
DON

F R E D D IE

Sy lve ste r C h a n g , o w n e r

�OURSELVES

Evening Herald, Sanford, FL

Briefly
G o v e r n o r Proclaims M a y 11-17
A s Florida Nurse W eek
Governor Robert Graham has proclaimed the week of
May 11-17 as Florida Nurse Week in recognition of the
contribution of registered nurses to the health care of the
citizens In Florida.
•The scope an(J depth of responsibilities assumed by
nurses is expanding rapidly In today's complex health care
system," said Martha Sparks, president of the Florida
Nurses Association. "One of our goals for Florida Nurse
Week Is to raise public awareness of the diversity of today's
nurse."
Activities are being planned by health care agencies
statewide to honor nurses. In addition, the second annual
Nurse Day In Tallahassee win be held on May 11, Florence
Nightingale's birthday to Involve nurses In the legislative
process and to acquaint the Legislators with Florida nuraes.
• Florida Nurse Week Is sponsored by the Florida Nurses
Association.

G ard en Club Sets Picnic

■

The Lake Mary Garden Gub will meet Wednesday a t the
Big Tree Park lor a picnic luncheon The program will
feature o speaker on the lak e Mary Community Civic
Center. Guests are welcome.

Blke-A-Thon Winners
A Btke-A-Thon to benefit St. Judes Childrens Hospital was
' held May 1, in lak e Mary Assisting were Delores lash ,
prises; Sandy Akins, clwtk point and "Spark Plug"; Walter
Syracuse and Bonnie Olvera, mam control point; and
Patrolman John Wight, traffic control.
First Prize of 150 was donated by Jim Honan of llorian
Engineering lake'M ary. Other prixes were donated by
Upplncotta, Robinsons of Altamonte Springs, McDonalds of
i Sanford and the lak e Mary Post Office. Burger King 'of
Sanford provided cold drinks.
First pn te was won by Steve Cooper, Russel Williams
was second and Tracy Rorawskl, third. An average of 60
miles was pedaled by the winners.

Erasing Sex-Bias W orkshop
The WEDGE Program of the Central Florida
Educational Consortium for Women announces a workshop
"Erasing Sex Bias," to be presented Friday, from 1:30 a.m.
to 1:30 p.m. in the Student Assembly Room at the
University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida.
This la a workshop designed to assist counselors and
others in increasing their knowledge of and sensitivity to
facta of aex bias.
Dr. Constance Cauley of College Park, M&lt;L, Dr. June
Gordon of Seminole Community College and Ray Robinson
of the Orange County School Board wiD be the experts on
the scene.

Sunday, May 18, tf i l —11

Outstanding
M om : Tm
Shocked...'
By DORIS DtETH int
OURSELVES Editor
“I'm shocked. . ,1 don't know what to My . . .I’m
shocked . . .1 wasn't expecting all this, Lola Jean Franks
stammered, almost breathlessly, when informed that she
was selected The Herald's "Outstanding M «n" In the
Third Annual event.
Headers were asked to submit letters telling about their
Isvorite moms and why they were outstanding.
The winning letter was from Randy Franks of Osteen, a
23-year-old quadriplegic who was injured In a diving
accident at Daytona Beach on Easter Sunday 1873.
Randy's sister, Janet Patterson of Osteen, copied the
letter for him. "It took him about five hours to write the
letter." Janet said. "Be can only stay up about six hours
at a lime. Writing the letter was a real accomplishment
for him," she added.
Janet explained that since the accident Randy teamed
to write with a hand brace holding a pen and is trying to
write now without the brace. She said he took the final
exams for a GED diploma this week. Instructors from
Daytona Beach Community College have been coming to
Franks' home to prepare Randy for these exams.
Janet said Randy “ can feed himself" and "push his
wheel chair a little."
Mrs. Franks kept repeating how shocked she was.
P ndy's letter that prompted his mother saying, "Oh,
gee, this la going to tickle my children to death," D aa
follows:
"1 will have to go back about seven years to tell you why
t Hunk my mom ta deserving of such recognition as out­
standing.
"I am a quadriplegic, paralysed from the cheat down
with very limited movements of my arms —the result ol a
diving accident seven years ago.
"1 was in the hospital 111 days. Mom made the 50-mile
round trip every one of those days, sometimes twice.
From there I was sent to a rehabilitation center In
Jacksonville for 13 weeks where she drove to get me every
weekend to spend at home with my family.
"She gave up a career and her life to keep me at home
and out of s nursing home. During the six yean I have
beep home, she has given me more love and devotion
everyday than I have ever seen or known.
"She worked hard to learn to care !o all my dally needs.
She has been my nurse, my doctor, a waitress, a maid, a
chauffeur, a legal advisor, my tegs, my friend and moat
Important — my loving mother who never complained.

Raruly Franks, right, a quadriplegic, wrote- the winning letter nominating his
mother, Lola Mae Franks for the "Outstanding Mom” honor. Mrs. Franks
holds grandson Clifton Patterson, son of her daughter, Janet Patterson, left.
"It would take a book to tell of the dally things that she
has to do for me and it may be difficult for many to un­
derstand. She's there to put me down last thing each night
and by my side each morning 1 wake to start her daily
routine.
"Not only does she do all thia for me, but the is also a
wonderful wife whom my father adores. Her home ii

Nominees Receiving
Honorable Mention
— Page 28
always spotless and she is always ready and willing to do
what she can for her other three children and five grand­
children. She is always fixing a great dinner for holidays
and family get-togethers and watching her grandchildren
so the parents can go out.
"She it all the Ume making clothes for the little ones and
doing special things — like helping my Rule brother
(Darryl) who moved out and nearby this yrar to learn to

cook tor tumseli and care ter his new home. She even still
does his la undo' — at her request
“ I'm the last child at home now and she could be living a
life for lietsclL
"She's there for all of us with love and understanding to
bring us up when we are down. This very minute she Is
making another quilt fer sQ ol us (or Christmas this yrar
— always thinking of evrryone but hrrsclf.
"1 don’t know where her strength and courage comes
from. Maybe It's prayers to our 1-ord each night to thank
him for what the hat and to give her courage to carry an.
" I don't know —for it Is • hard life she lives. But there is
one thing 1 do know — she is positively the best mother
God could have blesaed me with."
I/Ota Jean Franks is the wife of Sherman Franks and
Uwy are Uie parent* of four children. The haved lived in
Osteen for eight years and lived In la k e Mary prior to
that, The couple's other child Is tee Franks of l-akeland
Before Raraly's accident, Mrs. Franks worked In the
Sanford offices of Dr. tails Perei and previously was an
insurance clerk at Seminole Memorial Hospital, Sanford.
Janet said her mother "made a complete turnaround.
She really enjoyed the type work she was doing."
Mrs. Franks was nearly speechless when aha was
congratulated as the Herald's 1M1 Outstanding Mom.
“ I'm so happy — that's |usl fantastic," she said.

April Jo Munns Rates

Students To See 'A lladln ’

'10' A s M om Runner-Up

The nationally-acclaimed Asolo Touring Theater will
visit Idyllwiide and Sable Point Elementary schools to
perform Alladln on Wednesday and Thursday.
Approximately 1600 students In thesa two schools will have
the opportunity to see this talented troupe of acton per­
form.

Mrs. Rainier F. (April Jo Cassell) Munns of
Longwood, is deserving to the tune of "10" as
The Herald’s runner-up for ‘Outstanding
Mom.”
Mrs. Munns, a Mormon, met her husband
while they were both attending Brigham
Young University, ITovo, Utah, fie is an a t­
torney and Bishop in the Church of Jesus
Christ of Utter-day Saints. She received a
degree in art and elementary education in
1K73.
At 34, Mrs. Munns is the mother of eight
children (two adopted) and is "tickled pink”
that another baby is on the way.
The family portrait at left features Mr. and
Mrs. Munns (she’s holding Erika) surrounded
by their other children, Collin, Ryan, Jacob,
Vanessa Dan, Steven and Wayne.

N O W To Elect Officers
The Seminole County Chapter of the National
Organization for Women (NOW) will hold its monthly
meeting May » , at the Esslmonle Civic Center. The
meeting begins at 7:30 p m
Elections for the coming year will be held. Information
will be available for those In wishing to attend this year's
Slate Convention in Tampa in June.

Pen W omen To Honor M em ber
The Winter Park Branch of the National league of
American Pen Women will bold Its final meeting of the
season on May 16, at 1;30 p.m. at the home of Jesse Baker in
Orlando
At the meeting which will honor new members, the
Winter Park branch Pen Woman of the Year Award will be
presented to the member chosen for outstanding
achievamenta as a Pen Woman.
Pen Women visiting Central Florida from othe&gt;- areas are
welcome to attend. Call 8M-3563.

Htrtia rutu tv Tam VukmiI

Very Special Arts Festival: Exuberant Celebration
"

*

By SYBIL MITCHELL GANDY
Herald SUM Writer
Hundreds of very special people
recently made Central Florida's first
annual Very Special Arts Festival an

exuberant celebration of creative laienU
In handicapped persons.
Attended by adults and children with
physical, m ental and emotional
m uM hitfi, the Valencia Community

College-West Campus festival explored
an endless variety of performing arts and
aesthetic forms through demonstrations
and instruction.
For creative dance and mime to finger-

Cindy C a rn e s of SwiithiUe Ekmcstar; School, Sanford. stands by one of the
exhibits at the festival. Cindy made the fluffy animal faces on the table.

Lorenzo Sneed of the
autiatic c last
at
Hopper Elementary
School, Sanford, shows
a papier ntache clown,
a cilia project fm Utc
festival.

...

&gt;

...

_jli

painting and ceramics, the artistry on
parade May 1 and I brought children,
parents, teachers, administrators and
Interested citizens alike from Orange,
Seminole. Osceola, lak e and Sumter
Counties.
Erin Miner of the Orlando Council of
Arts k Sciences staged the Very Special
Arts Festival in cooperation with the
Council of Arts k Sciences for Central
Florida, Valencia Community College
and Crealde Arts, Inc. aa " a r t'i answer
to (he Special Olympics for the han­
dicapped."
"W e've been thinking about this
festival (or a long time. The area dealing
with art have traditionally been closed to
the handicapped. And we wanted to offer
these (pedal individuals a chance to
VZpfiaS thciuf:.Ww ii* dOPCO, tRUSiC,
painting and evyi in creating special art
forms," Mrs. Minor says.
Special aria festival chairman BtUy
Howe hosted the combination exhibitdemonstration and "talenU m parnde"
extravaganza which featured the wicks
of area county schools, Instructional art
centers, and well-known local artists.
Dazzling the crowds with creative
dance and vocal music were those everpopular youngaUr from the n w t n i u l
Exceptional Student Center who staged a

»»"Journey
1S..MAO

u ll
wtlai'iuin
Highlighting
this two-day event was
to fOi"
and a uniquely tllll rtkkll
th« "C hildren's art-m aking at the
delightful show of vocal acrobatics.
And strutting to the beat of the disco F estival", which allow ed the han­
dicapped to participate in artistry by
craze were those Bear luike Elementary
Disco Dancers who moved the crowd making their own ceramics, puppets,
with their Infectious awing step*, flitting paintings, draw ings and creative
on a versatile shoe were Seminole County dramatics.
youngsters from Soulhstde Elementary
Uniquely inspired by demonstrations
and Longwood E lem entary Schools of artist# with handicapping conditions,
displaying papier mache creations, wall an eager number of handicapped adults
paintings, sculpture pieces, and woven and children alike discovered the beauty
baskets.
ol "dabbling in the a rts."
On hsnd for assisting festival par­
The National Committee, ArU for the ticipants were Dr. Ron Y rabedra,
Handicapped, an organization which Department of Art, Florida A * M
seeks to create opportunities for han­ University In Tallahassee for painting;
dicapped children and adulta to learn Linda Davis, Department of Dance,
"IN the arts, ABOUT the arts, and Florida Stale University, Tallahassee;
THROUGH the arts, helped to sponsor Bob Goldberg, D irector of Bobbo
the event.
Goldberg Mime ineater ior mime; lands
Designed no! to promote competition in E arp Berman, perform ing and In­
the arts, these confabs are held In nujor structing In the area of creative
dramatics and music; and Cheval Fagan
cities throughout the United States.
of Winter Park, an artx specialist from
Ann K aenpftr from the Florida State South Florida Ceramics.
Marking what many hope will be the
Division of Culture! Affairs was on hand
for the festival’s special activities which fust of many "Very Special Arts
included a variety of films concerning Festivals" to come, these 1881 festivities
the world of disabled persons and a lent an unforgettable experience t&gt;
hands-on gallery, sponsored by the Central Florida's handicapped citizens In
Brevard Art Center k Museum to e i. thl* International Year of Disabled
peril-noe the environment through touch. Persons. (lYDPt.

�'D6-Fyonli*q Harold. Sanford. FI,

M a rva

Engagement
ANNE
SWAIN

Swain-Sulllns
Mr. and Mrx IJoyd O. Swain of Sanford, announce the
engagement of their daughter, Judith Anne, to Randall
Scott Sulllns, son of Mr. and Mrs. D.G. Sulllns, Stone
Mountain, GA.
Mtsa Swain was bom In Sanford, attended local schools,
and wa&gt; graduated In 197} from Seminole High School and
Seminole Community College In 1977. She graduated with
an ABJ degree from the Henry W. Grady School of
Journalism, University of Georgia.
While there she was active In Zeta Tau Alpha, aortal
fraternity, College Students In Broadcasting, and Women
In Communications. Presently, the La employed by the
Seminole County School Board. She plans to pursue her
master's degree In education.
Mina Swain's paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
I,. M. Switn Sr. and her maternal grandparents, the late
Mr. and Mrs. A.B. Stevens, all of Sanford.
Mr. Sulllns was bom at Holoman Air Force Base In
New Mexico. He waj graduated In 1979 from Towers High
School, Atlanta, and the university of Georgia In I960 with
a BS degree In microbiology. He Is employed as a bact*
teriologlst with Kraft, Inc., Atlanta, and Is seeking his
m ister's degree In business
Mr. Sulllns' maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
E E’. Colwell and his paternal grandparenti, Mrs D. G.
Sulllns, S r, and the late Mr. Sulllns, all of Griffin, GA.
The wedding will be Aug. 1, at 4:30 p.m. at the First
Untied Methodist Church, Sanford.

Hawkins
m u u

Elks Aw ard
$1,800 To
Contestants

Participating in the Elka Oratorical Conteit are. from left, W.J. Merkerson.
Katheryn Alexander. Charles Stallworth. Raymond Cow els Jr.. Rickey
Davis, Glynnls Hudson, Julius Wynn and Earl E. Minnott.
A total of I1J00 n i awarded to the following: First place
winner, Charlene E. Stallworth, 1700; Second place winner
Raymond Cowels Jr., $900; Third place winner Rickey D.
Davis. P00: Fourth place winner, Glyntsa A. Hudson, 000,
Fifth {dace winner, Julius L Wynn, 1100.
A check will be sent by the Elks Educational Department to
the school each contestant will attend In September.
Etoise Williams, the 1960 Elk scholarship recipient, and a
student at Seminole Community College, briefly addressed the

The Elks Annual Oratorical Contest was held at New Bethel
AME Church. Dgt. Ruthls Hester, presided.
The EUu Choir presented the music with words of welcome
given by Dgt- Mozell Johnson.
Greetings from Celery City lodge No. Ml and Evergreen
Temple No. I ll were given by Dgt. Devotta Sin is.
Dgt. Katheryn Alexander, is the Daughter Ruler.

new winners,
Chairman Earl E. Minot! of the Elks
Scholarship Department said he thanked the
judges, Mrs. Shirley Baker, Mrs. Doretha Ore,
Parker and Mrs. Juanita Harold.
Words of encouragement were given to t
Exalted Ruler Bro. WJ . Merkerson and Past
Charlene Stallworth will participate In th
Oratorical Contest In Orlando Sunday.

Is Not Gladness For All
DEAR READERS: Sunday.
May 19, la Mother’s Day.
Many inspect that It is lost
another commercial holiday
dreamed up by florists and
m erchants to itlm nlnte
business.
Not so! .Mother'* Day was
conceived by Ansa M. Jarvis
of Philadelphia, who In 1907
persuaded ber minister to
hove a special church service
the second Sunday in May to
honor nil mothers. Those with
living m others wore red
carnations, nod those without
mothers wore white earnatfonx This custom Is still
observed In some areas.
Mother’s Day la a day of
g U d s ru to most mothers. But
not for a ll I should know. For
week* following M other’s
Day, my desk Is covered with
letters Irom mothers who
have been snubbed, slighted
or forgotten.
Two typical Mother's Dny

letters:
DEAR ABBV; The day my
too got married, be forgot
that he has ■ mother. Every
holiday—Including Mother's
D ay-his wife drags him to
her people, and be goes like a
little puppy without even
putting up a flgbt
LOST MY SON
DEAR ABRY: My son lives
la the some city with me, bat
I'm lucky U I see him six
times &gt; year for 19 minutes.
Then on Mother's Day be
sends me n bouquet of ruses.
Big deal*
HURT
F.ach y ear, disappointed
mothers send me the verse:
" A ssa Is a tea until he takes a
wife, but a daughter It a
daughter all of her life."
My mall constantly reaf­
firms the fact that one of the
most sensitive of all human
relations la the one that estata
between a woman and her

One mother wrote to remind
me that Ike Ten Com­
mandments a y , “Thou shall
honor thy mother and thy
father’'- s a d It doesn't say
one word about the motherlnlaw!
You don't have to be a Dear
Abby to know that being ■
motherln-Uw. | There Is far good mother-to-law Is one ol
mere frletlsa betw een a the most difficult roles in the
woman and her husband's world.
Now that I am a molherlnmother than between a man
and the mother of his wife.) law, I have resolved to abide
by two simple rules:
Recently, 1 received a letter
Never offer advlre unless
from a young wife who asked, P’s asked for.
•■Who should itt In front with
Never ask questions that
my husband when we take his are none of my buslaess.
mother out for a drive?"
I am trylaf earnestly to be
I replied. “ Out of reaped the best mother-ln-Uw
for hrr age—his mother."
Well, the brickbats started
(tyfag from all directions.
Readers quoted Scripture:
“ And a man shall leave his
father and his mother, and
cleave unto his wife.”

possible. And I must say that
my rhanres for success are
escetleat, because for 11
year*, I have had a wonderful
tenrher-m y own mether-ln-

law, Mrs. Jay Phillips. God
bless yon, Rosie. You are the
best!
Lsve,
“ POPO"

Board O f Directors To Form
An interested group ef Seminole County rttixens gathered
at the Seminole County Agricultural Center on April 23, to
bear Sue Kenney, Director of ta k e Community Develop­
ment, Inc., discuss ta k e County's self-help housing
program.
The meeting was sponsored by Resources for Human
Needs, lr»c., a group of Seminote County social service
agencies, which has been atudytng Uie shortgage of af­
fordable, decent and safe housing In the county.
The group will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m., at the
agricultural center to dtscuis formation of the program's
Board of Directors. For Information, call Chris Holden, 323-

320 So u th Grove Street - E u stis
(Parking available in back of building)

Honorable Mention To
&amp;
«

O P E N 9:30 A.M.- 5:00 P.M. M O N .- S A T

Outstanding Moms'
|fc*

H IG H L A N D E R S
M A K E T H E IR M A R K

V Every motlier la outstanding, and the letters submitted to
- The Herald nominating Uvortta moms la proof of the fart.
V Howevet. some of the tetters that we lets were truly out&lt; standing cannot receive a just and due horv* able mention. The
• mom's name waa not given and many letteri were almply
, signed by a first name. There were no addresses given—for
which we are sorry,
Lola Mae Franks of Osteen look the top honors just a nose
ahead of April Jo Munna of lxmgwood, followed by Nina V.
. Messer of Sanford.
r
Outstanding Moms deserving “Honorable Mention" are as
»• follows: Mrs. Charles Rowland, Longwood; Mrs. Msrtc Ware.
Sanford: Bcmlcc Cooper, Sanford; Mrs Ruth ludwtg, Osteen;
Mrs. Mary Angle. Sanford; Mrx. Edna P. Butler, Sanford; and
•- Mrs. Sidle Pounders, Sanford.
Also: Mra.PrtsrtllaThorpe,Sanford; Mri, Raymond ftibbi,
Maitland; Mr*. Carolyn Wttherow, Sanford; Mrs. Wayne
Hoffman, take Mary; Mr*. Pat Robblna, address unknown;
and Margaret Clegg, Sanford. - DORIS DIETRICH

,

i

V

CALENDAR

We encourage you to shop

We ore currently

• 1

SI i 5 J'ft
*

'deoning house" in ontldpotion

In

1

U41! 2

iiria i

of our RELOCATION to:

SATURDAY, MAY 9
Fish fry to benefit the Crossroads Alcoholic
Treatment Center In Sanford, 5 4 :30 p.m ., at the center
on ta k e Minnie Drive off Highway 17-91 one mile south
of ta k e Mary Boulevard. Tickets available at B iPerkins and Gifts By Nan in downtown Sanford.

Margie's FABRIC Center
1301 S. Boy St. (Fla. 19)
Eustis • the week of June 1

Srminolr Community College Showcase open house
In celebration of SCC's 15th anniversary. Continuous
program of exhibits, demonstrations and musical
presentations.
lupin Foundation of Florida, Inc., 1 p.m. 1213 E.
Nebraska St. (Boy Scout building) Orlando. Speaker •
Nancy tandry, supervisor of H its Aging and Adult
Service Program. Open to public.

f M ARGIE* lE W IN u CENTER
: Ho SOUTH GROVE STREET
»
EUSTIS
Omreh
corner of Grove A W ard S4

TU ESDAY, MAY It
S im a (Tub, 7:30 p.m., Maitland Civic Center.
The Retired Officer* Wives (Tub of Central Florida
Installation of officers and scholarship uw ants brunch,
10 a.m., Orlando Naval Training Center Officer* Club.
Brunch served 10:30 a m la s t meeting until Sep­
tember.
Sleeting to orgaalte an African Violet chapter 7:30
p m , at home of Mrx Jo Wormington, 2069 Grandview
Ave., Sanford. For Information call 323-1239 or 322-3)79.

Itanirly
p ls s it a

SPECIALS TOO NUMEROUS TQ LIST!

K IN D E R G A R T E N T H R O U G H G R A D E 12

PARTICULARLY IN OUR BARGAIN BASEM ENT

NUN-DISC RIMINATORY ENROLLMENT

(PRICES START AT 50* PER YARD)

Free Workshop for .Spanish tpraklug parents on
Talking to Children about Sexuality," 7-9 p.m., Wed­
nesday and Thursday, Florida Federal Savings and
loan. Forest CUy. Sponsored by Parent Resource
Center. For Information call 4304449 after 4 p m
Srmloolr Self-KrUtnl Housing, fur., 7:30 p.m.,
Agriculture Center toff 17-92), Sanford, meeting to
select Board of Director!

Accredited by
Soul kern Association of College* and School*
Florida Council of Independent Schools
Southern Association of Independent Schools

m

LAKE HIGHLAND
PREPARATORY SCHOOL

AAHP-NAHT revered dish lunrbeoa and business
meeting, noon, Sanford Civic Center, Speaker •
Altamone (Mice Offkt, Edna Abel an defensive
driving. Open to all settlor dltteti*
"Dames at Sea”, 1:34 p.m , University of Central
Florida Theater. Call 275-2491.

901 NORTH HIGHLAND AVENUE
ORLANDO, FLORIDA 32803

FRIDA Y, MAY 11
“ Dames at Sea," 4:30 p m . University of Central
Florida Theater. Call 375-2911

- y* 9h i

IN M A W o r I U M .

In the ads. a s well as in the classroom and in sports activities,
our studenls achieve success Our onti'e education program ts
built upon challenge and individual instruction. W e invite you to
visit our cam pus and see happy Highlanders at work!

WEDNESDAY, MAY 13
“ How ta Talk with Your Children about Seiuallty,"
workshop for parents, 7:30 p.m., Altamonto Head
Start, 199 leonard St., Altamonte Springs. Second
session, May 20. Call &lt;31-2411.

• #

d Cog SlOg

Call Admission* Office M5-MI-2V .1 For Brorburr

,*&gt; ■*. *f~k
ff«*|V

i ,;

«*&gt;. W-*-

it

*

IV

*1 In #• r

C L IP and SAVE &amp;

One (Y) FREE Yard of Fabric
from our Korwun bsse&amp;eRt.
LIM IT 1 Yard per customer,
please, with coupon.
C oupon V alid M ay 7 th ru M ay U
M a rg lo '* Sow ing Confer - E u itlt

�Evening Hereto. Mnlcrd. FI

In And Around Sanford

Suwdey, MjV It. INI—IB

Junior Women Honor 'Mother' Club
Doris
Dietrich
OURSELVES
F d ltn r

Saturday was a perfect day to usher In May in a perfect way
al the Idyllwilde home o( Dr. and Mrs. Roger IGall) Stewart
Just call II May Day or Mother’! Day.
The lovely occasion was a coffee-recepUon hosted by the
Junior Woman’s Club of Sanford (Juniors) to honor the
’‘mother" organisation the Woman’s Club of Sanford
I Seniors i.
According to Gall Stewart, It was Just a "gesture to say
thanks for all the things the Seniors have done for the J unites.’*
It was one of thoee dress-up occasions In a formal—but very
friendly and warm—atmosphere.
The serving tables were tastefully appointed with floral
centerpieces, gleaming silver and sparkling crystal Silver
trays offered a variety of delectable party fare prepared by the
Juniors.
The committee Included SJWC president Nancy Crawford,
Gall Smith, Gail Berger and Gail Stewart.
Everything was carried out right down to the last word In*
eluding the serving of mint juleps (for those so inclined) In
celebration of Derby Day—a favorite day of the Stewarts.
Several Seniors were heard to describe the event u "Just
lovely" “perfectly gorgeous" and "oh, what a beautiful mor­
ning."
And It was Just that.
Happy anniversary to Dr. and Mrs. Norman A. (Us
Paulucct) Helfiich Jr. The couple will celebrate their eighth
anniversary Tuesday, May I I
Remember those lovely and lively "Birthday Girls?’* You
know—a group of descendrnta of the original Sanford Swedish
settlers.
Well, the girls will be gathering Friday, May IS, at the Palm
Drive home of Mary Robinson to celebrate the birthday of
Alice Vihlen. But nobody will tell bow old she will be.
Birthday Girls sltending the event will be Olga Hunter,
Eunice Martin, Ina Galloway, Katherine Senkartk, Ella
Bolton, Ebba Lee and guest Lenore Jones.
Interested citiicns are standing up to be counted In support
of the Humane Society of Seminole County.
An auction, musical, fashion show, luncheon and several
surprises are all part of a package to help build a new shelter,
the big event will be held In the Buccaneer lounge of the
Cavalier Motor Inn, Sanford, beginning at 11:JO am .
Several Central Florida celebrities are volunteering their
time in support of this benefit. They Include "Big and BeautyFull" Phyllis Dale who will moderate the fashion show, Art
Grindle (expect an auction), Clay Danlela (maybe he’ll ling,
too) Oliver Hardy, Red Hot Mamina Shrrll Davis and other
mystery guests.
The full buffet luncheon will Include chicken and steak for a
donation of t£ For Information on tickets and resenratlcns,
call Eunice Shomo al the Humane Society Shelter, J23-M65, or

M2-tit 1.
All trtendx are Invited.,.to both celebraUona.
Two 50th wedding anniversaries are coming up.
Congratulations are In order to Mr. and Mrs. R.U. Hutchison
and Mr. and Mrs. Joe B. Shaw.
%

The Hutchisons will celebrate their anniversary on Sunday,
May 14, with open house, from 3-5 p.m. in Fellowship HsQ of
the First United Methodist Church, Sanford.
The Shaws will I* honored at open house, between 2 and 5
p.m., on Sunday. May 17, In White Hall of the Upsala
Presbyterian Church, Sanfcrd. They request “ no gifts,
please."
The Shawl have two sons, John of DeLand, and Donald, who
arrived home this week from Saudi Arabia to help celetrate
his parents 50th wedding anniversary.
Jo Willis, Nancy McNamara and Mary Jane Armstrong
have returned from the Mu Stale Convention of Delta Kafp*
Gamma International which was held In SI. Petersburg.
Nancy Is president of the Beta Chi Chapter which Is making
preparations for their upcoming Founder’s Day celebration.
Jo Will's la very busy these days serving as District
Director. She Is responsible for II chapters and has the month
of May filled with-speaking engagements across the Central
Florida and East coast area.

Nanrord Junior Beverly Huffman, right, greets
Jonnie Elam of the Senior Woman’s dub.
DCNTAL INSURANCE

SPECIAL

n

Artist Day

A P P L E P E C TIN
j PERM
*25

At The Zoo
The Central Florida Zoo,
Burger King and the Council
of Arts and Sciences will
sponsor a children's “ Artist
Day at the Zoo" on Saturday,
May 16, from 10 a m . to 3 pm .

ison^B

Children of all agea are
Invited to participate In this
event w ithout regard to
county of residency. All en­
tries, one per child, will be
Judged according to grade
level (preschool through
grade 11). F irst place
drawings wrll] be bought from
the a rtis t for perm anent
display at the too.

CafMlierii
motor inn

FREE: a Beju tiiu t
Begonia Plant To
Our Customers

P lim T U I

Sen

Mother’s
Day

Burger King la hosting an
“ Award* Night'* for all
winners and their familial at
their W inter P a rk store.
Burger King la also providing
a Certificate of Appreciation
to all participating children In
15 water color aeta and pad* to
all winners.

SSSV

U U I-h t l

V, PRICE

B A K ED C H IC K E N With Rice
PORK CHOPS, With Dressing '
B A K ED HAM, Bone End
SOUP &amp; SALAD BAR Choice Of Vegetables
DESSERT W A F F L E S With Strawberries
FOR T H E BRUNCH F A M I L Y . . . Eggs- Bacon
Sausage, Hashbrowns

All children wishing to
p articip ate in this event
should register Saturday from
15:00 a m until noon at the
Small Group Picnic Shelter at
the Central Florida Zoological
park In Sanfcrd. No a rt
materials will be provided, so
children should come with
their own a rt supplies.
All children registered will
be ad m itted free; ac­
companying adults will be
required to pay the full ad­
mission price of |3.00.
For fu rth e r Information,
call the Arts Council 60-2717
ITHE-ARTS).

M O T H E R S A C C O M P A N IE D b y F a m ily
D ine FR EE ... {No Discounts)
1

Downtown —Magnelle Center

BUCCANEER LOUNOE

00 O rla n d o Dr, (17-92)

m *p.mESsunN

Close your eyes, and picture
yourself five to ten years younger.
Now, open your eyes to the newest
technological breakthrough
in non-surgical face lifts.

Students Included from the Sanford area are: Bonnie L
Austin. Honors: and Debra I « Yates, Honors.

FUR STORAGE

T IM E ©

M lflSSB TH6RRPV

W Wi Our fur Storage
Service Your
Fun A r e -

" C u r painless, non surgical p ro g ra m o f laser

• Cleaned The Furrier
Way

m uscle-toning has been shown to be effective

In preuenting and reducing faciat wr.nk'es ”
Dr. Thomas F. Yandell Jr.

• E xpertly Groomed

i
ff
fi.
N

Glaring

Choose Yeur Fur Storage As Ceretully r j
As You Choose Your Furs.

PHILIPS Ctaorating Den
And Cleaners
IN BUSINESS SINCE INI
jm -j j i -m ij o r Jii-7S4i
11! WEST m hST .

M il
By Aapelfllmenl I CONSULTATION

S T Y U N Q SALO N
Aue.

Those recognised with High Honors maintained ■ minimum
LM cumulative standing and those receiving Honors
recognition must have maintained a 3.50 cumulative standing.

• Free

323-8174
323-8183

l a .m . Ip .m .

Ml. a tvwlngi I

things of JJJair

During ita recent Honor’s Day Convocation, the Cumberland
College | Williamsburg, Ky.) administration and faculty
recognised students maintaining outstanding academic
records.

• Stored In
SctentilUelty
Cooled Vaults
On P rem ise!

towni Mon Frt

Lourine Messenger gets the full VIC treatment from members of the Junior
Woman’s Club of Sanford. Gall Stewart, sealed, and Gail Berger, from left,
Mrs. Messenger, Gail Smith and Nancy Crawford seem happy about it all.

Children's

T R sn stn
e

SANFOS

Now you have all the advantages of a
surreal face hit without any scars, needles
or pain Our hollatk program combines
SSTO m , nuS iuOmoI k U U IIM M U N , cosmetic
tonen and laser therapy, to safely reduce
and prevent facial wrinkles. Your pain
leu lieu lit will be achieved by stimulation

of skin tissue at specific pojnts using User
therapy Each program is IndMduaDy
designed for you, based on your genw»»!
heottft and facial muscle ton*. You will
be surprised at the amazing results and
the low cod — In general 1/3 to 1/10
the cost nt a surgical face Ml

Dr. Ttowisi F. Yandalt Jr.

For a lovely tomorrow call 305-323-5763 now for FREE consultation.

SAN FO R D P A IN C O N TR O L CLINIC
2017 5. French Avo. (Acron from Plxia Hut) Sanford

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40—tvsmrg HsraM. Sawtord. FI,

Adventist

Assembly O f God

Naxarene

Episcopal

Catholic

Orthodox
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Hor**t *•***#
Cl»'f* ft|A*f
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MMP*a»y i»r*

Christian

The most exciting thing about having Mama
put up your hair isn't the curls you're going to
have.
No! It's look inf in the mirror and seeing you
look just like Mama with her hair up
May he only the most conceited couples look
on themselves asmrx/W parents but that's what
being parents involves Whether we intend to or

DM wc become model* Jo our children. Their
stmngesl impulse i&gt; to imitate grown-up* —
cv(vcully those the&gt; love.
(longing the lainily to worship even week
pnivide* rich opjvrtunity in rcl'giouv training (nr
our youngsters. Equally impndanl is the grow mg
impact of faith and worship on the Mama and
Daddy those youngsters daily imitate.

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Congregational
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Sunday
Daniel
9:3-14
Monday
Sokvmon
8:5-7
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Church Of Christ

H entt
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Tuesday
Matthew
22:34-40
Wednesday
I John
4:7-12
Thursday
Nehemiah
l:i*l i
Friday
Psalms
145:8-21
Saturday
I Corinthians
2:1-9

Pentecostal

99 mem

Presbyterian

Methodist

Church Of God

Congregational
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F o llo w in g Sp o n so rs M a k e This Church N o tice A n d Directory P a g e Possible
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ATLANTIC NATIONAL BANK
Sanford, Fla.
Howard H Hodges and Staff

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nrf

MEL'S
GULF SERVICE
Mel Dekletmd Employees
FLAGSHIP BANK
OF SEMINOLE and Staff
700 W First St.
3000 S Orlando Dr
S H r~ ' ‘

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CELERYCITY
PRINTING CO , INC.

THE McKIBBIN AGENCY
Insurance

L. D. PLANTE, INC.
Oviedo. Florida

GREGORY LUMBER
TRUE VALUE HARDWARE
500 Maple Ave Sanford

PANTRY PRIDE
DISCOUNT FOODS
and Employees

OSBORN'S BOOK
and BIBLE STORE
2599 Sanford Ave.

HARRELLA BEVERLY
TRANMISSIOK
David Beverly and Staff

SMITTY'S SNAPPIN
TURTLE MOWERS, INC.
Mike &amp; Connie Smith
Owners

KNIGHT'S SHOE STORE
Downtown Sanford
Don Knight 8. Staff

J.C. PENNEY COMPANY
E C Elsea and Staff

STENSTROM REALTY
Herb Stenstrom and Staff
WILSON EICHELBERGER
MORTUARY
Eupice Wilson and Staff

PUBLIX MARKETS
and Employees

WILSON MAIER FURNITURECO.
Mr and Mrs. Fred Wilson

SENKARIK GLASS
A PAINT CO , INC.
Jerry&amp;Ed Senkarik
and Employees

WINN DIXIE STORES
and Employees

S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y A R E A C H U R C H D IR EC TO R Y

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---------T O I T i n fB B trn i'

�* I * * * *

RELIGION
Evening Herald, Sanford, FL

Briefly
Oviedo Choir Presents
'Greater Is H e ' A t Pine crest
Pinecrest Baptist Church of Sanford, HI W. Airport
Boulevard, Sanford, will host the adult choir of F irti
Baptist Church of Oviedo, Sunday at 7:30 p m . as they
present the Christian musical, "Greater Is He.” The in­
voice choir under the direction of Terry Rabun of Sanford
will sing such songs a i "1 Keep Falling In Love With Him"
and "Jesus Be the Lord of All," from the musical by
Unny Wolfe and Don Marti).

Florida Baptist M e n To Sing
The Florida Baptist Men, a group made up of minister* of
music from Baptist Churches throughout the state, will
present a concett at 7:30 p.m., Monday, at the Central
Baptist Church, 1311 Oak Ave., Sanford The concert is open
to the public.

Single Again-SIngle Parents

Pioneer Jewish Civil Rights

American Jewish Group 75 Years Old
By DAVID E ANDERSON
l PI Religion Writer
The American Jewish Committee,
the nation's pioneer Jewish civil
rights snd human relations agency,
marks its 73Ih anniversary this
month, confronting some of the
same Issue* and problems that
brought It into existence.
When the 7,C00 delegates gather in
Washington to mark the anntversay
It will be a time of gala celebration
and well-deserved congratulating.
But it will also be a time for some
soul-searching, for eipresslons of
concern if not alarm about the
condition of Judaism and the Jewish
community in the United States, and
a time for mapping a strategy for
the group fee the remainder of the
1980s.

Two Items In particular will oc­
cupy the delegates: The sharp rise
of anti-Semitic Incidents in the
United States, accompanied by
apparent strains in inter-group snd
Interfaith relations; the dgnifleane
of the "Reagan Revolution," and it*
implications for the tradltlaially
liberal domestic agenda of the
Committee.
Another major concern will be the
plight of Jewi in the Soviet Union,
echoing the event that led to the
creation of the committee In 1908.
At that time, a small but in­
fluential group of American Jews
sought to organise a humanitarian
response to the plight of the Jews of
Kishinev, Russia, where a par­
ticularly vicious pogrom had taken

The Single Agaln-Slngle Parents Class of Ravenna Park
Baptist Church will hold its monthly sharing meeting May
It at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Priscilla Thorpe, IlOf W. 20th
St., Sanford. Special guest will be the Rev. George Dunn,
director of missions for Seminole Baptist Association. He
will discuss reconstructing live* by formerly marrieds and
single parent*. It is open to all Interested persons. For In­
formation on free transportation and babysitting call 3739476 after 5:30 p.m.

4
/

'A Distant Thunder'
"A Distant Thunder", a Mark IV Pictures Inc. produc­
tion, will be presented by the lighthouse Christian Center
on Friday at I p.m. at Westsidc Improvement Association
{the old Star Theatre building) on 13lh Street, Sanford. It is
a fictional 73 minute color film based on events foretold in
the Bible as part of the Great Tribulation.

M o th e r's D a y Program .
New Salem Primitive Baptist Church, 1300 W. 17th St.,
Sanford, is having a Mother's Day program this Sunday at
11 a_m. Speaker will be Mrs. Phyllis Richardson, Sanford.

'G re a te st W o m e n 's Liberator'
Pastors Fred Neal and Edmond Weber wtU conduct a
special Mother's Day worship service Sunday i t 11 a.m. at
the Congregational Christian Church, 3401 S. Park Ave.,
Sanford. Mothers in attendance will be recogniied by
Pastor Weber and Pastor Neal will preach on "The World's
Greatest Women's liberato r.’*

S u m m e r M ission a ry

lundsy.M ay IM M I-JB

PASSION PLAY
Wrdnrsdny at 7 p.m. at Crntral Baptist Church,
Sanford, the Rev. V. Nell Wyrick will present
"Not an End, but the Beginning", a one-man
drama in which hr portrays the role of Christ.
Other characters voices in the Passion Play are
heard but never seen. Scenery and special
lighting effects enhance the moving story. An
offering will be received.

Brenda Jo Caldarelll, of 1403 Mara Court, Sanford, will be
a Baptist summer missionary from June through August to
Germany. A member of the First Baptist Church of San­
ford, the Is a student of University of South Florida, Tampa.

NEW DIRECTOR

Mother O f The Year

John Cunningham is
the new Seminole
County director for the
Child
Evangelism
Fellowship. Hr for­
merly served as a
Child
Evangelism
director In Penn­
sylvania and comes
here from Tampa.

"The Mother of the Year" at Seminole Heights Baptist
Church will be honored Sunday at the 11 a m service. The
winner was chosen Ira n nominations received last Sunday
from the congregation. As a part of an emphasis on mother
s and home, the service will also include a parent-child
dedication led by the pastor, Dr. Jay T. Goonato.

The Lonely H ousew ife
The "Focus on the Family" film entitled "What Wives
Wish Their Husbands Knew about Women: The Lonely
Housewife" originally scheduled for May 10 will be shown
May 17at I p.m. at First Baptist Church of Oviedo. Tie film
■erics is free to the public.

the lives of some 100,000 Jews in a
tingle year.
The American group sent money
and m edical supplies to the
beleaguered community and
augmented that aid with a campaign
to publicise the cruelty of the Csarist
government.
With the rescue effort, which
began with 30 people, the American
Jewish Committee was bom and
now claims a nationwide mem­
bership of about 30,000 in 600 com­
munities and 87 chapters
During the meeting, the delegates
will spend time discussing s new
report by the committee's national
office, which finds n sharp rise In the
number of anti-Semitic incidents In
the United States although It asserts
"on balance... the Jewish position In

the United States remains secure."
The report documents 377 sntlSemtic Incidents in 1980, primarily
arts of vandalism and desecration.
But It notes that most of these
events look place after the highly
publicised bombing of a Paris,
F rance, synagogue and were
primarily the work of “politically
uninvolved" teenagers whose ac­
tions seemed to be "Imitative"
rather than a "personal expression
of anti-Semitic sentiment."
On a positive note, the report said
that "historically anttSemllism has
constituted a powerful th reat... only
in those countries where It has
been institutionalised in the laws
and traditions of the land."
"No organised hate groups have
any appreciable political or social

influence In this country," the report
said. "The various Ku KIux K lim
and neoNaai group* ... receive
media attention far beyond what
their numbers and strengths war­
rant.”
But while overt anti-Semitism
does not appear to be a threat, a
number of Jewish leaders appear to
be concerned about the rise of the socalled Religious Right and Its im­
plication* for the future of the
Jewish community in the United
States.
The Religious R ight's strong
support for Israel coupled, however,
with a Christian absolutism that tn
some cases approves the effort to
convert Jews to Christianity has
created a sense of unease among
Jewish leaders.

Commandments Guides For Heart
THE NINTH COMMANDMENT; Thou shall not covet thy
neighbor's houte.lKiodus 38:17 and Deutrruoomy 5:21)
What does this mean? We should (ear and love God that we
may not craftily seek to get our neighbor's Inheritance or
house, nor get It by a show of right, but help and be or service to
him in keeping It. (From Martin lath er's Small Catechism)
THE TENTH COMMANDMENT: Thou shall not covet thy
neighbor’s wife nor his manservant, our his maidservant. n&lt;r
hi* rattle, nor anything that is try neighbor’s. (Exodus 30:11
and Deuteronomy 5:211
What does this mean? We should fear and love God that wr
may estrange, force or entice away from our neighbor his wife,
servants, or cattle, but urge (hern to stay and do their duty.
(From Martin laither'a Small Catechism)
HISTORY: The other commandments, In their barebone
form, get us to examine our actions. The ninth and tenth
commandments get us to examine our heart and our motives.
What these commandments say is that illicit desire is Just as
much a sin as an illicit act. It Isn't only that coveting often
leads to overt acts of stealing, killing and adultery. Even if It
deesn't. It can warp our thinking and twist our characters.
"As he thlnketh In his heart, so Is he," said the later writer of
Proverb*.
MEDITATION: To covet in the sense of "long fur" or desire
is notln Itself evil. We even pray, "aive us our heart's desire.”
II our heart's desire Is to better ourselves, that is a good
prayer. These lenten meditation* on the commandments have
had this as their purpose.
It Is when we deslra inordinately to heller our circumstances
and not ourselves or envy what somebody else has thnt desire
inordinately to better our circumstances and not ourselves or
envy what somebody else has that desire can get us into
trouble.
This kind of desire implies dissatisfaction with our situation
in life. I lls a tin against God who has given us everything we
need for our happiness so that we need desire nothing. "Thou
satisflest the desire of every living thing," said the Psalmist.
For those who doubt that, now comes Easter. Easter
assures us that the Highest and Best — our heart's desire—
is a present reality in our lives.
H that does not happen to be our experience, two of Hie
Easter stories ran help us.
lik e the women who went to the sepulchre to find Jesus on
Easter morning, we may be looking in the wrong place. The
women were looking tn the graveyard —among the dead. That
is where we often look for the fulfillment of our desires —
among things that lead to a dead-end In terms of happiness.
“Until you have a new car, a new refrigerator or a new

woman who, like the women in the Easter story, was looking in
the wrong place.
“He is not here,” said the angel to the women at the tomb.
"He is risen...He goeth before you into Galilee. There ye shall
see him . . . Go quickly." And as they ran, "Jesus met them."
Easter is a living encounter with the Highest and Best lift
has to offer. It Is In running and reaching toward the Highest
and Best that wc find our heart's desire fulfilled.
That Is the first clue the Easter stories give us.
The second Is in the walk of th* disciples to Emmaus after
the resurrection. The risen Christ had joined them on the way
but they didn't recogntie him.
That often is our trouble. The Highest and Best is In our
midst but we don't recongtie It.
"This ye, 'Us your estranged face* that miss Use manysplendored Using," wrote the English poet Francis Thompson
who recognised Christ "walking on the water not ot Gennrsereth by Thames."
leslie Wratherhcad tells the story of the young wife whoa*
husband had Just died. She was sitting on the hearthrug in front
of the flickering fire In (he small cottage. The arm of an old
white-haired woman was around her shoulder.
The younger woman was very resentful as she said to the
minister who was there: "You talk about the love of Christ, f
don't believe it. You talk about the everlasting arms of God. I
don't believe It. My husband and I were so in love with one
another and now hie has been taken away,"
And the minister said to her, “My dear girl, the lore of Christ
Is within a foot of you.in your mother. And the everlasting
arms you don't believe in — why, they are round you at this
moment. Whose do you think is the arm across your tiwuldrr
now?
Easter is the everlasting "arm across our shoulder,"
(hough wr may not recogntie it as Christ's. It Is our heart's
desire come to meet us.

M other-Daughter Banquet
A Mother-Daughter Banquet will be held at 6 p.m.. May X
in the fellowship hall of Grace United Methodist Church
fellowship haD at il l W. Airport Boulevard, Sanford.

N e w Hope Singers Concert
The New Hope Singers ensemble of Community United
Methodtit Church, Casselberry, will present ■ concert
Sunday at 7 p.m. at the church on Highway 17-91 R kk
Robinson, church music director, will present a miniconcert on the piano.

Women Plan Food Sale
The Women's Fellowship of the Rolling Hills Moravian
Church, S.R, 434, Longwood, is sponsoring a food sale on
May X, in the church social hall from 8:30 a m until 11:30
p.m. Many different and unusual homemade foods will be
featured including Moravian sugar cake, chicken pies, and
Lovefeast buns; home-grown garden vegetables, honey,
enchiladas, chicken Brunswick stew (Georgia style),
homemade fudge, and an assortment of other dishes, as
well as homemade bread, cakes, and pies.

Church Hosts M urray
The Seminole Height* Baptist Church, Sanford, has as iU
guest this weekend Michael D. Murray, who ccme* at the
imitation of the church's Personnel Committee as a
prospective Youth Worker. A sophomore st Stetson
University, he is the son of the pastor at the Lakeshare
Baptist Church in Jacksonville, and has done summer
mission work under the auspices of th Baptist Campus
Ministry st Stetson.
Severs! activities have been planned for both young
people and adults to get acquainted with him.
The church’s former Youth Worker, Tim Holland, will
terminate his services this Sunday, in order to enter
Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, KY. A
farewell fellowship with him is being planned by the young
people for Sunday evening in the home of Jeff and Debbie
SIBaway.

Songs O f Solom on
The Westminster United Presbyterian Church, 2641 Red
Bug Road, Casselberry, presents Kay Schmaus in concert
on May 17 at 4 pm . The Ulle of the program is "The Songs of
Solomon," Mrs. Sdim sus is the wife of Don Schmaus, band
director at Lyman High School. Mrs Schmaus will be tc
rompanied by Mrs Connie Gottschalk, who will also (day
the "Walts” from the Ballet • Nails," by Delibes.
The concert is open to the public. A free-will offering will
be received for the church's piano fund.

Prison Full Of Mail Order Preachers
MOUNDSVILLE, W.Val
(UPI) — For 11.50, snyotve
can become an Instant
minister In West Virginia,
even a man behind prison
bars.
While acme are laughing
about this, West Virginia
Penitentiary Warden Donald

Bordrnklrrher (ails to see the
humor.
A growing number of in­
mates are now "ministers"
and they're making a growing
number of demands for mere
freedoms to practice their
"religion."
Some refuse to have their

hair
cut
or
shave,
Homosexuals are demanding
lobe wed. Some Inmates want
wine with meals.
"A few of these gays get
together, and before we know
it, »ome Jarklrg preacher
here has them married,"
Bordenkireher complained.

For his efforts to clamp
down, Bordenkiicher has
been rew arded with the
epithet of “anti-Christ," and a
number of civil rights suits.
"There is one sect here that,
an outgrowth of the Jewish
religion, says to rot any hair
is any act against God," the

Mothers Hard To Ignore
Mother's Day Is not noted on the Church
year calendar of liturgical churches and yet It
is impossible to Ignore this day. All of us have
had a mother, whether she is now living or
dead. Jesus had a mother, a mother who was
with Hun even as He was suffering and dying
u i the Cross
Mothers are people and come in every
variety under the sun. They may be fat,
skinny, short, tali, young, along in years,
gentle, bitter, but always (to her children)
beautiful. The avenge mother will stand by
her children regardless of the advenities
they may encounter, likewise, she win
almost b u n t with pride at their smallest
accomplishments • from the first step to
graduation, to a promotion In their job.
"Respect your father and mother" Is the
way the Today's English Version of the Bible
tra n sla te s the Fourth Commandment.
“ Honor" is the word most commonly used.
However, “respect" is perhaps more ap­
propriate and may more properly be used to
apply to mothcre who, for some reason or
another may not be • honored''. Respect is
something that should be shown to every
human being simply because they a n a pari
of God's creation.
In our time "honor" has come to imply
someone doing something above and beyond
the call of normal, everyday iifairs. For
Instance the hostages, who had been held so
long by In n , were honored when they

\

Pastor's

*

Com er
By REV, RALPH L LUMAN
Lutheran Church
Goad Shepherd

returned home. According to what has been
said, they had not received respect from their
captore.
"Respect your father and mother" Is
something that is incumbent upon all of us. It
is especially tmperitive In these days of
turmoil that a sense of respect for mother,
father, brother, sister, teacher, police of­
ficers, etc. be engendered in young people.
And this respect lives or dies as U la for­
mulated in the home. This places a burden on
m otheniandfalhen) lobe sure they deserve
te a p e v L Theta U a la u a Jefutile d e n ta ls ! llial
young people respect their parents.
On this Mother's Day, all of us could
remember that to honor or rw pect our
mother wit) help us to respect aD individuals.
The example of the love of Jesus' mother,
Miry, weeping for Him at the Crow, is but
one of many examples of a mother's undytrg
love for her children. "Respect your father
and mother that your days may be long In the
land which the Lord your God gives you.”

MOTHER'S DAY
CONCERT
Karen Harris, suluist,
recording artist and
former member of The
Festival of P raise
Spurrlows, will appear
at Calvary Baptist
Church of Lake Mary
Country Club and
Crystal Lake Hoad,
this Sunday for a
Mother's I lay concert
from t&gt;:45a.m. to noon.
She has sung on
television on the PTI.
Club, 700 Club and the
Hob (lass Show.

warden said Thursday. "So,
they insist on wearing their
hair long. I told them recently
the Jewish religion also calls
(or circumcision, and I told
them I'd line them up to get it
done.”
But he regretted that
riposte.
“They started complaining
and writing letten laying I
was threatening to circumcise
them," he said.
Recently, West Virginia
Secretary of Stale A. Jam es
Manchln sent away for — and
received — his minister's
credentials from a California
outfit. By paying another |1.J0
at a county courthouse, as
Manchln did for the sake of
illustration, anyone can
become a "clergyman.”
Bordenkireher said nearly
73 inmales have Joined mail­
order churches, snd many
hiv e obtained m lnleters'
credentials.
Inmales insist on being
released from (heir cells to

m inister to other church
members, and file civil rights
suits In (rderal court when
they're turned down, Bordenklrcher said.
He said he didn't know how
many such suits have been
filed.
"I suspect this all seems
kind of funny," the warden
said. "But we tuve to provide
an attorney, and It's rotting
the taxpayers a hell of a lot of
money.
"The thing is, it's legal in
West Virginia, snd they may
win one of these suits. Then
we'll be in trouble. It won’t pc
funny sny more.”
And, even when prisoners
lose a lawsuit, they don't
seem to mind. After a|l,
there's a ride to another town
for a court hearing.
" I t's called windshield
therspy," he said. "We have
to buy them a Big Mac and a
milkshake along the way. It
sounds nice, but it's costing its
a lot of money."

Concert Concludes Series
The Asbury Artist Series will present the last of the
current scries of programs at 3:30 p m , May 17 in the
sanctuary of the Asbury United Methodist Church in
Maitland.
The featured performer will be Elisabeth Wrancher
soprano. Mies Wrancher will offer a varied program of
music drawn from heder and opera literature, folk and
contemporary music. She will be assisted by Stephen
Nelson as accompanist.
Upon graduation from Indiana University, Miss Wran­
cher studied in Munich, Germany as a Fulbrighl Scholar.
Her wide experience includes the tinging of leading roles tn
many of the majoe opera houses in Europe, and guest itptarancta with major symphony orchestras o( Germany
and the United Stales. In addition, she has done extensive
singing end acting In r * &amp; , Ulavlalon, and motioo pictures.

0

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Sunday, May It. 1M1

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HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

□an nnnn naan
□ n n a a n n a a n a n For Sunday, May 10, 1981

5 W:d*
1S $marl bit

•
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HaW tract
Slur over
Had
South African j g Touch gantry

thoughts may not be is
YOUR BIRTHDAY
profitable as later ones. Study
May II. 1511
Your
prospects
far matters.
drtmatiit
LIBRA ISept. tJ-OrL 231 A
achieving your goals for the
JOCnsly
45 Stubborn
tO Soth i ion
year ahead are good.The trick friend may come to you with a
21 leered
animal
11 Normandy
proposition today which you'll
33 Comptta
41 Indefinite par- Is to choose targets that will
unrHion day
kt j w from the start you w on t
be
desirable
once
they
are
I I Mott
24 Famafe
want to participate in. Be
attained.
47 Noun
rahgtoua
TAURUS | April 21-May 2I| di.Jomatlc when begging off.
21 Tho____o.*
labor!
. *^'¥lith
hippmesi
SCORPIO |OfL 24-Nov. Hi
Should m isunderstandings
IS Yatr catagory SI Amoncan
27 Indahnna art*- J*
arise with the family today, You'd be wise at this lime to
(Ibbr)
Indian
ct(
24 Burn off
try to settle your differences keep your goals to yourself.
42 Tarmmal pofe 52 Ditsofce
21 Stw
I I Catthaa
at once. A little tolerance and Even counsel from well4] Fata
14 Clump
12 Overthrows H 01 *RU*I
44 Norwagtan
55 f nt&gt;gn |abbr | forgiveness will salvage a meaning associates might get
IS Smudgy
21 framt lor
pleasant day. Find out more you off-track.
1 r t
1 i f r •
• *0 "
atratchtng
SAGITTARIUS |N#v. 21of what lies ahead for you in
27 Tail chauffeur It
II
Dec.
I l l Although your
the
year
following
your
bir­
I I fip rtta score
thday by sending for your purpose today won't be to use
If
31 Muaical
•I
&gt;•
■yttabfe
copy of Astro-Graph. Mad 11 olliers, persons whose help
» m ’-' 10
40 Cofloga
"
for each to AstroGraph, Bo* you ask may think so. Re very
■
h
degree|ebbr|
a
419, Radio City Station. N.Y. careful that you don't give
41 Mora
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10019. Be sure to specify birth this Impression.
aorpantrna
■
It » )*
II
4 1 ____ Blanc
■
CAPRICORN (Der. H-Jaa.
date.
M
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ST
41 Catch
F
GF.MINI l May tl-June 2I| 19) If you follow procedures
41 Part oI tha air
I
&gt;•
Beware of a tendency today to which worked fur you
SI Actraaa
1
1 L H
anticipate negative hap­ previously, you’re likely to be
Mortal
II
14 Lata good
penings which may never successful with them again
SI Colorado
41
«t 1) 44
occur.
1*1 events take their lodiy. Don't gam ble on
Indian
J
49 u if If
&lt;1 fi If
II
course and you'll enjoy unluowns.
S7 Astronaut's
■
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2B-Feh.
yourself.
i»
11
If
SI Pubfrcrty man 1)
CANCER (June Zl-Jolj H i I ll Be wary of a tendency
[2 w d t|
•&gt;
You'll be eager for com­ today to settle for second-best
51 Math aymbol
panionship today, but try to in finalizing situations. It will
•0
ii
60 Cooipttt
41
t select friends who can have take more time to do things
fun doing Inexpensive things. right, but you’ll be glad In the
Your extravagant pals couki long run.
PISCES | Feb. It-M arrh 29)
be hard on your wallet
LEO &lt;July 21-Aug. H i Try Olliers may have better ways
not to let yourself be drawn of doing things today. You
Into com petitive situations could, Initially, resist their
today. You're the type who Ideas. Don't let pride stand In
By Oawold Jacoby
to your partner's two-apade usually enjoys a challenge, the way of getting the job done
and AUb Sot tag
opening bid but don't feel you but this may not be true at Uits pnperly.
have to bid again unless his
t HIES ( March 21-April 11)
Bridge literature U conspic­ second bid ts a jump In a new time.
VIRGO i Aug. 21-Sept. H) When others otter you sound
uous by the absence of dlsrus- suit
ilont on bidding when there
Take away that king of Important financial decisions advice today you'll graciously
are pari scores There la a hearts and It your partner's today
should
not
be listen to what they have to
sound reason for this The sub­ two bid U a game contract predicated upon your initial say. Unfortunately, you're not
ject la too difficult
you should pan.
assum ptions. Your first likely to art upon it.
We Intend to devote the
If it turns out that partner
next few Saturday ante lea to hai opened two apadea with S
thti subject as a finale to a • A K i k x . H -A . D - A K i
year and a half of tipa on bid- i i i. and you have mined a For Monday, May II, 1981
din* and play.
diamond llam . It Is just too
Today the apecific aubject bad. But you can console your­
will be the strong two bid self with the thought that bid­
today which will have more
when you have a part score.
YOUR BIRTHDAY
ding Is never going to be
We get many letters siting perfect
bite than you Intended
May II, 1191
whether the two bid is atilt a
L'BRA (Sept. ZLOct. 21)
in rase you use two clubs as
Don't be discouraged if
force when It la also a bid of your Artificial and only forc­
projects or enterprises get It's good to do for others, but
game There ii no unanimity ing bid. II Is Important lhal
off to a slow start this coming today you may be unwisely
of opinion here but our sug­ you respond with any hand
year.
You may not establish generous and make a comgestion Is that you should pau
We have an interesting sug­
with an absolute blank, but gestion here Ptay two dia­ any records for speed, but you mi tine nt beyond your meant
respond with aa much at one monds as a complete negative will
m ake
substantial which you'll later regret.
U na or queen aad a jack.
(0 show that you don't hold a
progress.
On the other hand, when king or a queen and a jack
BCOnriO (Oct. 34-Nrnr. H i
TAURUS (April W-Msy TO)
you ttram to m a tt a response This It rather coenpUcaird for
Do nothing today to inaks
there is no need to whip a moat players, but then most Be persistent In that which yourself look important a t the
dead horse. You don't have to players don't use two clubs as you hope to accomplish today.
eipm se of associates. If you
make a second bid Thus, with the only forcing hid
You could get sidetracked if
5 - i i, H - K n , D - l i i t , K (NcwiPAPtH E ttm n u sjt an* i you don't stick to your do, the applause will be
marred with sneers and jeers
• i n * , respond two notrump
agenda. Romance, travel,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. Bluck resources, possible
pitfalls, and career for the Dec. 21) There is a possibility
KIT 'N' CARLYLE’
by Larry Wright coming months are all today that you might repeal a
discussed in your Astro- mistake similar to one you've
Graph which begins with your made in the past. Let old
birthday. Mad t l for each to lessens count for something.
AstroGraph, Box 489, Radio
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jaa
City Station, N. Y. 10019. Re 19) Unless handled properly,
sure to specify birth date.
Joint ventures couki be more
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) co u n te r-p ro d u c tiv e th a n
Take your responsibilities and fruitful today. Be tactful with
dutins seriously today, or else, emotional associates.
through neglect, they could
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
begin to pile up and cause you 19) This Is not a good day to
complications.
try to Imitate the actions of
CANCER (June 21-July 22) others in career situations,
Instead
of
operating tyhat worked far them may
prudently financially today, fixile for you.
you may be tempted to do
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
otherwise. Ixisses could occur If you are saddled with a
If you get too careless.
careless co-worker today,
LEO (July 23-Aug. H i You keep a closer eye on him or
won't accomplish all you hope her than usual. Do the com ­
to today if you do things in fits plicated tasks yourself to
and starts. Be consistent and ■void mistakes.
try not to launch projects on
ARIES (March 21-Aprtl 19)
impulse.
Some uncertainties are likely
VIRGO (Aug. B-Scpt 22&gt; today In business situation
Instead of weighing your This is not a Ume to take
words in order not to offend risks, gambles or make im­
others, you may say things pulsive moves.
I I Dina at homo
I2wda)
17 Hawaiian
volcano.
Mauna____
11 Fateful nmo
lor Caaaar
20 Actor Sparta
21 Occupwd
22 Itiogal hand
21 Germanium

W IN AT BRIDGE

BUGS BUNNY

by Stoffal &amp; Heimdahl

^A T5 *THS 9TOANGEST ^ r S NOT A
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Billie Jean Denies
Lesbianism Rampant
In Women's Sports
SEW YORK (UPI) — BUlie Jesn Kln«, who ti being sued by
her female lover, denies lesbianism Is rampant In women’*
golf ind tennis nr Ihsl younger players often are ieduced by
older ones.
The lennls champion and her husband, Larry, were Inter­
viewed by ABC* Barbara Watters in a segment aired Thur­
sday on the network’s “20-10" news magsiine. Mrs. King also
said she had Ihe “feeling’’ the was being blackmailed by her
ex-secretary, with whom she had an affair.
Her former lover, Marilyn Barnett, a paraplegic, filed suit
against the Kings demanding lifetime support and title to their
Malibu, Calif., bead) house where she currently lives. She said
Mrs. King promised her both during their years together.
Mrs. King said her admission of their affa'r would not
adversely affect women’s tennis.
“The game’s far too big," she said, adding that *he
disagrees with reports that homosexuality la common among
women golf and tennis players.
“Thai’s very sad became 1 don’t leel It's true at all,’’ she
said. "First of all, I don’t like them to single out women’s
tennis and women’s golf ... AU the youngsters have parents
with them, or coaches, or chaperones, or someone, and I have
nevtr seen anything of what you Just said and 1 Just can’t
beUeve people think like that."
Asked If the couple felt they were being blackmailed by Mias
Barnett, M rs King said "I was starting to get that feeling."
Her husband elaborated.
•That’s a difficult question to answer because for the last
five or six y ean we’ve been helping take care of Marilyn, he
said. “We’ve given her sums of money .. and then, for some
reason, there’s never enough. They always want more. You
never know when they cross the line but you become un­
comfortable when you stop giving
King said he knew of the lesbian affair at the time, and
blames himself because he was busy with sports promotions
instead ot traveling the tennis circuit with his wife.
“1 feel I contributed to I t ... by not fulfilling her need to have
m e there," he Mid. "I w asn’t willing to be th e re ... I wanted lo
do my own thing

“ I have lo admit I had a certain tinge of Jealousy,’ King
said "but 1also recognised that unless 1w u willing lo be there
I was In some ways defaulting in my responsibilities ... I
preferred that she be happy and lhavej somebody helping her
and doing those Ihloga that I wruid do L*! were there rather
than Just be by herself all the time."

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11:45
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2:15

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6 30
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I I (1 7 ) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE

’ o TUVEBOAYM
11 (SSI GLENN ARNETT!

• L i f t 'LOVE • MARRIAGE • B U RINU S

BEEN IN BUSINESS FOB 50 YEARS
IN PRIVACY OF MY HOME
HOURS S A M . 1 V M CV**d Sunday

(Tl O THE PRICE m RIGHT
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PADDINGTON

CARR • C ID S tA l RAIL HI ARISE*

Past — Pr«E«nl - FlltMFB
III I m il ADVICE ON All A l l AIMS

11:00

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Cable Exclusive

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Moth* l Day
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AithuiTkachet^
Features

A ll th e F IS H
You C a n E a l

All Day Sundays
This could be the year.
The year the Braves really catch fire
The year Gaylord Pkerry catches immortality with his
300th career victory
The year Phil Nlekro’s unhlttable, uncatchable
knuckle ball becomes catchabie But remains as unhittable as ever
And ifyou don't have cable yet. sign up now for a
season o f Braves baseball Wju don't want to mbs out
on a single caoh
Cause. THIS COULD BE THE YEAR.

Com a to Arthur Treacher i and fill up on delicious
bailor dipped North AUantic Whit«f.*h Foropene&gt;s. we will Mfve you three pieces ol hih. our big.
Crunchy English style chips, two golden b&lt;own
hush puppies and tasty cole* law III ha l dooan t till
y o u up you can go back lot more hsh in tact, ah
tha hsh you can eat Bui ramempei. Hut oiler is
only good on Sunday! and you m u ll eal all your
fish in Ihe dining room No U k g out!

; SAVE'-‘T7.50

..........................

on your Csblsvlslon Connection

j
|

today

Hit S. French Ave
Sanford, Fla. 11771

Children
under 12
only $1.99

ArthurtteachetS
SEAFOOD

3 2 3 -2 4 4 0

or dip this coupon and mall lot

I want lo catch all tha sperls this Spring
or WTB 1 and CablavIslaR. Call ma tor a
priority connection appelntmsnii
cable

Your fruit* and »ag*wbl« may Hay frsiher kingar if you
Iin* your Ysgelabla bin with papef lowail or dry tpongt*
to absorb mouturt.

5 00
35)IOREAMOFJEANNIE
10 MIS TER ROGERS
17) I LOVE LUCY

1.30
O t o BAYS OF OUR LIVES
( o
THE YOUNO ANO THE

6:2 9

(75 Q aooo m o r n in o America
ff (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
O|T0|REBOP(R)
I I (1 7) MY THREE SONS

m o v ie

4:30
[35) TOM ANO JERRY
117 1THE SRADY BUNCH

12:30
i l ) NEWS
p SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
Q RYAN'S HOPE
(35) FAMILY AFFAIR
S ) 1101 ELECTRIC COMPANY |R)
(MON. TUE. THU. FRO
(D (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY
(w io i

600
1 Q CAPTAIN KANGAROO
T I (351 FRED FUNTSTONE ANO
i-■ i n o ';
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1X (17 ilD A £A M O F JEANNIf

1245
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Wo loo* Jom Ttyla

I O

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U UERV GRiFF IN
(35) WOOOY WOODPECKER
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117) THE AOOAMfl FAMILY

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I t (3 5 ) TOM ANO JERRY

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Cum

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(35) DAFFY DUCK
10 OVER EASY
(17) THE FLPIT8TONES

12:15
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11:45
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11:15

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11 (35) DAY OF DISCOVERY
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1 1:30
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131 INSIDE I OUT (T U f , ERQ
101 BOO k BIRO (WCOl
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name

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ADDRESS
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STATE

RHONE
A B L E IN C A B L E D AREAS O NLY

�IB-Evinlrie Harold, Sanford, FL

U—HBb Wan)»d__

Sund#T,M#Y IB, Mil

CLASSIFIED ADS

A MATTER O F RECORD
MARRIAGE
APPLICATIONS
* Hobart l Wattori, • 17. CIO*. « 1
F -t. v tn t Carter Dr . w Pstm
Jofmitin. i n ; .
I t ) Stamp L * M Hill* D r . Mild
Stephen D B*.1Ht. I S7, U ‘
Pstadan* A v # . L W , B Michel*
La*. 7 S7. B T J. « « M id . tart
le a M u n i.* J1. Davidson. TM. 1
P i i r r l i C. M o i l • 41. u rn * ad
a rm
f d9*r r
A n u t , p I t . so)
SncwniH Rd . Ov.edo A Oatorit B
* m w . t Ik M »o a M rtn
AM B Brown, 1 «J. Ft Worth.
I F . i Dorothy J Grover. U S . M U
Tuaedo A .t . Oti.
Monoid O Rent. I 4). B&gt; M L
Oriado, B L &lt; u O War nor, 101.

tom* M O I t t

Donald d die*. I to. Ilfl
iantord A rt , Sonl *0. Cynthlo M
Baulin. SOI. 100 w Cotomon C r .
lanl
Timothy G McMahon. I I 01, Be
M ill. Dartona Belt . E Jean R
Itrrena 10 K . D*yl B(h
Leonard Rh»m , i l l , tan Whit*
Raceway. O n . A M ary L
I hornet. I at. MOL at* Mowoll. AS
Larry W Brown, 1 OL Ba Ml.
Lk.M ofy. A Joon A Brown. Ilea,
tama iddreti
Claud* A Caiman, M M , Ba
MS. LW. A Baggy Jo R y ttr, I IT.
tam* address
Michael H Alien, 1 1 0 , JOS
Colony Or , CB. A Bonnl* J
Demon!, II *1, tam* addratt
J*m*t A Cepe I * 1*. Ba e »4
Surttid*. I C , A Marti*Catal. 0*0.
tam* eddretl
Leonard W Nicholas. II IS. JOB
Datord Od . No H I U r e . t
Carol i Watty. 0 SI. JO* Wavarly
Dr , FA
Norman K Mimt. I el, Ba M l.
10 Monee*. A Ceyi* V Comallut.
0 SI. tam* a d d rm
Darrell E Pedray. I l l , MI
Turin Coach C t , S anl, A Kathleen
T. My Key, II 0 , u rn * addratt
Scall L McGill. I *0, H jacaton
C t, CB. A Tan* L Want 1. *01.
tame addrata
Jot* L O a la ria . I 41, l i t
Mayti*Id Cr . Sard . A Sara B
Caiarja, II SI, tam* a d d r m
M'0v*l A Datahot. 11*0. 1411
Bard Will** Cr.. Orl . A Dton* C
Itouttieid. 1 40. TOST Archwood Dr..
Orl
Camlld A Comal, *40. 4*0
A4*tlonylll* Ay*., S anl. A Sandra
M loper. 0 SI. tarn* addratt
Timothy J Oliver, 10 W. SIM
Brocaton Or , O r l , A Cynlhl* A
Flo/at. 001, tom* a d d r m
Willi* C Wathington. T IS. ION
.B a r Ay*., S anl, A Da ty L
•Vtathington. f IT. tam* addratt
I ; coord* A Simpkins, 4 St. 1401
*Jtoily A v * . Sanl, A Chary) A
e^amptan. 1 SO. tamo a d d r m
'• Timothy O Chotloan, ♦ SO. OOT
.'Dearborn A re , AS, A Jill P
Mtollar, 1 40. 404 Ellsworth S I. AS
V. William C (lead. Jr , T a , t i l l
';S Chat* Ay* . S anl, A Elinor D
^■Welrovon. S S4. tam* addratt
- j FtadancO Banka, • 14. 114
»;Grohem
Ay* , O rlande
A
M Bant*. 4 *1, tam*
, varnotky J r. T M , IS I

Cr., Cd A Or an* a t
, t ««. tam* aaataaa

IW

S S ll:

'-tern# addratt L
•' Michael E Oiddent. JOSS, l i t !
Tm dan R d . WB A Amt* M
■ heatley J SO tam* addratt
; Mark A Dealt. 4 SI. 4IS J
, Flntan B l , AS A M ar tart* M
Bradr. I 0 . tama addratt
Ernatl L. Slloh. 041. Fr4nAlm,
\ * A Barbara j Moor*. 041. 110
Dai pmar I N LW
Clyd* H Robertton J r , I IS. Ba
1411. Sanl A Candit J Bury. 0 M.
» l W ISth S I . Sanl
A nd 'aat W idrig, 1 01. J0J B
Barth C l . WS A Ingrid A Iiarnut.
111, tam* addratt
' * Jam atD Wilton, S SA. Rl I, Boa
. 0S&gt; A. Ovlado A Charlie A Suggt.
•.I SO. tam* addratt
David C Duran!. i j* j. Slid
Orange Dr . AS A Barbara L,
itutkar. 1100. H I Swaaiwatar
Club Bird . LW
Jamat A O rta '* , I St, ITI4
Denton R d . WP I
Ban* E

Thompton. sss. t*m* add
Stanley E Heart. II SS. DO
Coward Rd . CR 4 Donna J t t r m
TS». OTI L«0C R . CB
Harman W Wood. 7 04. M W
Either S I . Orl A Edna Carrnil, 1
a *4 t s t a . c n
Dtemtt E HortrL. ! i t K Son
h r t t c r . WP A »* fln F Bow. U
S*. u m * add
Brine* McKinney III, I P Rl L
Bt M l A. Sard A Janlct Jett. I SJ.
it* Euan B l , Sint
Jvaom* C Chandler. 1*0 111
Draw Ay* . sanl A Lawana
Williams. I I 44. IS01 W Tin S I .
Sanl
Richard D Austin. *14. JJOl i
Part A v t . Saw A Barbara L
Phillips. 140. 1004 S Marshall
A r t . Sanl.
Charles E H all, f St, M M
Saeurlly A r a , 0*1*40 A Fraddi*
Mat Broardv. I 14. B t 411 Otiado
Dtlw.n O L iltMitld. 10 IS, Ba
1111 F o r ttt C ily A Carolina
Hodgkmi. l o t Rl 1 Be 41* W Lk
Bramiay Rd . Foroil City
Jamat t . Bohman. 1 It F a n lo i.
Vo A Roberto B Truiuct. S H . 441
Elliott A v * . Sanl
Richard Caen. I ) SI. 1010
Landmark LN , CB A Patricia A
Avery, T g . tame addratt
Dal* R. Durranct. l i t . sat Lk
K atnrynCr., C B A Cindi A Tarn.
Sac. l i t Grandview A r t , AS
Robert E B urn t, t It . I l l
Spanish Trot* Dr., AS A Nancy L
Chandler. I II , Ha Cobra Dr . LW
Guy T Birth*. 1 41. I** Country
Club R d . Lk Mary A Toni M
Ttvsigul. J 4 L M l Larkwm d D r .
Sanl
Sluort
Labau.
* 17,
Fr*m.ngham, MA A Marilyn C
Quintero It a*. Sa’liabrook NJ
Leonard M
C rls p tll, 1 at,
V Odl* III. NV A Monti a «
h-ydyr mayer, s St. ta m i addr a il
R ichard C
Ta rg a tl,
a il
THusvill* A lata J Booth. H a l.
TllusvIM*
Bust*/ E MtCouin. 1 SI. u&gt; 0 4
Lk Monro* A Diana L Carter. 1 44,
a . sye Lk Menrhe
Robert lulhef lend 4 U . JIM
Magnolia A v * . LI A tan* A
Marlary E
Laky t l la. i*m*
a d d rm
J a llra y C Iro n y . I I I . JOI
L awl,a id C r , WP. Cynthia L
Hykokkl, * P , IJ Nilth-ng Poll
I n . CB

Sem inole
Rem* j Mane* A Jamas AJyin
B e jtr«* O Talas A Joseph R
Virginia M ac f arrara vs jgnn
W#yn# Murphy A Elam#
Jamas A B * «rr A Heim# D
Kathryn Lauahlnghous* Craft A
XJ.T.ci Z t s t t u a tt
KMOfl M Cranj A C a r d O,
R ichard M ark Ja.obson A
JeniCt Gorbar. art m i,dan nama
Garber
Lou Arm Henderson A Jamas F
Robert H Joyce A Lind# K , set
nama Gardens
Kelly S Pern# A Jamas A II
Jacquatin* Goodson A Carl j. R
Nor* Kay Haonlg A Gary
L toner d
Jan* Lao Rcwatt A Char I n
Edward
Ddyiana D oan t D rier and
Richard, wt lormar nam* Doan*
Pamela A Pout and John J , wl
nam* Thomas
Deborah Juann M onlgom ary
and Ralph Wm

BUILDING PERMITS

B U ILD IN G P lR M IT S
Dan Ball, i l l Park A v * ,
Remodel porch. 1700
John C Moor* T00 I Summerlin
A v * . Ec carport. POO
Dawn Kiddy. HOt Sanford A v s ,
Remodel In t r . S1.000
Dal* Gustation, l H I F ranch
Av* .
Repairs Com ’ l,
IS00
Superior Consir , M01 Elm Av* ,
Residence. * 11*70 ; 1*00 E lm
A v t . Ratidonct. I l l 170
Am or. D tv
A Lend. 1*01
Orlando Or . M&gt;nl warehouse.
IR U B S
Tompk.ns Dev Corp . M 4 Raid
C f . Rosidvnc*. 114.411. I N An
thony D r . R nidenct. l i t i l l H I
Jutim Wy. Residmc*. SIA 4I I . l i t
Anthony, Rrtldonc*. I l l III
wesson M l E Jenkins Cr .
Reroot. It 740
Mary A Sherman. 1411 W IRh
S i . Repair R e td . 11.000
Lucille Noll. ISO* Summer I m
Av* . Ulll Bldg . tlOO
Or Jgn R Day. 701 1: 7ml S t .
Infee o r remodat, CL 000
A K Shoemestr, 704 Villa O r.,
Rrsdenre. II* *01
Addison Jones. I 0S W H P SI..
Frame stairs. S M
Thomas Brown. 1701 E Ith S t.
G en ua 11 no
Second Image, H04 Sanlord Ay ,
interior remodel. 1)00
Paul Jackson. I l l ] Laurtl A v * ,
Enc porch. ST40
Undo Low Blu* A M o M i E
Jem al M Jackson ITS* W IRh
Elinor Cngal A Barton
SI . Enc porch. 11.000
Nina M Swell A J r llr t y
Maud* Davis. I l l ] Cypres* Au ,
William C M tC im a rd A Dabra
Reroot, ll.too
*
George Vogel. MO I French
A
Tra d Lyn Priail A Ricky Cana
A v * , n p t i r s . 11.000
Rrbacca Jaan Tucker A Horae*
Manual Jacobian. H I Sanlord
A II, w! lovmtv nama— M ayan
Av , Remodel m itrior, 11.000
William H Bunfln. li t M aytt r
Howard Preston W rit Sr A
Cr , Enc car port A mleroe dining
M .ry Kolharln* (Dyson) w all
r m , 11.000
Vicki A Beallav A Jlm m lt C
,!ii/aba*n Ann Otohl A John
Padre J. Rodrlguai. 1141 Gat*
David Mithaal Logan A Cynthia
PI., Enc. porch. IM 0
Complete Interiors, loa w a il
L ym . wl lormar nam a-R otanc
wmd Cl.. Rasldanc*. S H .P 1
Gladys L Saunders A Blwcmd E
Virginia K Slemkleubar A John
First federal, 111 W tst S I,
R
Spr Inkier tytlam , SH.tOO
Rosalyn 1homes A W llllt M
W aller G u lck , M l Carriaoa
Donna D Whitasr* A Raymond
Cove Shad L Awning, ISM
L,
Ralph Kelley. 7*17 Marshall
B m a b o ih Ann O u la u ll A
Av* . Residence, SM.T1S. and 1*11
Marshall Ava . RasRSanca, tlt.TTS
V 0 * w Cell Prams A Barm* p
j i
Raovnbauvh. to* Holly,
m a a iiiM
‘W v
SMB
Sow* V 4* 4*1, 14* II*I4 U l e w
Dr . Fane*. Slkl
Connie Sue Mauve A Howard
John Mickly. 10 Hiddm Lak*
Dan Moor* Sr
Or . Convert Scr rm S I M
Micn*#i D**n Stephens A Shall*
hentlimki 74S Loch Low D r .
L
Scram E n d . 1*00
Jamla Lou 4 lym A Robert R
Murphy Properi,*i. 1 0 L 107.
lefts* Etait* I Gordon I Gitrka A
147*. 1 0 1 .1 0 7 .14U 74JS, and 10T
Victor Joseph
A A B lak# Av* . Duptaa. 114.i l l
Jtm ot A Mason A Donne P
each
tuttim* Kay Sumner Sm'in A
llernla Morr Ik. 1(1 Dogwood Dr .
Muhaei La* Smith, wl maiden
Geivbo A O K k . 1)00
nemo— Sumner
Lawrence Blackmon. IIS Loch
Norah L Tolkson A Roy H
Low D r . Util moa . 1170
Gary L Winn A Susan O
W illiam
H arkntst.
404
Lynn* arm Morrison A Dev d l „
Magnolia, HtrooJ. SIAM
w! lov mer name T yief
N C Doudnty, m E Comm I .
Samuel Works Jr A Geneva O
Inrr remodeling SM.000
Brand* Schofield A William
Complete Interiork IT* Wild
Roland J Crtyiar A Rita T
wood Dr . Rasldanc*. I l l 700 J07
liana C Jtnnlngs A Richard J
H.ddyn Lake Dr . Ret dame
Melissa A Smith A Robert J
H AM * and 117 Wildwood D r .
Sally
V irgin ia
P n a ril
A
Raardancb. l i t Ac*
1 manual D . wt meden nama
Dennis Bratmer, t i l l Tarrac*
Badgatl
Dr , Enc garage, tl.OQO
Dabra Lynn Dean A Anthony
Helen S Adhau, MX) Iroquois
Augusta Daan
Arc . f ir * Wall. H 000

DISSOLUTIONS

REALTY TRANSFERS
Thomas M ahaflrr Jr A Jamas
W A lak# Mewall Corp la Lak*
,»4ow*M Arms Cando. L i d . fhar
cartel SEivM SW '.Sac 1111 X . I
ot SR 4)4 tic . 14.104 000
■ Tre tu e M H sm il, w d la
Ira m # M Hamil A Charles
Wes'ey Hamil J r , l o l l *1 A t l
Sanlord Ha ignis Addn . 1100
Equity Reilly Inc to WIMom G
F t 4/ son Jr. A wt Jinot A
Mar (* f ft I A damson sgl . Un
n i l . Sandy Cava. US.MO
FL Rend C o m m . Inc lo Paul
-E f t Adams A wt Susan K m Lot IX
Wakiva Galt Villas, Sac. Two.
S7LOOO
• Lawllald A p i s , Inc to w
Theodore Etiol III A wt Kim L .
'O n (4 in s cedarsrood VIII Condo
10.000
FL Res id Comm, lo Jatvn R
Covano A wt Potrklo. L ol 0 . Th*
Lindings. 1*0.000
Th* Huskey Co to Russell T
Swam. J r , Lot 1. Bik B, Swtai
water Club. Un III. SIOO.NO
W Don Davor*. Sr , Ind A
J ttp r Est In ti O Meredith to
Wmlom A Kuykendall A wt
Senna. Part ot S4 It r a d Old
forest City Pain. Springs Rd , N ty
ot Lot I, btk II A Lot SO, BIS A.
Mobil* Manor Ind Sat . S I0 JIM
F A R Buildws Inc leMichaal L
Leggett A wt Bonn!* L .. lo l IT.
Villas ol Casselberry. Ph II,
M UBB
Frtdarkk O Danitlak A wt
Jana t* Themes Wilkar A wl
Janlct A . Lots S A A Lsvada
u-Tourt, SM.000
Iteith* B B a k ir, Wld
lo
Kotnram N Cor lay. E 'S Lot IS.
Polm
Hammock
A llgtm on t,
*111000
Barth* 6 Baser to fllchord N
Bull*/ A wt Eleanor, E 'y ot lo t IT.
Polm
Hammock
Allotm ent,

* I ts dod
g

Kalhiten M
ly r ro w s
to
hiagsnp Bk at Sam . lo t M. Blk
• A. Lika wood Shores. 111.000
JSI O rv . Inc. to Charles S
Bannatt Jr A ret Elian R m Lai It ,
Wedgewood Trrwvls Viu*s. S44.4D3
' JSI Do* to Jam al Samililan A
pt Muriel Lai II. Wtdgawood
JonAiS Villas l l t . I «
Pitch* P Silvan A wt Doris tg
Dario E S.ag A wt Maruavat M .
tpt &gt;!«. S«alM Oaks. Utt 1S74.SBB
. RiCYard Em Ladas A wt Sandra
lo Oaborah W S U m ty A Phyllit
M Katblornsen. Lott I k 17 A I t

il

Wk E. Wait Aitementa Hts . Sac L
S7S.TBB
Maronda Homes Inc to Louis S
Uhi*r A wl Inal, Lot 0 Cedar
Ridge cm III. SU.40O
Bel A ir t Homes Inc. to J**t B
Court A wt Mario E . l o l JIT. Bat
Aira Hilts, Un I. IM.sOO
1QC07 Lmda A Grtanlo Barry
L. Oraan. H il. lo t Id. bra 47,
Sanlandd th* Suburb Beautiful,
Altamonte Sac . S'OO
LfwfiaM Apts , Inc lo Tana R
Hannah Un 041411 Cedar Wood
Village Condo . I. Sal aou
Mildred M R ti . vjl A Batty E
Johnston to Ju Jty F Millar
(M arr I Un ( 104 Crane i Routt
V,.iagt. Sac The ■*. I l l red
f r c Landings Assoc. lt d to
Abdviiah • N Al Banian. Lol U
Th* Landings. ST1700
Visual Arts Productions Inc to
John E Meitref. Let 4 A W 10- ot 1.
1 1 1 ! of 1 Mk 44 lowniita el
North Chutuata. at at IS.WCO
IG CDI Farm# Stathaorth to
Delhi* Aka* Milchall A bertha La*
Knrght. Loti 1 A 1, Blk 1. Allan s
First Addn, Washmgton Ha.grus,
BIBB
(OCD) Amt Bowen lo Joseph V
Bowen A Ants, Let IS. Spr&lt;ng Oaks,
un a. Slot
Wallace O tSollarsd lo Merino A
Kennedy A Ca nd id M Abbott. Lot
A Bl F A W » ' Ol 1. Blk F Rev
mop Ot ChuhtOt*. SI TOO
Henry O Stnou Held A wt
(Satba’ o At 10 VJlilibh L S.ppet A
wt Colhsrln* M . Lol ttl. Winter
Springs. Un. A S100.000
Martha A M ray Boynton to John
H Boynton Jr. du pin opts. E 100
ot W K Ib o f N m atSJOOot NW ’ .
ol Sac 10 I t 10 Tl7 ISA S100
Batty J . Echevarrlo. sgl to
Baity J Echevarria A David l
Vernon trustees. U tl 0 A part of 0.
Lim a Bear Lakes d. S IX
M ary H , M oilngo. tot to
Stephen Solomon U wt Sam ra T ,
Lot IL Blk O. Lak t Kathryn Woods
14 11 IL 144.100
I OCD I Arthur H w .ik trs o n A w t
Susan lo Susan L WHkarson. Lot 7,
U t N. Samuil I* SitaA SIM
Northglan Prop Inc. la Pout J.
Jansen A wt Sharon i , Bag I r a
«e w Lk Rd A S r w ot AkNail Rd
ate . p i i l at Let 77. McNaits
Orangr Villa S4IJOO
William C Jayna A Bath l |g
Jamas W Payne IV A wt Gabor Mi
F L N . l t , Varna Chanty s o ,

S&gt;7 000
IQ C D I Nancy Smith cl
&lt;0 H arry W I'vyngOnJ. Let SL
Country Club Village. Un On*,
1100
Alilhany B.ondol.llo A wt
Trw/asa to jaromy E Ktrp. Sr A
wi Dot itdo M , A Jerome E . Karp,
Jr A wt Jonnnl*, Lot 7*4 Bel Air*
H 'ls Un 1. IU .M 0
IG CDI lm oa i Haber (Form .
M .u n tili to Parry Allan Mitrhatt.
L N la, B n I, Foim oor Un. Twe.
DOB
J S I Da* . Inc t* W lliom J.
Pamay A wt Geneva. L N la.
Wadoawood Tannls VilltT. M M
JSI Dev lo Nathan SeiO.lcn A n t
Baatrico B . Lot N Wedgewood
Tennis Vittel. 1*1.400
Dim Amer Home* to Robert H,
bndgars. III A w l Jann S . Let *6.
B'k H Starling Oaks. 14) 100
Bat A irt Homes It* t* Timothy
L K n tb tl A wf Rebecca J , Lt.
HA Oak Forest, U ln Two A.
S71.T0B
Paul N Mann, sgl Lowtll E
Mann A Curl'S W Jr to Emory C
Newman A wt Faya. E 'y ot LW
lad.
van
Arsdaia
O tbernt
Broker***. Addn Black Ham
mock, u s *00
Magnolia See Corp to Norman
y Ream, trukfaa from m ien I r a
WtAiva Springk Rd A E r p ot
Hum Chib Btvd . * 140 arros m I.
MMUpB
Twranca L lie ton A wt Ctcfllo
M to w m .lw n tc k e r A w l Barmc*
I ) mi A David Lehr A wl Mira. 1
1 Par 1 From N E tor ol N W i« of
IE 4 Sec H i t 10 ate U M0
R ichard E K illin g Inc. to
Robert J. Cates A wt Arendo C .
L04 1 Tuscawilto. Un I. 1104.*00
Supoficr Contlr C o . in* to
R '.h a, i f McGuir* A Pt Bortors
J m Lot I, Blk E. Not Its Orlondo
Ranchek S*e • SH.tOO
t r l Star Btdrs. Day te S A I
Consir C o . L o ' S(, Cypress
Landing at label Po.nl, Sag*00
Tfl Star D tv. to $ A I Consir
CO. L N 4. Fotwaod, Phase I,
U 7 J 00
Sam* os abovo.LN 1. Foipood.
Ph t. sii.joo
Robert F D avit I* Vincent C.
Bowman (moer 1, N il ut L N SL
Havre Colony Co k d S1LS00
L .finert. N V to Sutonno Ellld
Rosco*. sgl Un A L Marbeya
Club Condo. SJI.TOO

Danway Com tv . 117 Odham D r .
Scram Parch. La. 100
Albert Anderson. 1011 Jafttvon,
Part rargot s *l)
t r a i l M Gathers. 101 W. 7th
S I . Gan repairs. SI 000
IU 4 .U . A i u l l j I S . l a i wall,
'm l Sfdg. ll.M j.B M
Euoenr Shaw. 141} Sanford
A v a . Irrtr remodeting SI MB
L o rry Taagua, t u t W III. St .
Rapav roof. S1.SD0
Lavrrmca Wynn. 104 W. Iltn S I.
Additem. S) 000
Reuben Burch, l i t ] W 7th S t .
Addn util rm A Work shop.
Sl.000

O rlando - Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLA SSIFIED DEPT.

RATES
I Hi m

HOURS
I N A M - | ;M P M ,
M O N D A Y fhru F R I D A Y
SATU R D AY T

.......................

S Fco R n o

ivamuaruttkoflmM

Sdr a »wo

7 c o n s* c u fly ( llm o i
..O t
I I con** s u lly # H i» d T 1 7 c » lin t
13 M M in im u m
I Lings M in im u m

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday

Legal Notice
n o t ic e u n o ib f ic t it io u s

NAM E S TA TU T E
TO W HOM IT M A Y CO N CER N;
Notice it havetry glum mot.
pursuant to "Fictitious Nama
S ie tu tf Chaptyr tat Of. Florida
Velutes, the parson named below
writ regular with th* Clark of the
Circuit Court, m and tor Samwol*
County. Fioeldo upon ractipt ot
proct ot th* pubbcwion ot this
Notice, tha fictitious noma, to wit
S E C U R IT Y S TO R E a l l under
wmch I avpacf la engage .n
outmess *r K t Well P in t Siraat.
sanlord. Florid#. 11771
That in# party Inlarastad in I he
said busPast enterprise is
Jtno F Pauluccl
Daled at Sanlord. Stm m alo
County,
florid*, this H r d day ot April.
If f I
Publish April 14. May 1. )A IT, IM I
O E H 117
IN T H t C IR C U IT COURT IN AMD
FO R
S E M IN O L B
C O U N TV ,
F L O R ID A
CASB NO. A II4 4 C A 0* K
LA W R E N C E J JACK M AN.
Plainlitt,
JA K O B
c h e m iE

H AR ICH ,

rl

in ,

in t e r n a t io n

ml
a l,

INC ,
Oalmdant,
N O T IC E OF SALE
N O T IC E IS G IV E N that pur
suantfaatinal ludgm m l datadlha
11th day ot February, Itt I. m Casa
No to lie* CA 0* K ot ih* Circuit
Court ot th« Eighteenth Judicial
C ircuit In and tar Samlnol*
County,
F lo rid * .
In which
Lawrm c* J
Jackman Is in*
pMMtllt and Jtkob H arkh. et us.,
and Chami* Intarnatlonal. In c ,
ar* tha dafanoams. I will sail te th*
rughesi and best bidder roe earn in
lh* loony at Ih* West door ot Ih*
Seminal* County Courthouse In
Sanlord.
Samlnol*
County,
Florida, at II 00 A M on Juna It.
1*11, th* lallowino described
property sat forth in th* order of
final ludgmant;
SOUTH 110 teat of lo t I. Block
O F . Cossatbarry according to Ih*
play thereof as recorded m Plat
Book 7, Pag* 17 ot Ih* Public
Records ot Samlnol* County.
F fond*
Dated this 7th day ot M a t. IN I
(S E A L !
Arthur H Bockwith, Jr
Clark ot Circull Court
By Cynthia Proctor
Deputy Clark
Owry Legal
p O Or *w#e sat
earn Park, rtariwa
Publish May IB* 17. IMI
D E I 44
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Nolle* is hereby given that I am
tngagtd m business at 1)1 Mor
nm g O lo ry O r , Lak* M ary.
Florida. Sammal# County, Florida
under ih* flcllllavs nam* ot M ID
F L O R ID A J A N IT O R IA L SER
V IC E , and Ihal I inland I* register
laid nama with ih* Clark et Ih*
Circuit Court, Samlnol* County,
I tor da in accordance wmi Ih*
provisions of th* F ictftious Nama
Statutas Ta W it
Srct'm I4SB4
Florid* Statutas t*S7
Stg Michael l Hull
Publish April 1* A May S, It, 17.
IM I
O E It 170
IN T H i C IR C U IT C O U R T, IN
AND FOA I B M IN O L l CO U N TY .
F LO R ID A
C IV IL A C TIO N NO I t M 4C A 0T L
F R E D M GANAS and
D O R O TH Y H GANAS. hii wilt.
FlaM W *.
T A S GR O VES. IN C . a otsoiyed
Florid* c o rp N a llo n . BO W EN
BR O S . IN C . D A V ID k E R B E n .
individually and as Trust**, and
EDW AR D R OGERS *1 Prrsusmt.
Secretary and sal* lu r r lt m g
D rector ol T A S GROVES. INC.,
a dissolved Florida corporation
Defendants
n o t ic e o f s a lb
n o t i c e is h e r e b y g i v e n

mat pursuant la Summary Final
Judgmam of foreclosure rendered
anils* Irnday ol May. (M l. Hi that
cartam causa pending Hi th*
Circu t Court in and tor Saminw*
Comfy. Fieeata wharem F R E O
R GANAS and D O R O TH Y H
GANAS. his wita. ar* Plaintiffs.
M
T L I GR O VES. INC . a
dissolved F lo rid * corporelion.
BOW EN B R O S . IN C . O A V lb
K E R B E N . individually and *s
trustee, end E D W A R D ROGERS
as Pm ktent, Secretary and sore
surviving Director ot T. A . S
G R O V E S , I N C . o dissolved
Florida corporation ore Oaten
dame. C N .I Action No 111** CA
0* L. I A R TH U R H B E C K W ITH ,
JR . Clerk of Ih* ite re sa d Court,
will at II DO A M . on Ih* lath oar
N May, IT II. W IN lor sal* and sall
lo Ih* highest biudar Nv cash ol
Ih# Samlnol* County Watt Irom
door ol th* Courthouse In Sam mol*
County, F lo rid a , in Senlord,
Florid*. Ih* follow mg described
properly, situated and being Hi
Semmoia County, Floe do, lo wit
L N i t and Ih* West &gt;t W Lol 41
SANFORD C E L E R Y O E L T A . as
recorded tn r .a l Book I. Pag* 71
and 74. Public Records W SemlnoM
County, Florida, lying North N
Kentucky Avenue
SublfCT lo mortgage m l i n e N
Fior,d# Slot* Bonk N Sanford, as
recorded in Official Records Both
SSL Pogo I N I , Public Record* or
Sent,note County, Florida
Sad salt will bt made pursuant
Stand m order lo u li t t y m olar ms
ut toid I-real ludgmtnl
IS E a l I
Arthur H Beckwith. If
Clerk ol th* circuit Court
B y Eleanor F . Bvrotlo
Deputy Clark
Phillip H Logan N
M tlN H O lS T E R , LO O A N a n d
M O NCR lE F
Post Off icy Boa W T
Sanrgrd. F io rd * 11771
Attorneys lor Plamlills
HOD J7J MOO
Pubbsh Moy It. 17, ITtt
OEl 0

I—Card ol Thanks
Th* lam.ly N Ih* lot# Mrs Ol*
Mae Gordon
W* wish to Oiprats Our le v ere
thanks lo oeoryon* who
Nought N us. Hi our hour N
Bereavement W t would lik* I*
repress * spec lol thanks to Ih*
cn!ire New Ml. 7on Church
(amity
Thank You
Th t Gordon Fam ily

i —Lost

Found young M ale Germ an
Shepherd miied Tan doi over
re ay* Vic Weklya Pk Dr

H ild a

4—Child

• A B O R TIO N •
IN Trlmastar abortion &gt; I I wks .
S la t-M e d ic a id 1110 . i l 14
was. SI4)-M e d ic a id H IS . Gym
Clinic SM. Pregnaney tall,
mala
s la rlllo llo n i
Ira*
cpunMIlng Profnsionol taro
s u p p o rtiv e
o lm o tp h o ro ,
conridaniltr
C E N TR A L F L O R ID A
W OM AN'S H E A L T H
O R O A N I 7 A TIO N
aot Colonial O r.. Orlando
N T 0*71
T N I Fra* 1140 111 ISM
I W ILL NO T B E RESPON
SIBLC FO R A N Y D E B TS
IN C U R R E D B Y A N Y O N E
O T H E R TH A N M Y S E L F AS
OF M A Y T. lift
Ernest E O Steen
I W ILL N O T BE RESPON
S IB lE FOR A N Y D EB TS
IN C U R R E O BY A N Y O N E
O TH E R TH A N M Y S E L F AS
OF S i l l
T.Ewgan* Cowart
CO M FAT A O ATE
Toko I mimjtt lo listen to
recorded message I M l 0 1
5SSJ foil or write Compel A
Oal* P O Bm 101 Sum
marvllfa. S C 1T4«]
Lontiyf W r t ^ ’ Bringing pMpi**
logNhar Daring S N ytco l" Alt
ages A lemur Cuts ms P O.
1411, Writer Haven. Fla 1) 4*0
Lonaly Che IWIan Sing!**

«A*M Chenliaw un#M# m vwue
are* Wrn# JoufhN hC V Istlan'
l.ngies Club. P O go# 101
Summerville. SC M ail or call
l l c i 0 i f t M i 4 h n ._________
k educe sale A last with Go besc
I*wets 4 E Vap "water pills"
Touchlon Drug

Legal Notice
C IT Y O F
A L T A M O N T E SPRINOS.
F LO R ID A
n o t ic b

of

p u b l ic

h b a r in b

TO CO NSIOBR TH E A D O P TIO N
OF P R O P O S tO OROINANCR

t o WHOM IT MAY CONCERN;
N O TIC B IS H E R E B Y O lV t N
by Ih* City N Alls.T.inl# Springs.
Florid*, ihal th* Commission will
h»&lt;d a public hearing la consider
•naclmanl N Ordinance No M a lt
entuiad
AN O R D IN A N C E O F T H E C IT Y
OF A L T A M O N T E
S P R IN G S ,
FLOR 10A, A M E N D IN G A P P E N
OIK A OF TH E c o o e o f o r
oiHANces o r th e city of
A L T A M O N T E SPRINGS. FLOR
IDA. BY A M lN D IN G S E C TIO N
l a OF A P P E N D IX A BY TH E
D E L E T IO N OF P A R A G R AP H F|
BY A M E N D IN G IN ITS BN
T IR E T V , S E C TIO N I 7. SPECIAL
R E G U LA TIO N S R E L A T IN O TO
O F F S IT E SIGNS P R O VID IN G
S E P A R A B IL IT Y .
C O N FL IC TS
AND E F F E C T IV E D A TE
Th* C lly Commission will
tons dee tam* for final pataaga
and adaption altar Ih* public
hearing which win D* halo in Ih*
City Hall a&lt; Anamord# Springs, cn
Tuatdoy.lhaiaihdayaf May, IN I.
0 1 SO F AA, or as soon lhartaflar
as possible A l th# mealing kt
tcrested partial may appear and
be heard with respect I* th*
proposed ordnance ThH hearing
may ba continued from I,me to
lima until Gnat acton it taken by
th* City Commission II an yen*
decide* lo appeal any decision on
IMS ordinance, he w ill need and
will need te assure thai a ytrbalim
rallied ol th* proceedings which
Includes th* Ittllm o n y and
evidence upon which tn* appaal is
to be based it mad*
A copy ol Its* proposed or
d.nance it polled t l ih* Clly H tll.
Ajitm ory# Springs. Florldt. and
CMhas * r« on III* with th* Cloak of
tn# City and tom* moy be in
sperted by in* public.
Daled this y n day 0 ALty, A O
IN I
Phyllis Jordahl. CMC
City Clerk ot in*
City of Alttm onlt
Springs. Fio rd *
Publish M*r 10, m t
D EI 0
N O TIC B U N D E R
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E S T A T U T B
T O W H O M IT AkAY CO N CE R N :
Not ICO II hereby given trial tn*
undersigned, pursuant lo tht
"F ic titio u s
Name
Statute",
Chapter m m . Frond* Si*f«tts.
will register w in in* Clark ol the
Circull Court In and tar Semincf*
Carniy. Florida, upon recnpi of
th* proof of pub'teal ion of this
Nofico, th* fief Itlout name, ig n ,|.
FLO R ID A D EP R E S S IO N GLASS
SHOW under which I am engaged
•« tha bus Kiel* at Post offtc* #*■
I K Lak* A to va t. Florida 0 7 0
By Sara K Myers
O A T E O at Sanford. Somksgs*
CoHity. Florida this K m a j .
April. IN I
Fubf.sh M ay 1. IB, 17. 14. I N )
D E I I*

Spur oflh* moment
baby sifting
n i Tita
Child Car* by a e pan tnetd
mother Spacious yard, hoi
hatch i fees ro lts 0 1 *MI
Elem ent Child Coro by m aivra
lady Ir m y homo
BM W
ONE PH O N E CALL S T A R 7 $ A
C L A S S IF IE D A D O N ITS
R ES U LTFU L END
TH E
N U M BER IS 011411 _________ _

4-A—

"l p n . FsHnrm * 1 M P M. IM*!
Apply L ik t v lo w N u rlin g
CeofTf. TIT B. md St.

Hh &amp; Beauty

insioil B s e ryc r gas epo'iorcrs
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
Low Fee
1 Wks Salary
tTtT French Ay*.
01117 *
T V M O VIES
Natural people needed 10'
la gltim a lf
TV Movies
A
Comm ercials
NO
e ip
necessary Fra* lr*,nmg pro
gram il selected Call 0 1 m a .
X l y i r r _____________________
Wanted Hostess Cashier Apply
* m parson. Holiday Inn. San
lord on Ih* Laktfronl
Licensed P ro rtk il Nurse- 0 *
shin. Full or port tlmo, Son
ford Msirllhg A ConutMicaed'
Canter Cent act Mr* Brown'
0 T ISO*______________________

REAL ESTATE
A S S O C IA T E S
Kipsytonced *r last licenced
Jam SanNcd 4 Seles Lesoari
We Otter;
‘ Largest listing muanMry In
Seminal# C*«* 7f MLS 1* f■
Vic*.
•ItM nsiy* TrtM M g
•Fulltime Office Support
• BRA Neiienel ReMrrMs A
•Homo Warranty Program.
•S*mtn*M. Orange A Velm a
•MLS Saeska.
•Damlnonl TV . Nasrtpapar B

• M agaim* Advertising.
.Finest OHice Facilities
•Prelassltaot. Ctaganial B
•Saccassfal AysncloMt as y t »f
Carear Par mart
If yen wont M Hi* on# soft.
Nabady Deal II Bettart Coll
H ark Slanslrtm
or Lot
Albright •&lt; 1 0 TH T lor 0
•ftandly and coalidontitl In­
tery taw Mdoy and disc aver th*
dtlltroncal

DMSO

STENSTROM

10* \ pur* korvrrl -1 4 of SIT TS
plus I I SO T F ( H Distributed
by
Nu Ram
We
ship
anywhere 1X 1)110 0 1 t
Spring Fever la la
Welkins products
0 ) SOTS
SH A K LEEH ER B TA B LETS
WE d e l iv e r

017401

Immedioi* njwnuig tor Super
rleor and Jan .tors Full time.
Night Shin I 2I 4S4S.
★

★

★

CORN
CORN
CORN
7 oars t*r St «
lib s St 00
Ih d tS IM
lb TTc
4 lbs. I I M
1 for S IM
Sib* ITc
I t lb* SI 7*
hefl newer t
&gt;0 for I I OO
i n u r e Giant I n — «
OnlcpiS
Ige bunch t l 00
bananas
I lb* I10S
1 MB MB
H b hds SI 00
JU S T IN TIM E FOR

Tomatoes
Lettuce
Graan Brans
Summer Squash
Cam#loupes
Pot at oas

M O T H E R 'S D A Y

Realty-Realtors
D ll P a rk Drive

0110*

Would you Ilk* 1amacme to
confoct your eidtrly rfM 'lv t
each day lu ll to m okt sura
may or* satoT. For further
ineormaiion Coil 0 1 I N I.

ten Canfrortrti

¥

¥

¥

M IN IC O M P U TE R
Operator naadad to install
inventory control and A R
package Ihrm ighogl lisle
Some travel required, car
por eta headquarters Mealed in
Sanlord E a co lltn l btnelit
package A opportunity Mr
growth P le n a sand con
I Manila I resume I# Codkco.
Inc .
Attention
E
A
Cavallaro. 1**4 Fllghtllne
A uo. Sanlord. PI 1071 or M il
B. A Cavaliaio W i l l H I M
M CCH

SJAI.UP
IN R R O S I
I Management aap, 1 preset. )
automotive
A AA E M P L O Y M E N T
L o u e tIF t*
In it ia t o r y
1417 Franch Ava
0)117#

COOK
FAST F O O O p r e p a r a t i o n
No experience necessary win
tram, good salary, hospilal ia
lion. eUhav benafils
C a ii0 ))4 4 )

11—Instructions
Tenrtlt Inert union I J I F T A
Car Iliad Group or Prlu oU
lesion* Children a specialty
Melltiowski 0 1 DOT
W HY S A V Is IT
. . S E LL IT
O U IC X L Y wins t F e u Acting.
Low Cost ClsstHiod Ad

IS—HeloWbnSed
AVON

R b P R fS B N T A T I V « l

Sankro TerriSartos oasuabi*
44S M 7S collart M U V N
RN Pull tins# ( 4 shJll Sanford
Hue sir.* and Convolosconf
Cantor Contact Mrs. Brown

L A Y O U T F L A S H F IT T IR S Mr
sieel fabrication work Co
banolitl
Top pay Mr lop
paooto Apply In parson al
Florida Iron Works. MOWod*
SI . W.nler Springs
CosoMtool SonMrd
W s liro si w tnled Apply in
Person Monday thru Friday
■1 11 p m m x m
C LER K ( E i p
With HI key
catcmaigr a m ull I Typing
halplul SS Mon thru Frl
Com art Lmda, R k h Piaa ol
FMnda. ) 0 Ma). Sanford
T IT L E SEAR C HER SAL. NEG
I F LU S H O F F IC E I
Eap in llllt Inturanct. mull ba
bond# bit
A AA E M P L O Y M E N T
LowotfPet
1 whs salary
H IT French A vt
0)S1J4
burger Kina No f m Sanford
new accepting epglicaltoiH Mr
Days and Nights Apply In
panon I S p m
E q u a l,«&gt;
porturviy Employee

0111*4
C O N V E N IE N C E
S TO R E
C LE R K — Good company
owsofin Apply Handy Way
Food Slows. Sanford ace*
IntrrSlotUr Phrtogrophy needs
Madeli Alt types, use odors
Reas Portfolio 117101 .
KICK T H E STO R AOE H A B IT
Soil I nose useful. rx&gt; kasgef
naadad Mans* wins * Harold
CiottNIod A d Coll 1 0 M il or
P t-TTTl.
C O N V E N IE N C E
S TO R E
c a s h i e r s - w a olfar I teas
pod sacaiioa every 0 months
Now looking Mr aaportoncod
people read, lo work For
ml ar view pnont Ih* manager
Ml
Airport g ird 0 t « H i
Cassarberry 1) T i n s
Cfiery Ay* 1 0 4 0 1
Lake Mary m IM S
Sierchi’s now
plications for
Cemm rtsion
Appiy bafwaan
T B lf X M m

taking op
a Full Hmo
Soiesptrson
th* hours of
, Tuan., wed

S IR Per Weak Pert Tim * t l
Home Webster. A m o n c o ’S
foremost dictlontry esmpopy
needs homeworke-t lo uodote
total maiivsg Irsls All ages,
eepenenct urmecesury C*11
I 7I4 S4SS470 E l i 1M 7
Carpenter Mr m m work on 14 h
10 17 II cruisor Wa r* looking
Mr t&gt;p*rlanc*d trim (Can
slrvc lio n l c o rpa niart now
Vaody work too good bener.rt
Mr hard workers Apply IB I ]
A M CeOi* Boel Crmpony.
Silver Lake R d . Sanlord. Flo

★

j; •?#-»

¥

¥

*

¥

M* id Monday #nd Wednesday
Available Loco)rafarancas
____________ 11) 001

24—Business
CWOrtunHIfl
Evening Harold P tp a r RoiR*
Nat USB* wk ass than IVs
hr* * d#y delivery tlm*. Coll
0 1 4 MB.
_______________
Plumbing OIY, Hardware and
E to d fk a l r atoll ond ftp o ir
Bus mass W WO R*#l E lio tt
Bast Terms. *10,000 Wm
Maliciowskl REALTOR 01
7TU Eves 0 1 )»T.

2*—Apt1. A Houses
____ To Shirrs___
Airport. *M Bus woman to snor#
lu m . 1 Sdrm. 1 B Condo with
soma t itrts
NoAsmohtr.
SITSAAo ♦ '1 #loc Oep Rater

0 7 44*1

29—Rooms
Room tor Rtnt. Full us* ol
nous*, uimtios paid Small

O apotl 011410
SAN FO R O Reas wkly E
monthly roles. U lll Inc. KII B 0
Oak Adults (41 T N I

27A-Room &amp;Board
14 Hrs

Suparuitlon tar Senior
Citljans Family environmwit
with TL C 1 0 SI01

30 Apartments
U rd u m ts M

Plymouth Off# 444 41*4

Onty W c
N ow ! 2 L o catio n s 17-92,
next
to
V ill a g e
S m o r g a s b o rd

TOA4A TO E S M lb bow*74 S
Baggs Product
IMS Sanlord A v« 0 1)4 4 1

★

II Situations Mbnlcd

E 1 per enc rd Carpenter. 17 SO
per hour to s tir! work In

W AX BEGONIAS Whlfo. Pink B
Rod, S" port. Itrg t plants

W e T a k e Food S ta m p s
L eR oy F a r m s , SR 44 &amp;
U p sala R d., S a n fo rd

★

In c lu d in g
fra a ttn g ,
macbanrcal. tilt, ale M r TO
Garden Apartments In Son
ford. Florida Contort Tom
McBride C P Th# Law Con
struct ion Company, f r y . P Q
Boi H IT . Wkhito. Kamos
0 0 1 or Cpil IIS IS ) 4)44 tor
bulding intormafien E 0 E M F

luxury

4—Good Things to Eai

★

W ANTED
SUBCONTRACTORS
Largo M.dwasl davalnper heads

S44B He
J Tf.*l?S!?AS'T?lC Ctw. *

S tR V T'E P B R S O T*

Care

Spatial Summer Program for S
11 yf. olds Wkly swimming,
skating B movies J11 I 0 4
A Child’s World

♦-Personals
WHY b e L O N E L Y f WrtTO ' O N
A Mate'' Dating Saevtco. All
•gas. P O Boe 0 71 . Clear
eetsor, FI D S H
_____

4 Found

C A R E E R O R lE N T E O
Peopl* to help others Naltorskl
Company Will train High
•ornings Beilone *0a JJ*
_ r
t u
______________

RN * 10 U M L A N ’S lo M M
P ori 11m# ar F u ll lima,
MedKal Concepts S 4IM )I
L IB R A R IA N II staring ulary
0 )1 weakly Maslrr’s Otgre*
In library telenet Iram ALA
Accradded school ol library
sc lane as 1 r n proftssionai
librarian eipananca I yr
mudl hava bean served In
F u b ik
L ib ra ry
Apply
Sam mol# Court y Pecionnel.
N. Fork A y t . SonMrd by May
IS. I f ) I An Equal Opportunity
Employ*/ M F M V
FLOOR
W A X flB -P o rm a w n i
lull Hmo iob
Cob B i ll
Ftn ca
Atsambtor*.
tow
Ogre* tors. Ganertl Lobar or*
Day thilt ar nignf shift. Apply
between hours* ) ' 0 m. and I
a pm
A m trk a n
Wood
Products M ill O I(le t. M 0
Mar v m A r t . Lonfwooe
FLOOR W AXBR AppraiL
■soltty M Nrs par wk m Alta
mania t v *s- M l TSOI
•
0 30HR
I LO CAL 1
Sugar C*. anlh rtcm anr oan*
Htv
A AA E M P L O Y M E N T

D R IV E R

low f m

IT II French A y«

iw k i. Salary
0 ) 111*

W A N TE D — Lly*&gt;m companon
toflderlywMow L.gM coding
B housekrrprng. SB wk. 0 1

00
T Y P i S T - l e s i and atH cltm
Strang phono vake Medical,
penvph. pridn sharing toons
IJmtod Solvents 0 ) 4444.

x fa rtm en ts

F a m ily A Adults socllon.
Poofs Ida 1 Bdrmt M e te rs
Cav* Apis 1 0 7M 0 Open p i

weedonus.
M arin er s VTflog* on Lak* Adh

1 1 bedroom Apis. Irom STM.
Luce red 17 Tl |usl South, ol
Airport Bird in SonMrd All
Adult* 0)4470
L A U Fk RON I
aP A R TM E N TS
1. U S B 1 b d rm on Lis* Jennie
in Sanlord Pool. roc. room,
outdoor BbQ. lennil courts B
dispeoais Walk to schools B
shopping centers 0)1741
SonMrd Lovely I barm Air,
corpoiad. carem.c born Furn
•YOU , S1K Adults S417MJ
Spacious M odornl bdrm , I barn
opt Car paled, kit equipped.
CM4 A Near hospitol t lake
Adults No pats 0 1 n i l

f ROM 0 0 la rg e I.1 A 1 Bdrm
API* Pool, Iannis court
0 )4 0 0
PROM SIMA UP
EH kitncioA I A 1 Bdrmt Aprs
m ow n by appf Coll 0 4 0 4 B .
* " l* r caenlry IlyMgt I SOret
A pis. O lym pic I I . Ptal
ShawaadasR Vllllp* Ops* T L

04 m i

J I— Apartm ents Furnished
Furnlin*d*M rtm anrttor Iwilor
ClTItant. H I Palmofto Av* . j .
Cowan. Mo phone coin
ir»o u don’r beiieve Inal m M edl
w m * results try on*, ond
Hsian 10 your phono ring Diol

0 1 1 * 1 1 0 / n iT T fl

31A —ftjp le x e s
Avail Al. New 1 BR, 1 both. Sit
oppl. car paled, drape* No
p all S 0 S M 101 Ridgewood
Day I t s 0071. E n M i l s
NEW -IHIM ELLON V ILLE
1 BR. 1 Both. Kit A ppl. AC. No
peri. WOO , Depot,! Eve O l
M AS___________
get

those lu x u r y

it e m s

FOR A F RACTION OP THEIR
COST FROM TODAY'S WANT
AOS I
Sanlord Lk Mary or** New
Duptaa. 1 bdrm. H i bath.
Ceed H A No pelt. Ill op
pHoncas 0 0 74(1 Alt 4 p m
D U P L E X . 1 bdrm. Beth. XIIO a n .L R . DR. Utility fm W w
carpal. CHA. No pals. 0 1 ) Mo

0)01*0

33-Houses Unfurnishad
1 0 And— ion CkCM 1 Bdrm, I
» * lk . corn#/ lol Fenco,
rorcpfl, C o n i, AC. car palm
U m il 1 child, no pais. 0 » m
t STOP D rppyt O l 4MS
) Bdrm. I Both with outtd
entrant a SIM Md Last #r
Sac Deg 17) 4041

1 Bdrm

Plum carpal, aw, «

to'onces. Kies, no peri t l

Md 1st, tost v depot ,r Co
Ml l l o m 0 1 IM 1
) Bdrm. I Botn. Fsm lly Rm
C H A c o r p t tid . losslroni
Rovenn* F o r i orto. clot* 1
NCR and Sirgmberg. swo
Sacurrfy &gt;11*40
Mctorl# Hum# on ) teres priy#
land L S I# M ary, two m .
M cvrlly. 1 0 4J ip
J Bdrm , 1 Balh 10) Jenkins Cl
F in e tre il. Sanford u i g mt
S)00 security
R tlartnc*
required 44 SOOM.
Sanford 1 Bdrm , 1 Beni, Garage
7' 1 Y r. o m Brick h u n t 1 0
mo No
T H E ftY W A TEft COM PANY
d fA LTQ R
tkltfia

�(I

41- H o u s e s

41—Houses

HAL CDIMRT REALTYiac

HANDYMAN SPECIAL
Downtown ) Howfdt ronod lor S
Unit Aperlm onU J J ) « I 4

32-H ouses U nfurnished
■n D»"ona

m u l t ip l e l iit in o r e a l t o r

D 4 I4»

323-7832
Cm JTiOfii
w e niRii

33— H o u s e s F u r n i s h e d

ROBBIE!'*

R E AL TY
REALTOR MLS

I Bdrm. IB.tr. i„ ,n g

COLOBURY a r e a len lerd . )
B orm .
|I |
B. C arport,
f p e c e u f le n re a eo vent
P rirre location t l t . n o i l l
till

r m .K itt h y n *avit,

m tjt o
3 4 - R e s o r t R e n t a ls
Scenic New H a m p er.,. ( M g *1
Eaylman R n o rl Commen t ,
1 Edrm. &gt; Bath f u"y c orpared
&lt;nd tum inw d l u i Ttnnii,
i* boi» hempanyhig c ell
C« j» m W n it R Thometuto
IJ O en to r i i*n». R ock, Hill.
C am atH cul MM I or te n Ml
M l *411
l a k Ef r o m
fu rru tn o d ) Bdrm UTOVd
n&gt; t u t

REOUCEOtl.OOO
Som ora
No
qvelilying
Boeuliful iconic tro * I M rm .
I 'r bain, fa m ily rm . Coni h
A. O r e r t n e d lol loncod
A ttum o 11**10 mortgage el
II*) Mo #' I \ wRR US 000
Down Owner will rpnoder )nd
lor p e rl el ifnwn peymanl
Pr.nc p e ll only
Owner U f S r *

40—Concominiums
Im m a c u la te Condominium J
Bdrm. 1 born. Fie Rm. ell

*«*&gt;',anen tr»o me e.*me
before I Arter &gt; ft)

41—Ifcu'-es
I

M rm I bet* wilk H i l l
u r t t M ^Ml ft m ttfttr m l««
(rtftffd tor U 2S.I

tll.H i ft attolM t ,

S
TE
N
S
TR
O
M
REALTY - REALTORS

lot*

P e r meet* el 14*4 me Ceil m

Ilf*.

OPEN HOUSE

COUNTRY LIVING C LO U IN
1 Berm. |Vr path on •&gt; ecre
be nut ful let w,th m en r try t
'ree» IU .100
MOBILB h o m e l o t s f ie ri.ng
el SI.000 per lei Lore oown
paym ent end **4y lerm i
RENTAL I M rm I lu m . Mab‘ie
Meet* f t ! Me Discount leeie
e&lt;ell*b&gt;e
f TEMPER AOCNCV
RIALTOR l l l f f t l
i r t i h u r l i n if&gt;f. m i n i
Meinpie Lifting I r r r . t t

Kisir

OPEN SUN. I l'O tt.H
MAYFAIR VILLA)
ON W U A
ACBOU—MAYPAIB
COUNTRY CLUB
OelipMlel I t I IB . &gt;B crude
Remet. leelerinp le te ry eye* .
•enced n ' w * t lieer p i r n tn
h eeetilel weedfd IMt. w city
cane., e e itc e n l le Meyleir
Country CluRI Ovality COOtt.
by SRoomtOor

CALLANYTIME
IMI

322-2420

Pork

REALTORS
AAittipie Listing Service

Hf..\L FSTIT)'3 2 1 -0 0 4 1

• • a •

OBI Wide &gt;4a*3M M rm . T Both
*1 11/
R 'le re il
Oewn
p a y m tn l end l i f e eee r
per m e n u Cell aft f 10 m

Oil*

M d o t i 1 M rm . Block. Ckrpgt.
Coni noei. Lg* loncod NT
L it W0 111 0)11

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
llee 1 Trench Are

JMfOOO

M1011I

»&gt;»»

S t . J lo ln )

l\ i 'd ( t t f

(S o m ix in y

me

Tftf Tsmt T rtttd F .rm
[7 1
•fteq R raf t t ’a'# R 'c*rr I 11
yO l W C om m afcui Si
X71 ft 11J

Harold Hal Realty
REALTORS, MLS
323 5774

Day or Night

R B T IR lM lN T
O R B AM
N O M l. J e l l lllll* im
m eceiete i Berm la cheNe
D a tary ere*, l e t in kiKoen
Leeeiy icreened parch. Tred
tr e ti end mere Ored le rm i

nua

A lle m p lie *
Leri le te r e il
m a r tg a g .
L a* m eelkiy
p e y m e e t C e e c ifle Blk. 1
M rm . t Bel*. Ceet tool
Er ( tilth ! Cendltwe 114 1*4
WOULD YOU BCLIBVC U 7.P09
•or leeeiy lB d rm Rome Betire
m Myie. e r fie ri rl«Ri without
rent pey m m ft Cell now
COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE. I
M inelee frem dtw plew o
Laniard 1 Edrm. I 'i MIR.
Liylnf R m . Temily R m .
Lerpe yard. Vff.fH
FrkA A WA B W T iR t. h a v e
YOU SEEN THU HOME I
Lew. lew dew* e* ikn 1 te rm
Rem* in Pm ecreil E e c k ie p l*
keeetitvl w iodrd Oeot. Onty
i n lee

U 000 holow THA VA Loan
c e m m ltm o n l
O w n tr
dot per *1* J M rm . f &gt; Bo'h
Rod Brick n*m« Ckrpert.
Utility rm . Tvlly loncod yord
with Irwil ' r m
with com
pirloty rrcond iionod to now
tpocH N dllenf including now 1
ply root Open Rovt* 11 a m Ip
4 p m Sunday. M j, to. Ilf
MHume Circle iott a ,. port
B ird ) Or call 1114MI. HI
*040 N s d o tin g c e t l t lg
d u tliliod buytr
SPLASH TIME Lovolf coo, pool
turroundod n .in Iprg* loncod
yard and D i l i t t r r m r d p o le
with Brick Bor B O ut grill )
largo M rm t. } Rom. Tormol
d*n*ng ond Living rm . I t i l f
Com* room on MOkIM H e*
Prtc# 117.00

Cal I Bart
REAL ESTATE
flA L T Q R H ) 140*

^ ^ R a a l Estate
^ S u p e rM a rk e t
SURER DEAL
S tti) DOWN
1)10 MONTH AT 12% Rl
With Qualifying
2 I with family raom reduced Id

C A L L 323 5774

e .1 4 If.TlI M clW . u t . n o
Cell tod4y U l 4*4)

ANTIQUE 4 M odern d a m .
Kowpi# dolll 4 l lg v r ln tt.
Alotandor doll* 404 00JI.

A rt you 4 full I'm * driyor w in a
P*rl lima c o r) Our d o W . r d i
a r t leaded with good buy loyou

A n tig u tt
Diamond*
OH
Pa,ni.ngi Or.anlpl Rugf
Bridget A n t^u ft
C ) 7001

Lawn Garden

Gold. Siivor C o n i Jtw tlry . non
Ivtiouf melon. ho*oMo Tool
Co tlO W Ul Si t t ) 1100
OPEN SAf 0 A M T O tP M
Want aoi O P Prop,# TogPRor
— Theft B urn* And Thoet
tolling ) H N 1I or U l I f f )

fliin m

72—A u c tio n

67A F a r m E q u i p m e n t
f o r E ila t* C om m ercial 4
R nidonlial Auclwnt 4 Ap
pro,M il Call DPI'S A udier

EQUIPMENT AUCTION
S al. May 14 *t 19 00* m
p a r t ia l l is t in o

AVBE HEiHUTS M15 EYE51

'€ • » • * « v w . i s i v e

» —Miscellaneous for Sale
Originol Oil Pom lm gt Mutt
Hgutoo'o ileck. noil price
Cavelier M eier l nn.Hy I) *). t
Pump, m eter end 10 Gallon
wpior lank, t t l . Gould pump. )
Hp B rlg g t and S lrp llan
m g no. including )0 it Hot*.
1171 Orongo P 'tk.ng Pag.
t i t , H o rb o t'd o r hot# ond
Neiiol. utod 1 monm. coil
IDS. Mil 14$ 111 U U
le t Cub* Mocn.no, ISO 'b t
I'o .n ir tt t ie r ' new c e il U .4SC.
toll I I . m U I U S 1
Comgoclor Kitchen A*d tfO
Bundy Trvmpof.lNM
w i m ___________
Looo.Ro Tor a New H em e) Check m e Wont Ado te r Route*
o* every t i l e end price.
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
L e v t and Wrangler Jeont
l i t Sanford Ay*
U ) S ) tl
HUNTING CAMP C o m p ltlt
with e le c tric
V icinity ol
ferm io n M onogem m l ore*
Call oil or 4 p m No ceHoct
c am i*041 ) y kotr
R O O T IA LI
f r t i r o S oleclien C lock ewr
p ric o t on TIM
hay
a
NUTRINA T IR O S .
WikO Solo* — Hwy 44 W. 4 Ml
W Ol I 4. Sentoed IT) 047«

_______ W 14)0_______

W —G a r a g e S a le s
Carport Solo Sal 4 Sun II S
L eft of n 1c t baby an d
chtidfVh t cfofhei No Junk
n e t Airport BivtJ
May t Yard ( H r *00 Park Av«
F um iturt. od d t and md%.
%omvfhmq for avaryonq
2 Family G araqv Safa Ap
pfianen c h ffd ran t elofhat.
toy* tOI (&lt;off Ava Saturday
and Sunday

CO fa rm ira c to n . ) Hancock )f)
r i r r t ' r d t c r a p t r t . I '44
koohrino io*d*r b te k h o o .
ford ))' Bucko! truck. IPS*
Ward L af tone* firo trv c k . )
If70 ford School b u m . Cnovy
I Ion te e v e t truck. Maktoy 4
inlornaHonal loed'ng thdvoit.
Cuthmon truck. Torroin IP
km* mowor. DM ID lorklllt.
1)1 CfM D otal com petitor.
H7I Mobil! road iw orpor. I ft!
fo rd lio n Dump. I t 7) CMC
Sup Van. Initinaiw nal BTD I
B u l'd o itr and m or* A ll*
m .ic tlla n ro u t lla m f Con
tg n m m li le c r p '- l daily
DAYTON A AUTO AUCTION
Hwy f) D at'ona Bracn
SOI &gt;111)11

6S

S S -B o a ts &amp; A c c e s s o rie s
toylinar'Tf. )SH i l l " p
Good condition: 14 100
* )) OSI) e r U l *417

56—Camping Equipment
Hunlmg C*mp lor S o x fe rm io n
orooOUron M il Traitor wim
bunk Romo, lull powor ond
noil with pump Coll U ) &gt;113
ty frv n g t only

Complete M utlc S y lla m . *
H e a t o n Egualltor. C a ttriir
deck ) A m pnlw rt S1.001 4)1
UU

^
uu*

VA B THA Tkxnclng

sRsL T Y
realtors

H tu

m m

Gel tom alR ing I* t o u t A
Cloti H ed Ad will ton it loti

i

J »M. * 181.. Parftdliv fiivihaB
P im liy rtw , AHflftf IH .W

UNCLUTTER YOUR CLOSKT
toll 'n o w in m et the! or* luti
'.k in g uptpOCOwllR 0 want 04
In IRo Mrroid u n t i l or U l

1 L ott SU.SOO
Mwll M t f i l U t M a ttffro n t
p ro p e rty
Stonf
I Hand
u»On. ty Lot 100*1700 I I
fra m e ♦ 2 Br MotMl# CM
b*f»tvaft&lt;* IS) OOO

LK B o e iE t'e tr Broner
IteC SenlerdAv*
1 2 1 -0 7 5 7

43— L o t v A c r e a g e
} BEAUTIFUL woedod loft on
P io m o t*
O r.
aM iollO ’.
Stooweikt L City w o rn u m
o e c h e re e rh lor 114.000 Ownor
171 toad ____________________
Corner Lot. booV 'lul Iroet noor
Cryflol LOk* Cell i n 4**1
DONALD O JACKSON INC
Rool'or IT) 1701
Tomorrow may k* IR* day you
toll m ol roll o way bod you tro
now R ortlorellow oy
II you
pioco o C io itile d Ad todoy

• M O N D A Y , M A Y 11 #
• 7 P .M . S H A R P #
fu r n itu rt kaopt pouring Ini w *
h**« no cnoicoi W* a r t run
nmg pul *f room I Wr m u tt
toll 11
Good duality Oak. Mahogany 4
W alnut
E verything Irom
fuitof l* odd (tw in c h a in ,
labial, d r e i t p t 4 br&gt;c a brae
W rro loaded n Ih 70 f 4 » »
period turn,lure 4 colltctibltf
a im lino rrproduclient of
ihooo hard lo Imd a n n u a l.
Wo ve got a Hi te tP t. M com#
early for a good Mat
SALE S I a RTS PROMPTLY!
I CASH VISA M Ct

P e ts S u p p li e s

• 6 A N F O R D A U C T IO N *
1)11 S flin c h Ara

JUitoO

Auctioneer Wtyn* Bloch*

67—Livestock Poultry

77— J u n k C a r s R e m o v e d

C l l m l o r t o e HOODOO a i m )
Cm l Br«hm« Bull, h o n t
ff lH ff, P h illtt coifs. Will
trod* UJtOU

BUY SUNK CARS 4 TBUCKS
From 1 IS M SJO*r m a rt
Call U l IlM .llfaao#

68—W a n te d

log Donor P a d lor Junk i ' Utod
c a rt, truck! 4 hoary fOuip
man! )7) 1019

to B u y

TUBN OUNt ANTIQUII

7®—M o to r c y c l e s

S HIGH DOLLAR $
SANTOROAUCTION US1MI

t t « Sufut 0 1
S
ilr
(* p k .fic p l* n l condition 11*9
or boil oiler H I 44)1 or
tlfISO )

Don 1 0 *14)4,r Or Pull Vour-Hak

-Ult AWant Ad Until or

U l Off)

44A-lrxfcntriel Property
4 INDUSTRIAL LOTS
1 HpvkOf A L*rg« vnop
, Coll 001141

REALTY - REALTORS'
S a n f o r d 's S a le s L e a d e r
w B L U T A N O IIL L

M O R I HOMES THAN
ANVOHE IN THE
SANTORO ABBA
b EDUCRD ) Edrm. I Both with
Coni M A. Woll non tor pot
p jtia. panfry. de&lt;»r ih c M i .
laM K apadf Ilf .f H
JUST LISTEQ 1 Bdrm. 1 Batft
home ta tftf country* Spiff
level Cant h a , f l p d a R m .
I l f Ml KifcMft. ftlrn. pood. Iff
•*» %fenced ac rti. I l f A H

COZY S ft*rm f Bath ftama M
tread lot wifft tm t r aaf. • »«
« a u fa wall carpaf. firtpUca
and Ie«cad yard* t lt .H t

JUST FOR YOU S Bdrm. J Bafft
ham* •#» tarpa carftar laf
O ctal r— m. Oamc casiu^t.
iftM fireplace, apeipped eat
Ml k iK N d . »ermel dim** tm
aftd beautiful
a id patiaf
L ift m acat ftfl.SH
HIDOIWOOD ACRtSI Dup*ei
tuff Zawad. all vfthnet. paved
f ta d td N ear
SHSI Will
%uborimate Nr bui»der% Buy
M « t Build
f later 1 Jail
II Nfft From lU .lffl
MAYFAIR VULASt I ft S td rin .
t ftatft Cawda Viliai n e«1 la
Mayfair Cavalry Cleft Select
y w r laf. tlaar plan ft ia let far
decar f Ovality caattrvctad By
Shoemaker N r S4J.IH ft vpt
Open Safar day II H S .H ft
San Neva If
ASSOCIATES MSEOEOt New
t r eipersaaced- Call Herft
Stenstrem or L e t A'ftr*phl IP
day ft drtcpver le c c titi

47—Reel Estate Wantiu
W « Buy equity in Heutet.
aparimentt. vacant land and
Acreage
LUCKY
IN

VESTME n Vl P 0 Be* HOC.
11711 U 1 4 MI

Sanford. T io

Wontod Irom prlvolf ownor. lol*
medal M o w or 14 II wid*
Motiit* h»m* with 1 er 1
oodroom* on U er 1 1 ocr# 1*1
Clei* le town w in Ret*-i*i In
m* mid Slo t Giro *11 com
pi H r d *1 tilt ond Idm* (nolot
Writ* Bof U . Vonut. P* itJ 04

t.c n o n g o 1 Brdroom. If*/ Elm
City. N o un Coraim* Hout*. I

Sovt your o d u 'r ond c rtd t Irom
la to cldfuro lo n e proporly
m i l low oou'ly ond ottumoew
m ortgogn d rtw rd I Prlcoond
lor m i nxioiiob'o Coll U la o t l
lor cknlidonllol oppo.nfmtnl
In y ttlo r
Buying
Incomo
Proporly Pnnc poll on't No
brokori Algroon M i 4141
Wintry Pork, f l 1)701

47 A—Mortgages Bought

_

asoM

W* pay co m I*. Ill 4 Jnd
m origogoi Boy Ltgg. Lk.
M o rtgago B rokor, 111* E
Reg,noon. » IDT
(V ERY OAY IS BARGAIN DAY
IN THE WANT AOS. i n M il er

jlU H E .F I R S T S !

CALLANYTIME

Lk. Mary
• 'yd

322-2420
323- 2222
323-6363

REALTORS
(Multiple Listing Servlet

n rr;

down. StI Mo 701 S french
H I ’Ml

D A Y TO N A A U TO AU CTIO N
Hwy 9). 1 mil* m l of Speed
way. Daytona Baach. will hoi*
a public A U TO AUCTIO R
ovory Wrdnrkday *• I p m i n
Iht only one M f lor Ida. You M»
Ih* ' e m red pen* Call 104
U S U l l Tor lurihrr d o lt'll

II you don I loll poop'*. Row a, *
Ihay going Is knew) Tpl inam
with a c le ft,• i*d ad. by calling'
U ) )*H or u i of*)_______ *
IDS Capri V * Rebuilt m g ,no
and b r a i n New pa n' R acin'
Inip . 11)19 » ) AMI
PINTO Italian Wagon |*T7,
vary d a a n . ta c a llm l can
d 'le n ! T* i m IR I lan iard
Are H at rroryih.ng an it
STOP DOLLARS
•
f o r your car ar level, ragar
d i m ol cond P r r 'r r running
Fra* lowing U l l l l l Agtnl
'M C n arfo 'P Mon'r Carl*
1*4 Me No money dawn

m tm______

71 P.nla 4 Spent
N.coCar Iff)
U l IH 4
19)9 Plym auIR fu r y , good
m achl. im a " V I ISM 1049
Celery Aye 771 )740 work
'71 Mercury Montego Air, Aula.
AM TM. fu ll Pcww. ) N r*
T .ffi. la so or Ban « n n n s
Dunrbuggy Rail Iram*. I
rebuilt VW mglna. now bal
*o#v. D r a in » ) IM7
STORING IT M A kESW A STESE tLIN O IT MAkES CASH
PLACE A CLASSIFIED AO
,OW Can &gt;7) 14" pr III tTI)
71 Bulck ) Dr H ardtop
L im iltd E ilr a t Lit* now
1109 catR or trade and pay th«
p a y m m 'I I lf 9)99 or U f foo t
•7) Torino Sport Coup* E i
ctiiom Cand"Kin Rog g a t *
SUM Call ID S 79 Eym ingt

VACUUM RAINBOW
R rp c iio tird
w ith e ll a t
UcRmonlk 4 powgr hoed Like
nrw w arranty Pay 1) 4* or I I I
monthly Tmonclng, no down
paymeest
BAKS 1104 N M idi | | ) Ml
Orlando 4r* 1140

AND LET AN EXPERT D O T H E JOB

U l S*l)

To till You' Business...

S2 - A p p l i a n c e s

Dial 322-2611 o t 831-9993

Kffimorv p w fv trrvicv. u%fd
MOONEY APPLI
ANCCI inftftfY
■ CP P f P O U c u -H frMfffV#
Or.g ftSlt. now (701 or I f f mo

Aqwif UfDN

Air Condition

Brand Now. p uth button central
not prob* 0 »&gt;gnoiiy Ml*,
bo lane* l i f t . SI* rnomt ly

J ) t W _______

w»inor r rpo GC delvo* mode,
SeM cr.g 140* IS. m od inert
I .mo B*i l i l t I t e r SI* M me

Mint m m -------------$3 — T V R a d i o S t e r e o

Sold tlolo color conoelo m
W alnut C abin*! W arranty
Fay IIS* e r IIS monthly
financing, no down pay mm*
•A K SIW 4 N. Mill* |l ) » ) l
Or lane* 1*41044
TELEVISION
BCA. IP 'la la v itla n XL NO Sol'd
Slat*
Color
P o rtab le
Warranty Pay Bid* or SI*
Month'* fin an cin g N* Down
Payment
BAKS 11*4 N M int A n (! ) Tit
O rtta d o l 4tAl«ot
G*od Utod TV't.TlS i up
MILLERS
j i l t Orlando Dr
PR t t l U S)
TV rtp o IP ' Zonim Sold orlg
S4») 71 Bal SIU 14 or 117 mo
Agent I l f M to ______________
TV ITO R RENT
Color 4 Bloch 4 wnii* fro *
dtliyor. 4 pickup Jim m y’s
TV R tnial Phono Anytime

ClsrN will ta ry te t AC'l. ro te* .
I r r r r r r f . * * trr c n tlv ri. m ,tc.
Call 11) 17)1

Aluminum Siding &amp;
Screen Rooms
Aluminum AppllcalMn la rv lc t.
Atumn A vinyl f id my. follll.
urtv*&lt; room |,
oomt.
B*1* t IM 1714 « * n

Gar ago Sal* fu m .lu r* . pump
o*e condifwnor. Baby itom v
a »n*t. ptc. f r l and Sol only
147 B urnt Avo , Country Club
Hoighlt Inoar Lk M aryl
a ito b a im
goodt and p la n ti Saturday.
May SIR. t a r n
U nited
Prrtbytorlan Church. US W.
W'lbur. LOk* M ary

rum m age

sale,

STOP ANO THINK A MINUTE
II C la ttiilf d A di d id n 't
work, m a rt wduMnrl bo any
frlday. Saturday. Sunday )tM
S Cedar Ay*. 1 * John ton
O utboard
m o ld r.
I l.tc
Cleaning H aul*

Botrding A Grooming
Animal H a i t i B oard,ng 4
Grooming konnali Thorm
Con'ro'iod Heal ON floor
lirtp.ng B a i n w * calm I*
yeur p m ) » | ) u

Brush Cutting
custom w ork

R ta ia n a b la
R a ta l
fra *
SSolimai* Call Early A. M. e r
CW D ) ISA* or IJOSI T l l l l i ,

FAMILY —ADWLTI

ft UMvrwgftvq
B OubM I (H O

: SOS W. 2Sth ST.
SANTORO

I22-20t0

Concralf Work, lo d r r i, n o o n 4
p e eli la n d ic a p in g 4 aee
work Fra* Ml H I 710)

CypreuMukfi

Coll Abll.tv ironw ork!
lor Window 4 Door G uards
f r a * E ll » ) lioo

Carpel Cleaning
Shampoo 4 Drop V M m Lly.
Dvs R m . Hail. 1)9 )M **
add.tonal rm U l 0*44

Ceramic Til*
M ElNTJER TILE
* e * 1/ rep* r l*#4 r the*#** ouf
Ipm i ' i y . D m l i p 940 B 4J

Clock Repair
gw altn lt jl w e l e r

S0 4 S Park A rr
H ) 4199_________

Concrete Work

( *" O fi p T n i

in

f•ft# p*«Arft fr q n haavan
you Mil “ Don't N to d t"
with a want ad

Furniture Rtfinlshing
• ill
4
Jim i
fu rn llv re
Rtlmuh.ng 4 R tfla ra ’len w*
buy 4 1*11 Cell U l U l l an te
h ri U l 17)1

Handyman
Handyman R ri.rad Will lit
tim e il anyihing in in* Roma

ILiuling &amp;
Yard Work
Haul.ng 4 Yard Work 10 \ off
.. in Ad 113 t i l l no ana U )
14F) Larry, Jayc* Bryard.

Home Improvement

Wmdaw Guardi. Door G uards.
Sliding G la il Oaor a n c ta u rt* .
P t l l a and Peal railin g * ,
re n ta l. G ain , fir a E tcapat.
Staat S tain. Ornamental Iron
Furr*.lure. Etc Com* la* our
d .ip 'ty . 1091 E ISIk rlgM her#
m San lord'

IB « « Y U N T tftlO H J
W aM paptriftB. pam firg Low

Thinking about that aummar
racationT Oat a batter c a r
through the clau d ied a dt in
•ad fy 'l papar

Landscaping
LAROB T R IE INSTALLER
la n d u a p tftg . Old Lawn* u«

Lawn &amp;Garden
Service
fr a n k i Lawn Service
4 Landscaping Q ualityFlrtl
Call |S94I Tlf 4)99 Caltacl
NEED A SERVICEMAN) You'll
lind him lined In aur O u tn a ai
torvica Dlrtctgry

Carson Lawn Strvic*
'
•&gt; HP
&gt; ■ SCJ'
• ,U i

Croc k a rri law n
kaaut.ticationand '
M amtfnancaSkCrk*
Th* pancnal touch t

mom

AT law n Car*
All Rhe lav. Tap Quality
L e w p rk a t Ray D 4 t 4S)
Yard 4 Garay* c ta a n u g
Shrek 4 I r a n Rywryval
Lawn Mawtng

Mini ULock

Carpanlry 4 Remodeling
no , 0b 100 small
D ) UM ef Atlyr 4 )0

Insulation
SAVE ENERGY 4 D O llA E ll
R a" 4 Blown FBONTO IN
SULATION CO H ) 411) or U 4
IDE Frtd Evl; mat at

*

(nfoYtor •■forlar. pUiftf»np.
walipapaf mg Qualify word
Itoat Fraa tit 222tm
P lu m b in g

FONSECA PLUMRING Can
Structi*n. Rapairt. Emergen
cy Lie . Bended. In i UlaOTS
fr a d d l* R obinien Plam bm g
H r p a .r i, ta u c a li. W C
Sprinkler! I l l U I9. U I 97M
JUST THINK. IF CLASSIFIED
ADS OION'T WORK. THERt
WOULDN'T IE ANYII

Pressure Ckanlng
Mebiia M o m Mourn. Reofi
T ruest. Trailer. Etc Fertabi*
Unit Haryld Rankin ))) )&gt;!l.
WANT ADS AEE SLACK 4
W HITE ANO READ ALL
over

Remodeling
Cv 9ti|»i«U

Horn#

Ntpatrt

ft

fftm odaiing. Patnfiftf. room*
addition*. dfYwall. «fc 20 m
ta p Call I 2I 2BI2 O rn

Remodeling Specialist
W f harvf't fft#

YYftoia Bail of tta i

&gt;

B. E . Link Const*

tt2'702f

Sandblasting

G aragr M in a r t In f r a ta n Tall
Iha people about M wllb *
Clauilwd Ad in in* H araid
U ) 1411; U l t f U

QUALITY AT AFAIR FR IC fll
Gan R rp f.rt 4 Imprgy IT yr*
lot all r ton.ar D u US 1US.

Faint ing,

AAasonry

0 Bfiw, a&gt;4U).. masss

dome Repairs

2220AM

Dacof afinq

4 m anong ArkHyair

All irp e t ol Mason Work
No tab lye large or tad im all

CENTRAL FLORIDA HOME
IMPROVEMENTS
Painting. Rowi ng. Carpentry
Lk- bonded 4 Guar am rad
F#m E iEm alai US-1A4T

prkao Ouar.

Cuifom

Compiet* lawn care H ) l 7f )

Ramadalmg 4 Rapalr. Dry vsvfku
nanginj. T ri'u rad Calling*. S .

Anything C o n cralf
S lo ts ,
Or,raw ay I . C ontract color mg.
Etc Quality work al lair
p n e n R on)}) 497} Alt J p m .
V ii t raom n yeur a tiic . parage
Sail iJ K " a m i w i n a
Ciast.iwd Ad Ceil a friendly
ad la k tr al U ) )At 1 er U IT 991

Painting

placid mini

Top Ouftlify Mu left d«iiv«r«d fa
horna or b v tf titi ) S
IS l

m un

A PA RTM EN TS
fl II mM — la L I ftY- U l'H
• N I P Tw e Au i h -

Clauilw d Adi ara 'h e a m o u n t
Mg new! iltm t you will Und
anywhere.

Burglar Ban

CLASSIFIED AOS
MOVE
MOUNTAINS of mcrcRpndio*
tvtfY d « r

QeqevaQardei|s

Tn* Evening Herald ClafU lird
Adi O ilp no l*n&lt; r claim
i
Juft RofuHit

mo

miDd

S4—Garage Sales

I MAN QUALITY 0 , ' l R ATi ON
t y ' t o&gt;P Pole*. OrivaaMyf.
He Worn* Brol i l l i i j i

Beauty Care
TOWCff'S BEAUTY SALON
FORMERLY H a rrip l'4 Baouly
Nook ) l t E Itt SI . 1)11747

Ironworks

C o n c re te W b rk

m ic r o w a v e

H I—M i s c e l l a n e o u s f o r S a le

le i* nig * o k*d, d i r k b n g t.
guodcond 171 rrir&gt;g U l 401
B Hally A &gt;*. Sen! M! 4*04

l)*l

•is c*r~7 f t v .

CONSULT OUR

W it SON MAIER TURNITURE

Ultftl

4. now . g ro o n living room
n i f l l u l M CkOKL SIM Wcli.
I molcRmg ottoman S i 14)1

twi

\

80-A u to s

S1-A—Furniture

lir o p 'o c r t. p re o n tro o t. *
boouly M l 1114044

CALLANYTIME
uu

P a rk

1070 O aifun P e l up &gt;0 000 M.
Long bed AM f M rrg gay
» ) 17)0
.

1*71 linger Tuiura fu lly oul*.
rtp o tw w o d utod vory iberl
tim# Original tSO) act f i l t e r
U l mo Agon! UtdMO

t e l e v i s io n i i - b c a

STENSTROM

111

• S P E C IA L A U C T IO N *

f a r Salt P'pi. 170 and Up
Paacocl. I Ma'a. ) f i n a l , s i l l
Great Dan*, mala, I r to l i
food homo H I 0100 *,k for
Gan*

59—Musical Merchandise
ORGAN—W u rlilio r.
) tty
board, tyn m atlio r. rhythm 4
cattail* 're o rd e r 1000 Call
U ) ) f *4 or 1)1 IM)

the IMdm'N U ndo'pearly
ya' git I* Iht MANTAOS

■■■■■■
■
TT-Truda A T railers

-M o b ile H o m e s

1} ) 104* or 111 1104

f roocR
SAVE II.M * an thai terety krend
new 1 Edrm. &gt; k4IR in
P in e c ie tl. P riced te fell
I4M M Harry*

6fl-Wanted to Buy

sa le

uur. u n i co.7). S4.r«

LAWNMOWER SALE ] Star
Spocol A voiiob'r now horp
but W niorn Auto. Son torn
•

•tor go to run TTwref no room
•or in* f a r ? c iron it ovl with *
Wont Ag n i n M rrfij p h
m J i l l or U l m i

to# ju r booulitul now BROAD
M O R E , from i roar B R 't
G R E G O R Y M O B IL E HOMES
HOI Orlando Dr
H ) 1100

o w n e r m o t iv a t e o i

T e ff over paym iW i tn d owner
Will held irrond er wrop
ermavd on this Tnptei Prietd
el a M | M i ooo

b u il o in o

tu w d o y , M ay H . 1981—9 8

E ve n in g H t r l U . Sm U t A F I .

Materials

SI—Household Goods

HerMed under lerpe O el tra n .
Hut 1 M rm heme hai * larg*
lem .ir room w in e«lre .n
fu le lte n lor voundprootlny
Owner t e r l
" ho'd mor
• gage to e' * Wring U 7.T00
B ee u 'lu l ■« Acre le i on Cenel
lead ng 'o SI Johns. 110 100

steel

9s

C h arm in g Oldor I Edrm
C o m p ltltly re lv re lf h tg
SJS.JE*

N k o M H toll or Rm i
On Wokiu* R i.o r Bargain

BATEMAN REALTY
B e t......... ..................
111 f i l l
le e in iff*

61 — B u ild in g

TILL OIRT 4 TUP SOIL
YELLOW SAND
Coll Clark 4 H .rt U l MM

4J

I M rm . I Betk. »**•* Plen.
F am ily Rm # M d 0 *&lt;l
m .m .

O M ’t r m i to BUY B tal I stole
BUY R m i ( it of • and w a tfin
LAWANAKISM
R lA L T JB
3 2 1 -0 0 4 1

PlO E A
CERTAIN I T&lt;?
AN A66TRflNJMER:
toER,AH'*wEAKNE&gt;W U5
ANYMORE.
iN V0UR &gt;\ANPiBLE.'XpEA5ANTi.
MAJwR.'^

O n » n and Chair
C ictffvnf coodifion. 1 140

1 M rm . I P _ v ° &gt; * " f '
Asking llf.RM M eet Olfer

vum

REAL c h i n a : HE T&lt;2£7K
X ) 0 U REALLY THINK
THAT A I O - C O J N T O U S T
I T * W IS E TZ&gt; R E T U R N
t J T H E R l N ^ N I i S H T . MEAN5 FL&lt;?WN HI5 TEETH.1
_____
N E W A f A F T ^_R. K1L L . .61 AW MecEWAutfF a r
V O JR L A ^ T 0 m i N E N T \ JA U
the yHEAVENS THAN

toil* t

DUN,

4 M rm . | (e lb R rm anned
Kile Ren New Crnt Heel end
Air Ilf.if*

with Major Hoopla

» * l k Preach

M LS

I idem , t Baffl M#ftil# Home
F a lta ft I v tM tti N P ro ttrty

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

NEw Cancraia Eu.ktingf. all
flm S M B u * At I 4 4 SB 44. I
4 inouitr.ai Fyrk » ) 0941

Nursing C*n1tr
OUR RATES ARE LOWER
* 4k * n y w N uri.ng c d r lr r
t l f E Sacend V . Sanlord
U ) 4)97

Painting
Hallman ram iiny 4 R ep o rt
Ouaiiiy week fry* Evl Due
IQ to n n es 114 9*99 Roljr
Hwum Fam tyr- III C lan W grt.rraionabi* p r.c n 1) , M r i
np
Kannyln Her* » } f » y
aftftf |

F*lnimj-I!«
Ikrior Iniyrlyr RymadtJna

P r y ly n iy n a i

t i e In* Free l i t |. get m y

SAN0 9 LASTIN0
DAVIS WELDINO
» M ) f t . SANFORD
W ander what ta «D with Tw o'
to ll Ond — Tn* gunk. M ty
W ant Ad way Thy m agic
num tae iy H I 1*11 or U l f f f )

Tax &amp;Accounting
_______ Services [ |
;
K B u U n n m and iM bnduaii
E lijabafh A Grind!* C P A
U ) I US__________

^ ^ T re e S e rv ic * ^
Trt Caanty Try* Service
Trimming, ramyryl. "aa/iny.
NduUng Fray Ell lH N W
N A EFEB 'STRB B SERVICE

Trimming, ryntdrlng A Lara
f'## Ell m o il)

Wallpapering
T m aJT ^S m m
and I t y T
WAilgdpyrlnt Fray ( i r l)
Y es. l e a c an a i (Mac)
McK'nnyy U l M at ’ E m Ip m

�ttfndlf.WT 18. 1*1

1 3 ) WITH O M ritU D IU M R BOKM CERTIFICATE

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

WXNDUU* ITORI1 INC
CORVBGMT — l*»l

Ubby&gt;
Ubby&gt;
Libby/
W o A * ‘

WITH ONt FIU.E0 tU KR I 0RUI CERTIFICATE
1000 MIT I (M I. I N I

Here’s how it works!
PSck up free Super Bonus Certificates
at our checkout counters

la ty ru ir

Ybu get 1Super Bonus Stam p for every
•1you spend. Paste 3 6 Soper Bonus
Stamps on each certificate

M id i ■ Tint U M l *000 II
m rouewiii r itm i couimt o u t !
oiam gi

iu i

sim ik ou

o u io u . u i v a w » o iu v »

(itnn (NiiioTTi went count u i.
Mil'OKA UUUI m HIKOtT (OUNTT

i “ ’i o^XPRKIS GOOD

W hen you check out. present one fitted
Super Bonus Certificate (or each Super
B onus Special you select.

F0H UL OTHtR COUHTItl
K i m I I I T0UH LOCAL HIWWMR.

Mf.-------- MAY 10-13, 1981

PORK CHOPS

FRYER QUARTERS

SLICED BACON

SIRLOIN STEAKS

| j

$119 3
u ir

io n

finl W IRISH OS |MOMD POM LOINS

FtlSH COUNTVf STYlf PAN RtOI ANO
KOULAI CUT UP

t so n i

CINTIR CUT THIN &amp;UCIO MtAKlASf

Sue ID INTO

Ham............. . ‘2

D n rL

Steaks ..

•ONNil MAJO M I a W D

*2 ”

COnAGEBUnS

CHICKEN P A n iE S

.

BONELESS MAM .

BALLPARK FRANKS

SLICED PEPPER0NI

l«VT rttMIUM W/tlAN

HMMt OtAH (MKO HOI o t inCLAI

St A MtTOCIAN IIW

S T R IP S ..............

BAG SA U SA G E . .

TROUT FILLET . .

U l M il M IUID

HTOAAM AU WtAT ANO M l « H

*1”
MU)|

*V '

SMELTS

..........

GROUPER FILLET

AU FLAVORS

ARROW

DETERGENT

CHEK DRINKS

PORK &amp; BEANS &amp;

31&gt;oi.

4 6 *ox.

CANS
A llO W FA»»&lt;

CRACKIN GOOO POTATO (T w in

CANS
w av t)

Softener

NO ttlU tN C « l« ROOT Mlt.COtA

Drinks . . . . 6 'it *1

IHItf TT MAiO CtAMItMT

Sections . . . 2ii«t

CAN%

DETERGENT

2
ARMOUR
u u sau n r

ICE CREAM
o r SHERBET

HAJTVtST IR IS H 0 ANJOU

SUMRMANO Am t

Pears........2

Juice ...

DINNER CLASSICS

ASfOt JPIAIS

Broccoli . . . 2

OMON. KtOUMH l» COOHTI

O W'K*.
• • • • • • » • * **a'

C u n E M v *

s t i a k /c h ic k e n f r i c a i k

$129

■ «»'

)

CHEESE
u suets

KAAM U K It) AAAI tlC AN 1000

Cheese....... «*.
«r«ANO iaaamtadon wwad

M”

PUNCH
WAVt u c
UAVOtft

i i n u r o to uA jtuh

MARGARINE
n u tu ri
*
BISCUITS ..
humor

ja

�</text>
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                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on May 10, 1981.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
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                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, May 10, 1981; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
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                    <text>SUNDAY EDITION
73rd Y t a r , No. 335-------- S u n d a y , M a y 34, I W l - S a n f o r d . F lo r id a 33371

E v e n in g H e ra ld — (U S P S 441-310)— P ric e 35 Cent*

Clerical Error Brings Back Memories Of A xe Murders
B y B R I T T S M IT H
H erald Staff Writer
It's a clerical mistake, a minor notation on a back page o l the
Seminole C ircuit Court docket Appearing almost as an af­
terthought In the miscellaneous "O ther Handling" section, It
reads lim p ly: " H a r r y Higgins M urder In Th e First Degree."
The case number Is of a style so old it Isn't even used anymore.
Th e case shouldn't even be on the docket. But It la — 23 years
later still stirring memories of one of the bloodiest episodes In
the annals of local crim inal history . . . .
Th e date: Monday, Ja n . 1 2 .19M. Tim e : I a m . Most of the
residents of the fashionable Lakewood Snores subdivision In
south Seminole County are still In bed, bundled up against the
JW eg ree dawn.
H a rry Gifford Hlggtns, a 40-year-old aerospace engineer and
missile expert, Is getting dressed But ha won’t make it to work
this morning. He has other, more Important things to do. He
must stop a conspiracy of which he Is the tareet He knows ton
much, national m ilita ry

and technological secrets. The

Russians, he Is convinced, are going to kidnap him and his
fam ily and torture them until he tells aO he knows.
He must stop them. It will be quite simple, really. Calm and
deliberate, he fetches a new axe from a tool shed outside and
does what he feels he must. Th e Reds must not get to them
first
S W IS H ! Th e axe slices through the crisp morning air and
rips Into the neck of Higgins' wife Ruth as she Iks in bed
asleep.
A slightly-built man, Higgins shoulders the heavy axe and
silently walks down the hall to daughter Ruth Ann’s room. Her
wide eyes peer out from the darkness. H e can't bring himself
to strike while she Is awake. He sits on her bed for a moment,
asking about her pet dog, then gets up and moves down the hall
to where his three sons lie sleeping. Tw elve-year-old Bryan is
the first to go, his neck severed to the spinal core! by the blow.
Richard, I , Is next Ten-year-old Phillip wakes up and begins to
"7
Again, Higgins balks. It's those eyes. He can't stand them

watching him . He doesn't want his son to see death coming He
cradles the boy In his arms and carries him to a couch In the
living room.
Upset by her brother's crying, Ruth Ann. 14, heads for the
comfort of her mother's bed. She flicks on the light switch and
stands there In the doorway as If paralysed; for a second
totally im m obile, a suddenly frown mind and body that has
solidified Into one great silent set earn. She runs sobbing to a
neighbor's house where the police an called.
Follow ing the carnage, Higgins had planned to kill himself
by d rivin g Into a tree at full speed, but a patrolman arrived on
the scene before he could make his getaway. Higgins remained
calm through It all. Even when a crowd gathered outside his
house, he casually opened the beck door and In his typically
sofLtpoken manner said he would be right o u t He wanted to
talk to his priest first.
Higgins never expressed remorse for the gory hacking of his
fsjsBjr. H is only regret rtss that his wife, whs lock four hears
to die, was not killed Instantly like the rest. " I ’m s o rry ," police

Hostages
Taken By
Rightists
B A R C E L O N A , Spain ( U P I ) - Heavily
armed rightists stormed a Barcelona
bank Saturday, wired It with explosives
and threatened to blow up the building
with more than 300 hostages Inside If four
m ilitary coup plotters are not released
from jail
A hostage who was shot In the bank
seizure by as m any as twenty five pro­
Franco extremists said they had stacked
explosives In the windows and at the
entrances of the Catalan headquarters of
the Central Bank.
Government sources said more than
300 people were held at gunpoint inside
the headquarters of Central Bank.
In a statement delivered to a B ar­
celona ne w spaper, the p ro F ra n c o
rightists demanded two planes to be put
at their disposal within 72 hours to fly
from Madrid to Argentina with the four
officers arrested after a failed coup Feb.
21.
The gunmen threatened to kill on*
hostage every hour If the government
Ignored their deadline and said they
would blow up the building If police
stormed t l
Almost three hours after the occupatton began, a number of hostages
estimated at about a d o irn left the bank.
Eyewitnesses said most were women.
They said none appeared wounded.
A bank employee permitted to leave
the besieged building after being shot In
the leg said there were between 20 and 25
gunmen, all armed w ith submachine
guns and explosives.
He said the gunmen had placed ex­
plosives In aO the windows and entrances
of the downtown building.
Another bank employee reached by
telephone said the gunmen had ordered
everyone In the four-storey building to
gather on the ground floor.
Police jeep* and sharpshooters massed
around the downtown building. Units of
Spain's crack anti-terrorist police, the
G EO *, raced to Barcelona from Madrid.
Police sources said the only access to
the headquarters building was the roof.
Police u ld a Barcelona newspaper
received a written statement shortly
after the bank seizure claim ing the at­
tack was staged by right-w ing extremists
demanding the release of four of 30 of­
ficers arrested after the attempted coup
Feb 23 In which the Spanish parliament
was taken over by ultra-rightist m ilitary
men.
Police identified the four jailed officers
whose release was demanded by the
extremists as U . C o l Antonio Tejero
Molina, the mustachioed civil guard
officer who seized parliam ent at the start
of the coup attempt. Lt. Gen. lstis T o m a
Rojas and two lieutenant colonels

TODAY
Action Reports
Around Th e Clerk
Bridge
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Horoscope ....... . . .
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quoted him as saying, "that Ruth whom I loved the most, had
to suffer." H e admitted that had Phillip and Ruth A nn been
asleep, he would have murdered them too. He said he w asn’t
sure, however, whether he could have killed himself.
Tw o months after the sensational slayings. Higgins was
Indicted for his crimes — three counts of first degree m urder
If convicted, he could have gone to the electric chair. But
H arry Higgins never stood trial. He was mad. At least, that's
what ■ team of psychiatrists said, adding that he was In­
capable of helping prepare his legal defense.
So, now-retired Judge Voile Williams sent Higgins off to the
state mental hospital in Chattahoochee But that wasn’t to be
the end of It. W illiam s ordered that should Higgins ever
recover, he w as to be returned to Seminole County for possible
prosecution.
For the next 15 years, Higgins remained a patient at the
See C L E R IC A L , Page IA

Riots
Inmates Rebel
In Two States
MoroM P la te s kv Ton Vmkmh

Kd Posey, general curator al Central Florida provide new facility of concrete block and tlab,
Zoo, points to worn-out animal quarantine complete with animal run* to an adjoining
facility made from old cages taken from the old fenced-in area.
Sanford Zoo. Funds from coming auction will

Dan Fisher, adm inistrative aisistant at the surround new elephant paddock, built with
Central Florida Zoo, showi moat which funds raised during last y ear's auction.

Wild West Auction
The Central Flo rid a Zoo's Annual Wild West Auction and
Music Jamboree w ill be held al the Walt Disney World
Contemporary Resort Hotel Thursday
The event is a benefit for (he zoological park in Sanford.
Last year 525,000 was raised during the event to build a
new elephant paddock at the too. Plans this year call for the
proceeds to be used for a “ free flight" aviary and sick
animal quarantine area.
Auction llama w ill Include a rare 20th Anniversary,

lim ite d Edition Ski Nsutlqup «jwa«1 host, complete with
trailer.
The auction wtt) follow a prim e rib and barbeque rib
dinner and country and western music entertainment
Actress Colleen Zenk, co-star on "A s Th e World T u m i "
w ill be on hand.
For complete Information call the zoo at 323-4150 or
323 4451.

C A R S O N C I T Y , Nev. ( U P I ) - A pistoltoting Nevada State Prison inmate,
described as one of the most dangerous in
the country, freed 50 hardened criminals
from Death Row and top-secunty cells
and took over a cellblock, holding three
guards hostage through the night before
releasing them Saturday unharmed.
T w o of the guards were freed by a rtfleflrtng S W A T team that ambushed the
cellblock around 4 a.m.
Th e third was finally released tw o
hours later when uprising leader D a vid
Wayna surrendered, handing over a .25calibre pistol to prison Superintendent
John Slanaky, who negotiated for 10
hours for the guards' release.

Th e Ionia uprising ended at about 3
a .m . E D T today, when 25 state police and
45 guards swept through the Institution,
getting Inmates back Into their cells and
securing cellblock*
Inmates had seized two ctllblocks in
the century-old reformatory, and set fire
to a school and food-service area about I
p.m . The prison school and s guard shark
were destroyed by fire.

Meanwhile, guards and state police
swept through ■ maximum security
reformatory Saturday at Ionia, M ich .,
securing as m any as 1,000 inmates who
staged an uprising Just hours before a
riot by 1,700 Inmates at the world's
largest walled prison quietly ended.

Prison Director Chuck Wolff, J r ., M id
the facility was secured at t:30 a.m . and
that the only guarantee granted W ayne
was that he would be able to have a visit
from his girlfriend.
Wayne, who just a few hours earlier
had been acquitted on charges In another
hostagetaking, asked for and was twice
given doses of an antidepressant drug,
Demerol, by prison officials during the
tense negotiations.
Deputy Prison Warden Steve Robinson
said Wayne wanted "assurances he won't
be killed."
T h e takeover. In which one inmate was
stabbed and another beaten, w u the
t ilt h hostage Incident at the prison In the
past tilm iitunUts and the third involving
Wayne, described by a prison official as
“ one of the most dangerous men In the
United Slate*."

Four guards and I I Inmates were in­
jured In the stx-hour Ionia Reforms lo ry
uprising. T w o guards reported bring
beaten by a gang of up to 40 prisoners
One convict suffered a head wound and
was reported in critical condition.
Seven inmates were Injured In the
earlier riot at Southern Michigan Prison
at Jackson, none seriously.
Th e 17-hour riot at Jackson prison, the
world's largest walled prison some 50
miles aw ay, ended without force at about
10 p.m . F rid a y when the last stubborn
Inmates returned to their cells.
State prison officials blamed the
Jackson riot on "irresponsible and In­
subordinate" guards, who told Inmates
they would be locked up far the three-day
weekend and subjected to a cell-search.

A t Nevada, Deputy Warden Steve
Robinson M id the 12-member team broke
through the doon on (he ground floor of
the prison shortly before 4 a m . and
captured M ot the rebellious Inmates.
Shots were fired but there was no Im ­
mediate report of Injuries.

Wayne, 37, serving a 30-year term for
attempted murder In a Reno, Nev., bar
holdup, was being escorted from a
shower around I p.m. Friday when he
pulled a pistol, taking three guards
captive.

Controversial Bill Passes House

Assum able Mortgages, Pro And Con
By DONNA E S TE S
Herald Staff W riter
A bill affirming the rig h t of lenders to
charge higher Interest rates when cer­
tain home mortgages arc transferred
passed the Florida House of Represen­
tatives this week, but its future In the
Florida Senate la uncertain.
W ith both of S em ino le C o u n ty's
resident legislators — Slate Rep. Robert
Hattaway, D-Altamonte Springs, and
State Rep. Bobby B rantley, R-Longwood,
— firmly on the opposition aide of the
Issue, the measure passed the Florida
House by a 57-54 vote.
A t this point if one buys a home in
Florida, the buyer m ay be able to assume
an old, low-interest mortgage If the buyer
qualifies. That practice. M y o fficcn at
m rings and loan associations, has hurt
lending Institutions because mortgage
interest rates have clim bed so high.
Th e b ill as pnpoaed, would permit
mortgage lender* to exercise "Clause
I F '— the so-called due an isle clause—
in many low-Interest contracts entered
into prior to rapidly clim bing interest
rates of the past I I months. Th is would
eliminate assumption of those m or­
tgages, thus permitting lenders to writs
new mortgages al existing interest rates.
Hattaway, a realtor and banker, said
he opposed the legislation, calling it a
"gut Issue" on which he had to make a
decision. “1 had friends on both sides,''
he Mid.
“Th e bill bereflta few businesses at

tha expense of a large num ber of people.
Savings and loan associations are Mytng
they are not making money, but looking
at their buddings and expansion they
must be making m oney," he said. Hat­
taway Mid if the bill passes the Senate
and becomes law , It w ill take a lot ol
people who wish to buy older homes and
to assume ex tilin g mortgages out of the

some special Interests."
Maxwell w u of tha opinion that tha
only reason the bill passed the House w u
because of "som e arm-twisting by the
House Dem ocratic leadership. With all
the leadership's power, the hill passed by
only three votes," Maxwell said. “ I find
little support for it in the Senate.”
Sen. Joh n Vogt u y s he is still "un­

marketplace.
Brantley had the same concern. " T h u
bill would make U impossible In many
instances far young m arried couples just
out of college to realize the American
dream of owning their own homes,’' ha

decided" about how he w ill vote on tha
measure. T h e Cocoa Beach Democrat,
whose district also includes Seminole,
said he is asking the questions he hat
about the legislation u testimony Is
given in the Senate Commerce Com­
mittee of w hich he Is a member.
Hearings before the Senate's Com­
merce Com m ittee began Thursday af­
ternoon.
"Em otiona lly, and u someone who has
some single-digit mortgages. I'm In­
clined to oppose the ‘due on u l t " bill,''
Vogt said. “ B u t I m ust look at It from an
informed standpoint of what the Impact
is an u v In g a and loan associations.
"Hopefully I ’ll became more informed
in (he comm ittee hearings," he said.
Vogt said he had 15 penons outside Ms
office door waiting to talk with him about
the Issue and had numerous telephone
calls from persons in the u s in g s and
loan Industry and from realtors sine* the
bill passed the House

"Th e only peraona! contacts I have had
In favor of the bill were persons in the
laving* and loan Industry," Brantley
M id. He added the issue of the legality of
"due an a s k " clauses la now pending In
Florida courts.
" T h u is an attempt to circumvent
court action I don't know that we need to
do that, either. Let the courts rule on the
Issue, in other states where the courts
have ruled, the decisions have been
against the due on sale' clause,”
Brantley Mid.
The tall will not p a n the Senate with
State Sen. C la rk M axw ell's help. The
Melbourne Republican, whose district
Includes Seminole County, said flatly,
" I'm not w pparting i t I don't aee where
It la • people bill or where proper con­
sideration will be given to people."
Maxwell H id the bill “ will only help

The bill's provisions apply only to
mortgage contracts that have a "due on
u t a " clause w ritten into them and would
corns Into p lay only when a house Is told

M»r*M riw tt k , J i m C s u rtM rry

Gib Edmonds, prrsidrnt of F irst F rd rra l Savings 4 Loan of
Scminolr in Sanford, shows chart of relationship in rise of interest
paid on money market certificates as they relate to higher Interest
rate charged on loans.
T h e d u e o n u le c la u s e - also called an
acceleration clause or Section 17 —

courts as being an unfair provision
In Flo rid a , the 2nd District Court of

appears In most mortgages issued after
1978, an estimated 20 percent of Use
existing home mortgages in Florida.

Appeal tn Lakeland has struck down the
danse, but many lenders have Ignored
the decision, contending It applied only to

Th e clause explicitly allows liv in g s
and loan associations and other lenders

the single case. Courts elsewhere in the
country, however, have given oppoeilie
rulings.

to adjust the interest when a mortgage Is
assumed by a new owner. The clause has
been

successfully

attacked

in

some

Th e House bill would affirm
Sec A S S U M A B L E , Page 2A

the

�7A-tveninq Herald. Sanford. FI.

Sunday, May 24, 14lt

W O R LD
IN BRIEF
Pope Recovering Well,

Infection Fear Dwindles
R O M E ( U P 1 ) — Pope John P iu l I l l s well on his way
to a full recovery from Kunzhoi wounds, and the
biggest problem now facing his doctors m a y be
restraining the pontiff from resuming his active life too
The surgical team caring for the pope since he was
shot in St. Peter's Square M ay 13 signaled th eir con­
fidence in his full recovery Friday when they rem oved
the last of the tubular drains that drained excess fluids
from his abdomen — indicating they had little or no
fear he could develop a potentially dangerous ab­
dominal Infection.

Syrians Down Spy Plane
B E U It ir r , lebanon ( U P I i - A Syrian missile shot
down an unmanned Israeli spy plane in a further
escalation of the Middle East crisis, and a special
conference of A ra b foreign ministers promised "to ta l"
m ilitary aid to S yria if its territory is attacked.
U S. presidential envoy Philip Habib, who F rid a y
met with U b a n e s e President Ellas Sarkis, is expected
to travel back to Damascus today in his mission to tend
the crisis over Syrian missiles sis*|cfiH In Lcts n e s 'S
central Bekaa Valley.
In Washington, Secretary Slate Alexander Haig
rejected a Soviet offer of an International conference to
avert a new war.

Cosmonauts End Voyage
MOSCOW ( I l l ’l l — Soviet cosmonaut V la d im ir
Popov and his Romanian colleague landed their Soyuz40 space capsule safely, bringing to an end the 14-year
era of the Soyux model that served as the backbone of
the Soviet space program
"W e were lucky to fly on the last ship of the Soyux
series, which did a lot for the development of space, not
wily for the Intercosmos program, but In general,”
Popov said F rid a y after touchdown from a one-week
stay on board the orbiting Salyut-4 space station.

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
First Holiday Weekend

Casualties Are Reported
H O M E S T E A D , Fla . ( U P I l - Two persons killed in a
grisly collision that left I I others injured In Dade
County and an elderly Pincltaa County man became
the first casualties of the three-day Memorial D a y
weekend as the count barely got underway F rid a y .
Th e H o t Ida H ighw ay Patrol has predicted 23 people
will lose their lives on the state's highways during the
holiday period that began at I p.m. Friday and ends at
midnight Monday.
The Iwliday weekend w u b a r e lj 2i minutes eld when
two passenger vans collided on a southwest Dade
County h ig h w a y , A F lo rid a H ighw ay P a tr o l
spokesman said one of the victims died at the scene of
the accident. A spokeswoman at Janies Archer Sm ith
Hospital in Homestead confirmed another person died
ui tne emergency room there.
Victims included 20 Haitian i efugtes packed inside a
nine-passenger van, the driver of that vehicle and two
persons traveling in the other van.

Satellite U p...Finally
C A P E C A N A V E R A L , Fla. (U P D America's
newest "weather eye" — the G O ES 3 sophisticated
weather satellite — has finally been launched and
spare agency officials turned their efforts to putting
still another " b ir d " In the skies today.
IN T E L S A T 3. the second of nine advanced
telecommunications satellites designed to carry 11,000
telephone calls and two color television channels
simultaneously around the globe, is scheduled to be
boosted Into space atop an Atlas Centaur rocket at 6:29
p m. E D T .
The satellite, owned by the 106-member Inter­
national Telecommunications Sntellit Organization,
was due to fly Th u rsd a y, but last-minute battery and
computer problems forced a 46-hour delay.

Warning Issued On Canned Mushrooms
Russell M iller, director of Environmental Health Services
for the Seminole C ounty Health Department, said today the
UJ5. Food and Drug Adm inistration has Issued a public w a r­
ning concerning botulism found in a particular type of canned
mushrooms.

age respectively, claimed that the confessions given police
hours after the murder were not volun tarily and freely given.
Th e boys, along with 31-year-old Columbus "Sonny Boy"
Edw ards, were arrested Te b . 7 and charged with murdering
Jam es Charles BuDock of Apt. 1. O ak Ridge Motel, U S . High­

The mushrooms a re canned pieces and lie n s produced by
the O x tx d Royal M ushroom Co., Kelton, Pa. and have been
distributed to sou* 3d different food stores in Flo rida,
Including Pantry P rid e and G ra nd Union

w ay 17-91 in Fern Park.
B t ilW k 'j body was discovered In E dw ards' fw un. A p t 3 al

SfUR DKR C O N F E S S IO N S N O T SUP P RESSED
An effort to suppress the confessions of two teen-ager
brothers charged with m u rd e r In connection with the February
shooting of a 14-year-old Fern P ark m an has been rejected by
Seminote Circuit Judge Joseph Davis J r .
Attorney for Homer a n d Jackie le e Poole, 16 and I ) years of

conscience."
Segal went on to say that Homer Poole could net Intelligently
wave his rig h t! ( to remain silent and to an attorney) "because
he didn't knew what in the world they are. He doesn't even
know what an attorney is. I submil that he would not have
waived ihoae rights had i* iuiuwii * L t » they a re ," he said.
Jackie's law yer. Charlene Kelly, added that the boys were
not allowed to call ihelr mother for four or five hours following
their arrest. T h e confessions, made after the Poole's initial
request for a phone call was denied, should therefore be

Action R epo rts

The deadlv botulism w i t found by FDA in a couple of cans
Unprinted on th« lop w ith the following codes: to line — D K 101
to D K 1)0; bottom line m a y be P-1 of P -I of LP-1 or LP-1. T h e y
were packed In April a n d M ay of this year. Other codes which
may be toxic Include E K 101 to E K 111, P-1, o r P -J o r LP-1 or
L P -1
Unopened cans of th is type should be taken to the store of
purchase for a refund. The store w ill return them to the
company.

confessed only "because he was terrified, he didn't know any
better Th is all took place around 4 o'clock In the morning in
the back of a police car between two officers twice his size."
Segal*said T T w w a y the police handled this c a w .hock* the

★ Fire t

* Courts
tr Police
the motel, around 1 a.m. after neighbors reported hearing
•creams. Bullock had been beaten, robbed of ItO and shot once
In the head with a IScaliber pistol.
H om er admitted to police that he beat, robbed and shot
Bullock, but claimed the shooting w as accidental. Jackie Poole
u i d he too took part in the beating, and named his brother as
the gunman
But Hamer's lawyer, G a ry Segal, argued that hi* client

tnadmlSMbte In court, Kelly M id.
Assistant State Attorney Alan Robinson argued that the
confessions should be introduced as evidence at trial because
at the tim e they were made, both brothers M id they knew what
they were doing, understood the consequences, but still wanted
to make statements. Robinson also M id that sim ply because
the Juveniles were not allowed to call their mother when they
wanted to does not mean crucial evidence should be sup­
pressed.
Davis agreed.

. ..Assum able Mortgages

New Rioting
In N. Ireland

(Ccetinurd From Page 1Ay
legality of the clause in Florida at least
until the U S. Supreme Court decides the
issue, a ruling not expected for several
years.
Rlc Coffin, executive vice president of
First Federal Savinas a n d lo a n of M idFlorida. u i d his Institution began in­
cluding "paragraph 17" in mortgage
Instruments In 1971 — a year after most
other 5 &amp; la started the practice.
The purpose of the clause w u to give S
A fa the ability to accelerate mortgages,
requiring full payment o f the mortgages
whim the property w as sold. Another
purpose, Coffin u id , w as to m ake sure
that persons taking over old mortgages
were credit-worthy.
Coffin said his institution with home
base in Deland has been enforcing the
provision of "due on u l e " for the p u t
three to four years even though a "lot of
attention has not been given to the
provision until the p u t 12- t o - ll months.”
Coffin u id S l a had n o problem with
low in te rn i mortgages fo r a long time.
Th e y stayed at six percent interest for
years. "We wrre paying fo r many years
4‘x-to-S percent interest on passbook
M v ln g j and receiving s ix percent in­
terest on tntcigagrs," Coffin u i d .
"Th e n the M erest rate on mortgages
h it s 1* percent and started rising rapidly.
Certificates of deposit w e re Introduced
into uvtngs and loans a n d we began
paying more to attract doUars than wo
were racrlvln* I r o n (ho va s t amount of
our portfolio of M erest on (ingle family
homes. It w u obvious w e needed to do
something like adjusting the mortgage
interest rale," Coffin u i d .
" T h e majority of moat u v tn g s and
loans" purtfoiioa are In low-yield m or­
tgage loans with single digit interest
rates. These include F1IA and V A loans

with M erest rates ranging from 3 4
percent to 1 ,7, m and 9 percent," Coffin
u id .
Coffin u i d le u than 10 percent of the
mortgages held by his institution contain
the "due on u l e " clause and thus will be
affected by the law .
Gib Edmonds, president of First
Federal Savings and lo a n Association of
Seminole County, u i d the Sanford baaed
institution began including "Paragraph
IT " In Its mortgages in A p ril, 1974. A t that
point the M erest rates on home mor­
tgages w u 1 4 percent.
" It w u Included in a standard form put
out by the Federal H om e Mortgage Corp.
especially to stand arize documents for
thoae who buy and sell mortgages across
the country,” Edm onds u i d .
Some uvtnga and loan Institutions In
the area began using the form only a year
•go, Edmonds u i d .
"When mortgage rates were fairly
stable, there wasn't any need to enforce
the clause, but now we are paying such
high rates on u v in g s . You can't pay
extremely high rates to savers without
the berrowers feeling the pinch," he u id .
Edmonds pointed out that the proposed
new law will change only those mor­
tgages which include the clause. Those
with First Federal of Seminole before
1974 do no4 have the clause and those
mortgages a rt assumable, he u i d .
The institution has the option of
whether to enforce the clause. Edmonds
■aid, noting his Institution began en­
forcing it 12-b v lt months ago.
Proponents of the proposed law u y the
S A la need the rig h t to enforce the
clause because the soaring interest rates
they must pay to attract deposits have
driven more than SO percent of th o u in
Florida Into the red.
Opponents generally acknowledge that

the S A U are hurting. But they contend
homeowners had no choice but to accept
the clause in their mortgage contracts
and would have great difficulty selling
their homes If it were enforced.
The bill applies not only to future
mortgages but existing ones az well,
including those now being challenged In
the courts, a retroactivity that opponents
claim would m ake it unconstitutional
Proponents counter that the meajurt
merely affirm s what already exists on
paper and u i d that without it, mortgage
money could d r y up entirely and benefit
no one.
A apokesm an for
the Florida
Association of Realtors u i d the longprevailing right of people to buy and sell
real estate through the assumption of
existing m ortgages would be virtually
destroyed if the Flo rid a Senate approves
the bill.

B E I -F A S T , Northern Ireland ( U P I ) — Troops fired
plastic bullets a l rioters hurling homemade grenades in
•UW
Wt&lt;4 afwwI tWl elrtkl af
nrfnnrfare«•
4&gt;y|aw In (
-**• J —1 tes* s i i y n m y s s H
protests in the hometown of dead IR A hunger-etriker
Patrick O 'H a ra .
On F rid a y , two more convict* in Maxe Prison began
hunger strikes to back the demand by Irish Catholic
militants for s ta tu as political prisoners, replacing
O 'H a ra and Raymond McCreesh, who died Thursday.
Police F rid a y u i d a Belfast girl, I I, and a L m d o rv ie rn
m an, 40, both wounded by plastic bullets, had died in a
hospital. A n 18-month-old baby girl w u struck in the back
by a stray sniper's bullet aimed al a police patrol in
B e tfu t, police u i d .
Irish Republican A rm y prisoner Kieran Doherty, 23,
took M cC re e sh 'i place and O’Hara w u replaced by Kevin
Lynch. 34, in the deadly chain of starvation, strike
organisers said.

"Th e so-called ‘due on u le ' bill could
prove disastrous for the housing industry
in our state,” u i d W illiam A. Watson Jr.
of Jacksonville, president of F A R . "We
have no quarrel w ith the original Intent of
this clause In the mortgage contract,"
Watson continued, "w h ich w u to assure
the lending instiUtuion that the person
assuming the m ortgage w u qualified to
do to.

Police u i d teenage rioters lobbed home-made hand
grenades packed with nails in clashes at the edge of the
Catholic Bogslde district of Iondonderry, where earlier
some 1,000 mourner* paid (heir respects to O 'H a ra u his
coffin was paraded through the streets, accompanied by
six masked republicans.
Isolated gasoline bombing also was reported early
today in west Belfast, where a British arm cred personnel
carrier w as hit F rid a y by a Soviet-made ro c k e t

"What we object to is the uee to which
lha u v in g s and loans are putting this
clause today, solely tor the purpose of
jacking up the Interest rata from what it
w u al the contract's inception to today's
prevailing m arket rate when the mor­
tgage is assumed during (he u l e of
morlgeged p ro p e rty ." Watson u i d .

IN REMEMBRANCE
In loving memory of our
beloved son and brother

JIMMY SMITH

Watacn u i d by Increasing the rate of
interest on assumption of mortgage*, the
uvings and loana are "pricing more and
more people out of the housing m arket."

We miss you and we love you alw ays i

[Kfutfa, Daii, M , “Doug and flue

A R EA D EA TH S

Long-Time Sanford Businessman Dead
Manuel Jacobson, IS. of
S an ford
died
S a tu rd a y
morning at Florida Hospital
Ahsm ssts after a w iif umcas.
He came to Sanford fro m
Providence, R.I., In 19H a n d
opened a store called the
Outlet on Sanlord Avenue. H e
opened Manuel Jacobson's
Department Store on F irs t
Street In 1946.
H e w in a m em ber o f
Tem ple Israel of Orlando a n d
had been a Mason and a
Shrine r.
Survivors include his wife,
Hannah; son. Dr. Sherwood
Jacobson, New Y ork C ity ;
daughter, Arlene Tetenbaum,
S a n fo rd ; brother, H e rm a n
Jaco bson, Sanford; i t v e n
grandchildren and two great­
grandchildren.
G ra v e s id e services a re
te n ta tive ly scheduled fo r
Monday afternoon in Tem ple
Israel Cemetery in Orlando.
Baldwln-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Orlando is in charge of

FLO RENCE
DENTURE CLINICS,
N o w in
ORLANDO, FLA.

(305) 644-1753
Dr. John R. Parry, D.D.S. &amp; A ssociates

M ANX' E L JACOBSON
Tan g
FFam
a m iily requests no flowers
plea

MRS. P E A R L B A K E R
Mrs. Pearl Octe Baker, 90,
of 206 B rv -L v n n Drive. Wee(
Melbourne, died Friday at her
residence. B om in Janesville,
V * ., she came to Brevard
County in 1966 from Hamilton,
Ohio. She was a member of
the Bethany Baptist Church
and the Melbourne Senior Day
Club.
S urvivors include sons, R C .
B aker, O k ls n u r, Herbert, H.
B aker, Melbourne, Roa D.
B ake r, Jacksonville, William
" B i l l " E . Baker, l/mgmirt,
Wash, and Roger D . Biker,
W.
M e lb o u rn e ;
three
daughters, Mrs. Janice P.

W EATHER
A R E A R E A D IN G S | l (. i ll. ): tem perature: 66; overnight
low; 60; Friday's high: 64; barom etric pressure: 30.10;
relative humidity: I I percent; w inds: calm .
S U N D A Y ’S TID E S : D A Y T O N A B E A C H : highs, 11:31 a m ,
- p . m ; lows 1:1) i m . , 6:06 p .m .; P O R T C A N A V E R A L :
highs. 1 2 :9 a m ., — p m .; lows, 1:04 a . m , 3:39 p.m.;
B A Y P O R T :highs, 1 : 9 a m , 4:43 p . m ; lows, 11:13 a m , pm .
M O N D A Y 'S T ID E S : D A Y T O N A B E A C H : highs, 12:30 a m ,
1:21 p m ; lows 7:91 a m . 7:03 p .m .; P O R T C A N A V E R A L :
highs, 12:43 a m ., 1 :13 p m ; lows, 1:33 a m , 1:36 p m ;
BA Y P O R T : highs, 7: V a .m . 3:31 p .m .; lows, 1 1 :9 a m , 13:9
p.m.
B O A T IN G FO R E C A S T: SL Augustine to Jupiter U lr t , Out
JO m 'irs S L Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 30 miles wind
easta ly 10 to 13 knots today and southeast 16 knots at less
tonight and Monday. Seas 1 to 3 feet decreasing to 2 to 1 feet
tonight.

THIS OFFER EXTENDED

Goodwin, Sanford, Mrs. Mrs.
Wanda J . Reynolds, Cocoa,
■nd M r s . M a rg a re t E .
W illiam s, West Melbourne;
two brothers, Richard Minor,
Ham ilton, Ohio, and E lija h C.
M in o r, C o co a ; 23 g ra n d ­
children and 11 great-grand­
children.
D a v is
F u n e ra l
H om e,
Melbourne, is in charge of
arrangements.

Only Limited Number at Spacas Available

2 SPACES
SIDE-BY-SIDE
In our beoutiful Garden o f M em ories

PRt HUDSPECIAL
REG.
*900

F u n e r a l N o tic o s

in

•AktR. Mai. P lA R L O C It Funeral services tot M n Pr»ri
Or it Baker, 10. el Waal
Melbourne, eho died Friday,
will be el I p m . Monday al
Dare Funeral Home VeiUtlan
Sunder a t o m . Dent Funeral
Home. J* C B rtrerd Dr .
Melbeurne (ntombmanl In
Fionas M tm o rlil C ird tfll
Moutoiowm. Coco*
HUNT

122-4741 F o r Information At No O bligation

OAKLAWN
MEMORIAL
PARK

M O N U M E N T CO

MWV IF-k.-P
•

’

IN TE R SECTION OF COUNTRY C L L I ROAD
AND RHINEHART R O AD -SANFOR D

P ti. 114 4961

• All Treat Maaeaitatt
• Cem etery l*rt#»i«f

• Sranie M o tart

DO YOU HAVE QUESTIONS
ABOUT PRE-PLANNING
FUNERAL SERVICES?
WE ARE QUALIFIED AND

A R E A F O R E C A S T : Mostly tu n n y Saturday then partly
loudy afternoon through Sunday. W a rm with highs in the mki
to upper Ms. L ows Saturday in the m id 60s. Winds easterly tO
to 13 miles per hour. Outlook for M onday partly cloudy and
warm .

AVAILABLE FOR
DISCUSSIONS WITH YOU
m;

Ewnlnj* Herald tusp*«*»»■»

*495

DON'T
INFLATION SPEND YOUR
DOLLARS FOR Y0UI SAVE NOW.

Robert I. Brlsson. LFD

BEFORE MAKING
FINAL DECISIONS.

Sunday. M a y je. I H I - V o i . n . No. 211
F.klivhaU Daily aa* leader, aictpl Saturday by Tba Seaterd
Herald, la c . M N Freer* A r t . (Aaterd. Fla t i n I .
(erend C l o t rttleye Paid al la etird . Fiend* ZZ7II

Hama Dalirary. Weak, II H , Meet*. M.IXt 4 Mealfct. IN44|
Vaar, M l aa By Mill; Weak II M j Meet*. S U I j 4 Meetbc
H I M . Vaar. U T M

I jp

Brisson Funeral Home, P.A .
905 Laurel Ave. Sanford, FI.

322-2131

�Shop Leesburg, Deland, KbsimmM da9y 9-9, Sun. 114.
Shop Mt. Dora and Ckrmoat daily 9*9, San. 124.

Shop Sanford end Orlando dally 9:30-9230, Sun. 12-6,

rm rm
m ik

M T B IW R x k ,

Your Choice!

Your Choice!

2 *&gt;78c

2

* ,• !

Roll of 50 Bolt Towols

For 24 ct. Plastic Cup*

1 ply pap er to w el, 11* 11"
sheet*, 45 sq, It. A b s o rb e n t.

H o ld s 9 oz. A v a ila b le In
w h ite and assorted colors.

80 ct. Paper Plato*

50 ct. Foam Cups

K&gt;, lO 'i or 15, 11% s tu rd y
w e re plates. S a ve n o w .

F o r h o t or cold d rin k s, 4.4
oz. P e rfe c t for parties o r p ic n ic s

140 ct. Paper Napkins

25 ft. Aluminum Foil

140 one ply 13*15.15"

11“ w id e dlsoenser a lu m in u m

^

n a p * i n s in w h i l e ur C s t t o f S .^ o ^

foil f o r m a n y household uses.

CountryKitchf*
M in try f U ic A *

d e s ig n e r
i « S Q f! 50l«.»S»ttlS " 1

A O N e w b o r n . . 3.97
4 0 O v e r n ig h t , 4.47|
4 0 T o d d l e r . . . 4 .7

Tour C ho ice
O

Q

&gt; 1

dei

n

■ •

Canvas Handbags

Adult Sunglasses

Bogs with contrast­
ing trim pockets

P ic k o r choose fro m a
v a r ie t y of adult sunglasses

W eather-r •skalanl
Chair Or C h aise

2 Days Only

_

7

Chair-Limit 4

tandonna Scarves
24«24 square c o t­
ton scarve Colors

O ur Reg

M

T f #

2.78

Men's Pocket T-shirt

4.67 sic
Disposable Diapers

6 0 daytime or 48
extra absorbent

O f polyeslor/
co tto n
Solids

Folding furniture of
plastic w ebbing on
aluminum frame.

M u ltic o lo r

M an's a n d W o m a n 's
full H is s O n ly
U

4-ply Polyester
Cord Whitewalls

Sandal fo o l O r P T ~
|Beln to rc e d T o e | r, '

Tour Choice
a
Our Reg
3 97-4 47
W Pair

Our Reg 37 76 — A78xl3

Our Reg 64C Pr

S

•each Thongs Sale

Knee-hl Nylons

13x19" Place Mats

5 0 Trash C a n Uners

Nyton/suede thong,
multicolor bottom

C o m to it to p
Sheer nylo n /
spondex

A c r y llc / p o ly eiter with cotton
f r in g e
Save

Plastic 2 0 -3 0 gal size, 15 rmi

A ll Tires Plus F.E.T. E a c h
M o u n t in g I n c l u d e d
N o t r a d e -i n r e q u i r e d

RIGHT
GUARD

O u 68 88 — Sun Thai Sat
5

4

. 8

8

K

a

. , .

K m art' 5-60 B a tte ry

Our Reg. 30.97

Our Reg 1.54

32-01 .* Nestea*

Lemonade Mix

2 Ice Cube Trays

53-ql. Cooler

R ig h t O u a r d '

M o n ro -M a fic S h o c k s

Iced tea mix.
Sugar and lem­
on f l a v o r e d .

W y l e r s ' mix
mokes 8 qts 24oz.* tin Save

Set of two. blue
pknfc cube trays

P o ly u re th a n e
foam mutation
Drain

Regular deodorant
n l u o z ' spray con

H e a vy d u ly For
many U S and for­
eign cars

O scillating

4.77

Foca l or Kodak
F ilm
Davalopad and P rin te d

PRINTS 10&lt;~»
p ivl tin t of tt f .la p .n e
V »« 01 tout lOlof print! *1
K n u rl f Gtf fe##v»itul b o r

2 D a y s O n ly

O u r R e g 4.97

dertott trifur sd ?rlo»v

5 0 ' D a rd e n H o s e

Insulated la g
t r i g g e r s p ra y
o z . r e f ill.

Waterproof vinyl,
wrap-around handles

M T. DORA
wool d im tb ia n o l i

m o r r in o c iN if •

W EST ORLANDO

tIUWISTCOLOMiai
S I U T1XASAVI.___

Nylon-reinforced
•A" inside diameter.
Sprinkler........4.77

K IS S IM M E E

u.s H w r.in

f

v in i

ST.ATTKACKSBAVt.
S .E . O R L A N D O

tasiioutHKM oaAN
a t cu aar roao

L

Kodsctiromt
or Extrachram*

] « Exp. SHdaFllm
arSm m *
Suporlmm
Movla Film

Steel poles, nylon
wound net, Volley
ball

mm IfuIHram* M t ) color
print rolls tor n
rtgu lor
print on ilm o ird Iwitro
t.mtn pjprr

I

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E A S T C O L O N IA L
HEBNDOM PLAZA ACROSS

V
A

f b o m f a s h io n s q u a b i

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* o t o r O il

SANFORD
u .s . h w y i r n A T
a ir p o « t i l v d
S. O R L A N D O
m l ! ORANQS BIOS.
TRAIL A T SAXO LAKE BO.

Sale Price

Volleyball Set

K n u rl gutr«ntM t iPPlM*

\J '

7 T ' Abovo- I * - ,
ground Poles. I

Developing Special

to cat proem its ns. 11s

LEESBUR G
MOO TM CITRUS 11VD
AT U.S. HWY 4«tA»»

S u p e rb
l« S f - 4 0
J )l S e a s o n )

\/
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1\
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D ELAN D
1MI SOUTH
WOODLAND SLVO.
CASSELBERRY
U.S. HWY. It SI N 1X T
TO iAt ALAI f BONTON

Kendall

10W40

motor 0*1 Save now

\

P IN E

1

MIAWASSZI BD AT
s iiv ia itabbo

H IL L S

\ A L T A M O N T E S P R IN G S 1
tu ts MWY.4J.AI
1

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r o a m c it y b d .

K mart' Air Filters
Sizes (or many
US., foreign cars

CLERM ONT
SOUTH IA K I PLAZA
M4 (A IT HWY M
W IN T E R P A R K
hw y. u n A T itlB D .
Mi SOUTHOBIANOO A V I.

�V

T
E v e n in g Herald
Around

Home Delivery: Week. I ) 00; Month, 14.33; I Monlhi. 134.00;
Y ear, 143.00. By M a ll: Week. 11.33; Month, » 33; ( Months.

U d v ii Year. » 7.oo.

The Clock
By D O R IS D IE T R IC H

In The Making

R e a g a n 's s e le c tio n of r e t i r e d A r m y G e n . E d w a r d
1,. 1t o w n y a s th e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n 's ch ie f S A L T

negotiator.
Gen. Rowny, like Mr. Rostow, opposed the
patently inequitable SALT II treaty negotiated by
the Carter administration. Indeed, Gen. Rowny
resigned as the Joint Chiefs of Staff represen­
tative on the SALT negotiating team and
requested early retirem ent from the Army so that
he could be free to oppose the treaty in testimony
before Senate committees.
No negotiating team headed by Gen. Rowny is
likely to be steamrollered, or hood winked, by its
Soviet counterpart.
The Reagan adm inistration's tenure in office is
almost certain to coincide with a Soviet-American
showdown on SALT.
If the Soviets are truly interested in good faith
bargaining leading to eq u itab le, verifiable
agreements, a new and better SALT treaty is
possible.
If not. the administration, the Congress and the
American people will be better off for recognizing
this sooner rather than later.
Officials like Eugene Rostow and Gen. Rowny
are precisely those most likely to help shape a
SALT strategy capable of smoking out Moscow’s
real intentions

Please Write
Letters to the editor are welcomed for
publication. All letters must be signed, with
a mailing address and, if possible, a
te le p h o n e n u m b e r so the identity of the
writer may be verified. The Evening Herald
will respect the wishes of writers who do not
want their names in print. The Evening
Herald also reserves the right to edit letters
to eliminate libel or to conform to space
requirements.

BERRYS WORLD

preview of b illi to come.
But we win be among the consumers picking

ways.
A ctua lly, I love summer. I suppose I am
among the weirdos who really likes hot weather.
U u w ” feel a wurds 1 teethed mi.
It's the cold of summer that I can't hack.
In the wintertime, we wear clothes to keep us
w arm . Th e n , In the summertime why don't we
w ear clothes to keep us cool?

W ayne 0 Doyle. Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managing Editor
Robert Lovtn b u ry, A d«er tiling and Circulation Olrector

The Reagan adm inistration is still formulating
its grand strategy on the subject of strategic arm s
negotiations with the Soviet Union. Out if ad­
ministration appointments already made to
crucial arm s control policy posts are any in­
dication, Mr. Reagan plans to take a tough stance
indeed in any future bargaining with the Soviets.
If so, President Reagan and his senior advisers
have learned the overriding lesson of the last
decade of SALT negotiations with Moscow:
Namely, that firm ness offers the only hope of
obtaining equitable, verifiable arms control
agreements that, in fact, enhance American
security.
The President’s nominee for director of the key
Anna Cuntroi and Disarmament Agency is
Eugene V. Rostow. a Democrat and former State
Department official during the Johnson ad­
ministration.
Rut Eugene Rostow is no mere token Democrat
in a Republican administration. Me is superbly
equipped to serve as ACT)A director. Mr. Rostow
has devoted much of his considerable ability and
energy during the last five years to a potent prodefense lobby group known as The Committee on
the Present Danger.
As its name implies, the committee’s abun­
dantly documented view is that the failure of
successive administrations — most especially
that of former President Jim m y Carter — to
respond adequately to the Soviet military buildup
has placed the United Stntcs in imminent danger.
Mr. Rostow's impressive grasp of both political
and military considerations central to the
challenge of negotiating successful arms control
agreements with the Soviet Union ensures a firm
hand at the helm of the Anns Control and
Disarmament Agency
Complementing the Rostow appointment is Mr.

m a t i n g at oiw house this summer — if this is a

plaining that it was too cold to shop.
Okay, M r. Manager, don't stand there In your
long sleeved shirt and long-alecved Jacket and

C all it heritage, if you like, but "sweat of the

S u n d a y , M a y 24, 1911— 4A

Grand Strategy

supermarket. Several customers were com ­

How do I hate thee, Summer? Let me count the

(U S M M l m i
300 N. F R E N C H A V E .. S A N F O R D , F L A . 33771
Area Code 3 0 M » -2 * n or 1314993

In the good ole summertime.
O h yeah, what’s good about It?

W hy?
Let me tell you. Somebody's heavy hand has
been on the controls of the air conditioner.
la s t week, I stepped out in a bare s u m m e r
fashion to go to the dinner theatre. It was so icy
in the building that m y husband was not the only
man to remove his Jacket for his shivering wife.
It isn’t that the fellows were pulling a S ir W elter
Raleigh, but we women were chilled to the bone.
We needed winter wrsps.
Th e same thing happened this week at the

ten us that It Is the same temperature we
shopped In all winter. You are probably right.
But you forget that during the w inter, we had
un heavy clothes to shield our bones from the low
temperatures.
Th e eiperts preach: "conserve energy." Yet,
businesses end offices are so cold one could wear
winter clothing year-round and be comfortable
— as well as bring III from frigid conditions In­
side and such sweltering heat outside.
This week I heard a woman complain of the
Indoor heat. There she s to o d -In a turtle neck
pullover up to her eare with her lower torso
squeezed into a pair of heavyweight pants.
O ur most recent home power bill was about (30
more than for the same period a year ago.
During both periods, no power was used for heat
nor air conditioning.
.Something tells me we arc going to do a lot of

up the tabs for these cold, cold air-conditioned
buildings aa inflation continues to rage.
Somebody's got to pay the power bill.
I^ s t sum m er I recall! going to a skating
benefit where there was no atr conditioning. A lot
were complaining about the heat and a few Ha I
deodorant failure, but nobody left And those who
bellyached loudest probably d iA i't even have
etr-conditioning In their homes (and more don't
Iliad do, yixi k now ).
Last Sunday we went to the annual picnic of
the Firs t United Methodist Church, Sanford, In
Fort Mellon Park. It was Hot and the insects
were having a field d a y. Games were played and
people were perspiring. No, as a matter of fact,
they were sweeting. Everybody seemed to be
h irin g a wonderful time.
This la what the good ole summertime is all
about

DICK WEST

JULIAN BOND

Familiar
Sinking
Feeling

It Was
Different
Reaction
pw rw m h ef Janet funk *1

W A S H IN G T O N ( U P I ) At last count,
eight sinkholes had been discovered in

Of course. She Is the young woman whose
made-up story of an 1-yeir-old heroin addict
recently won a Pulitier Prise. H er admission
of that hoas caused many people to question
snd challenge Ihe e fflrm a llv e -a c tlo n
programs that have provided minorities with
newsroom Jobs that had not existed before.
Miss Cooke, you see, is black.
Few er people recognise the name of
Michael Daly, who even more recently
resigned from the New York D a lly News —
which boosts the second-largest circulation of
any newspaper in the country — after ad­
mitting (hat he was "unable to substantiate"
■ column that he had written.
Michael D aly Is white - a fact that you
could have deduced fairly safely without ever
having seen h li photograph.
He attended Phillips Academy at Andover.
V ery few blacks have done that.
He graduated from Y a h University. V ery
few blacks have done that
Hut his race could most easily be ascer­
tained by the absence of any demands for a
review of the hiring practices that won him
his Job.
A s M ist Cooks probibty knows, white men
S*l Job* because they deserve them.
Black people, on (he other hand, get Jobe
because they sre bisek.
A ny subsequent lying or cheating by the
black em ployee it either gen etically
predetermined or the Inevitable result of the
process through which he or she got the Job.
At least, that's what the critics of af­
firm ative action seem to be saying
Th e Dally News senl Daly to Northern
Ireland, where he wrote ■ column titled “On
the Streets of Belfast, the Children’s W a r."
He wrote that British soldiers shot plastic
bullets and live ammunition at a mob of
children. " G o (or their heads," he quoted s
British soldier as haring sakl.
Th e lsn don Dolly Mali accused D aly of
producing “ a work of pure Imagination." Th e
paper said that the soldier who Daly had
quoted by name did not exist. It said that the
order to shoot Irish children in (he heed was
"p u re fiction."
After two days of questioning by his editors,
D aly resigned.
Janet Cooke and Michael D aly are ob­
viously not birds of s feather.
To m y knowledge, there have been no
clarion calls to bar white male graduates of
Yale from Am erica's newsrooms or to subject
them to any special scruUny.
Daly'e mistakes don't excuse those made
by Miss Cooke. But the muted reaction to
Daly'e departures from the truth does con­
trast sharply with the earlier cries — some
shouted, some whispered — to throw out the
affirmative-action plans that have helped
m any blacks to get Jobs.
Roth Miss Cooke snd Daly are talented
writers, lik e an ear lirr fraud, llifla rd Irvin g,
they m ay lw belter at fiction than at fart.
Neither deserves much pity tor difficulties ot
their own creation.
W rite II up as two mistakes made by bright
young people who surely know better.
And dismiss the complaints against af­
firm ative action as the bigoted bleats of those
who obviously don't.

Flo rida. Big deal!
You can find m ore sinkholes than that in the
federal budget without even leaving the
Pentagon.
One of the Florida sinkholes was reported to
have swallowed up an entire house, three or
four sports care, a swimming pool, pari of s
roadway and several empty beer cans.
You think that's a big sinkhole, you ought to
see what disappears down the federal budget
And nobody except David Stockman even
notices.
Fiscal-m inded geologists (Is there any
other kin d ?) tell us budget sinkholes occur
when tax sources d ry up, causing the revenue
level to drop. T h e bottom line Is then unable to
support the weight of govvrnment spending,
and the whole thing collapses into red ink.
But let's try to look i t the bright side.

JEFFREY HART

Abortion On The Line
Stx former U3&gt;. attorney generals and an
UnpTtsaive body ot legal scholars, tnt.mttng
P rotencr Robert Boek of Y a le , a con­
servative snd in intellectual powerhouse,
have held that the proposed congressional
action on abortion Is unconstitutional.
Republican Senator Jesse Helms and others
a rt asking Congress to pass legislation to the
effect that human life begins at conception.
With all due respect to the attorney
generals and the legal scholars, it Is difficult
to understand why the proposed measure
would be unconstitutional.
In Us key abortion decision, Roe versus
Wade, the Court explicitly declared that It
could not rule on the question of when human
life begins.
Th a t refusal would seem to leave the door
wide open for someone e lls to do so. The
natural authority to make that Judgment
would be Congress, which reflects the
Judgment of society.
In fact. Roe versus Wade seems to me to
Invite Congress into the question. If. Indeed, a
consensus exists In the country that human
life begins at ctncepUon, w hy should
Congress not reflect that consensus?
Second point. If Congress does enact such a
definition, It does not necessarily mean that
abortion would be legally equivalent to
murder. Killing your local bank teller would
be one thing. Killing a fetus at some stage of
Its development might well be legally quite
different.
Having saldalTtbis, I have to adm it that the
proposed legislation n uk es me distinctly
nervous.
A t the political level, this nervousness has
to do with the absence of a national consensus
on the subject of abortion.
F o r example, b u t ; ! U « v * « w l U little
disagreement In this country with the
proposition that slavery is evil. In ICO,
however, there was no such consensus. The
nation docs change Its mind on such
momentous matters. But to have legislated In
1130 as if ■ consensus existed on the evil of
s ilv e r y would have been p o litic a lly
disastrous.

It is conceivable that In due course the
nation will conclude that human Ilf* Indeed
does begin at conception. Consciousness will
have been raised. But we have not reached
that point.
1 believe that we have reached the point
where we agree that something must be done
to moderate the flood of abortions that
resulted from Roe versus Wsde.
We have not yet agreed on Just what. I know
nurses who are outraged over the common
practice of aborting female fetuses because
the parents desire s son. Th e frivolous
abortion Is clearly unacceptable.
But even if human life does begin at con­
ception, Ills not clear that a pregnant 14-yearold should be obliged by law to give birth.
Balanced against the potential damage to
that 14-yeor-old's life, • decision to end the
pregnancy could well be defended on
prudential grounds.
Ideally, 1 suppose, at Ihe current stage of
consciousness os regards abrotion, one might
envision same sort of responsible board which
could p u t on the merits of the cose, s hospital
board, perhaps, which would function under
the understanding that abortion is a very
serious matter snd not something merely
"between the woman and her doctor."
But the political pot seems to be boiling on
this Issue, snd it has built up a larger head of
•team than I myself anticipated.
In considerable port, the anti-abortion
crusade represents a reaction to the sexual
permissiveness that came in with the 196(ks.
There exists an tmpluse In the country to
"draw the Une," and, politically, abortion
sppean to be the place where Ihe attempt will
be made to draw the Une.
Among some inti-abortion people there is
dearly an element of sexual resentment.
They cannot strike directly i t sexual
pleasure. Instead, they mean to penalise It by
pressing the abortion issue.
In practical terms, if the Helms bill or
something like it does pass, we are in for a big
mess on the scale of Prohibition.

It m ight be overdoing it a bit to Imply that
every sinkhole has a silver lining. And cer­
tainly nobody would be so Pollyamaish as to
believe there is a sinkhole full of gold St the
end of the rainbow. Nevertheless, one
measure of a country's greatness is its ability
to make the best of bad situations.
If, therefore, the sinkholes that have pock­
marked central Florida ran be turned to
constructive uses, II w ill be a distinct plus for
our national image.
Even now, you m ay be sure, some ot the
bast minds In Washington are being applied to
tbe problem. P relim in ary thinking embraces
three potential sinkhole spinoffs.
F o r one thing. II is possible that the
Inevitable sinkhole feaslbtlty study will shed
some tight on the pothole mystery that has
baffled scientists for so many years.
If the sinkholes provide any Information on
how pothole* are formed, sr aid the c a m : of
pothole prevention, they truly will be a :
blessing In disguise.
Another potential boon is suggested by the
Reagan administration’s controversial plan
to close the National Aquarium for economy
reason. A logical compromise would be to
move the fish to Flo rida and call their new
home the National Sinkhole.
It is, however, the M X missile system that
provides the m ost feasible sinkhole
utilization.
Th e M orm on C hurch,
registered objections to
Utah for M X sites. But
would welcome the use
missile emplacements.

as you know, has
using the state of
Florida, I'm sure,;
of Its sinkholes ts

In fact, I have a sinking feeling that Russia
already la planning to sink a few holes around
Vladivostok to offset America's sinkhole
superiority.
Who k no w i where the sinkhole buildup
mighl lead? But don't be lurprised If the next
round of arm s control talks produces K
Strategic Sinkhole lim itation Treaty.

U.S. Pulls About Face Of Assad Snub

■
■Y o u 're fu ll o t s e lf- p ity le t 's g e t m e rrie d '''

I'm fu ll o f se lf-p ity -

W A S H IN G T O N - On his trip last month to
the M id d le E s s l, Secretary of State
Alexander H aig deliberately snubbed one of
the moat Influential Arab leaden - President
Hales al-Assad of Syria. Haig not only refused
to go lo Damascus to meel Ihe Syrian
strongm an, but publicly nlifed Assad during
his visit to Israel.
After that, however, the situation changed
dram a tically: S yria mov ed Soviet surface-loalr missiles Into position In Lebanon — which
II has been occupying under a United Nations
mandate. Israel hinted that this action could

A similar amendment, sponsored by Rep.
MiUieenl Fenwick, R - N J „ to protest the
Syrian actions In U b a i i , recently passed
the House Foreign Affarts Committee. It is
one of the few times Congress has attempted
to halt foreign aid already appropriated.
The abrupt change in the administration's
attitude toward Assad — from someone who
can be snubbed to someone who must be
courted — is a perfect 111us (rati on ot his in­
fluence on the world scene.
Assad rules s country that could sink into
the desert without dis tru b tn g W estern

touch off w ar. Thanks to Assad, the Middle
East teetered on the brink of war.
Faced with this explosive problem, H aig
evidently began having second thoughts

economies. It has little oiL It has alienated
mast other Arab nations. In short, S y ria has
no clout.
But because U lias acquired the reputation
of being the most intransigent of Israel's A rab

about Ihe Syrian dictator. Th e administration
ssk^d the Senate Foreign Relations Oomm iitlee to hold off on legislation that would
curtain Am erican a ir to Syria because of
Assad's flagrant repression of human rights.

opponents — however Ineptly It has carried
out Its hostility in three w ars — S y ria has
become the A rab darling of the Soviet Union.
A nd therein lies its influence. S y ria and

Assad, by their very irresponsibility, have the
power to touch off a Middle E a st w a r - and to
make such an explosion the occastui of a
great-power confrontation. In short, Assad is
regarded as a tail that m ay wag the dog.
As ■ result, Assad Is no longer ■ pariah who
ran safety be snubbed by the United States.
The State Department dispatched on of Us top
troubleshooters, Philip H abib, specifically lo
butter up Ihe Syrian dictator.
Who is this m an on whom the decision for
peace or war m ay depend? According to what
diplomatic sources have told m y asiodaie
1-ucette Lignado, Aasad, who has ruled the
desert country since 1970, is one of Ihe
toughest hardball players in the Middle East.
The brutality of his regim e has been
documented by both the State Department
snd Amnesty International Torture a id
summary execution of political opponents are
apparent!) commonplace. He is obviously
hated by m any segments of the Syrian

pop ulatio n; there have bean ta ve ra l.
assassination attempts against him.
Each attempt on his life has apparently!
hardened Aaaad's attitude toward his political
opponents. A s a m em ber of a minority
Moslem sect, the Alawiles, he has en­
countered opposition from other Modems,
Including the radical Moslem Brotherhood - I
the same people who put a price on Anwar
Sadat's head when he mode peace with Israel.
But Assad has been careful to assure
himself support from the m ilitary, sad from
the Soviets, who supply their weapons.:
Intelligence sources say Assad has installed

■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ H i

JACK ANDERSON

officers who a re personally devoted to Assad. j
Aasad shrugs off international criticism of]
his repressive regim e. Secure in his Soviet;
hacking he likes to throw his weight around,'
pitying the bully In Middle East politics.
" A s u d wants to prove to die world that he's '
■ tough g u y ," one intelligence expert explsined. " T h a t's v e ry unportopt to him .”

n

�t

O P IN IO N
Evening Hera id, Unfort. PI.

Sunday, May 14, IN I— 1A

OUR READERS WRITE

Why Spring Hammock?

Amtrak
Contention

In spite of the fact that I love animals,
I am violently opposed to the apparent
offer of land lease (or the Humane
Society's proposed animal shelter.
According to an article in your paper,
May 11, the land to be leased by M r. and
Mrs. Sullivan, Barbara Christensen's

The article on Am trak by B rill Smith

1 (M a y 10) is informative, but he ap­
parently swallowed Am trak president
B oyd 's contention that subsidy
reduction means elimination of long
: distance trains.

parents, is part of Spring Hammock!
A long, hard-fought effort by those
concerned for water recharge areas
has within the past year seemed to be
resulting in priority consideration of
Spring Ham m ock for preservation by
purchase with state funds.
Construction of the 1X0,000 i approx)
.shelter there w ill encroach on these
e n viro n m e n ta lly sensitive lands,
drastically altering them in addition to

Th e northeast c o rrid o r
from
Washington to Boston has no priority
rig h t over
A m tr a k 's
availa b le
resources. Congress can Just as well
direct Amtrak to maintain the long
distance trains which serve the entire
country with new equipment, and teli
them to make necessary reductions in
corridor operations which serve only a
few states. It would then be the
obligation of those few states that
benefit from them to finance their own
corridors.
Alan Boyd appears to be trying a
worst-case approach in order to scare
Congress into giving him whatever **
wants. However, it's now almost sure
that Amtrak will get a reduced subsidy.
That makes it absolutely necessary for
the public lo tell their elected
representatives w hal they wanl done
with that subsidy money. Shall it be
everything for a few northeastern
slates, or shall It be spread around the
entire country In the long distance
trains that serve all. It's your choice,
not Alan Boyd's, not Drew Lewis, and
not Ronald Reagan's. But your choice
has to be heard, and not defaulted to a
burea ucratic
pow er
g ra b
in
Washington.
Robert T . Clark
Sanford

threatening the plausibility of the
county's stated intent to preserve when
requesting the above mentioned funds.
I have not teen evidence that the
Humane Society has exhausted every
avenue a v a ila b le — w hat about
building at F iv e Points? Is there
nowhere else?
Must we kill the golden goose for one
»* * ? !!!
I have sent a copy of this letter to M r.
Robert S turm , Chairm an of the Board
of County Commissioners, asking that
il become part of Ihe record al the time
of Public ilearing for consideration of
reioning of the property.
Patricia Bailey
Casselberry

Firem en Com m ended, G o o d Job

Tople* H rr , itiite t

Trade Postman's Truck For Presidential Yacht?
Common sense tells m e, Ih it I should
not do or say anlhing to make "waves,'*
but there comes a tim e which makes
me feel indignant enough to speak. (O r
in this esse w rite.)
It seems that an appeal to the
"powers that be" is a futile effort.
1 am referring lo our m ail carrier. He
has given excellent and courteous
service (or many years and has
recently been hoepttalixed. I only know
him as "Jo h n " which proves that he has
not been too fam iliar with thoae he
serves but attends strictly lo business.
Now, he rides a bicycle on his rounds.

Form erly he had Ihe use of a mail
truck. Isn't one C iv il Service job as
prestigious as any other government
position? Have we lost our place as
number one nation?
W hat im pressio n is this g ivin g
foreign nations regarding our strength?
Are these drastic cuts really being
made lo stabilise our economy, or are
ihe proceeds needed to pay for a
presidential yacht? ( I can't help but
wonder.) If t wanted a rowboat to use
for a little fishing occasionally, 1 would
have lo pay far It myself. I couldn’t give
my neighbors an ultim atum to depot!!

to m y bank account hinds for a pleasure
craft and it'a upkeep which only 1 and
m y friends would enjoy the use of.
Please g ra n t our m a ll c a rrie rs
protection from hot tun, rain, cold, and
dog bites and let them bring oar mail
again In trucks.

Kathryn S ugrw r

Sanford
Editor's Note- John Salibury, the
Sanford postman who Is now delivering
mail by bicycle says using the bike Is
"good exercise." Reportedly several
offers have been made to donate the
yacht, rather than using lax money to
purchase il.

tost F rid a y afternoon, quite sud­
denly, we found ourselves in great
distress due lo a raging forest fire in
Geneva, threatening our homes and
property. It was a traumatic ex­
perience to see flames shooting high
into the air from Ihe tops of pine trees
and p alm etto trees
com pletely
surrounding our homes. T o us it looked
like a hopeless situation. We were
convinced there was no w ay we could
be spared even clothing for our backs.
When the heat became so intense we
were forced to leave. We realised we
would have nothing to return to. We
were not alone In our misfortune as
m any other fam ilies w ere going
through the same experience. The fire
was so out of control it appesred im ­
possible to stop it.
Seminole County has a team of
fire figh te rs , operating under the
direction of Chief G a ry Kaiser, who

worked diligently for many hours,
continuing through the entire night to
save the homes of every family in Ihe
bn* of fir*. There s u a great lo** of
forestry, but not one residence was
destroyed. Those of us who live there
realise the odds they were working
against —
the darkness, constant
shifting winds, lack of rain creating
nothing but a continual dry shaft to
burn, Ihe heat created by the fire and
terrible smoke. We are Indeed thankful
for the efforts of these firefighters and
know they work In most undesirable
conditions. Th ese fire figh te rs i r e
professionals who are organised and
efficient and know how to get their Job
done. We feel these men should be
commended for a Job well done and for
performance beyond U w lr duty.
Mrs. Randy Boyd
M rs. Robert Butter
Geneva

Planned Move Is A Nuisance And Inconvenience
The Lake M ary C ity Hall staff is get­
ting ready for two separate moves in the
next 1 ‘ i-to-three months. June 11 is the
big day when the staff must vacate the
city offices cn Crystal Laks Avenue It has
occupied for the past seven years plus
Although the staff w ill not be form ally
evicted, the owner of the building sent a
letter to Mayor W aller Sorenson telling
h im that another tenant is ready to move
In as toon as the city moves out. He gave
Ihe city 10 days to accomplish the move.
Sorenson said the city staff can first
move into the SJoblom building an
Country C u b Road until renovations are
completed at the old Cham ber of C om ­
merce building which is to become the
first city hail owned by Lake M a ry.
Sorenson, who seldom gets upset about
anything, said the double move w ill be a
nuisance and inconvenience, but that's
about ail. About the only additional ex­

pense in the double-moves w ill be
telephone installations.
Once the city docs move into the old
Chamber building the staff will have
about twice as much space as It now has.
Despite President Reagan’s plans for
abolishing the Legal Services Carp, of­
fices around the nation, U.S. Rep. B ill
McCollum is willing to go along with
retaining the organisation if some fairly
drastic changes are made in Its struc­
ture.
“ It is not clear whether the changes
made in the Corporation's structure will
save It, but they are absolutely essential
before I could even consider supporting
its continuation," M cCollum said.
A " s ig n ific a n t" am e ndm ent to
restructure the corporation would give
state and local bar associations control of
the governing bodies of all legal Ser­
vices operations an a local level.

Parties &amp;
Politics

McCollum point* out the Legal Ser­
vices Carp, is the federally-funded legal
assistance system for the poor. He notea,
it has been under increasing attack for
devoting a substantial portion of its
resources to a c tiv is t litig a tio n and
legislative lo b b yin g
ra th e r
than
everyday individual legal problems of
the poor.
McCollum said administrators hired
by the corporation are free to choose any
method for the delivery of legal
assistance. In most caaes, he said, the
governing bodies of area legal services

a re con tro lle d by social activist
organisations representing the views of
the "v e ry liberal federal bureaucrats" in
charge rather th in the views of a crosaseciion of the local communities.
O th e r changes adopted by the
Judiciary Committee of which McCollum
is a member include: tighter controls on
cla w action suits against federal, state
and local governments; much tougher
restrictions an lobbying and other ac­
tivities by Corporation employees, who
have often spent much lim e outside the
Judicial system attempting to engineer
social changes; simpler procedures and
increased powers of the corporation
board of directors and president to cut off
funds to local operations that get out of
Une and to fire attorneys and other
empoyees who engage in prohibited
activities; a prohibition on strikes by any
employees in the Legal Services system;
•nd provisions to reimburse overhead

Soviet Arctic Strategies Versus NATO
by T H O M A S F . P A Y N E
Special to the Herald
Desolate and uninhabitable In the
popular minds, the "N o rth Pole" Is
assuming greater and greater im ­
portance in world affaire, largely
because of new technologies which
enable men to operate and live In the
fro ie n , heretofore Im pe n e tra b le ,
wastelands. The A rc tic region today
also has a great stategic significance,
which was foreshadowed in one of the
most desperate and crucial, though
little celebrated, s tru g g le s of the
Second World War.
in i uty. 1M2, Convoy P Q 17 made Us
w ay from assembly points In the British
Isles to the Soviet c ity of M urm ansk,
north of the Arctic C ircle, c a r r y in g
Am erican lend-Letse material to the
Soviet troops of the Eastern Front. Th e
tim ely arrival of PQ 17*1 cargoes was
essential if the Russians were to stem,
and ultimately turn back, the tide of
N a il Invasion. The G erm an H igh
Command, well aware of the im ­
portance of these Lend-Lease ship­
ments, responded with a devastating
a ir and naval campaign to sink the
convoy before it readied its Russian
destination.
Submarine wolfpacka and Luftwaffe
bombers, mounting their operations out
of occupied Norway, dealt frigid death
to thousands of Allied seamen in the
A rctic Seas off Norway. Of the 3# ships
originally in (he convoy, only 11 made
port in Russia. But Die material
reached Murmansk and helped to make
possible the Stalingrad campaign, the
, beginning of Ihe end for the N a ils in
ft’tssii*
Aftet Ihe Second W orld W ar, Ihe
Soviet Union replaced N a il G erm any
as the predominant land power in the
European continent generally and in
the European Arctic as w e ll Th e Soviet
Kola Peninsula is the site of the largest
d l y north of the Arctic Circle, the port
of Murm ansk, and is the location of the
most dense concentration of m ilita ry

installations In the world. Its porta are
the bases for the Soviet Union’s largest
fleet; bombers designed to strike at
targets on both land and sea eserciae
above Its skies; and the whole place
bristles with sntl-elrcraft defensesmonuments lo the critical importance
of the installations w hich the S AM s
protect.
Th e mission of the Soviet forces in the
A rctic is two-fold. Offensively, Soviet
su bm arine s, surface vessels and
warplanes arc to break out of the
Barents and Norwegian Seas into the
North Atlantic. Tb**» they
ire lo
disrupt American sea- and airborne
resupply of the Central Fro n t in G e r­
many by site-king the resupply con-

VIEWPOINT
vo yi themselves and the bases and
depots from which the reinforcement
operations a n to be staged. In addition,
certain Soviet ballistic m issile-canylng
submarines must deploy Into Ihe North
Atlantic if they are lo be within range of
Uieir strategic targets within Ihe United
States.
Defensively, Soviet A rc tic forces are
tasked with guaranteeing the security
of their own bases, preventing the
monitoring of their own movements by
N A TO
intelligence
gathering
operations, and preserving the Barents
Sea as a strategic sanctuary. Fro m the
Barents sanctuary the m ore advanced
Soviet nuclear submarines can launch
their longer-ranged ballistic missiles at
Am erican targets without (ear of
American antisubmarine warfare.
Because the war plans of the N A T O
nations assume massive resupply and
reinforcement from Norm Am erica in

the Soviet Arctic Fleet would not bring
automatic victory to the Allies because
of the formidable capacity of the Soviet
forces on the Central Front. Thus (or
N A TO , the strategic m axim
which
must govern its policy toward the
European Arctic Is that no w a r can te
won there, but a general European w sr
can be lost there. Th e relevant question
thus becomes; what has N A T O dona to
forestall this disastrous contingency?

In m ilitary eierciaes which would have
practiced precisely such defensive
maneuvers Soviet naval exercises tend
to be staged ever more weatwardly into
the Norwegian Sea, and this has an
intimidating effect upon the N or­
wegians

Soviet s ubm arine s even probe
N orw egia n (e r r it o r ia l w aters lo
exam ine a n ti-s u b m a rin e
warfare
installations and Intelligence gathering
facilities.
Soviet w a r ships and planes trying to
N A TO 's failure lo respond vigorously
break out of their baas locations and
snd decisively to these violations of
into Ihe North Atlantic pn«s through
Norwegian sovereignty have not in­
two “ choke points." Th e one is the
creased Norwegians' confidence in
passage between the Barents Sea and , N A TO 's ability to defend their country,
but m ay have Increised the strength of
the Norwegian Sea farmed by the
Norwegian provtnee of Ftnnm ark and
neutralist sentiments.
Ihe Svalbard Archipelago. Th e second
The second choke point between Ihe
is the G -I-U -K G a p - the double passage
Soviet Fleet snd Ihe North Atlantic is
between the Norwegian Sea and the
guarded by Iceland. Unlike Norw ay,
North Atlantic bounded by Greenland,
Iceland hosts Am erican air and naval
Iceland and the United Kingdom . All
forces whose mission Is to guard the
the nations whose territories form these
Denmark Straits, but like Norw ay,
choke points ire part of N A T O , but in
Iceland has a powerful neutralist strain
the cast of every one of them , a com ­
in Its politics. In fact, Iceland has an
bination of political Instability, m ilitary
active and influential communist party
weakness and pressure from ihe Soviet
which is capable o( m ajor electoral
successes ( lu r in g been Included in at
Union ii causa for apprehension about
least on* government coalition during
lha ability of N A T O ’s Northern Flank to
ths past decade), and which is pledged
hold together In the long run.
to taking Iceland out of N A T O .
In many ways, Ihe situation of
In short, the Northern Fla nk of N A T O
Norway presents the most extreme and
Is both m ilitarily and politically weak.
revealing case. Although their country
Strengthening N A T O 's m ilita ry posture
is a charter member of N A T O , many
on the Northern F la n k is a precondition
Norwegians long for a return lo the
lor restoring Its political posture; but
n e utrality w h ich do m in ate d the
an increased commitment to N A T O on
kingdom's foreign policy before World
the part of N orw ay and Iceland is
W ar IL F o r fear of giving offense lo Ihe
discouraged by the ever-weakening
Soviets, the Government of Norw ay
m ilitary power of the United States.
permits no stationing of N A T O troops
Unless these weaknesses on the Nor­
cr nuclear weapons in its country. If the
thern Flank of N A T O are overcam e,
country were to be attacked by the
the efforts currently being made to
Soviets, the Norwegian a rm y could do
strengthen N A T O forces on Ihe Central
no mors than hold out until help came
Front m ay prove to be in vain.
from the Central Fro nt in G erm any.

costs to private attorneys who handle convinced that state and local bar
legal assistance cases for the poor free of associations could ty* provide muds of
chsrge
the basic legal assistance to ths poor
without federal funds. Should any glaring
"W ith the dram atic restructuring of
legal Services Corporation, which ap­ weakness in the restructuring effort
pears to be well along lha w ay, 1 am become apparent, t w ilt not haattata to
vote against continuation of Ihe Legal
leaning toward supporting Its continued
existence. H o w e ve r, I rem ain un­ Services Corporation," McCollum said.

Senior Citizens Advised:
'Use Medicines Wisely'
P re s crip tio n and over-th e -co u n te r
medications can make us healthy and
keep us that w ay. If not taken properly,
however, they can make us feel worse.
Drugs themselves are neither good
nor bad, of course. It's the w ay In which
they are used that makes Ihe dif­
ference.
And using them properly is especially
important for the 10 percent of the
population over age U that now con­
sumes 23 percent of the medications
taken in the United Stales.
Everyone — old and young — who
re g u la rly tik e s m ed ica tion should
obtain the excellent booklet "Using
Your Medicines W isely: A Guide (or (he
E ld e rly," prepared by the National
Institute on D rug Abuse ol the Public
Health Service.
Few er than hall of the medicines now
in use were on the market 10 y e a n ago.
These new drugs are helping many
people — particularly elderly people —
to enjoy longer, healthier lives.
But because older people generally
take more medicines, they also run a
greater risk of having problems with
them. So, the booklet lists these things
to do:
— Tell your doctor about all the
medicines that you are taking and
about any allergy or sensitivity that you
m ay have lo a drug.
— Understand all Instructions before
starting to use a m e d ia tio n . Know
when to take it, how long to continue
taking It and what to do if problems
occur. F o r example, some medications
should be swallowed only with water.
— Take medicines at the times that
you are supposed to. People who take
several drugs m ight be wise to have
some system lor keeping track o l when
to take all of them.
You might want to keep *11 medicine
bottles In one place. An empty egg
carton has room (or as m any as 11
small medicine bottles. Make sure that
each is labeled with the name of the
drug and the time of day that il should
be taken.
— Phone your doctor If you n o tin any
new symptoms or side effects.
— Keep drugs in air-tight containers.
Store them properly.
— Keep a permanent record of all
drugs and vaccines to which you are
sensitive or allergic.
Th e booklet also has a list of doa'ta:
— Don't take m ore — or le u — than

I Dr. Payne it Assistant Professor ol

Ihe prescribed amount ol a d r u g
— Don’t stop taking a drug without

succeed in their offensive mission. On

Nonetheless, in 1971, the Norwegian
government, responding to pressures

Political

checking with your doctor - even if you

the other hand, preventing a sortie by

from the Soviets, refused to participate

HilUaale, M ich.)

the event of a European w a r, any such
w ar would be lust If the Soviets were to

Science at HUlsdale College,

feel better.
— Don't m ix alcohol and medicine

Growing
Older
Harold Blumrafeld

unlraa yotir doctor aaya it’s O K . Many
drugs react adversely with alcohol.
— Don't lake drugs that were
prescribed (o r someone else. And don't
give your drugs to another person.
— Don’t transfer a drug Ir a n Us
original bottle lo another one.
— And don’t keep ok) medicines in
your medicine cabinet.
Communication between doctor and
patient is important. Before visiting
any doctor's office, make a Ust of all the
medications that you are taking, in­
cluding those that do not require a
p re s c rip tio n , such as a spirin or
laxatives.
Th is will help the doctor to prescribe
new medicine. Otherwise, the com­
bination of two drugs could produce a
dangerous reaction cr reduce their
effectiveness.
"U sing Y o u r Medicines W isely" has
s handy chart to list the names of your
drugs, their purposes, their colon and
shapes, directions, cautions and the
times of ths day that they should be
taken.
Inside is • sm aller tear-out booklet
titled "Passport to Good Health,”
which has spaces lo r recording names
ol doctors, hospitals, pharmacists,
family members to be readw d in an
emergency and medicines that you are
taking. The passport is small enough to
be carried in a puree or a w allet
You a n be w ire and healthy by
requesting
ths
book,
DREW
Publication. N o. (A D M ) B0-7tt, (r a n
ths Superintendent of Documents, U. S.
G o v e rn m e n t
P rin tin g
O ffice,
Washington, D .C . 7040.

PLEASE WRITE
Le tte rs ts th s editor are
welcomed lor public attorn. AO Icttere
must be signed, with ■ making
address and, If possible, a telephone
number se the Identity af the writer
may be verified. Th e Evening
Herald will respect the wishes si
writers who do sot want their names
la print. Th e Evening H erald t b s
reserves the right to edit letters to
eliminate libel or

to conform to

1 tp &gt; f* requirement*.________________

�tA— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

SundewMeyH. toil

N A TIO N
IN BRIEF
Schmidt 100 Percent
S a tisfie d .,. Almost
W A S H IN G T O N ( U P ! ) W rit G f f m i n Chenctltor
Hetonut Schm idt Is "100 percent satisfied" with hi* visit
with the Re*gan administration, but M ine m ajor dlffercnccs rem ain unchanged.
During two day* of talk*, which concluded F rid a y , the
two were in baalc agreement on how to deal with the Soviet
Union, but d lu g re e d on a few trade and economic iaaoe*.
Secretary « ' State Alexander Haig, reporting on the viait,
said Schmidt author lied him to la y he waa "100 percent
xatlafled with the outcome of his viait. Th ere were no aurprise*."
H aig also quoted Schmidt aa describing President
Reagan a t " a thoughful man with deep convictions."

Young Feted In Style
O R L k N D O , F la . I U P 1 )— Veteran astronaut John Young
waa feted In grand style Friday by officials and resident* in
hi* horr &lt;town of Orlando. But nothing teemed to please him
more than lunch with sixthgraders at (he elementary school
he attended more than 40 y e a n ago.
Th e slop at Orlando's Princeton Elem entary school— one
of ai* Ynune made rturtn* the rlovlnne celebration* in Ms
honor — was a special treat for (he Jl-year-old commander
of the first flight ol the space shuttle Colum bia, who was
bombarded with questions from the youngsters.
Young told the children that riding aboard (he Columbia
waa “ ic a ry al f ln t " but then became "Hite driving a c a r ."
Asked b y the kids why he was Jumping up and down after
the Columbia landed, Young said II was because " I looked
■t the bottom of the Columbia and we handn't lost a single
U le ."

She Stands By
Robert Garwood
J A C K S O N V H J .E , N .C. (U P I ) - Donna Long, the 35-yearold widow who stood by Marine Pfr. Robert R. Garwood
throughout his marathon legal battles, says Its hard to
remember when life waa nol "one crlsi* after another."
Since welcoming him home from 14 y e a n In Vietnam two
y e a n ago, M n . lu n g has been at Garwood's aide through his
m ilitary trial on charges of collaborating with the enemy and a
civilian trial on charges of sexually molesting a 7-year-old g irL
"W e ’ve alwaya just tried to lake it one alep at a U m e," M n .
lo n g said In an Interview alter Garwood was cleared of sex
charges. " U l e has been lust one crisis alter another."

W A S H IN G TO N ( U P I ) Attorney General William
French Smith vows to deem ph uk ze forced busing and
racial quoUs to favor of more "practical and effective”
w ayi to obtain equal education in d Job opportunities.
to his first m ajor speech on civil rights, Smith said
Friday, "Mandatory busing Is not an effective edocatiaoeI
remedy, and in many cases it has also proven counter
productive."
And, he u i d , quotas, "w h ile well • Intended... invariably
have the practical effect of placing inflexible restraints on
the opportunities afforded to one race in an effort to remedy
p u t discrimination against another."

U J. Bankruptcy Court!-Com No. 79-787-ORL-BK-CP
Smrtty'* he., 2714 0Hondo Drive (17-92) Sanford, fkrWo

[THURSDAY, MAY 28r 10 a.m.

F O R T W A Y N E , Ind. ( U P I ) - A federal Judge u i d he will
wail until next month to sentence former Agriculture
Secretary E a rl B u b for evading 174,057 to Uses. The
maximum sentence is five y e a n imprisonment and a

110,000 fine.
B uU pleaded guilty to tax evasion Friday before U.S.
District Judge Jesse Eschbach to an emotional speech to
which he u i d he had let down hia family and his country.

Reagan Back A t Ranch
S A N TA B A R B A R A ( U P I ) - President Reagan is back on
his ranch for the first time since he was wounded to an
attempted assassination, ready and anxious to saddle up a
horse and go for a ride.
Reagan, adequately recovered from his March 30 bullet
wound to resume some outdoor activities, left Washington
Friday for a four-day stay at his West Coast spread, the
Rancho Del Clelo.
"Y o u bet,” a beaming Reagan told reporters when asked
tf horseback riding w u on hia agenda for the Memcrial Day
weekend holiday. " F ir s t thing to the morning."

INSPECTION: Wedneidcy, Moy J 7 ,10 u n . to 4 , m . t Morning of Solo

E Q U IP M E N T
t-M O N A R C H Overhead Drive Lath# 16" Swing,
46" Canter, Taper Attachment

1- B U F F A L O Single Spindle Drill Press No. I I , Variable Speed

I— HANDY Overhead Drive Lethe 24" Swing, 66"
Center, Taper Attachment

1—

t- B R ID O E P O R T
Power Feed

1— F O R T E Horizontal Bend Sew Cutting Site —
10" High, 20" Long

t— E S T 56 Ton Punch Press

1-

2—
HOBART Model T-3O0 A.C.-D.C. Welders; 35
450 Amps.

1— P R O V I D E N C E 3 Spindle D r i ll P ress -

1 - M I L L E R A.C.-D.C Welder; 225 Amps.
1 - F O R D TRACTO R P.T.O. Hyl. 3 pt. with
Hydraulic Heavy Duty Front End Boom Lilt

M odel

K , V a ria b le Speed

AM ERICAN 5 H.P. Air Compressor

Miscellaneous aquipment, New end used parts, Office equipment, Small tools, IS asst.
Implements and much, much more.
TER M S: Cash ■Cashiers check - Company check with bank letter of
must be paid for in full day of sa lt and removed from building no later than Monday, June

For Information or for Brochure col

A A A Auction, Inc.
(3 0 5 )3 3 9 -7 0 2 0

Save

Save 1.90

on men’s

1 .8 0
on men’s
terry top.

R eg, f.30. A th le tic s ty le bo xer
sw im tru n k of p o lye ste rcotton w ith e le s llc lie d w a is t.

Sale 7.20
Reg. I t . T e r r y
V neck, ra g la n
easy c a re p o ly
contrast t r im .

Save
$
2
on men’s shorts.
Sale $8
R eg. ItO . C o m fo rt and good looks
c o m b in e In o u r cotton polyeslec w a lk
sh o rts . Solid co lo rs and plaids w ith
bell loops, tw o Iro n ), tw o back pockets.
M e n 's sites 32 lo 42.

top w ith
slee ve s. Cool,
cotton w ith
S, AA. L , X L .

Save 2.40

" I took h im (G a rw o o d ) to (he funrral home. 1 atayed outside
and he knelt beside the caaktl and he w u talking to Dale In
V W UiA ffitM ," aha said. " I had a fuitog be was telling him
'Don't w orry. I w ill lake c a n of Donna and the k id s.'"

on men’s
swim trunks

...C lerical Error

Sale 9.60

I Continued From Page 1A)

son* to death with on axe.
The cast xhould have been taken of! the court docket then. " I
don't know w hy it's still ihere," said Assistant State Attorney
Alan Robinson who handled the case to its final stages. "I'v e

V, H.p. Flexible Shaft Grinder

1- A L L E N 6 Spindle D rill Press - Variable Speed
from 430 fo 1400

Garwood and M n . Long plan to be married after Garwood
completes psychotherapy at a Harrisonburg, V a „ hospital for
"post tn u m a tic stress disorder," a mental iltoeaa that causes
some Vietnam veterans to suffer extreme depression, flash­
backs and nightmares.
M n . lo n g recalled how she and her late husband. Dale,
befriended Garw ood after he returned to active duty with the
Marines nearly two y e a n ago, and how Garwood waa deva­
stated by h t r husband's death In a m otorcyda accident.

January m orning when H a rry Higgins hacked hia wife and two

t— 1 H.P. Double Hoad Grind#' with Pedestal

l_ 1 h .P. Abrasivo Cut Off Sew on Pedestal With
Rolls

1—H FR A M E JO Ton Press (Shop Me do)

hia actions.

to the Higgins case.
It had been 21 years, one month, and one week since that cold

Model

Memorial Day Sale.
Sale 7.60

But that didn't mean the gates of the hospital were (lung
open and Higgins walked out. He continued undergoing courtordered treatment unlU May 1980 when be w u finally set free.
But even before then, on Ju ly 1 0 ,1971, a three-man team of
hospital psychiatrist* — Dm . Milton Hirsh berg, Modesto
lievia, and Ju an Maniago J r . — said Higgins had improved
significantly and was competent to stand trial.
But It was too late. Hoseman's order of O c t 1976 effecUvely
ended any chance of Higgins ever being brought to Justice.
W illiams tried anyw ay, claiming H o um an 's order w u in­
valid, and an Ju ly 30, I960 ordered the case to trial. Th e
hospital appealed and on Feb. 19,1961, the Florida Supreme
Court instructed W illiam s that no further action could be taken

Machine Model M

t—M A N N LEY 60 Ton H Fram e Press

A T l-A N T A ( U P I ) — Investigators maintaining contact
with a black m an believed to have information about the
slaying of on* of 27 young blacks murdered to Atlanta a rt
on a "w ild goose chase," an attorney for the man u y a .
Stanley Nylen, an Atlanta lawyer, u i d Friday that
authorities who questioned his client • a M-year-oid home
repair salesman residing in upstate New Yock - received
misinformstion about him .

Garwood, a 15-year-old native of Adams, Ind., 1* appealing
his conviction on charges of collaborating with the Viet Cong to

state hospital, undergoing treatment for hallucinations and
schizophrenia-paranoia.
Then, on M oy 3, 1974, D r. Benjamin R. O gbum , director of
the forensic unit at the state hospital, asked that the charges
against Higgins be dropped and he be declared not guilty by
reaeon of insanity.
Judge W illiams denied the request and reaffirmed his
previous order that If Higgins ever recovered he was to return
to Seminole County for possible trial.
Hoping to find a more receptive ear, O gbum went over
W illiams' head to then-chief Circuit Judge A .J . Hoaeman J r .
who on Oct. 5, 1976 went along with the appeal and acquitted
Higgins on the grounds that he w u craiy at the Um e of the

Milling

'•**

Wild Goose Chase?

sport boxer.

Defense attorneys claim Garwood was driven insane by
torture and deprivation and should not be held reaponalble tor

PUBLIC AUCTION

Butz Sentencing Next Month

M n . lxm g waa the star detente wttneaa In the at* trial,
leaUtytna U a rw ood waa out tit town the day the licident
allegedly occurred,

a serie* of Jungle POW camps.

IRDERED SOLD A T

De-Emphaslzed Busing, Quotas

R eg. 112. A th le tic style
s w im tru n k o l poly-cotton
w llh co n tra s t s trip e s , side
seam pockets, e la s tld ie d
w aist. S ire 18 lo 40.

Save $2 and $3
on new leather-look
vinyl handbags.

Sale 7.99
R eg. I I I . O u r o w n JC P e n n e y
O rg a n iz e r h a s p le n ty of
fashion a n d co n ve n ie n ce .
Includes c o m b , m i r r o r a n d
cosm e tic ca s e .

Sale $8
R e g. 510. Fa sh iona ble
h a n d b a g w ith double h and le
w ith center fra m e a n d
m u ltip le pockets. C o lo rs a n d
styles to choose fro m .

asked that it be rem oved." Th e memories aren't so easy to
erase.
After the m urders, Phillip and Ruth Ann Higgins moved to
with relatives in their father's home state of Massachusetts.
But no one seems to know w h e n Higgins to now. Neither
Williams, Robinson, nor sheriff’s investigator V e m Brewster
u y they have any idea where the infamous killer is, or even if

Of course you can charge it

J®enney

he is alive.
He m a y have checked back Into tlie state hospital, Williams
u i d , but the asylum is forbidden by law from either con­
firming o r denying that.
" I Just hope," said Robinson with a sort of somber black
humor, "th a t he's not working to a hardware store scene where
sharpening axes."

L-W * th* I l l V e l ' l

X

SANFORD
SANFORD PLAZA
H » , , IM 1 4 Stttt 04.

0*rn Msnejt n n l i l u l t r . l l i a. lg i
0**nS«aMy. I M U llg m

�Jersey State Police
Nab 3 In Drug Busts

P EO P LE
IN BRIEF
MOM On Nationwide Search
For Fresh, New Sex Symbol
B y U n it'd P m i IntrrnaUnaal
M G M -T V Is launching a nationwide talent search (or
a w i symbol. The studio wants to hark back to
filmland’s golden era to discover an actress and groom
her to play the lead in " T h e Dorothy Straiten Story,”
based on the life and tragic death of the murdered
Playboy centerfold model.
Th e girl they are looking for could be harder to find
than Scarlett O 'H a ra . Consider the qualifications as
outlined by M G M -T V President Thomas D . T a m menbaum:

N E W A R K t U P l ) — State troopers stopped
three out-of-state cars. Including two from
Florida, on the New Jersey Turnpike In three
separate incidents and found targe amounts of
drugs each time, police said Frid a y.
Bernard Miller, SO, of 0901 Brightw ay PI.,
Baltimore, M d „ was stopped at 1:45 .p.m .
Thursday by Trooper Daniel Cortese because
his car was weaving. Cortese placed Miller
under a n ts t for driving under the Influence of
a controlled dangerous substance, which
proved to be methadone.
Union County Judge A . Donald McKenzie
issued a search warrant, and an Inspection of
the car turned up lioim ces of heroin, valued at
1105,000, said police spokesman S g t To m
Gallagher.
M iller was lodged In Union County JaU,
pending a hearing.
U t e r In the afternoon, Trooper Jack Kepsha
stopped a car for speeding and noticed the
driver make a "furtive m ove" when he ap­
proached the vehicle, G allagher said. The
officer smelled a strong odor of m arijuana and
became suspicious when he saw that the car's

"W hat we are seeking is that rare, one-ln-a-million
personality who Is a breathtaking, natural beauty,
between the ages of 16 and 11. and, above all. a skilled
actress."
He called the dead model "a vulnerable, startlingly
attractive child-woman ..." Auditions are being
arranged in a number of key cities.

Coming Out From Under

spare tire and Jack were in the back aeat.
A warrant was obtained, and a search of the
trunk revealed 101 pounds of msrijuana,
valued at over 145,000.
Also found In the car were 4 black capsules,
believed to be methadone, and two hypoder­
mic needles and syringes.
Police arrested W illiam Peter Fairley, II,
6057 Golf Rd., and Dennis Charles Unscott, 27,
of 111 School St., also of Fo rt Meyers Beach,
Fla.
Both were in Middlesex County Work House
awaiting a prelim inary hearing.
In the third Incident, Trooper Robert Ctcrhino stopped a c a r near Elizabeth far a motor
vehicle violation.
The driver could not produce a valid
registration, and further checking turned up 11
pounds of cocaine in the vehicle. The driver,
Juan G . Vignoly, 2S. of 7650 N .E . 10th Ave.,
Miami, Fla ., ran from the car and escaped.
A passenger In the c s r, G erardo Grajales
from Miami, F la ., was arrested. Grajoles w u
found to be an illegal alien from Columbia. He
was In the Elizabeth Jail.

On Doctor, Master's Degrees
T A L L A H A S S E E , Fla. ( U P I ) - The Board of
Regents today declared a 19-month moratori­
um on new master and doctorate degree
programs In the university system except for
urgently needed health and engineering
programs.

at S a rd i'i on M ay 11 w hrn the IM1 Tony award
nominees w ill introduce their understudies and watch
them perform.
Among those on hand — Wanda Richert of “ 42nd
Street" and understudy G all Benedict; Gregory Hines
and Judity Jam ison of "Sophisticated Ladles" and
understudies Hinton Battle and Valerie Pettilord; Jane
"P ia f" Lapotaire and understudy Judity Ivey; Res
Smith and U n d a Ronstadt of "Pirates of Penzance"
And their suha. Scott Burkholder and Karla Devito.
The Tony Awards television show sirs June 7.

Navel Surgeon In Penthouse
D r. Howard Beilin, the New. York plastic surgeon
who got national publicity when a wwnan patient took
him to court tor misplacing her navel, opened a m ini
surgical hospital Tuesday an the penthouse floor of a
midtown Madison Avenue office building. The im ­
pressive setup was previewed by several hundred
friends of the doctor and his wife, former Countess
Christian Paolozzi, at a champagne party given by
them on Monday evening. Everybody oohed and aahtd
over Beilin's lo u ls X V desk set surrounded by
photographs of the doctor and his wife with V IP s, in­
cluding several recent U B . presidents

Vietnam Vets To Be Honored
U p to 21,000 people a: a eipected to pack the Nash­
ville International Raceway May 30 for the fifth annual
"One Fo r the Sun” concert. The Allm an Brothers
headline the all-day event, which this year is dedicated
to Vietnam veterans. Support has been tremendous
from the music community.
Gov. Lam ar Alexander plans to rpoclatm May W
"One F o r the Sun D a y " in honor of (he vets, says C arl
P. Mayfield, who is coordinating the event "We plan a
special opening ceremony to borer the Vietnam
veterans. It w ill be great and it's about time we
honored them ."

Tlegs: Music And Marriage

Chancellor Barbara Newell said, with the
legislature thinking of reorganizing the BOR
and the federal government retracting some
federal funds, the board should not begin
graduate degree programs requested by the
various universities unless they sre badly
needed.
The board approved negotiations for a
public health master's program at either the
private University of M iam i by contract or at
the slate supported University of South Florida
in Tam pa.

D A Y T O N A R E A C H , Fla .
(U P I ) — The partial cave-in
of a department stare under
construction In a Daytona
Beach shopping center — the
second collapse of a building
during construction in Florida
in less than two months — was
under investigation today by
local and federal officials
There were no casualties
in the accident Frid ay, but
nine workers sustained minor
in ju rie s when they p lu m m elted 20 feel from the
second story of the building to
the ground floor. W itnesses
said the collapse occurred
shortly after the workers
poured a fresh layer of
cement over s portion of the
top floor.

^™Tccc?7!a J m

M
O I N T A l IN JU H A N C I

her wedding.

•y Appointment

Tra v
p e d fo r d . N e w m a f

s C re e n

B e 3 ,th e Y r e a lly U r i e l s v ° l , A n d
b l u e e y e s na_ c e n c e .
if r ia g e S M o w m a 11 s
rtc u a l in n ° ce

Ar6S

Th* S?1

1&gt; e h in j T r o » o |« ' s s * , * n g V ° u ', e
t je h if d ’
,j s o m e *
.,b o u l

Ms. Newell said a doctorate program in
marine biology at U S F and a master's
program in social w ork at Florida Interna­
tional University In M iam i would not be af­
fected by the m oratorium because they w rre
approved last month.

o

at the new Burdines depart­
ment store being built as part
of an expansion of the Volusia
P la ta
Shopping Center.
Construction on the building
began about two months.
Fre d Holmes, a Daytona
Beach building official, said
the second floor slab had been
inspected six lim es since
A p ril 30. "W e found no reason
to believe there would be any
problems on the Job." he said.
Th e a colder l is under In­
vestigation by city building
inspectors, fire department
officials and Investigators of
the federal Occupational
S afety
and
Health
Administration.
One of the injured workers,
Richard C a m , I I, who w u
rU n d b ig on U«e spot that
a l

M w ia w
C t

t

323-8174

lin ly n .

Sal. I Evening*

E

ra t a

C O N tU U A V IO w J

323-8185

y o u 11 ^ n l e d
a lw a y s w

to

|eaCj j n g

a T h is
M o n d a y n '9

collapsed , said
"seemed like It
Just caved right
happened all of a

the floqr
swallowed,
in. 11 Just
sudden."

W E S H -T V

NOTICE TO
WATER USERS
ON
CITY O F C A SSELB ER R Y W A T E R SERV ICE

City Council on May 18, 1981, passed Emergency
Resolution to relieve water emergency and subsurface

IO SPITA L

Ottaon

18 at 7,

Mrs. Newell said there is a vital need for
more public health specialists in urban areas,
but proposed that “ we declare a pause until
January, 1 W . in new program s."
Other exceptions to the m oratorium would
include engineering program s and changes in
the "early divisions" c urriculum mandated by
the Legislature m the first two years of
college.
The board would also be able to make ex­
ceptions to the m oratorium for changes made
to improve the racial balance i t the univer­
sities.

on City of Casselberry Water Service TAKE NOTICE
Hewn t Men-Art.

Untord
Horn* M Dolton
) « W V Bruton
C rrm l H a rm
PoMutlt L McKinnon
Mormon J. Rvmbvft
Doc Roland
Noncy Loti Sprat
WMfon E More. DoBorr
Marporot f Roto. DtBary
E ttly n l Awglpureer. Doliano
Harry D BIIUnaM V, Oaltana
DISCHARGE t
Sanlore
lucaia Brundiega
Rlcnore P Gaiiona,
Anna K. Ki«.n
Ovtncana V Palltrton
M inus B Pa IBM
Louita Thomol
Jama* A. Thor pa
Richard L Will.amt
C h a rm amch. DtBary
Ralph M Patton. DaBary
Cortit E Prftit. Dattona
MtOM L Hvehol. Long wood
Dora M Salts. Orange City
Samantha Gala Earm eroi,

^

Citizens of Casselberry and Citizens in Seminole County

She said yes and has promised to attend the allBruckner program the orchestra will present at
Carnegie Hall in ita final concert of it* first full per­
formance season on M ay 36. Th at's Just I wo days after

ADMISSIONS

m

Daytona Beach Cave-In Probed

Frid ay's accident occurred
Supermodel C heryl Tlegs may be m arrying
photographer Peter Beard Sunday but she also has
accepted another proposal. It came from Rohan
Joseph, the 27-year-old music director of the new
American Philharmonic Orchestra. But instead of
m arriage Rohan proposed Miss B egs join the
American Philharmonic executive board and board of
trustees

lifliiM U Momorlpl M»»nw
M llt l

Sunday. May 14. i t i i-T A

Regents Declare Moratorium

The patient understudies who w all for their stars to
miss a performance — sometimes forever In vain —
are guaranteed a chance to perform this year. And
before a very select audience. The event is the
American Theater Wing's "To n y Award Ttm e " party

IOTES

Evening Herald. Sanferd. FI.

R E G IS T R A T IO N

aquifer protection as follows: Outside use of water from

IS U N D E R W A Y A T

City facilities, ground wells and lake drawdown is barred

SEMINOLE
COMMUNITY COLLEGE

EXCEPT during the hours 6:00 A.M. to 12:00 Noon on
weekdays only. (No weekend use is authorized)
#

FOR THE

Summer Term
CLASSES START JUNE 22

The Utility Director is authorized to reduce water pressure
up to 2 5 % In the event of extraordinary water
emergencies. Term of ban from May 18, 1981, to June 30,

FO R IN F O R M A T IO N O N P R O G R A M S , C O U R S E
S C H E D U L E S , E T C ., P H O N E O R V I S I T T H E C A M ­
PUS

JU S T

OFF

H IG H W A Y

1 7 -9 2

B ETW EEN

1981, unless terminated. Violators will be fined up to

I .O N G W O O D A N O S A N F O R D .

$300 per day per violation. TAKE NOTICE
SEMINOLE
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
SANFORD, FLORIDA 32771
1305)323-1450
1305)843-7001
Horses were first tamed in
Asia some 10,000 years ago,
h n io iijn i ssy.

ACCESS i a u A L OPPORTUNITY COMMUNITY C O L LID E

O W EN SHEPPARD
MAYOR
CITY OF CASSELBERRY, FLORIDA

�SPORTS
I A — Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, M ay « , I H I

S e m in o le O ra n g e E x p lo d e s P a st W h ite
&lt;

9

*

-

*

.- I T
HtrtM P N H » by Tern Vincent

Frank Rowe (No. 69) roughs up quarterback Joe Calloway.

A

Fullback Lenny Sutton takes a breather after touchdown dash.

Manley Ignites Orange With Return,
Sutton Slams For 24-Yard Touchdown
the final 24 minutes piling up 104 yards on
14 totes.
"1 think Sutton's gonna be our stud
running back next year," Seminole head

B y B F .N T O N W O O D
Herald Sports Writer
The Orange exploded early and then
coeated to * Z M win In Sanford'i annual
WYilla v*. U r ana* tnlraaquad baltta at

football coach Jerry Poaey takL “ He

V m l M t a l t l | h h h u i t F r id a y aiu M .

Six White turnovers spelled its doom.

Speedy R rndall Manley Ignited the
Orange on the opening kickoff with an 12yard return for a quirk f -0 lead.

They could have got back into the game
In the second quarter when Robbie Cohen
pounced on a fumbled punt at the Orange
21-yard line.

On ft* next possession. quarterback
Jeff IJtlo n moved the Orange offense
from midfield to the White seven-yard
line. Fared with a fourth down and goal
to go, U tto n found receiver Frank Howe
in the end rone for It* second touchdown
in five and a half minutes. Johnnie IJttles
dashed In for the two-point conversion to
give the Orange a H O advantage.
U tto n teamed with Howe again, two
plays Into the second period, on a 47-yard
storing bomb. The senior-to-be quar­
terback connected on four of his first six
passing attempts In sparking the Orange
to a b h i lead teas man U minutes into the
game.

But running back Willie Carter gave
away the first of five lost White fumbles
an Ihe first play from scrimmage.

1 think Sutton's going
to be our stud running

The White moved deep into Orange
territory again late In the first half,
before q u a rte rb a c k Joe C tllo w a y 's
screen pose was picked off by Thurm an
Thompson and returned 44 yards.
Three of the White's fumbles In the
second half were bat in Orange territory,
stalling a trio of scoring opportunities.

back next year.'

— Jerry Posey
U r u iy Sutton's Iwo-yard blast with, fust
7:30 left In the game, was the only other
score tre real of Uie night. Ih e 10.2
sprinter was a one man offensive show in

orange
While

Victor Williams snares a pitchout and follows Johnnie Littles up field.

LAKE HOWELL

LAKE BRANTLEY

Grant Runs Offense
To Overtime Victory

Besaw's Three Touchdowns
Buzz Blue Past White 19-13

By S C O T T S M ITH
Herald Sports W riter
It was the offense paired against the
defense Frid ay night at [* k t Howell In
the annual tntra-aquad football game.
Th e defense was given
point for

a

every tune It stopped the offense and
the offense used Ihe regular scoring
system.
Halfback B illy Moiblech ran two
y ards up the middle late In (he tourth
quarter to forge a 12-13 deadlock, but
Scull G rant's extra point kick was

la k e Brantley Coach Dave Tull is
wasn't kidding when he said It was an
"offenaive night" F rid a y as (he Blue
and White got together for the annual
spring meeting.

credited linebackers Doug Fuglcberg
and Chris Bauer with coming through
in the tight spots.
"W e were good as a defensive unit,"
said Becker, who felt he needed better
play from his seniors to be 100 percent
solid.

Running back Kevin Besaw rushed
(or IM yards an II carries and scared
three touchdowns to lead Ihe Blue p u t
Ihe While 19-13.

Offensively, freshman Ja y Roby set

"H e 's an all-around runner," raved
Tullls about his senior-to-be. "He
scored Inside and outside."
B esaw 'i first touchdown came from
22 yards out on a sweep. N u t , he swept
the end again for 60 yards and another
T D . G re g M iller booted the point after.

blocked.
In the overtime session, the offense
turned the tables on the defense.
With the ball placed on the 10-yard
line, the offense scored three times in
five minutes. G ra nt was a one-man
show for ihe offense.
G rant scored first on a key block
from N a t F.dmondx Then the gifted
senior-todM caught a pass In the back

Besaw's third flash to fame came on
a trap play where he scooted (0 yards

past the befuddled White for the touch­
down.
Th e White scoring came (ram newlyinstalled quarterback Fred Baber and
running back Otis d ix it.
CUatt ram bled sis yards for Ihe first
■core and Baber, who'* trying to fill the
cleats of departing Ja y P u g , ran a
bootleg IS yards for mother touchdown.
A nd y Reardon drilled the P A T.
" I was real pleased with tha offense,"
■aid Tu llls , who’s In bis second year at
Brantley. "B a b e r threw the ball real
w t ll,” Baber w u I M o r -X for I I I
yards.
"Defensively. Kyi* Davis did a good
Job at linebacker and Doug Smith
played well at taiety,” concluded
Tu llls .

field and broke three tackles before
being brought down al the one.
Mosblech did the honors on the nest
play.
G ra nt closed the scoring when he
recovered his own fumble and scored
with no tim e remaining.
Guided by quarterback Scott Frick
and the d a u lin g running of Grant, the
offense quickly moved the ball down
field tor the tying score late in tlic
quarter.
,*
P r io r to the la s t-q u a rte r rush,
however, the defense commanded the
majority of the gam e, taking a 1221 lead
at one point
Defensive tackle Mike Palmer was
the standout perform er, picking up six
sacks fur the night. Defensive back
D s v k ) M artinet got five tackles.
Defensive Coordinator Bob Becker

the stage for the first score by scam­
pering a yards to the 20-yard line.
N u m b e r two q u a rte rb a c k M ike
M r Knight then fired a 20-yard touch­
down strike to Jeff Whipple.
G rant's conversion kick was good
culling the defense’s lead to 12-7.
Firs t year Coach Mike Blxcegtia had
words of praise for G ra n t, Mosblech
and R lc d Magaro as well as his
defensive unit.
"W e moved the ball well, we just
broke down a few tim es," said the
fo rm e r H ia le a h Iw o -llm e d is trict
champ.

—

-

HaraM P h tit

s u n taunt

Coach M ike Bisceglia sends in a
play with Billy M osblech.

Carlos Payas gathers In a pass.

�Sundiy, M a y H ,lfll-* A

Evsnlng Herald, Sanlard. Ft,

-CH A N G ES

Kennedy Resigns, Cubs Still Lose
U P l Sport! W riter
In one of their more curious mores,
the C hicago C u b s accepted the
resignation of G eneral Manager Bob
Remedy F rid a y and named former
M anager H e rm a n F r i n k s " a c tin g
Interim" G M ,
It was F ranks who walked away from
the Cubs’ managerial Job in 1979,
claiming he was fed up with the
players. Whether he can now build
those same players Into a winning team
appears to be a key question for longsuffering Cuba fans.
Team President W illiam W rigley
said, “ AU of us are distressed with our
current won and loss record. W ith (he
possibility I m a y be too close to the
(crest to see the trees, I have decided to
bring In someone from the outside who
also is fam iliar with the organisation."
The Cubs m arked the occasion by
dropping their season record to 6-28
with a 8-3 loss to the Muntreal Expos
Charlie Lea, who hurled a nohitter
over San Franclaco two weeks ago,
stretched his scoreless string to 28 14
Innings by shutting out the Cubs on four
hits through the first seven innings.
Then he had to leave because of a
blister on the middle finger of his
throwing hand.

Lea only walked one In his stint and
conceded his Im proved control was a
factor In lowering his E R A to 2.25.

U P l Sports Writer
F o r B illy G ardner there was no doubt
In his m ind — It had been n long time

Rookie T tm Raines stole a base and
got one h it T h e theft was hi* 35th
Pirates 1, Phillies I

coming.
• C m happy with this," sold Gardner,
who was named Minnesota Twins'

Hot-hitting M ike Easier went I-for-3,
driving in one run and scoring two
o th m , and Pssqust P e r n , 1-0 , pitched
a sis-hitter far his first major-league
victory.
Padres I, Braves 2

m anager after John Goryl was fired

i f f

M a jo r

The pitchers have gotten ample help
from the Tw in s ' sticks. But that should not be
surprising since Calvin has always turned out
the best in lum ber. Ta k e a look around the
league. The West Coast especially. Th e 0 Twins are hitting .177 as a team.
Catcher T im Laudner la rig h t out of the
KlUebrew mold. Th e slugging receiver has 13
round-trippers to lead the Southern league

A m e ric a n
League
East
W L Pet.
B alt
23 12 .137
C le v e ln d
20 11 .825
New
Y o rk
22 15 .395
21 11 .366
Boston
M llw a u k e
20 16 .336
D e tro it
18 19 .486
T o ro n to
12 27 .306
West
26 16 . 11!
O a k la n d
20 IS .371
C h ica g o
20 I t .336
T e ia s
C alif
21 31 .300
Seattle
11 25 .343
M inn
12 25 .324
9 22 .290
Kansas
C it y

Standings

L o a d e rs

a ,**™.

N tliM S I 1 | I| H
| ll
I set
Moa
C US H JJJ
Parkins, SO
» V* U M l
1* 101 11 IS*
Yonubld NY
M 14) a » 4
Harndon. 5F
7* 104 1) 14V
Eatla r. Pit
14II* 40 1M
Brooks. NY
I t 114 . 41 111
Ramts, Mil
n iia 4i ns
Harnndl. 511
Dawson, Mil
S I M 45 114
M IIO 15 111
Cadano. Mow
Amartcan Lvaova
0 a* k
pci.
IS M l M 1)1
Rama. Bos
linglton. Sol
14 no 44 14!
1) 11) 41 1S4
Evans. Bos
1) 140 51 145
LansVord. Bos

Sam
Cook
Sports Editor

and 29 runs batted in.
Outfielder-Designated hitter Randy Bush
has been Use most productive Tw in, lie has
swatted the bail at a .313 clip with 36 R BI.
Right fielder Steve Douglas, who chased
home five runs In F rid a y 's 10-Inning loss, is
batting .333 with a league-leading 54 hits.
There's more. T h ird sacker Gary Gaetli
brings home an 11-game hitting streak. Re is
lO for-M du ring the span for a .317 clip. Il has
lifted fils average to .309.
Shortstop Rod Booker Is even hotter.
During his eight-game blase, he la lWor-24
for a .158 percentage. He is now hitting .297.
The lu m ber start* cracking at 7:30 p m.
Saturday.
While taking In Saturday's O-Twtns pliyoff
preview, It’a a good opportunity to stash the
ballot box for Sanford's T im Raines
Raines, being a rookie la not on the AU Star
Game ballot, thus must earn a starting
position by w rite-in. The “ Write-In Raines"
campaign is gathering momentum with
baUots at Sanford Memorial Stadium and
Seminole H ig h School.
Raines, now patrolling left field for Mon­
treal, played for Memphis two years ago
Saturday and Sunday are "bank nlgbts."
Check area banks for special Ucket plans.

M iam i, Sem in o les Clash In Regional
M IAM I ( U P l ) - M iam i and Florida Slate
clash in the w in n e r'! bracket third round of the
N C A A aoutn Regional Baseball Tuusiuuurtil
today, while Middle Tennessee Slate tackles
Florida in the first gam e of the round.
The top-ranked M ia m i Hurricane* scrat­
ched their wey to a M victory over upstart
Middle Tennessee F rid a y night to retain an
unblemished 2-0 record for the tourney.
Florida Slate also scored its second win
against no losses — a stunning M victory over
Minnesota to oust the Gophers from the event
Florid* eliminated Missouri 7-3 in Friday's
loser's bracket game on the strength of senior
first bssemsn David Falcone, who drove In
three runs with two doubles and a single.
Florida Stale opened the scoring against
Minnesota with a line drive R B I tingle by Mike
Yastrxemski on the first Inning. Then on the
fifth, the Seminoles exploded for five runs.
The streak started when catcher Craig
Ramsey singled and scored on a Beiders

Leagu e

N a tio n a l League
East
W L Pet
GB
L o u li
St.
21 11 856
13 15 .805 1
P hlla
M o ntreal
21 16 .568 14
P llts b rg h
15 11 .411
Y o rk
New
10 I t 294 12
Chicago
6 28 .176 11
West
28 11 .711
A ng
Us
22 16 .579 14
C lnci
F ra n
22 20 .524 74
San
A tla nta
18 19 .486 1
Houston
19 11 .475 •4
D ie go
S in
16 26 .400 124

Dusty B ake r’s bases-loaded single In
the 12th snapped a 2-2 tie. Dave
Stewart, 2-0, w ho hasn't given up a run
in six appearances this season, pitched
two innings for the victory.
Mris I , Cardinals 1
Joel Youngblood and John Steams
orove In two ru n s each to back the fivehit pitching of Pat Zachry, 4-5 The
Mels won their second in a row after
losing nine s tra ig h t
Giants I , Astro# 1
Darrell Evans keyed a three-run 13ih
with a two-out, bases-loaded single to
put the Giants over the top.

II might not be too long now before Min­
nesota Tw ins’ Boss C alvin G riffith gets on the
horn to O-Twlns General Manager Bob WIlUs
and wants to talk changes,
Griffith unloaded M anager John Goryl
Friday as his b a lld u b was in the midst of an
eight-game tailspin. Th e Tw in s responded
with a 7-0 victory for new manager Billy
Gardner.
Bui victories on the Double A level h a rt
become common place for W illis and 0 (for
outstanding )*TwIns M anager To m Kelly.
The O-T's currently ran off an 11-game
winning streak which placed (hem atop their
division In the Southern le ague by 3 4 games
over Jacksonville.
They return Saturday night to Tinker Field
for a 7: JO ball game w ith the Memphis Chicks,
who currently rule the roost In the other
division.
Either Jack Hobbs or Irfty Brad Havrns
will be on (he mound Satuday In an attempt to
terminate a two-game losing skein that
developed since the 11-game streak.
Ilavena Is one of the O-Twtna pacesetter*.
He has an Impressive 5-1 m ark with an earned
run average of 3 66. Right-hander Steve
Maple Is the lop starter with a 7-1 record and
an E R A of 3.31.

BILLY GARDNER

CHARLIE I.EA

Te rry Kennedy doubled In two runs
and Juan E lch elb erge r earned his
fourth victory against two Io n a .
Tom m y Boggs, 1-7, took the loss.
Dodgers I , Reds 1

0-(For Outstanding)
Twins Return Saturday

choice, then Lionel Martinet singled and
scared on a balk, Je ff Ledbetter tripled in the
singling M ike Fueotss and Yastncnuki
scored Ledbetter w ith another triple. The son
of Boston Itc d Sox star C a rl Y a itn e m ikl then
scored on a single by Joe Ucata.
The Seminole* Iced the victory In the tap of
the ninth, when Yastrtem skl singled and
scared on a double to right field by Mark I,acy
and Ftgueredo bround In la c y with a base hit.
Minnesota scored Ua first two runs of the
tournament in the aeventh Inning on a single,
free walks and a sacrifice fly by catcher Greg
Otaon. It added three runs ua wily wie hit in Uie
eighth, scoring on errors by le d betier at first
base and Seminole third baseman Rick
Ftgueredo.
Middle Tennessee pitcher Steve Duncan
pitched a four hi tier and held Miami srortleas
for seven innings.

*c

» to* m » j

PtctorM. i * t
IS ID *4 111
«Vinl.t4d. N Y
7) i l l a j : i
A lm «v CPI
M ID O MS
Ourlfton. Cal
M 1)1 U H I
2,tt. Sira
7) 14) 4* ID
Hama Rant
N illM a l Laaovt
ScOrruai.
Phil 1). Damian, M il It, C*y
and Guarrare, LA. and Foalvr.

cm «
i n n l i a i i Laaea*
Tnam ai
M,l II. Evans. Sot 10. Arm**.
Oak. and tm pltlon.
Ball tj
ford Cal. I n k . Saa. Murphy,
Oak. and L u ilm k l. CPI 0.
R a n i RalVad la
Nahanal Lt4Ra* — Cunci*
cion. Cln ) ) . ScPmkX. Ph.l 30.

Shoots Down Moose
B ru ce Frnnklin hurled e no-hitter and Kiw anis brat Moose
10-0 F rid a y nlghl lor Its fourth second half w in without a loss In
the Sanford Junior league.
R otary topped Elks 11-13 In Frid a y's other game.
T h e win by Klwanla sets the stage fo r ■ showdown with
Knights of Columbus at 7 p m Wednesday. Both teams a rt 6-0
In the second half.
A U leagues of the Sanford Youth Baseball Association will be
idle Monday because of the Memorial D a y holiday.
It look Klwonts only 14 Innings to beat M oor* Friday.
F ra n k lin fanned eight In four Innings of pitching.
O rio n Waldo had a double and single and drove In three runs
for Kiwanis. B ryan Debose stroked a trip le and Mike Wright
added a double.

yean.
The Greyhounds tallied 1114 points in 113 for
nmnerup Lake B rantley, la k e Howell gave
Seminole County a sweep of the first three places by
scoring 107 points far third.
Deland (103), Daytona Beach Seabreexe ( f t ) .
Sentinel* ( 86). Daytona Beach Mainland ( 86),
Apopka (7 0 4 ) and Spruce Creek (69) completed the
standings.
Lyman captured nine first place finishes, (h a d )
Bob Goff's boys and girls swimming teams
provided the only double for the ’Hounds.
The swimming top spots joined boys tennis, girls
trsck.snd pentathlon and girls goU In push Lyman
past Lake Brantley for the title.
spring

sport*

winners, the

Greyhounds added first place finishes In boys cross
country, a Be with Sesbrtesc In soccer and Skip
Pietier's outstanding wrestling team.
Coach To m Law rence's boys basketball learn
finished second as did the boys golf team. Boys
track was tied for third with Spruce Creek, while

Sports Awards

__
24
3
3

11
114
114

(U nrt?, L A . «nd t r v f . Mom Iff
Fotitr. Cm If.
A m tricin
L « i« u «
Sm
OWon, Ba I I f i Arm** And
Murphy. OAk. And EvAfto. Rot
If. BAIL T t l . And Ogllvkf* Mil

15
St«ltn B « m
N Aiken«t L* a « u * — * Ail***, Mil
lit
NofHl#
SF
It,
Scvtf*
Mon tfj M iller, A il. o a *w &gt;
Mil. And lope*. L A 1)
AntfricAn L tt g u t
Mcftdtr
tort, OAk If/ C rut. Sia 30;
LtFlort. CM 11/ Bumbry, Ba I
10 L Ant ford dot f
Pitching
Victor »t«
Ma I iaha I L t if u A
Vilgn

JTuAlA. LA | | ; Carlton PM I 7 0
Motion LA A 0 , R ythvm . Phil
A I* Rhod«n, Piff 1 0 ; Sa a v a t *
Cm 5 1 . A lfiAn drr, IF
II
'N'ifkiro. Mow 11
Amvrictn lt t g u t
* rough,
OAk, And BtylAyrn* Clr A I,
Norrit, 0 *K. And F o ru ft. CAi A

1 n nt pWcBm tittf wtttl S'
E Anted Ivm Aver Aft
fltticd on 13 inniofil
Ntliontl It A f u r
V a Icti
furia LA O il Ryan. Mow 1 II.
Knroprr. flow 1 If. R lu U . LA
1 50 A it i Andtr. fP I «4
AmtricAn l«A«w#
fiafkrr,
Clt I All
Blylfvm . Cl# I A*
ClAri, Spa M l , McGregor. Ba!
I If; trout. Chi I ?0

ttnlAAvt*
NAfHHlA! iPAfUf
V alrn
fuel a. LA U Carlton. Phil 73 ,
Soto. Cm IL i f an. Mow AS;
S ta r AT* Clm. and1 QuUfcfcton*
MH 41
Am tocan lt t g u t
ttlflA
yen, O r 47; Barker. Cl# 44
Davit. N T 41, trough. Oak J t
May. N T , and WHcoi, Drf If
It v tt
National I i a ( u i —
Suiter.
ML. and Mmfon. SF f, Lucat.
SO 7. Mum*, Ctrl, and R om a
Put 5
Amvrtcan ItAfu* — Gotti?#,
N T II
Fingtrt. Mil I
T
Marhn«f.
Pal t
M*yt and
Farmer. Chi S

JC P e n n e y
A u to C e n t e r
We won’t steer you wrong,

ether hit was a triple by Sieve D ick erw n.
D e nver Johnson, making his first start on the mound, went
the distance for the win.
lo s in g pitcher Tim m y Hampton paced his team at the plate
with a pair of triples, while Carl Ruffin added a pair of tingles.
M an
000 B - I I 4
K lw w itt
I I I * - 10 &gt; I
WP
Brut* Franklin in * hilt**I I P — J.tW l William* CO31 Nil
t*rs Moot*
N O N E, Klwtmt — Orion Waldo 1 7 dovhla. Brian
D tb o tt I I Iripl*. Alr.n Jon** 1 1. Mika WrlgM I 7 doubi*
Ralary
W OB-tt M I
Elks
154 .71— 15 II 4
WP
Hvntar a iv d tn I ) SI.LR - tta vt D tnnit ( ) 1) H iilarv. Rotary
Roe** Mann 1 1. P h i Karr I t ) 5 Hunlar Gtridan 1 I trial*. Billy Panlck
I 7, D a rrtll Taylor I ) . Joay Ivans I S. Elks
htgln ald May** I 7.
V n * Dannn I X Darryl Woedwi I I, Mika Hickm an 17. Darral
Graham I 7. Donald Crayton 17. L*roy Richardson I 7. Control Kmgnt
I 4. Amain* Cotttrham I 4
K rn K n n &lt; Oarai*
151 4 -1 7 1 0
5*mmat* IparHns Oaadt
SX 7 - I 1 0
W P - - 0*nv*r Johnton 1101 IP
Tim my Hampton I I I ) H iN trt
Kan K tr n 'i Garaga
Laonard Richardson 1 7 hem* run. It*,*
Dickarton I 7 Iripia. 5rm,rx&gt;i* tparting Goods — Tim m y Hampton &gt; 1
la * rn p ia t, Carl R*4lm ] ). M * h «* Fatinherr 11

d ire r).
O th er aw ards were as follows:
B u t b ill
Moat Valuable J V
Jeff Barefoot
Most Im p ro ve d Varsity
John Reich
Moat Valuable Iniietder
Brian Holrworth
Mike Andriano
Kevin Brubaker

Softball
K im G illia m
Sybee H elm s
Sybee Heim s
ho)* Gull

girls cross country and boys decathlon placed
fourth.
Lym an also held its Spring

6
13

break Minnesota's eight-game losing
streak.
G a rd n e r, 53, was Minnesota's thirdbase coach since last December and Is
a veteran minor-league manager of 12
seasons in the Boston, Kansas City and
M ontreal organisations
Th e Tw in s fired Goryl sfter tuning
lost 14 of 25 for the season. Howard Fox,
executive vice president, said Goryl
w ill be offered another job In die
organisation.

Ken Singleton drove In two runs, one
with a tie-breaking homer in the eighth
inning, to lead the Orioles.
Red Sox 7, Brewers 3
J im Rice and Dwlghl E r in s each hit
tw o-run homers, enabling Boston to
scare its filth straight triumph.
Rangers 1, M artnrrs 1
Buddy Bell drove in (our runs with
two homers and Danny Darwin, 5-3,
loosed a four-hitter to spark Texas,
despite a triple play by 1)4 Mariners
A ’s 1, B lu r Jays 2
D w ayne Murphy lined a twoout, tie­
breaking single to trigger a four-run
eighth Inning and break the A'a eightgame losing streak.
White S o t 9, Angrls 5
(ire g I.urinskl struck his seventh and
eighth homers of the year to drive in
(our runs and Mike Squires added a
pair of run-producing singles to spark
Chicago.

Wee league action.
K e m 'f was leading only 7-3 before putting the game oul of
reach with six runs in the lop of the fourth.
Both hits for Ken Kern's came in the fourth inning. The first
hit w as a three-run homer by ln xiarxi Richardson and the

finishing fifth.
O th e r swim m ing awards Included Carol Rogers
(m ost im proved girl swim m er), Pal Conley (m oat,
valuable g irl s w ta m e r), Jim Christian (M oat
im proved boy sw im m er), Jo t Beadles (m o st
valuable boy s w im m e r). Jodie Stanley (m ost tinproved d iv e r) and Becky Mooney imost valuable

Most Im proved
Best B atting Average
Most Valuable

2
3
14

niyleven to his sixth straight victory.
Orioles I , Tigers t

P hil H arris and Roger Minn each haJ three hi la for Rotary,
while Steve Dennis and Reginald Hayes had two hits apiece for
E lk s.
K en Kern's Garage was out-hit five to tw o F rid a y but stiU
managed to beat Seminole Sporting Goods 134 In Sanford Pee

Th u rsd a y night In the school’s auditorium.
T w o of Bob G o ffs talented s w im m e r* -U n a
Schoefplin and Ja y Hebert-w alked aw ay with the
Most Outstanding Athlete* for the school year.
Schoefplin, a senior, helped Goffs girls to a third
place state flnlah. Senior Hebert, who won the state
breaststroke title, was instrumental in the boys

Must Valuable Outfielder
Outstanding Pitcher

14

Joe Charboneau hit slhree-runhom rr
and Ro Diax drove In three runs with a
sacrifice fly and a single to help Bert

R otary scored seven runs In the top of the third Inning, but by
the end of four timings Elks had taken a 14-13 lead. Rotary lent
13 batters to the plate In the top of the fifth to regain Ih r lead
with eight runs on four hits.

Greyhounds Grip Third All-Sports Title
Lyman High School continued Its domination of
the Five Star Conference A lLS po rti Trophy
Thursday by claiming Its third sward In as many

GB
MS

F rid a y . " I managed 12 years In the
m inor leagues. J o h n Is a good biiebatl
m an, but these things happen. When it
arises, you have to take advantage of It.
"W e have the talent here. It's Just a
m atter of applying themselves. I Uke to
... m ake things happen
He got people moving Friday nlghl —
the T w in s blinked Kansas City, 7-0.
Joh n Casttno and Sal Butera drove tn
three r u m etch to back the six-hit
pitching of Je rry Koosmsn, 2-8, and

last August, became the second A L
West manager fired this season. Joining
M a u ry Wtlla, formerly with Seattle.
Indians 7, Yankee* 2

Franklin No-Hitter

Schoefplin, H eb ert N am ed M o st Outstanding

Along with the

Twins Axe Goryl, Blank Royals

i* i

Most Im proved

Jeff Stradji

Most Valuable

Scott Sm ith

S a le 2 fo r *72
W eather Tamer Radial.
Reg.

$45 e a . p lu s fe d . lax*. S ir s P 1 5 5 / 8 0 R 1 3 . A ll s e a s o n W eather

T a m e r R a d ia l h a s a 2 p ly p o lye ste r c o r d b o d y w it h 2 llb e r g b iis
b e lls . W W .

Size
P155/B0R13
P165/80R13
P185/75R13

Rag.
$45

Sal*'
$16

$53
$56

$43
$45

Other tire sizes
also on sale!

Size
P195/75R14
P205/r’5H14

Reg.
US
$71

Sale*

P215/75R15

$79

543

‘ P lu s led la* from M l I* 2 IS tech
tire. Tire * m o u n te d st no ealr*charge
N o tra d e -in required.

G irls Golf
Most Improved
Moat Velusble

Zoe Dittm er
Kathy McOwcn
Boys Traais
Kenny Lee
Jeff Horn

Moat Improved
Most Valuable
G irls Tranls

tin d a Stewart
M aureen M cFadden

Most Improved
Most Valuable
Boy*Track
Outstanding Sprinter
Outstanding Jumper

Vince Presley
Steve Alekecvitdi
la u r y Ringers
Doug M c B ro u n
Je ff Biddle

Outstanding Thrower
Outstanding Distance Runner
Most Improved

Outstanding Sprinter
Outstanding Jumper
Outstanding Thrower

S ave
*7

Reg. S47 Sale $60. Deep
cycle Action Pack B0
amp utility battery i* lor
RVa and fishing boat*.
Action Pack 105,
Reg. $77 Sal* $70.
Super Crank marine
battery.

Reg. $57 Sato $50.

dirts Track
Schowanda W illiams
Anjeanette Cleveland
Diane Fuller

Outstanding Distance Runner Rhonda Hollenbaugh
Most Improved
B renda Haggins
Lym an's Athletic Boosters C lu b also presented
three awards for scholarship and earning two
varatty letters. Anne Reinighas ( l i n t ) , Hollenbaugh
(second) and David Seligson
honors

(th ird )

took the

152
$57

SANFORD PLAZA
Hwy. 17-92 A Stole St.

A u t o C e n te r O pen M o nday th ru S a t u r d a y l a . m . - i p . i
A a to Canter O pen S u n d a y 11:30 5 p m

�IOA— Evening H »r » Id . Sanford. FI.

Sunday. M ay » ■ i m

BUSINESS
IN BRIEF
Sun Banks And Century
Agree On Proposed Merger
Richard F . Uvtngston , chairman of the board and
chief executive officer of Sun Banka of Florida, Inc.
and Daniel S. G oodrum , president and chief executive
officer of Century Banks, Inc. have announced a
preliminary agreement has been signed for the m erger
of Century Banks, Inc. into Sun Banks. The transaction
has been approved unanimously by the Board of
Directors of C entury and the Executive Committee of
the Board of D irectors of Sun Banks.
Under the term s of the agreement. Century
shareholders m a y elect to receive either Sun Banks
common stock or a combination of rash and notes. The
shares of Sun Banks common stock issued for each
share of Century stock w ill have a fair market value of
918. per share, subject to a minimum ratio of .7 shares
and a m axim um ratio of .1 shares of Sun Banks
common stock fo r each share of Century common
stock.
Sun Banks of Flo rida, Inc. is a registered bank
holding company headquartered in Orlando. The
company owns substantially all of the stock of IS sub­
sidiary banks having 1H banking offices In 17 Florida
counties. At M a rc h 11,1981, Sun Banks reported total
assets of 13.} billion.
Century Banks, Inc. is a registered bank holding
company headquartered In Fo rt laudrrdale. The
company owns substantially all of the stock of 11
subsidiary Danas having sx Da ns mg on ices in iu
F lorida counties. A t M arch 31, 1911, Century Banks
reported total assets of $1.1 billion. On May 13, 1911,
Century Banks had 8,514,734 shares of common stock
issued and outstanding. On that date, maximum of
433,387 additional shares of Century common stork
were reserved for issuance in connection with the
conversion of Century's six and a halt percent Con­
vertible Subordinate Debentures due 1998.

Professionals Give Advice

Tips Help M ake Home More Sellable
You've decided to sell your home.
But right non there are strangers
in your family room, looking out
over the patio to the pool.
What do they see?
Smudges on the w a ll' Stains on
the carpet? Silt on the pool? O r, do
they see the tropical home they've
dreamed about during a i d northern
winters, or crowded years in an
apartment’
Will they make an offer, or drive
to the next house?
Of course, there are many factors
that influence home sales in today's
highly competitive market. But,
most Realtors will agree that a
small amount of decorating know­
how applied inside and outside the
house can make a big difference.
"D e p e n d in g
on the
hom e,
sometimes an investment of as little
as 1200 can create that w arm , homey
feeling that can speed the sale or
being a higher price," said G aynor
Mullin, the Winter Park Manager
far a leading Florida realty firm .
According to the profesaionals, the
first step is to look at your home with
a stranger's eye. T r y to present the
house like something on display in a
store window. The Realtors also
agree that cleanliness brings more
money. Fancy decorations are far
l e u im p tfU n t to a p&lt;u»p«vtive
buyer than a neat, well-maintained
home.

Would Vou Itsy Your Home?
If the outside of the house is
unappealing, your buyer may never

trees, are a plus, but m any buyers
are wary of too much untrim m ed

come inside. Take a slow drive past
your house, or cross the street to get
an overall view. Is this a home you
would stop to see?
Be sure the grass is green, edged
and mowed. A lawn service can help
with sod and grooming. It goes
without saying that heaped-up trash
w ill not attract buyers.
Is the tile roof dirty? Paint it or
have it steamed cleaned. Paint the
outside of (he house if it la cracked or

O n the positive side, if you have a
pool, be sure the water is crystal
blue. Hire a pool service. Am t, be
sure the patio is scrubbed free of
mildew.
Another important tip is the
g ro w in g im portance of e n e rg y
conservation as a selling point.
D raw attention to your outdoor
bving space with attractive lawn
furniture and plant arrangements.
Ceiling fans add a tropical look and
can help cut energy costs. Consider
adding a few healthy tropical plants
inside the house to carry out the
theme.
And, with so many homes built
together in some areas, a wellplaced wood fence can add a feeling
of privacy or block an undesirable
view.
During the time you are showing
y o u r home, extra attention to
housekeeping can pay handsomely.
Start by cleaning closets so they w ill
appear larger. Older people or busy
working couples may want to con­
sider hiring help for one complete
housecleaning, including windows.
After that, a half day each week will
be a good Investment until the house
is sold.
With or without help, neatness
counts so don't neglect those daily
chores. Do the dishes and keep the

badly stained And, U the house or
trim is an unusual color, paint it
white.
Major landscaping improvements
are probably not necessary, but pots
of bright flowers near the front door
w ill make a visitor feel welcome. Be
sure the door is inviting and that it
w ill open without sticking if the day
is warm . Is the doorbell working?
M o re than one re a l estate
professional stressed the value of
dramatizing the tropical surroun­
dings to make the home more a p ­
pealing, especially to people from
out of town.
A word of caution, however,
com es from
Dcrotha
Schug,
Manager of a Lake W orth realty
office. “ A key mistake made by
m any Floridians is lo iet me yard
become o v e rg ro w n ," she said.
"Tre e s , especially fruit and palm

vegetation."

A REA BUSINESS SPO TLIGH T

Franklin K. W illis, chief of the U S . Negotiation
Team for Bilateral A irline Agreements, will deliver
the key note address at the second annual Airline Day
Program on June 5, in Orlando.
Willis, deputy assistant secretary for Policy and
International A ffairs in the 1 )5 . Department of
Transportation, w ill speak on " U S . Aviation P olicy."

executives. Other dignitaries in attendance will In­
clude Bill Frede rick, M ayor of Orlando; Roland M.
lee, president of the Orlando Chamber; U S
congressmen and representatives of the Governor’s
office.

Cardinal Industries officially opened IU new ) 800.000 plus model home
renter on Highway 17-32, Casselberry, with Monica Subtlrrlu. head of the
firm 's architectual departm ent in Columbus, Ohio, cutting a ribbon.
Also participating in the ceremony (from left) Kd Renore, director of the
company's single family home division; llryce Raker, vice president of
the Florida division; Austin (iuirlinger, Cardinal president; and Julian
Stenstrom. the firm’s public relations director.

Code Group Tours Cardinal

Phone Shop Opens

and plug them in if their home is already equipped with
a modular Jack. If not, customers m ay now "pick up” a
modular Jack and install their own extension phone.
The service representatives at "Th e Phone Shop"
wui explain to customers how to Install their own
telephone Jacks and provide them with a book of in­
structions for reference. Th ere is even a "help"
number provided in case of difficulty in the in­
stallation. "Phone S h o p " service is also available to
small business subscribers using single line service

MCA Hires Gouchenour
O R LA N D O — Gouchenour, Inc. Advertising and
Public Relations based in Altamonte Springs has been
named agency for public relations activities related to
M CA Inc.'s recently acquired property in Orlando.
MCA Inc. recently announced it purchased ap­
pro llm slely 312 acres of land in Orlando that had been
under contract for several months during which time
M C A studied it as a site for duplication of the Universal
City entertainment complex located in California.

Guy D. Colado, president of Tropic Rank of Seminole, has announced the
appointment of James I). Deal of Altamonte Springs, and Itichard ().
Baldwin Jr., lifrtlm earra resident, to Tropic's Roard of Directors. Deal
has almost 40 years experience in real estate and finance, currently
heading up the Real Kslate Department of General Mills Restaurant
Group. Raid win is grneral partner and funeral director of BaldwinFairchild Funeral Homes, president of All Faiths Memorial Park,
president of the Goldenrod Business Association and is active in civic
affairs. Jam es J. Wester has been appointed to the position of vice
president of Tropic's Casselberry location, concentrating his efforts in
the Loan Department, lie was formerly with First National Rank of
l-akrland. Landmark Rank of Clearwater and most recently Avon Citrus
Rank of Avon Park.

people's furnishings, not your own
tastes.
Since your goal is lo help potential
buyers picture their own belongings
In your home, you want to provide a
neutral background that will m ake
your rooms look as large as possible.
A coat of fresh paint in white or
o ff-w h ite is probably the best
decorating decision you can make.
Next, look at the floor. If the
carpet is soiled, have It shampooed.
This can also help to eliminate
mustiness or pet odors. Replace
carpeting with a neutral tone only if
it is badly worn. Even then, you m ay
want to consider alternatives. B y
refinishing an old wood floor, you
can add sales appeal
The last step is to take a critical
look at your own furniture. If the
rooms arc crowded or cluttered,
store several pieces m tne garage.
O r, you might hold a garage sale to
lighten your moving load.

Disaster Loans

JA C K S O N V IL L E Th e
S m a l l
B u s i n e s s
A d m in is tra tio n
has
an­
nounced
that
E c o n o m ic
Injury Disaster Loans are
available to eligible small
businesses In 33 F lo rid a
counties, who have suffered
economic in ju ry as a result of
the severe freeze which oc­
curred on Jan uary 12, 13, 14
and 19, including Seminole,
Orange and Volusia.
The purpose of economic
Injury disaster loans Is to
permit applicants to meet
obligations which could have
been met had the disaster not
occurred. A p p lic a n ts m u tt
have sustained substantial
economic Injury and furnish
evidence as to the extent of
such injury.
Proceeds of the loan shall
be used solely to effect relief
from economic in ju ry at­
tributable to the disaster. No
loans shall be approved for
expansion
of
fa cilitie s .
Refinancing of s h o rt-te rm
debt, on which deliquencies
sre a ttrib u ta b le
to the
disaster, will be considered
eligible. Funds also m ay be

The interest rate Is l l - H
percent and the m axim um
loan available is 1100,000.
Applications w ill be accepted
until October 21. 1981.
S m all
business
firm s
located In Seminole, Orange
and Volusia counties may
obtain In fo rm a tio n a n d-or
applications b y co n ta ctin g
S m a l l
B u s i n e s s
A dm in istra tio n
D is a s te r
Office, 736-B North Edgewood
Ave., Jacksonville, F I . 32203;
telephone (9041 3844738

F o r tax purposes be sure to keep
track of expenses and receipts for
fix-up costs during the 90 days
before a sales contract is signed
Set The Stage. Thro b i t
Most prospective buyers w ill
make an appointment through a
Realtor to see your home A few
minutes before they arrive you can
take care of last minute details to set
the sUge.
Be sure there is plenty of tight.
Open the drapes where the view is
good. Check lamps and switches.
Remember, you can use lighting to
call attention to special details tike a
coxy fireplace.
Check the house for last minute
clutter, especially in the kitchen and
bath. Put pets out of sight and turn
off the television or stereo In warm
weather turn on the air conditioning
E x tra touches could be fresh
flowers from the garden to add
w arm th to the dining area, or a cake
in the oven. The aroma is hard to
resist and your family will enjoy the
special dessert.
Finally, when the Realtor arrive
remember this is a business call, not
a social visit Read a magazine
while the Realtor shows your home
to its best advantage.
If you've made the most of your
property your chances of getting a
top ofier are greatly improved bo
Just re la x and think
about
decorating your nest home.

A M atter O f C o u rs e ...
Mini-Courses Offered
U C F — Tw o mini-courses — one In performance
appraisal, the other In automotive fleet administration
— will be offered June 11 and 12 In Orlando by the
University of C entral Florida.
Both courses wtU be held st the Marioti Hotel on
Sand la k e Road.
The performance appraisal course, under the
direction of Drs. R uth Wienclaw and Waller Bog until,
U C F faculty m em bers, will esplore methods of
developing an appraisal system and techniques to use
In Its application to motivate employees and Improve
productivity. Th e 9243 fee Includes luncheons and all
necessary materials.
Robert G . Edw ards, formerly program manager of
fleet administration for the state of California, will
focus on ways and means available to fleet managers
to offset spiraling coats, and die areas of procurement,
utilization, oprrations,economics and disposition. The
course Is designer! p rim arily for those directing
passenger vehicle fleets. Th e fee for the two days is
1133, and Includes lunches and course materials.
For information on either of the two courses, contact
the U C F College of Extended Studies at 1303)275-2123

Real Estate Courses Set
U C F — A course for real estate instructors is among
the June offerings by the U C F Real Estate Institute,
which has also scheduled a real estate review course
and two salesperson's courses during tie month.
First on the month s schedule Is Real Estate I,
starting June 2 for two weeks. Classes will meet at (lie
main U C F campus Tuesday and Thursday from 6 • 10
p.m. and Saturday and Sunday, 9 a m . to 5 p m . A
second section of the same course will be conducted
June 22 •Ju ly 8, w ith classes from 10 a m . to 3:30 p m .
Monday through F rid a y at the U C F South Orlando
campus in Central Park. Tuition Is 990 Including books.
June 5-7 are dates for the Real Estate Review course
st the South Orlando campus. Classes will meet I • 10
p.m. Friday and 9 a .m . to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.
Tuition la 930.
The continuing education for instructors course w ill
be conducted In the U C F engineering auditorium from
8 a m. to 5 p.m . Saturday June 20. Tuition is 930.
Additional Infermalion about any courses offered
through the Real Estate Institute can be obtained by
calling (305)275-2129.

REAL ESTATE
CAREER
SEMINAR
D OES TH IS A P P E A L TO YOUT
• B E YO U R OWN BOSS
•F IN A N C IA L SU CC ESS
• T H E H A R D E R YOU WORK,
TH E M O R E YO U EARN
•M A N A G E M E N T O PPO R TU N ITIES

Kathy Nash of Del.and has been named
television producer for Channel 24, W'MFKTV, public television for Hast Central
Florida. In her new capacity, she will
schedule segm ents and oversee the
production of "Postscripts," which she also
will host. In addition, she will contribute
m aterial lo "Florida Focus." Although Ms.
Nash already appears on both programs,
her new look for "Postcripts” will take
effect June I. After May 25, "Postscripts"
will air at 3 and II p.m. each weekday.

CAVALIER M O TO R INN
2200 S. O R LA N D O DR. (17 93)

WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 1981

Refreshments served
10 A.M.- Morning Seminar
7 P.M.-Evening Seminar
TUITION FREE SCHOOL
D O N 'T G A M B 1 I

Million Dollar Month

wtth your Insurance I
t

United Home Services of Flo rida, Inc., The Rich
Plan of Flo rida, celebrated its first 8} million sales
month in A pril. The R ic h Plan has offices in all prin­
cipal Florida cities, and thousands of home food ser­
vice customers throughout the state.
The local sales m anager in the Sanford area is Ron
Hernquist, 499 S R 434 Suite 18, Altamonte Springs.

clogged drain.
“ I don’t recommend extensive
redecorating," said Keyes Manager
Sonnie W illiam of the LongwoodOrlando office. She suggests that
this is the time to think about other

providtd to bring and keep
curren t for a reasonable
pretod payments required on
long-term debts. Th e com­
plete refunding of long-term
debt is not authorized.
Personal and-or business
assets must be used by the
applicant to the greatest
extent
feasible
w ithout
causing undue hardship to
overcome economic Injury. In
addition, private credit lo the
extent
ob tainab le
on
reasonable rates and terms
must be used prior to ob­
taining econom ic
In ju ry
assistance.

The B rrv a rd County Chapter of the Southern
Building Code Congress, International, held its May
meeting in Sanford this week. Following a welcome by
Sanford C ity M anager W .E . Knowles, the building
officials representing B revan l County and cities of
Melbourne, Indialantic, Satellite Beach. Indian Harbor
Beach, Cocoa, Cocoa Beach, Titusville and Palm Bay,
loured Cardinal Industries' Sanford factory, Cardinal
rental units at Sanford Court Apartments, and the
company'a new model home center in Casselberry.
Also attending w ere L a rry Jordan of the Florida
Department of Com m unity Affairs In Tallahassee and
Don Ktselewski of the agency that inspecta ('anim al's
products for the state of Florida.

The Orange City Telephone Company has introduced
a new shopping concept in telephone service for the
area with the recent opening of "Th e Phone Shop.”
!xcited at 239 N . Vc.usia Avenue In Orange C ity,
"Th e Phone Shop" w ill offer company subscribers the
convenience of a department store setting to choose the
phone that's right for them. There are many different
style and color combinations to choose from. Sub­
scribers Just select their telephones, take them home

view.
Now is also the time to fix the
leaky faucet, noisy dishwasher or

Available To
Small Business

Orlando Hosts Airline Reps

Airline Day is a Joint effort of the Orlando Area
Chamber of Com m erce and the Greater Orlando
Aviation Authority designed to focus on the growing
commercial air m arket in Central Florida, with
Orlando as the hub. Invitations to the program were
extended to representatives of 3) domestic and foreign
air carriers; to date, 18 have accepted, including two
chief executives.
As guests oI the business community siul the
AvtaUon Authority, sir line eseruUveswtn tour the new
83SO million air term inal under construction at Orlando
International A irp o rt, be briefed on the overall
economic structure in Central Florida and visit the
construction site of Orange County's new M2 million
convention renter, in addition to major tourist at­
tractions in the area.
The day-long program w ill climax that evening with
a reception and dinner to honor the visiting airline

kitchen counters de a r. Make all
beds and do the laundry. Keep toys,
newspapers and clutter put aw ay.
And, find a place to keep pets out of

ll

Th e word honeymoon it believed to have come from
the old German cuitom of d u n kin g mead (a wine
made with honey) for thirty days altar a wedding.

Alger &amp; Pond R ealty Inc.

-C A L L -

T0M Y B U # S I

fi f t
IN SU R A N C E
"
f
321*0283
H O M E OW NERS INSURANCE

323-7843

�OURSB.VES
Evening Herald. Sinford, F '.

Sunday. M ay 14. l t l l - l B

Briefly
H A R R Y S. W O O D R U F F ,

Federation O f Women's Clubs
To Conduct Installation
The Seminole County Federation ol Women'a Club* will
hold installation of officers and a covered dish luncheon at
Its May 21 meeting at 10 a jn . at the Fastmoote Civic
Center. Ixngwood Avenue. Altamonte Springs

D P S ____________;
206 E. F IR S T S TR E E T
Dr. Harry S.

S A N F O R D , F L O R ID A

Woodruff, left,

The Incoming officers Include Ruth Johnson of
Casselberry Woman's C lu b , president; Eleanor June
Pearson, Altamonte Springs Woman’s Club, first vice
president; Ann H ull, Casselberry Woman's Club, second
vice president; Helen Pierce. Casselberry Woman's Club,
third vice president; Pat Foster, Sanford Woman's Club,
recording secretary ; Claudette Behrens, Sanford Garden
Club, treasurer; and U n d a Fisher, Altamonte Springs
Woman's Club, corresponding secretary.
Bootale Holllan of the Casselberry Woman's Club w ill
Install the officers, who are elected to serve for two years.
Jean Fowler of Sanford Woman's Club Is the outgoing
president.
Juba FallU Is president of the Altamonte Springs
Woman's Club, which w ill be the host organisation, and
provide the plates, cups and beverage. Those attending are
asked to bring a covered dish.

Catalog Of Classes Offered
A catalog of Sum m er C u ltu ral Classes is available from
the Council of Arts and Sciences. It includes many of the
area's art centers, educational institutions, and other
organisations which offer classes in the visual arts, drama,
and music that will begin in June and July.
The Art Council's cultural classes catalog lists the
organisations’ addresses, types of classes offered, age
groups for them, beginning dates and length of classes and
information on registration.
Anyone who would like to have a copy of the catalog sent
to them free of charge should call the Arts Cornell, 10-2717

will dote his
Sanford dental
office In June.

The only mouths

CLOSED A FTER

I plan to be
looking Into

50 Y EA R S

from now on

&gt;^
^1

Gone
Fishin'

are l^h'' he
laughed.
Herat# Ptwt# by Tam Vincent

&lt;TH E -A R T S ).

The fourth and final D istrict Title I Parent Advisory
Council meeting will be Th u rsd ay, 7:20 p.m. In the board
room of the county school office, located on the comer of
Thirteenth Street and MeUonvtlle Avenue in Sanford
Some of the items on the agenda to be discussed are the
Federal Project 'O , a report on the Region Four Parent
Workshop in Asheville, N .C . and the Parent Monitoring

By S Y B IL M IT C H E L L G A N U V
Herald Stall W riter
After SO years of caps and crowns and all
the other designing devices of dcntU try,
D r. H arry Woodruff, one of the last sur­
vivors of Seminole County's pioneer
Woodruff family, U bringing the final
chapter of his professional career to a
close In June
"Y eah . The only mouths I plan to be
looking Into from now on are the fish,"
Woodruff Uughed. "Fifty years U long
enough for anybody. I'm looking forward
to June.”
Unlike the aggressive Image that a
founding family name would suggest.
Woodruff projects a aoft-apokeneas in
m anner and a (rodents* of spirit that
undoubtedly charms friends and patient*
alike.
Although Woodruff's great grandfather
settled In Seminole County back In the
1640s, records show, the modest descend­
ant leads a relatively quiet Ufe, perfectly
content to practice hi* itn e ra l dentistry In
the second-floor East Firs t Street office.
And he's kept tliat same office for all of the
46 years he's been practicing in Sanford.
A product of the Seminole County public
school system, Woodruff, who was bom
and raised at 520 Oak Ave.. finished high
school in i n s and attended the University
of North Carolina during 1926 and 19Z7. Th e
nest four years were spent at the Atlanta
Southern Denial C ollege-now known as

teams, etc.

E m o ry University.

Students To Present 'Mikado'
Altamonte Elem entary Fifth Grade A E P students
&lt;gifted) and fifth grade chorus wlU be presenting Gilbert
and Sullivan's popular com ic operetta. "Th e Mikado", on
May
under the direction of Mrs. Sylvia Reddltt, Music
Director, and M rs V irginia Fawcett, A E P Teacher.
There will be two afternoon performance# starting at 1
p m. and an evening performance at I p ni
Through the generosity of the parents, students will be
wearing authentic Japanese wardrobesI *
for
» * 1 setting
which takes place in a beautiful garden In T i l l K Japan
The general public la invited.

a,

Community Reading Lab Opens
The Community Reading ta b la apeq at Vmtnote
Community College for adults wanting tq jmprqve their
reading skilla. Vocabulary development1' and .comprthenaion techniques are stressed in this free lab. Morning
and evening claaaei are available on the Adult Education
campus.
For Information, call Seminole Community College, 0 2 ­
1420, Ext. 4M.

Parent Advisory Council Meet

Woodruff's fa th e r, F . L . W oodruff,
meanwhile, was busy w ith his various
positions in public office for city, county,
and state governments. T h e prominent
area businessman who owned several
pieces of local property, was even elected
mayor of Sanford In 1903.
" I waa really too young to remember m y
father being mayor. Rul I can remember
him bring in the legislature and the city
c o u rtJ," Woodruff said.
Wow. exactly where his great grandfjfner aun e from is Just about anybody'*
gress, Woodruff says. But he thinks great
grandfather W oodruff c a m e fro m
somewhere in Mississippi.
Records In the Atlanta archives show
Ellas W. Woodruff getting a permit to
cross travel through G eorgia In 1844.
Obviously. Woodruff's great grandfather
was traveling with several aLaves, four or
five, hts descendant believes which would
have made such a permit necessary.
The nest record of great grandfather
Woodruff shows him settling in at Fort
Heed where he bought some land. Rut
frankly, no one really knows w hat he did —
farmed, ran a business or what.
But that's how the Woodruffs got here.
And the family has made quite an im­
pressive mark on laying the foundations of
Sanford and Seminole County.
H a n y, the dentist is one of the last two
survivors in ■ 4-son fam ily. An older
adopted brother who practices general
medicine, moved away fro m Seminole

County many y e a n ago.
The retiring dentist La married and has
one daughter, three grandchildren and a
lot of good fishing and golfing still ahead

Dr. Woodruff credits the
late Dr. A.W . Epps Sr. as
having the greatest Influence
on his pursuing dentistry.
'Dr. Epps opened his office
In the bank building while
I was still In school. I
admired and respected him
so much that I wanted to
be just as successful as he
was,' Woodruff said.
for him . he says
Avid fishermen who frequent the la k e
Monroe area are apt to see Woodruff out
trying his luck with the fish on Woodruff

Scout Leaders To Convene

Columnist Dead
Polly Cramer, who for 20 years wrote the widely published
“ Polly's Pointers" column, ('led M a y 1) at age 77 In Palm
Springs, Calif.
Mrs. Cram er's column on household bps was distributed to
more than 700 newspapers in North America by Newspaper
Enterprise Association. She retired from writing the feature
last April and turned It over to Patrlca "P o lly " Fisher.
In an Interview shortly before her death, M r* Cram er said
that she had never planned to become a nationally syndicated
columnist She worked as an Interior decorator before her
marriage to the late Douglas S. Cram er.
It was unly after tier children had entered school that she
offered to write a home-decorating column for the Cincinnati
Poat The newspaper agreed lo give her a try, and she wrote
columns — first on decorating, then on homemaking — for

election of regional officers.
The regional annual meetings are held every two years in
the six national regions of the BSA. O n a ltrm att ywars, the
meetings ire held in conjunction with the B S A 'i national
council meeting.

Summer GED Classes Scheduled
Day and night da ises for adults who wish If study (or a
high school diploma have begun at Seminole Cummur.il &gt;
College. The summer schedule will Include G E D classes an
the adult campus and also at 10 study centers located
around Seminole County.
. ■
Free Instruction, taught on an Indlndu aU snrw sis, Is
available to all adults. Call Seminole Community Cbllege,

moat of the rest of her Ufe.
Mrs. Cramer was the author of the book “ Polly's
Homemaking Pointers," which was published by Rawson-

3X3-1450, Eat. 444 for information.

Glenn Installs Club Officers

Fisher, Treasurer; and S i dele Pate, Historian.
Seminole County Com m issioner Sandra Glean, also a
club member, was the installing officer.

Stetson Grads From Seminole
Stetson University students (ram Seminole County who
received diplomas at the Commencement nereis** on May
17, were:
From Sanford: M a m a L B ro ru p . B B A degree; Sherry
N . Cook. BA degree; M arguerite Cornell, BS degree; and
John Tucker, BS degree.
F r a n Longwuod: Christine Jones, B B A degpe; J .
Douglas Lanier, B B A degree; Patrice MosUllo, BBA
degree; and Frans F . Sprtngm ann, B A degree.
From Altamonte Springs: N an cy D . Coleman, BSdegree;
and Ronnie Pearce, B A degree.
Also Carolyn M . Catledge. Casselberry, M E D degree;
Shanon L Mobley. F e rn P a rk . B B A degree; H a iti B.
Perm chief, Lake M a ry. M E D degree; and Phillip R.
Renault, Oviedo, Education Specialist degree.
.

S ept 3.

'Polly's Pointers'

Volunteer leaders In the central Florida Council, Boy
Scouts of America. wlU attend the 1M1 meeting of the
southeast region an M ay 21 and 29th, In Hollywood.
Scouting leaders from throughout the region w ill be In
attendance. The meeting w ill Include seminars focusing on
the four functions of council and district operation, special
group meetings, silver antelope awards and other
recognitions, entertainment, ladies program activities and

The Altamonte Springs W oman'* Club held mgtallaUon of
officers for the 1M1-C2 club y e a r at a luncheoq at (he Steak
and Ale Restaurant in Altamonte Springs.
Officers Installed were Ju d y F a llU , President, Joan
Zollek, Vice President; Dolores Vickers, Recording
Secretary; June Pearson, Corresponding Secretary; Linda

Creek.
"1 use to go fishing more often than I do
now, but it Just got to be, too much like
work. So I stopped that and decided I'd
stick to golf," Woodruff said.
“ Now that t'll have some time on m y
hands, 1 believe I ’ll be getting a few days
of fishing in ," he said.
It was only In recent years that Woodruff
and his wife, Genevieve, did very much
vacationing and travel. They've been out
West, to Europe and Mexico and other
areas of the country. So all they really
want. Woodruff laid Is Just a chance to
enjoy some peace and q itrt.
D uring these last years of practice. Dr.
Woodruff has worked an I • 11 a m. dally
schedule, every weehediy except T h u r ­
sday, at least six months out of the year
" It 's Just enough to keep m y hand*
bu s y," Woodruff said. While he'a out on
Woodruff Creek at the old la k e Monroe
canaL Woodruff wlU probably have a
chance lo relive some of Ihoee childhood
memories — especially of D r A W , Epps,
S r., a dentist who Woodruff credits with
having the greatest tnflunce on his pur­
suing dentistry.
" D r . Epps opened hts office In the bank
building while I was still In school. I ad­
m ired and respected h im so much that I
wanted to be Just as successful as he was,"
Woodruff said.
Anxiously waiting the retirement status
in June. Woodruff w ill be 7J y e a n old on

* •» •!* ttmH *» T * a V iM H t

Wade this (aU.
“ I've Just loved It," she recently commented upon her 20
years of writing a i.yndlcated column. "Th ey ( the readers who
wrote to her at the rate of several hundred a week) have gotten

Winners of Seminole County Middle School Math Festival are, from left.
Sami liendren, Suklt Chaiychatl. Jam es Sapp and Scott Clay with Pat
Murphy, coordinator of the math festival and teacher at Sanford Mlddje
School.

Math Festival: They're Tops
T h e Sem inole County C o u n cil of
Teachers of Mathematics presented the
annual Middle School Math Festival on
M a y 16 at T u ik iw U la Middle School
E a ch middle school (Jackson Heights,
la k e r ic w , Milwee, Rock Lake, Sanford
M iddle, South Seminole, Teague, and
T u s k a w illa ) selected the top three
students from sixth grade, seventh
grade, eighth grade and the top four from
algebra masses.
Aw ards were given to the top three In
each category and aU participating
students received a C ertificate of
Excellence in Mathematics, a M e rit
A w a rd from Burger King which entitled

them to a "Whopper", notebooks from
Daxko, and pens.
Sims Office Supply donated calculators
for the winning students and "R u b ik 's
Cube” p u n k s , donated by the council,
were awarded to second and third place
students.
Math teachers from all middle schools
attended and refreshm ent* w e re
provided (or all attending parents and
students. Winning students were an­
nounced before the Seminole County
School Board Wednesday n ig h t
W inners were as follows: Sixth grade;
S a m m i liendren, T u s k a w illa , firs t
place; Beih Brooks, Sanford Middle, and

•a*

' A * as* aw

Marla L a ia r, Rock Lake, tic for first
runner-up.
Seventh g ra d e : S u k it C h a iy c h a tl,
T u s k a w illa , firs t p la ce ;
Kenneth
DeMoore, Teague, first runner-up; and
Je rry Hauck, la k e view, second runnerup
Eighth grade: Jam es Sapp. Sanford
Middle, first place; G race Roegner,
Rock Lake, first runner-up; and Scott
Kincaid, South Seminole, second runnerup.
Algebra: Scott d a y , Milwee, first
place; Caroline Rodriqrier, Tuscaw llla,
a n l David Lam pbcrt, M ilw ee, second
runner-up.

f*

• -*

to be m y friends."
Mrs. Cram er felt especially close to the sm alltown women
who had been her most fequent correspondents.
“ After a ll," the said, “ 1 was raised In a small town. I've kept
house for S4 years. And I'm a mother and a grandmother."
Mrs. Cramer was bom In Ltulsvllle, K y . In recent years, she
bad spent winters In her P alm Springs home and summers at
her apartment In Cincinnati.

POLLY CRAMKK
. . . I ’ve just loved it'

�Affair About A s Secret
A s Rooster Ignoring Dawn
S l'E
ELLEN
HEAD

Head-Lau
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel W . Head, 102 E Woodland D r .,
Sanford, announce the engagement of their daughter, Sue
Ellen, to Robert Duane la u , aon of M r. and M ri. Duane B.
lav). Worthington, Ohio.
Bom In Albany, G a , the bride-elect la the maternal
granddaughter of Mra. J . C . Jackson, Kingston, N. C „ and
the late Mr. Jackson.
Miss Head la a 1979 graduate of Seminole High School,
attended Seminole Com m unity College and la employed
by T u b u Jic ii Service Bureau, sanlord.
Her fiance, who was born In Wausean, Ohio, la the
maternal grandson of M r. and Mrs, Ted Dearoaten,
Belleville, Ontario, Canada.
lie Is a 1977 graduate of Worthington High School
Columbus and attends the University of Ohio where he Is a
music ma)or.
The wedding w ill be an event of June 20, at 4 p m. at the
Sanora Club, Sanford.

Hawkins-Green

LOW JO MADISON,
JAMES THOMAS FERRY

Madison-Ferry
M r. and Mrs. George W. Madison J r ., of Altamonte
Springs, announce the engagement of their daughter, Lori
Jo , to James Thomas Fe rry , son of Mrs. ElUaoeth Taylor
of Casselberry, and Isaac F e rry of Claym ont, D e l
Mias Madison was Dorn in Washington, U .C .. attended
local schools, and was graduated In 1979 from Bishop
Moore High School. Presently she Is a student at Seminole
Com m unity College.
Th e brule-elect’s maternal grandparents are M r. and
M rs. Bennie Scarton of B retr, W. V a ., and her paternal
grandparents are M r. and M rs. George W. Madison Sr. of
Deltona.
M r. F e rry was born at Patrick A ir Force Base in
Rockledge, Fla. He attended Lym an H igh School.
H is maternal grandpa rents are M r. and Mrs. James
Reddick of Winter Springs.
Th e wedding will be an event of July 11 at 11 a m . at SI.
M a ry Magdalen Church, Attamonte Springs.

D E A R A B B Y : I have been married l In
name only) for five y e a n . I was a lonely
divorcee age 47) and John was a well-todo widower ( 00 ) when we were married.
Th e first night we w ere m arried 1 found
oul he was impotent. I know it's not his
fault, but he should have told me. (He
later said he was afraid he'd lose me.)
We had everything a happily married
couple could want — a lovely home,
friends, trips. I can't say 1 wasn't living a
good life, although I missed the physical
side of m arriage some.
Now 1 have m et a wonderful man. He is
m y age (32) and il was skyrockets and
Roman candles the first time we were
alone together. W e're In love and want to
get married, but hate to hurt John.
Would II be wrong to leave John and
grab what little happiness Is led In Life?
IN LO V E
D E A R IN ; H you waul lo Justify
leaving John, the fart that he faffed to tell
you about bis Impotence Is sufficient.
(Th a t's probably grounds lor an annulmrnt. i T ry in g to kerp an affair a
secret will be like trying lo smugglr
dawn past ■ rooster. You'd better tell
John brfore be tells you.
D E A R A B B Y : Everybody starts out by
saying they have a problem, and that's
(he w ay I am starting out, but don't throw
this away yet because I get better as I go
■long. ( 11a h a !)
I am a married man with three kids, 9,
12 and 12.1 always wanted to be a writer

Dear

but I can't teem to break Into the field. I
bet I sent 100 short stories to different
magazines, but I never heard back from
nobody. A person would Uke to be told
what Is wrong with their stuff, wouldn't

I hate going to church because I see
people there who I know are drunkards,
gossips, liars and cheats, and they are
right there every Sunday saying their
prayers and singing the hymns. I don't
have sny respect for hypocrites and our
church is full of them, m y own parents
Included.
I am only 13, so maybe m y opinion
doesn’t count, but I don't see any sense tn
m y going to church with s bunch of
hypocrites.
O N L Y A BO Y
D E A R O N L Y : Christ became a man at
13, and you a rt not too young lo become ■
man either. One goes to church to leant
about the Bible and the word of the laird,
although G od dwells In one’s heart, and
It's not necessary to " g o " to churrh to
communicate with him.

you think?
You must know a lot of big shots In the
publishing business, Abby. Can't you pul
In a good word for rive’ I don't eipect you
to aay I a m any good unless you see some
of m y stuff, so I am sending you H stories
I've wrote. If you are loo busy to write
and tell m e what you think of them, y ou
can call m e up. I'm sending you my
phone number, and If the tine is busy,
keep calling because m y kids are on the
phone a lot. In the meantime, have you
got any suggestions?
*
I jO V E S T O W H IT E
D E A R L O V E S : P irate don't send me
anything, because m y lawyer advises
against reading unpublished material.
And to vbe m ra n u m r, dan l Help y o u
kids with their English.

w s y , only a very few parishioners would
agree with him . Sign me...

D E A R A B B Y : I a m a 13-year-old, and
m y parents force me to go to church
every Sunday.

T H E V E R Y R E V . F A T H E R D A N IE L
D. R E S S E T A K ,
H A R R IS B U R G , PA.

A church Is not a museum lor salnti.
It's n hospital lor sinners, so "Judge not,
lest ye be judged," young man.
D E A R A B B Y : Re that person who
knew an editor who said he would fire
any reporter who used the word “v e ry"
— they should substitute the word
"d a n jie d ” instead.
Well If they used m y ehurrh title that

ELK'S CONTEST
WINNERS
The D lslrist Ellis
Oratorical Contest w a s
held in Orlamlo at
R oyal
Palm
Klk
l-odge. Awards win­
ners are. from fell, D,
Lam bert, Third Place;
Charlene Stallworth,
First pfare; Brother
Engine Holt, District
Educational Officrr.
V. Y ates; and D.
Hodges, second place
winner. The Stale Elks
Oratorical Contest was
held in Miami and
Miss Stallworth won
fourth place.

Mr. and Mrs. W illiam D. Hawkins of Route 3, Sanford,
are announcing the engagement of their daughter, Julie
Eileen Hawkins, to I j u r y Robert Green, son of Mr. and
Mrs. la rry F. Green of Sanford.
Bom In Sanford, the bride-elect Is the granddaughter of
Mrs. Jessie Marie Hawkins of la k e Monroe, and the late
W. II Hawkins, and also the late Mrs. favtnla Ramsey of
longwood.

KATHERINE

Miss Hawkins la a 1979 graduate of Seminole High
School and la presently employed by S and II Fabricating
and Engineering, Inc.

McGUIRE

ANN

Her (lance, bom In Sanford, is the grandson of Mrs. Eva
Beckham and the late R . H . Beckham. Sr. of Sanford, and
Mrs. Hestelt Freeman of Sanford, and J. C. Green Jr. of
Miami.

Htraltf Photo by M irvi Hiwhtni

He la a 1971 graduate of Seminole H igh School and la
presently employed by G re gory launber Company.
The wedding will be an event of June 27, at 2 p.m. at Ihe
First Baptist Church of Sanford. A ll friends of the couple
are Invited to attend.

Girardi- Walker
Marie Elena G ira rd i and Ira G . Walker are announcing
plans for their forthcoming m arriage which will an event
of June 27, at 10 a m ., at Congregational Christian Church,
Sanford.
The bride-elect, a native of E lm ira , N .Y ., Is employed
by Howe Industries, Sanford. H er fiance, who was bom In
Jrfferson City, Mo., U assistant manager of Pay less
Shoes.

McGuire-Davis
M r. and Mrs. James F . M cGuire, 2013 Grandview Ave.,
N . Sanford, announce the engagement of their daughter,
Katherine Ann. lo O irts W. Davis, son of Mrs. Vivian
Wtlllama D a vit and Guiford Adams Davis, Atlanta. Ga.
Born at Agana, Guam, the bride-elect Is a graduate of
Seminole High School and attended Valencia Community
College, Orlando. She Is employed i s a dental hygienist In
Atlanta.
H e r fiance, who is a native of Georgia. Is employed as a
dental technician In Atlanta.
Th e wedding will be an event of S e p t 3.

Rollins Art Major's
’Self Portrait' Wins
Purchase Award
Rollins College Senior Art M ajor E rin Fitzpatrick has
been honored by the Board of Visitors of Ihe Hollins
College Cornell Fine Arts Center.
Miss Filrpetrick, a graduating senior from Sanford,
was selected for the annual Senior Purchase A w a rd by the
governing body of the Arts Center.
The award means that a work of art by Mlsa Fltrpatrick
will be purchased by the Board and presented to (tie
college for Its permanent collection. Th e selected work,
"Self P o rtra it," was produced by M ils Fitzpatrick as part
of her academic program In the Rollins College Depart­
ment of Art.
"S elf P nrtra lt" and 117 other works of art by the five
senior art majors at Rollins a rt currently on display
through May 21 at Cornell Fine A rts Center on the campus
of the College In Winter Park.
Th e Arts Center Is open to the public with no admission
charge, Tuesday through Frid ay, Ira n 10 a m . to 3 p.m .,
and on Saturdays and Sundays, I to 3 p.m .
Th e Senior A rt Show Is an annual presentation at the

Erin Fitzpatrick's "Sell Portrait

Fine A rts Center.

SU M M E R D ft MCING

Spouse Abuse
Subject Of
SMH Seminar

CALENDAR
S A TU R D A Y , M A V U
Casselberry AA, closed, t p .m ., Ascension I-ulheran
Church.
SUNDAY. M A Y !!

New awareness of sn old problem, "Spouse Abuse", Is Ihe
objective of a seminar on the subject being sponsored by
Seminole Memorial Hospital June 3 atthc Cavalier Motor Inn
In Sanford. Tim e Is from 8 a m. to 3:13 p.m.
For health professionals the seminar faculty will help
registrants In understanding (he problem of spouse abuse and
guide those involved toward a resolution of their conflict.
Objectives include identifying possible causes of spouse
abuse, utilizing crisis Intervention techniques in assisting
spouse abuse victim s, listing and ptn-po'nting the roles of at
least four community agencies involved with helping spouse
abuse victims, and summarizing the legal actions now
available to victims.
Faculty member* a r t: Edna Abell, Altamonte Springs
Police Department; Kathy Anderson, Coordinator, "We
C a re "; Nina Casaady, Fa m ily Department Coordinator,
Circuit Court; K aren Casalese, University of Central Florida;
Carol Cohen, Couaelor, C I T E , Valencia Community College;
Undo Kuen, Director, Victim Services, Seminole County;
Chris R ay, Stale Attorney's Office; and Ellen S p irry , Special
Services, Seminole County Mental Health Center.

"Y o u n g -at-Heart" dance. 8 p.m ,, DeBary Communlty Center, Shell Road, D eBary. Instruction, T;30
p m .. Open to public.
Memorial Day ceremonies by Seminole County
Veterans of Foreign W ars, 1 p .m ., All Faiths Memorial
Park, la ke Drive, Casselberry. Open to public.
C entril Florida Blood Bank mobile unit, 1:30 a.m. to
1:30 p.m , AH Souls Church parking lot, 9th and Oak,
Sanford. F o r information call 322-3693.
M O N D A Y , M A Y 23
Sanford At-Anoo, 8 p.m ., F irs t United Methodist
Church, Sanford.
Sanford A A , t p m , 1201 W. F irs t St.
TO P S Chafgrr 71, 7 p.m ., over Baptist Church,
Crystal la k e and Country Club, fake M ary.

To register call Nursing Education, Seminole Memorial
Hospital, 332-4311.

Philips
D e co ra ting D en
Is A C o m p le te
Professional
D e co ra tin g
Service

A NEW
DECOR
FOR
YOUR HOME
We Can Turn Those
Decorating D r u m s Into
A Boawtitvl Roslltyl

LETS PLAN TOGETHER...
E arthw orm g its is is rep ute d to be a good curs fo r s tiff

Sanford B ig Book A A , 7 p .m ., Florida Power aril
Light, Sanford.

Fee ts t i l per person and U for students. The seminar ts
approved for five Continuing Education hours, Florida State
Board of Nursing.

With O ur Etpert Know How And Your Personal Tastes
In Decor Wa Can give Your Home The Look You
Want—

Joints.

Ballroom and round dancing, 1 p.m ., Temple
Shalom, Providence and E lk ca m Boulevards, Deltona.
Seminole AA, 3 p .m ., open, Crossroads, 391 lake
Minnie D rive , Sanford.

SKIRTS
You can s k irt the
s u m m e r s c e n e In
s t r a ig h t ,
p le a te d ,
w ra p o r e ven split
skirts, In cotton, d e n­
im or poly blends
And , of co u rse , coor­
d in a te d
to p s !
A ll
pleasantly p rice d .

DRAPERIES* CARPETING
WALLCOVERING • VINYL

SCULPTURED
NAILS

NO
O B L IG A T IO N

FREE
E S T IM A T E S

(305) 322-3315 or

mice

CATHV MOILICA

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PHILIPS

SALLE T — TAF — JAZZ — JA IIIX IR C IS S — a ALL ROOM
ilOIMNIMO THAU ADVANESO
CHILOAEM — TtENS — ADULTS
M r FwrWttt lnl»rnuli*n Call if Slip a*
ALSO
VFRCIAL SIOIITRATION HOUftt
a u v

tilt ELM AVE

t r a i l j u n i ] a «. 1:14a* w s iN fo w .

SAT , JUNEII*t H i m Until Naai
SANFORD

» j.t

Decorating Den
In Businas* Sine* less
l t » Wasl n t h St.
Sanford

. iJ

t

Jana and Wally Phtilpa

u s m ia iT s ia t r t T .
tiN so to

an mini

f

�»t '

Evening H tfiM .S a nfo rd, FI.

In And Around Sanford

Rocking Chair Squadron Beckons Norris
The Invitation read that W illia m A . Norria
S r., A T C USN , R e t would be inducted into
the R ocking C h a ir S q u a d ro n , A c tiv e
Branch, on May 11 with a c e m m f ty M a y I I
at the Idyllwiide home of B ill Norria and his
wife, Jean.
Navy chow w ill be a m e d , the Invitation
said.
So B ill Norria has reached his 10th bir­
thday, but we doubt seriously that the
rocking chair will have him — now or ever.
Over X Navy friends and others were on
hand for the celebration when eaL drink and
be m erry was the order of the evening.
A table on the enclosed porch — in a
setting of plants — was literally loaded with
downhome food and dishes popular with the
N avy. Detish!
Jean’s lifelong ‘sister' friend, Sidney
Ashley, arrived from Madison to help Jean
as cohostess. Also attending were the
N orris' daughter Jo Arline, and her
children. Tom m y, Am ber and Nikki, from
DeLand.
Everybody seemed to have lota of fun if
the party breaking up at 2 : 1} a m Is an
indication of a good time.
If you should see D r. and M rs . lads Peres
(she's D r. Maria Peres), wish them a
belated happy B th anniversary
Th e popular Sanford couple celebrate*
their silver wedding anniversary on M ay X ,
Cuban liberation Day.
We wish them many m ore happy an­
niversaries.
M ay 11-20 marked a big event at Bayhead
Racquet Club — the first Ladies Only
Member-Guest Tournament.
According to Peggy T y r e , 24 teams
participated in the 3«day affair “ which in­
cluded some fabulous feasting s i well as
super tennis in an atmosphere of friendly
competition."
Members brought picnic lurches to share
Monday and were served wine and cheese
while afternoon matches were played.
Peggy said, “ Tuesday, m em bers did their

Sweet Sixteen’

of Dance, has been appropriately entitled, "Sweet Six­

door.
The Broadway-type varie ty show will nm the gamut
from tiny pre-schoolers to the advanced dancers of Ballet
Guild of Sanford-Seminole.

O UR SELVES
Editor

\

BALLROOM
DANCING

thing with a covered dish luncheon, co­
ordinated to the last detail, and fantastic In
taste, decor and hospitality."
Serving on the committee with Peggy
w ere B ttly R e a g a n , S y lv ia M c N u lty ,
Maggee Harper and Nancy Morgan.
Winners of the final matches were: first
round consolation, J a n Renaud and Karen
Newman; second round consolation: Kathy
G ra y and Ju d y H a bw orth . The Grand
winners were Jeanette Alexander and Flo
Arnold.
J

JOIN THE FUN.JUNE 9lh
THRU JUNE 30th

D O N 'T SIT THIS

ONE OUTI
T U E S E V E N IN G ? :0 0 lo t;M
IN D IV ID U A L S
COUPLES

Katherine H eagerty, daughter of M r. and
M rs. Ju n e s H eagerty (P eggy W right) of
Bradenton, was gradusted cum laude on
May 10 from Duke University Medics!
School.
Katherine la the granddaughter of Mrs.
Margaret Z, W rig h t and the late H r . James
Wright. M argaret said Katherine will

D IM

111*

(Softool of ^Dance Shirts
FOR FU RTM SS IN F O R M A TIO N C A L L OS IT O P R Y
ALSO

S P E C IA L R E G I S T R A T I O N H O U R S :

mntfcw her ritritew nt the University

Angela Marie Buchanan, Treasurer of the
United States, is the scheduled speaker as
Samfcrd University, Birm ingham , A la ,
graduates one of its largest classes in
history.
Samford'i C um berland School of Lew will
hold graduation exercises Sunday, M ay &gt;4.
U S. District Jud ge H a rry E , C lair home of
L a i V egas,« SMI Cum berland alumnus, Is
the guest speaker.
Robert Hunter Pflueger of Sanford will
graduate. Doctor of Jurisprudence, from
Cumberland School of Law .

of

In celebrating the 16th anniversary of the School
Dance Arts in Sanford, the annual Spring Recital, A Night

teen."
About MO dance artists w ill perform Saturday at 8 p m .,
and Sunday, i t J ; 30 and I p m. Tickets are available at the

Doris
Dietrich

North Carolina this sum m er and transfer to
Florida State U n ive rsity this la L
Katherine la a registered nurse reechlng
for a career as a m edical doctor.

Sunday, M iv » ,

DUl Norris, right, serves authentic navy chow to Dr. and Mrs. Sieve
Sutherland and daughter, Sarah, during "rocking chair ceremonies.”

AMERICAS FAMILYDfJUG STORE

V,
H:

M A V IIA II. J U N l 14* ! :)• » m t * IO » F »
SAT.. J U N I SIR*.»«• nt U N T IL NOON

y •J

1JM SIM A VS., SAN FOR O WJ-IMS

**rf;

O H IC IO R S

M IR IA M W R IO H T A V A L E R IS W lL I^ ,p

You're going to like
our Pharmacy.
KKh(clw&lt;hi«&gt;mMfi||I^Mr WfrneOMftMMN* •*» •
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yewn#*0 * Artd h* **#.» tr+t le M*f t*s&gt;wwtog
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Ha cart* t hovel pOME heeW

Miss Harden 'Outstanding'
Dana Harden, a former student at
la k e Brantley High School, has made
outstanding acco m p lish m e n t at the
University of Tennessee where she is a
Junior.
Miss H arden has been elected
president of her sorority, Delta G am m a,
and she Is “ little sister" to Sigma Phi
Epsilon fraternity.
She w a i selected as one of 11 girls from
app ro tlm a U ly S O to be student orien­

HAPPY 9STH
BIRTHDAY!

tation assistant. Am ong her other honors,
Miss Harden is the recipient of the
Foundation National Scholarship Award.
Her sister, C in dy Harden, is a fresh­
man at U .T . this year and is a member of
Delta G am m a and she la on the
scholarship committee.
Tha students are the daughters ot Mrs.
Mildred M . Harden ot Longwood, and the
granddaughters of M r . and M rs . Robert
M iller, Sanford.

Cay West erf if Id. left, vice president ofythe San­
ford Chapter American Association of Retired
Persons (AARP) assists May Kubow with opening
cards on her 9Sth birthday, May 10. A celebration
was held at the Sanford Civic Center for Mrs.
Rubow who Is a charter m em ber of the Sanford
Chapter AARP and also the registrar.

SCC Leisure Time Classes
Th e following classes begin
during the weeks of June l
and I under the leisure Tim e
Program at Seminole Com­
munity College.
W U SHU RUNG F U (evening d a * ) - One of the
oldest known martial arts.
The purpose of Kung F u Is not
only self-defense, but also
ph ysica l
and
m ental
discipline.
K A R A T E -(e v e n i n g d a is )
— Designed to teach the
fundamentals of the Japanese
style C h ito ry u : basic exer­
cises, kicks, punches, and
blocks. The d a is is open to
beginners, as w til as ad­
vanced students.
A E R O B IC
D A N C E -E X ­
E R C IS E - (morning, noon
and evening da ises) — A
physical fitness course in­
volving rigorous exercise to
m u s k . Different routines a n
taught with the tm phasii on
dancing for movement and

exercise.
S U M 'N T R I M (m o rning, afternoon and evening
dasaes) — Designed to in­
crease flexibility, endurance,

energy, to release tension, to
becor.’M mare aw are of proper
diet, to lose Inches, and to
develop proper pasture and
breathing habita.

Search Is On F6r
Outstanding Dad
June 21 Is Father's Day.
The Herald Is searching lor the annual “Outstanding
D a d ," but we need the help of readers.
Te ll us in your own words why you think a certain father
Is outstanding. First, w rits your nam e, full address and
telephone number at the top of a page. Th e n add the name
of your candidate, giving h it full nam e, address and
telephone number. About i page and one-half of In­
formation on standard sue paper Is sufficient.
Subm it entries to O U R S E L V E S E d ito r Dons Dietrich,
in noon
noon on
&lt;
300 N . French A v t., Sanford, 32771, no later than
June 11.

You're Going to Like Eckerd's Famous Photo Offer!

M

Tw ice the Prints
or frietk end whrte p'Mral ’dm OeveiopeiJ enx) prm§e4
TODAY AMO IVIAYOAY

Tw ice the Film m e m i w i i t t iK R w
ot Mick and *M a. ehe* you lute rout Mm m « c* n N
Ml t ct a tilt TOOAV AND IVMYDAV
Tw ice the Guarantee
NO tn aaH U NI t Ih# goal M l Cl F t pcfcst MLng

^ V f %* V W M M M v y b

OPEN D A ILY ! to I , SUN DAY A M EM ORIAL DAY 10 lo 7 SalePrtcaa good thru Wad. May 271
W l A llS O V I T N I WONT TO LIMIT O U A N T IT III
RMARMACT l i a v K I AVAIL I S I S ID HOURS IR STORSI U I T I O SHOW

i n a o o ii M i l to AOoent

U N FORD M l Pals it Sinfart PUta

LONGWOOD Mwt » t l i t S.R. 04
4M Center, N t S.R. 434
CASSELBERRY: Wmwali plats 10) SeRMria I h r i
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS HI W «if S.R. 4U, 04 E A lU m * * O u t
O R AN CI CITY: Mur Tttftrt S N ffu if C t«* f

_______
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N o o n . I* tu rf » h » t S * r H iram IW garman built I S . d a m — M m ay

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rtfctthlng beauty to tha country-aid*.

Sunday
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Thar* h* and h it t o m tpenl m o d o l a century grinding c o m for thalr

Wedneiday

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Hit detcandantt ramambar Hiram at “a God fearing man.” Not
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to have a deep ratpact for th* Source of all entrgy.
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iptrttual roomcra of your church or tynagogu*. Go where th* Energy III

Pulmt
97:1-12

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Psalms
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The Following Sponsors Moke This Church Notice And Directory Page Possible1
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SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY
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�RELIGION

Evening Hertld, Sanford. FI.

Briefly
Curls Sing At Oviedo
First Baptist Church
A m ini-concert of Christian music w ill be presented
during the 7 p.m . worship service of the F irs t Baptist
Church of Oviedo this Sunday by BUI snd Lucy P » t Curt
from the F irs t Baptist Church of Orlando.
B ill C u rl, associate pastor of First Baptist came to
Orlando In 1971 from Mt. Sterling,Ky, where he was pastor
of the F irs t Baptist Church for seven years. A native of
Kentucky, B ill Is a graduate of Georgetown College (B A )
and Southern Baptist Seminary IM . D iv .). P rio r to the Mt.
Sterling pastorate, he served Rosemont Baptist Church In
Lexington as associate pastor, lie and his wife, the former
Lucy Pat Redding of Georgetown, K y., have four children.
Th e public is Invited to worship sendee where the Curls
will be singing and Pastor Bill M arr w ill be preaching.

Sunday, May 14, INI—IB

By Presbyterian Croups

U.S. Infant Formula Vote Protested
H O U STO N ( U P I l - Th e nation's
two largest Presbyterian groups
elected leaders at their annual
meetings Wednesday and voiced
opposition to the United States'
dissenting vote on an Internationa)
code for infant formula marketing.
The Presbyterian Church In the
U.S., with 643,000 mem bers tn 16
southern states, elected Dorothy
B a rn a rd as its second w om an
moderator. She Is a ruling elder
from St. Louis, who recently moved
to Nsples, Fla .
The United Presbyterian Church
in the U S A ., with 2.4 milltati
members concentrated In northern

slates, elected the Rev. Robert M.
Davidson of
N ew
Y o rk
as
moderator.
The U P C U S A 's 600-plus delegates
also voted to telegraph support for
an inte rna tiona l infan t fo rm u la
m arketing code to P reside nt
Reagan. The action cam e just before
the United States cast a dissenting
vote at Wednesday's W orld Health
Assembly meeting In New York.
The P CU S began Its meeting too
late (or floor action on the code,
which passed despite U .S . op­
position. T h e P C U S issued a
statement pointing out it was the
first church body in this country to

boycott products of the Nestle Co., a
major supplier of Infant formula to
developing nations.
That move came In 1978, and
United Presbyterians followed suit
In 1979. Boycott supporters say in­
fant formula is generally inferior to
mothers' milk and is often overly
diluted or mixed with impure water
in developing nations.
Davidson was elected to succeed
the Rev. Charles A . Hammond of
West tefayette, Ind , on the second
ballot with 347 votes. He outpolled
the Rev. M a rg a re t T o w n e r of
Waukesha County, Wise., with 236
voles and the Rev. Keith R.
Shinaman of Marcellos, N .Y .. with

26 votes.
Barnard drew 203 first ballot votes
In the concurrent meeting of her
denomination to succeed the Rev.
David Stitt, pastor of the Bellaire,
Texas, Presbyterian Church. She
defeated Ihe R e v . A A . " B i l l "
Markley I II of Fayeltevllle, N.C..
who garnered 168 votes.

on the corn id e m u iity of counseling
sessions between clergy and their
followers.

The meetings, which last through
May 26, w ill consider a variety of
internal matters and take positions
on social issues.

Th e issue was sparked by a
Presbyterian m inister's being cited
for contempt of court at a M ay 14
bail hearing for a parishioner in
McKinney, Texas. Th e Rev. Ronald
P. Salfen of The Colony, • Dallas
suburb, refused to answer a judge's
questions about what a church
secretary charged with a crim e told
him during counseling sessions.

The Rev. Mac H a rt of Dallas,
general Presbyter of Grace Union
Presbytery, said Wednesday both
groups will be asked lo take a stand

The Texas Court of Crim inal
Appeals
w ill
hear
S alfe n's
arguments that the conversation Is
confidential In a M ay 26 hearing.

New Meeting Place

Checking Up On The Confessional

D r. Ja y T . Cosmato, pasta* of the Seminole Heights
Baptist C hurch, announces that activities of the church w ill
be in the Covenant Presbyterian Church, H ighw ay 17-91 i t
la k e M a ry Boulevard, this Sunday evening rather than nt
the Seminole H igh School as usual. The schedule w ill in­
clude Youth Choir at i p m .; Ornrch Training at 6. and the
worship service at 7.

1 threatened several m wka back to check up on the cootesii onals in the Catholic Church and to rate them as I have
lurch servks
services ( from one to 11 stars) for Ihe past
been rating church
three years.
threat raised ■ loud outcry trom catholics wiw m h ! that
nvade the sacramental precincts in such a manner would be
fraudulent and sacrilegious
A columnist for a diocesan paper, under the headline, " la y
off the confessional. G eorge," wrote that Ihe sacrament of
penance (o r reconcllatlon, as It is now called) Is "too sacred,
too private, too Important lor any kind of public ‘rating’." 1
backed off - not, however, because I scare easily but because,
as a rcm-Catholic, I didn't think I could do Use job which a
number of Catholics have told m e needs to be done.
Are they right?
Th e May Issue of " U S . Catholic" magazine has a cover
story on "10 rttsons why Catholics have stopped going to

Focus On The Family
Th is Sunday night, at 6:30 p.m. Pinecrest Baptist Church
presents the fifth of D r. James C. Dobson l l t n series,
"Focus on the F a m ily ." This week's title Is "P repa ring for
Adolescence: Peer Pressure and Sexuality." The film ia
open to the public.

Comm/tmenf Emphasis
St. Paul Missionary Baptist Church, 113 Pine A v e ., will
celebrate its Annual Christian Commitment Emphasta Day
this Sunday at 11 a m. Mrs. Annie Ruth Brow n, of M iam i,
will be the guest speaker. At the 3 p m . service, the Rev.
Samuel I . Stallworth J r ., of lakeland and the Mt. Pleasent
A M E Church Choir will be the guests. Rev. Amos Jones is
pastor of SI. Psul.

confession."
Here are some quotes from that story:
— "Catholics are losing confidence in their parish priests'
ability to understand and relate to the real-life trials in the

Spiritual Renewal Service
Th e Stewards of Alien Chapel A M E Church, 1103 Olive
Ave., Sanford, w ill sponsor ■ time of Spiritual Renewal
Service for "SO Men in Black and SO Women in W h ite," this
Sunday at I I a m . Mrs. Betty R. Washington w ill be the
speaker of the hour. Guest choir will be T h e E lk s Chorus
and the M arching Men of New Mt. Calvary Baptist Church
will serve as ushers. Rev. J .ll. Woodard la pastor of Allen
Chape L

Christian Women Meet
Altamonte-MatUand Christian Women's C u b w ill hold its
May Brunch T h u n d a y at 9 45 a m. at the M aitland Civic
Center. Spring flower silk arrangements w ill be demon­
strated by Stapleton Florist. The speaker w ill be Robin
Streets and m usic by Cockle Joyner, both of lakeland.

O rder O f St. Luke
Th e Rev. George H. Back, acting dean of St. tekes
Cathedral, Orlando, will be speaking on "A biding in thy
Healer" at the M a y 26 meeting of the G reater Orlando
Chapter of the O rd er of St. luike the Physician at 7:43 p.m .,
at A ll Saints Episcopal Church, 336 E . Lym an A ve., Winter
Park. A priest at the cathedral for two years, the speaker
was ordained 14 years ago and has had much experience in
the healing m inistry. He was chaplain for the O rd er of St.
Izike in Central Masaachusetts and has taught healing
seminars.
There w ill be laying on of hands and anointing following
the meeting which is open to the public. Refreshments will
be served at the fellowship time.

Community Capers
Com m unity Capers, a family night variety thow
featuring m em bers of Community United Methodist
Church of Casselberry, w ill be held at 6:30 p.m . Sunday in
the felbwshtp hall. Refreshments will be served following
the program . Master of Ceremonies will be te n Nicholas.
Following the family night program, youth of (he church
will hare a "lock in " at the church prior to a trip to the
beach for a sunrise service and day of fun.

Graduates Feted
Th e Sanford Church of God will honor its high school
graduates w ith a dinner at the Polynesian Hotel at Disney
World F rid a y nighL Graduates include lands Grissom ,
J t m i Me Alexander, Eugene Death*, and Diane C a rp w n trr,
all of Seminole H igh School; Beth Moorer, Ly m a n High
School and Brenda Richardion, Seminole Com m unity
College.

Circles To Meet
Circles of D e B ary United Methodist Women w ill meet
Tuesday a l the following times and places: M artha- 9:30
a m. at the home of Mrs, Ethel Weller. 40 Columbine T r a il
for coffee and buns; Ruth, l :M pan., church parlor; M a ry ,
1:30 p.m ., home of Sarah Mitthews, 117 Coronado D rive ;
Esther, 1:30 p m . home of Mrs. M ildrrd Jensen, 140 Buena
Vista Street for a picnic meeting.

Spring Ingathering
lloiy Cross Episcopal Church will observe f. sceruton Day
Thursday with the Spring Ingathering of the United Thank
Offering of the Women of the Church at the 10 a .m . service.

Comnt/ss/on/ng Serv/ce
Richard Johnston, ministerial intern at Sanford Church
of God last year, w ill be truest preacher Sunday at the
church in the absence of the pastor D.K. Gunter. Th e Rev.
and M rs. G unter w ill be In Cleveland. Tenn., far the intern
commissioning service for the current ministerial Intern
G ary W alker.

Philip Weeks To Speak
The R ev. P hilip Weeks, teacher and preacher whose
radio broadcast is heard each weekday morning over Station
W A JL , w ill be guest of Holy Cross Episcopal Church,
Sanford, this S u nd ry at the 10 a.m service snd the luncheon
to follow. Those attending are asked to bring cold covered
dish foods.

WOMENS DAY SPEAKER
Kathleen Gordon of St. Mark African Methodist
Episcopal Church, Orlando, will be guest speaker
at the annual Women's Day this Sunday at It a.m.
al the Nrw Bethel AMK Church, Sanford. At 3:30
p.m. the Women of liethcl will sponsor a musical
program.

United Methodists
Convene In Lakeland
On Monday at l p.m . the
139th Florida Annual Con­
ference of the
U n ite d
Methodist Church trill con­
vene
tn
H ra n s c o m b
Auditorium Florida Southern
College, Lak ela nd. B ish op
E a rl G . Hunt J r . will be
presiding ove r his firs t
Annual Conference as the
Bishop of the Flo rida Ares.
The Conference closes on
Friday noon, with a time of
worship and the reading of the
pastoral appointm ents by
Bishop Hunt.
A special worship service at
7:30 p.m. will be led by Bishop
Hunt and wit] feature special
music by combined choux
from ihe lakeland area, and a
sacred dance choir from the
Broadway United Methudiit
Church, Orlando.
The Tuesday session w ill
begin at 6.43 a.m . with a
Memorial Communion Ser­
vice ,
recognixing
those
members of the Conference
who have died since the
Annual Conference in May of
I960, and c e le b ra tin g Ihe
communion of all the saints.
A high petal o( any Annual
Conference is the Ordination

out and set-apart m inistry.
Those
consecrated
as
diaconal m inisters re ta in
their U y status within the
church, while being called to
full-time Christian service.
The speakers for the 1981
Annual Conference, in ad­
dition to Bishop Hunt, w ill be:
the Rev. D r. O sw ald P .
Bronson,
president
of
Belhune-Cookman
College,
Daytona Beach;
B ishop
R obert E . G o o d rich , J r . ,
of Houston, Te x a s;
^J,lines W. Henley, of
former Bishop of
Area; and the
the
George G . Hunter
faihville, Tenn.
H I.
Dr. Bronson, a member of
the Florida Conference and
former Sanford resident, w ill
spesk an Thursday evening
during the worship hour.

THEY'VE COME
A LONG WAY

Service (or E ld e rs
and
Deacons. Th is ye a r there w ill
be 26 persons who have been
recom m ended
for
F u ll
Connection (E id e rs O rd e rs );
24 for Probationary M e m ­
bership (Deacons O rd e rs );
and three tor Associate
Membership.
A ms jar portion of Ihe time
an Wednesday has been set
aside (or • presentation by the
Florida Conference Council
on M inistrie s;
both
of
program proposals for 1982,
and Information on current
programs in progress for 1981.
The Council t* the program
a rm
for
the
U n ite d
Methodists, and as such is
responsible for all such events
within the Florida Area.
The laity organizations of
the United Methodist Church
and the F lo rid a A n n u a l
Conference will report on
Thursday morning, and the
Consecration of to persons
into Ihe Dtaconal M inistry
will be a highlight of Ihe
evening session. According to
the 1180 D is c ip lin e , ihe
diaconal
m in is tr y
is
recognized by the U n ite d
Methodist Church as a called-

dally lives of their parishioners,
'* Can you honestly see yourself,' asks a 33-year-old career
woman, 'going with a serious m oral problem to either the
newly ordained seminarian in his 20s or the crusty old veteran
who hasn't entertained a new idea in 40 years?’ "
— "lan ds is a 29-year-old homemaker and mother who has
been a Catholic only since she was 21.
" ‘Th e fln t time l went to confession,' she says, 'I came
away feeling foolish. Th e priest dealt with m y concerns in s
simplistic, superficial way. M y second experience was no
better. I haven’t been back lor a third try .' "
— "Catholics who continue to go to confession are often
embarrassed or hurt by priests who im ply that some of Ihe sins
they confess are nothing more than trivialities.
** ‘I really resent priests who m ake me feet Uke m y sins are a
waste of time,' comments • nurse-homemaker."
— " A t least part of the blame for (he dropoff in confessions
falls on priests, according to Fath e r Pierre Htssey, 40, who is
with the Missionsry Servants of the Moat Holy Trin ity.
“ ‘A good reason why m any Catholics are turned off to
confession,' says Fr. Hissey, 'is the poor quality of many
priests. Fo r a long time priests have shown ■ sometimes ob­
vious disinterest in the sacrament ’ "

Sa/nfs And Sinners
G E O R G E 1’ U G K N Z

m

.

If I were to rate the confessionals, I would not be the first. A
weekly newspaper in Boston caUed "Real P aper" sent a
reporter anonymously to eight Catholic churches last fall to
"confess" that he had used drugs, had frequent sex, etc.
He also confessed - and this was the real reason for the
paper's stunt - that he had voted for one of the proabortion
candidales who came under Cardinal Humberto Madetrus' fire
before the November election.
O nly one of Ihe eight priests who listened to the reporter s
confession spoke of the proabartlon vote with disapproval.
Some didn’t mention it at all when It came to giving penance
and absolution.
Th e scheme was hatched by the editor of "Heal P aper." He
was enraged that Msdetrns could presume to tell people how lo
vole after Rep. Robert Drinan of Massachusetts was forced by
the pope to resign his seat tn Congress because tt was deemed
inappropriate for a priest to be involved in politics.
“ The P ilo t," the archdioceaan paper In Boston, called the
invasion of the confessional " a new na d tn in blasphem y."
Maybe so. But, as the article tn " U S . Catholic" magazine
shows, m any Catholics are dissatisfied with the confessional
and would probably welcome a little scrutiny of the
sacrament. Some complain that confession has becon&gt;e
roullnlied, a mechanics) exercise In which penllstiU are given
perfunctory penances to perform
Novelist E dith Wharton once said, "M ost wrong-doing works
less mischief than its useless confession."
There Is, however, another view of confession, fn s day of
relativism , it m ay keep us mindful that same things are right
and some are wrong. There ran be no reformation of life until
we recognize that
As the unfaithful iand uneasy) wife in "Sam e Tim e Next
Y e a r" said, " In the Catholic Church at least you know where
you stand."
Th a t m ay not be everything but It is something.

Celebrating Ihe 3Sth anniversary of the founding of Ihe Good Sam aritan
Home In Sanford Sunday at an open house, from tell, the llev. H rrrklah lluss,
pastor of the Free Mill Holiness Church, who Ird a praise service; Timothy
Wilson, president uf Ihe home and husband of the founder, the late Mother
Huby Wilson, and Deacon Charlie Lyons, who has hrlped Ihe home since Us
inception.

YOUTH WORKER
Mlcharl D. Murray be­
gan his duties as Kcminolr Heights Baptist
Church summer &gt;outh
worker on May 14. A
religion major, he just
completed his sopho­
more year at Stetson
University. Licensed
to preach in 1979, he
plans a career in the
ministry. He is active
in the Baptist Campus
.Ministry and served on
Youth Revival Teams
last summer. The son
of the Kev. and Mrs. A.
Darrel .Murray, his fa­
ther is jtaslor of Lake
Shore Baptist Church
of Jacksonville.

FRIENDS DAY

The Finger of God Touches Your Life When You Make a Friend
iiirin r lur in r iimu.u r tuiun tinu r n n iu s i t&amp;y nnci a \ tion uopt* .illusion
Baptist Church. From left, Mrs. Kathleen Gordon, guest speaker, Orlando;
Mrs. Bernice King, co-chairman; Mrs. Betty Washington, find place winner
of the Family and Friend Contest; Mrs. Shelia King, second place winner;
Mrs. Mary L. Fears, third place winner; Mrs. Kvelyn Clark, chairm an and
Mrs. Mary L. Clark, co-chairman.

�I f t - g v t n l f H Herald, Sanford, FI.

BLONDIE

Sunday, May U. Itll

by Chic Young

across

I H*f» I

to Frpwouo Furrli

2 Em m id 111*
3 Esns
4 Figpn

husband

5 Afncsn Mbon

9 Fag
9 Dsttroy (K )
12 Isn t |sl|
13 Aleutian

9 Olnnnulwt tut-

island

14 Amoncan
Indian
15 Hawkl
vtctiiws

HOROSCOPE

c -iO E -Jt.iio in n r.i

lu * n o t i l
■praanalnnu
unnnon■nnnonn
unnnnrit] nnn
nenn ratio nuu By BERNICE BEOEOSOL
nan nnnn anno
M u n n accn
pnunnn enrjI I I m l For Sunday, May 24, 1981
□onn nnnu
Q I : in raa
vtslng others
YOUR BIRTHDAY
inna
if *

fti
7 Fomil* Mint
Ubtor)
I Cm

9 Fuiblo Indun
10 Egypbin duty
II Elthnr |7r |

19 Fhysician's is * T dlTa« Ino ial n

19 Article
locution
17 And aot
jebbr)
I I VM1 sipsnM 21 li n k brssd
19 Mtasure o» 23 Soutc* ot

i . i t )I
[ g lmi un m
’ I ■L» j o l T f * !

n it
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39 Attronlutl

land

»

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odd!

meui
-Ill righ r
4 } Mono____
74 Chowickt
„
plinbng
22 City In Itity
l*M »)
24 Watchword 25 Brownt
39
Housewife's
tt**
l« W »
25 Four fpruflil 29 lUptuUm
M flbbr)
metniiM
27 Biiittind
27 Orngy
41AlCopp
47 Imtitoo
21 South Atncin
Chlricto*
11 S'**
31 Crimp
tnbo
32 Oecombu*
42 Collogo
eontsmors
29 food
long
30 HOuling
Ithlotx group * ' f W *99*
33 Egypt (ibbf |
wigon
43 Epoch!
** * * * * *
34 Hockey
32 9iWc*l
licit horo 44 Cornpinion ot
issgus libbr) 35 Dinner
court!
35 CoHngt build­
ing tor ibort
to 111!
.
1 T“ I 4
r s T 1
39 High ( l i t )
1
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37 Highprotem
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food
ft
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39 Ratty

70 Soul*

40
41
42
45
49
49
50

Clgii rendu*
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Clumsy boil
AiquirH
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Found!(Sbbr|
11 IS
Whuk
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34 Flown
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S6 S u i t ot
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burden
17 Sundir
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51 H iidllnd
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WIN AT BRIDGE
By t h w iM J iro b y
io d A U a So*lag
When jroq have • part score
of M or more the opening one
notrump U a bid of fame
Combine that with the normal
d n ir e o( nearly all bridge
player* to bio tha t in t
notrump and we find player*
who use a notrump range of
14 to 20
We like to bid notrump at
much a t anyone, but we
deplore this misuse Instead.
we recommend that It
normal range
eatend It to I S -I t and it your
normal range In IS-11 you
eatend It to 11-19 We abo
recommend that you always
prefer a fire-card suit to
notrump In other words, don't
open notrump with S-3-3-1 If

n

you h * «* ■ big p u rl score

P R IS C IL L A 'S
_________ V

POP

A W .C O W E O f i W M
L B T 'M E I N - T M
K E A U Y HUNGRV'

b y E d S u lliv a r

The direct raise to two
notrump la clearly a slam try.
but it should be a very mild
one and only aik for a further
bid by opener if be haa a
maaim um Assuming the nor­
mal one notrump is l l - t l .
responder needs at feast I t
good points to raise to two
Slayman should be used
with these high part w o rn ,
hut not w ithout enough
strength to be willing to play
in two notrump
L e f t look at some sample
hands opposite one no trump

l . ) S-KQI4l l

KJIID-

a a a C • J a Respond two

how to handle
their complicated social af­

A w ilt-th o u g h t-o u t game
plan la essential for you In the

fairs.
SCORPIO (O ct 24-Nov. 22)

year ahead. Without it you
could be lo dlsorganixed you'd
dilate y o u r c h in c c i for
succtts.
G E M IN I (M a y 21J u n e 20)
You may gel an opportunity
today to be i big help In
leaching another how to look
for that which is good in
people, instead of that which
U bad. Find out more of what
Uei ahead far you In the year
following your birthday by
sending for your copy of
AstroG raph. M a il f l for each
to A it r o -G r a p h , B os 489,
Radio C it y S ta tio n. N .Y .
10019. Be sure lo specify birth

This is a guod day to Invite
persons to your place to be
entertained who have feted
you previously. M ake it a

date.

■
■

May 24, 1391

c'uhs and pass a major suit
rerponse. but bid two notrump
o v rr two diamonds T h u is not
a slam try.
2 ) S - K Q M H - K J I t D *
A 7 S C • J 2 Respond two
club* Raise either major to
three aa a m ild ila m try or
rebid three notrump over two
diamonds if you feel sdven
turous
3 I S - K Q 9 H - K J 9 D - A
7 3 3 C - J a a Just pass one
notrump Your 4-3-3-J distri­
bution makes thU hand unat­
tractive Change the jack of
clubs to the queen and you
should bid two notrum p while
make that jack into the king
and you can afford a jum p to
three
4 IS - K Q I II • 2 D - A Q 10
I 3 1 C ■ K 7 4 Respond three
diamonds T h U U a lirclng
btd If partner lim p ly retrtdi
three notrump. you should
p a n If he bids (our diamonds
you can go to five or past
depending on what your
partner's bidding style U If
partner bids a new suit, be U
accepting your slam try and
you should bid the slam
With a part score of 30 or
40. the raise to two notrump
may be given with as little as
sia points You are trying foe
game Now the raise in three
is a mild ila m try and shows
the same strength that a raise
to two shows when you have
40 on score
iHKtttraiujt tim u tra u a : assn i

by Larry Wright

C A N C E R (Ju n e 21-July 22)
Th ere Is a good chance
someone w ill come upon your
srene today and Indirectly
show you how to bypass an
obstacle which has had you
blocked for a tong Ume.
L E O ( J u l y 23-Aug. 22)
Others know that your word Is
gospel Tod ay, you m ay find
out just how m uch they
respect and appreciate this
quality In you. Y o u r loyalty
will be rewarded.
V IR G O (A u g . 13-Sept. 22)
Although the pay m ay be
small in dollars and cents, the
acknowledgement and praise
you receive today for a Job
well done w ill be priceless.
LIB R A (S epL 23-Oct. 23)
Y ou're adept at h and ling
personal relationships today.
You're also capable of ad-

m erry group.
S A G IT T A R IU S (N o v . 23Dec. 21) An opportunity m ay
present Itself todsy to gain the
attention of someone whose
cooperation you need.
C A P R IC O R N (D e c . 23-Jan.
19) Work on things today
which can contribute to your
security and feelings of well­
being. Contact individuals you
feel can be helpful.
A Q U A R IU S (Ja n . 2D-Feb.
I I ) The reason others w ill put
tremendous stock in what you
say today is because they can
see from the example you set
that your counsel Is both wise
and workable.

PISCES (Fe b . 20-M arch 20)
The changes for the better for
which you've been hoping In s
matter imoortani to you and
your family should begin to
occur as of today.
A R IE S (M arch 21-Aprtl 19)
A social arrangement with an
older Individual should turn
out to your liking today. This
person will have ■ steadying
effect on you. Th is could
prove to be extremely helpful
T A U R U S (A p ril 20-May 20)
S o m e t h in g
f in a n c ia lly
beneficial Involving a project
on which you've spent con­
siderable Ume m ay finally
yield the fruits of your labor
today.

For Monday, May 25, 1901
Y O U R B IR T H D A Y
M a y lS , 1911
Persons with whom you
share sim ilar philosophical
views could play m ajor roles
In your affairs this coming
year. Their Input w ill help you
to expand your horim ru.
G E M IN I (M a y 21-June 29)
OccidonaDy everyone make*

mistake*.

If you make a

blunder today, adm it It rather
lhan try to hide It. Others will
respect you even m o re .
Romance,
tr a v e l,
luck ,
resources, possible pitfalls
and career for the coming
months are aU discussed tn
your A s tro -G ra p h w h ich
begins with your birthday.
Mail |1 tor
Graph, B u i
Station, N .Y .
specify birth

each lo Astro499, Radio C ity
10019. Be sure to
date.

C A N C E R (Ju n e 21-July 21)
Someone of whom you're not
loo fond m ay try to make
changes today, heptng tt w ill
benefit h im o r her. T h e
greatest advantage w ill ac­
crue to you.
L E O (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22) Not
everyone you encounter today
tn one-to-one relatio nsh ips
will be in harm ony with your
aims Be willing to make
adjustments if necessary.

SCORPIO |O c t 24-Nev. 22)
A grievance m ay arise with
someone st home today —
possibly your m a te . T h e
problem can be smoothed out
by being extra-nice in areas
where you do agree.
S A G IT T A R IU S (N e t . 23Dee. 21) Criticism w ill slow
co -w o rk trs to d a y .
W e lldeserved compliment* w ill
speed up production. If you
want to meet your quota,
chooM between being nice or
nasty.
C A P R IC O R N (D e c. 8 -Jan.
I I ) Y o u r possibilities for
material gain today are very
good, provided you utilise
your usual channels. Getting
off on tangents could prove to
be costly misadventures.
A Q U A R IU S (Ja a . 20-Feb.
I I ) Tim ing could spell the
difference between success
and failure
to day.
Be
assertive, but do n’t i t a r t
pushing until you get proper
“ go'' signals.
PISCES ( Feb. 20-M arrb 29 1
You might be caused some
Inconvenience todsy by being
accommodstlng. Suffer the
annoyance. Those you help
may do you a larger faver
later.
A R IE S |March 21-AprIl I I )
T r y to deep financial and
business m i lle r s out of
dealings with friends today.
A ll should ru n s m o o th ly ,
provided m a te ria l th ings
don't become issue*.
T A U R U S (A p ril 2 0 M a y 29)
Success w ill com e c a ll e r
today
If
you
aubdue
aggressive tendencies Strive
lo win the s u p p o rt of
associates, not to alienate
them.

by Dougbs Coffin

f-ih * .

�•&gt; » *

f o n d ly , M a f H , 1 M 1 -7 8

Evgning Herald, Sanford, PL

A MAHER OF RECORD
MARRIAGE
‘ APPLICATIONS
Thomai O. Lyora III, &gt; « l. M l
Oonon* Wy, C l 1 Roee.n 0.
* M l 141, w i n ydd
AUcbteet Wm Louie. 1014. 1M B
(.M c O v tf I n . c a . I
T trrl L.
Pollock. » 14. u m t odd
'* Todd 1 It m m t . 1114, too)
town* Or . AS. I l i m m a
Martin. I I 14. 400 longaei* A r e .
tot
BUtwrd T. Rebcer J r „ 114. M l
S . m . i ' f r Bl« I., t o t. a Elates
L. T * »l«r. 1 &gt;*. tamo odd
Henry E H j r r i . 4 44. la 144.
* Aalur.a IM ttr J N th o iv 1 41. I l l
Eattridoo Or . O r4094 city
lo ftrrr E Lapaintt. M l . 1414
&lt; Palm ettoA*«. Sen# .X Kowmery
*. M Matt,ton. t 14. 4101 /of m l City
»d . Or!
'
ta rry a otiihamton. 4 M. 414
N Park A v 4 . S a M .. a Annotta
anodtt. II M. tamo add
Hudson J Otoimor 4 11. Doltona.
‘ a Jacqvtl K Smith wick. n i l .
7.1 IS * El Portal O r , San#
Milton C. Doroo. I I I L 111
Carr 1490 Covo. Van# , a Jen* V
Coilmt. 114. 141 Carriaor Covo.
C Sant
Clonn E D em on. 1141. I l l 44
Ird S t . Sant, a Edna J Simmona.
* 1 St tamo odd
'i
Storm C Bryont. iota, all
Lonawood Cr. 44.. LW , a 1 termer
, A Dock. I I 4). u m t add
Radar! M Bodmctiuck. I 41. X!0
■■•Mild A ro . AS. a tmddlOO t .
V Mimt. 4 41144 E Or4094 Ava . A t
Bradford L r otay. II » , 1110
rranch Avo . Sant , a Nancy A
, ■ Matey. 4 St. tamo odd
hint ton I. lorguton. IIOS. 114
* SolmoOr . AS. a Corlrvdo Scott. S
14. 1004 Peltenen Avo . Orl
lavranco C. Pool* 4 41. I l l yy
14th S t . Son# , a Sony# O Pvekrtt.
' to 41. tomo odd
N t t h m M u rp h y , f .}| , m
t Acodomv k v f t » i t S p j i jy g
Parry, 1 14.10 H 1991m T t r r , Sen#
Howard E Eddy ) r , I ] 41. 1144
'i Ridyawood. Sony . a O01I 4 Eddy.
I 1 41. 1144 RidROwood. Sant
John l Trogteon. 10 44. I l l Palm
SpruiRt Dr . AS. a Farienen Fenl.
■ It 14. 401 Ihooon Bird . tel
Chortet E Millar, IB 14. I l l
Moimood C r . M l, a Karm L
" VAuRhl. 4 M. u m t add
«
M4f Ian G Holm wood. 19 tt. lo t
, AnRftot CA. a Lytsno P Trlbo. 1
41. u m t add
Rvttail P Marshall. 111. 1M4
I Snirlay Or . Apopka, a Undo C.
, Marma 1 44. 14 m f odd
Michool B P rttio r. I St 101
Drtoto S I. AS. a MiMrod A lim . 4
«0. Pi 114. Oviado
Sirpnm C Dang lemon, 140.
1104 Park A v * . Sant. a Suton C
Mynlor. 141. R T 1. B i 44. Sant
|
Ronoid E Drgortoni. 114. Rl l
t l 144. Sant . a Tam m y K Bit
chit. 1 41. B i 1S1. Garwva
Ewing M Hail. I X . IJOI'v M
Itl S I. Sant, a ElnoPath R
Chapman. 4 rn. tomo odd
Jomat R tm d to y. I M . 1140
' Ridgewood. Sant , a Eliiobath A
aonchy. 4 40. to m t Odd
Paul E
M ollarm on, 0 19.
Oaltono. a EMopoth M Monton, 4
&gt; a . I l l Mound It .. LM
Donate t Connors, 1 S4. II Elk
, wood C l . MS. a Nancy J
" Coos non. I M. tamo odd
,
Omar H MeG ohm . 111 Tohoo
S i. Apopka, a Catherine L. Do
Motllo, 141. SI atm I t l . N T
Thamtt A Vanhorn. S St 19 I
Devon A v a . MS. A Sendra J
Siarlor. 4 M. tamo odd
*
Wotlloy O Miranda. 1 44. Bt 41.
* t i l Orwma A v o . AS. a lite m
, Clahono. 4 SS. tarn# odd
John H McDermott. Jr., &gt;41.
SIS E 4)4 Prrn Pk . B Carol A
Hooker. 090 I t tome odd
Tarry J Johnson 4 » . Moutten
T i . a M.chaio G Def 410, 4 SI.
Moutron T i
km ry G Brown. 4 S4. 1411
bungalow Bind . Son# , a Cynthia
E Golden. 11 SI. 1M1 1 M Rd .
Ion#
Roy P Donnelly. It H . 1 »
■' Ptirlond Cr . Ion# . a Kothlom A
1 Pullsrilor. 141. tomo odd
George h Motthowt. 1 M. M il
M arrm A m . M i ld . a voiee,e V
Thompkint. &gt;44, tM aothuno C r .
Sam
Ronate C L * d * ,r. 4 41. l i t
' Made I t . MS. a Sandra K Angle.
» W 14. MM Grander**. Sant
n Car lot M Gonio1*#. II 44. I l l

Mild Hatty L A . IW . a A n w
RtRitedo. 141. I l l 1 Sunlond O r ,
S#n#
Phillip 0 M ilk er. » 44. I l f 4#n
S I. Chuhte**. a Ran** AA. Knap#,
1 I t tomo t d d r m

BUILDING PERMITS
Eaten t A d h ir. MM Iroouote.
Inttrter remodeling, U .too
teyra p Jetty, saa Rvtoiio O re
Alum toNlll Pot CIO. 1 0 4 4 .
M rt J. j Catex M l E . lath SI*
Retool. 11.400
Kmtucky P r.rd CMckon. 1D4
Orlando Or . Oomoiith old t Sla ,
11.000
Mellon ..lit TrtC * Apts.. 440
Mattermme. Rtpoif a Rerool
U .« 0
Complete I id or ten. 1)1 Mild
•rood Or , R atwtnct. 114.444
Martha Doctor. 001 Orange A y.,
Garage. 11.100
1 a M Pohricotmg a E n g r.. two
Jr nett t n . Com ! a i , 1110.000
titte r Crockttl, Ml V m tura
O r . Apv Ground Pool 1400
Sharon Iraddy. t t Ml Carnago
Cava. Awntry a Shad. MOO
Eli# tu te la r. I I I M Coleman
C r . Scram E n e l, 11.40*
K rn Burnt, i t M l Carr. Cam.
Mad a A wrung. MOO
Mrt J J C a in . IMS Cornttl
Or . Rerool. tLM S
Pannte Beamon. 404 I loth It ,
Rerool. 11.400.

DISSOLUTIONS
Emaboth A Martin a Robert l .
«* termor namo — Shador
Patricia Ann taipm tpargor a
Raymond 0 Jr
Ronald Rut ten Mtemor a Joann
C
Jamot Roland Mock a Thor a B
Char lit F Norman a Margaret

J
Gary t Mac Quern# a Peggy
Piorct
Michert E Slump a Stephanie
C..me H f in e 4 Sam .ago t .

REAL ESTATE
(QCD) DortaW R Well#* to
JoMph M G m tr fit It wf Rtnglg C .
CommffKf bf S CtfQt 0»
&gt;nol|
ftfvtf. ISO' i o« i border of Let UO
bU D. Mtfcftafl'i Server of M o m
C Lrvy Grant, ate ttOO
M.chari E Hogan 4 « f Rotla M

♦« iatapb M Gmarafc 4 « t Ranatt
C . Cammanca So Etfga a*
Wmmol# Btvd . W T E of E border
of Lot tao bin o. M itcM iii Survty
of M o m E Lavy Graft*, ate
il4 ooo
Magnolia SVC Carp ta Jam at
C. Gambia, lo t ti. Wativa Hint.
Sac E*gnt. no wo
Joifpfi YotHfon to Svpeerar
CofWtr. Co inc . S M 40* of L&lt; t I 4
all of f. 10 4 It. B U X Fairvia*.
131.000
Eilar E n t r . Inc *• Seocratt
Engr 4 Conttr , C o rp . Lot 14
Mondbrtdga ot Tha Sprtngt Un
III. 114 WO
Gaorga W
Fwlghvm . ate.
Church of God of Rrophacy to
John* W Conlay. W a r of E M S'of
S I T of N W U of NWta of S o f
Sac t i l l 31. W00
Jo* E Gobi* 4 wf Shalby A . to
Alan E Tra w l 4 wt Laura C .. fvy
Of S«V «o f SE aOf SE saOf S#&lt; v
n n . twieTog.
Tmo C O r b to Ta rry D Megan
4 wf Ktnlyn J , E 441 04' Of N SOT
of N vy of O K U of &amp;WU of Sec.
Aden. 11A WO
(QCD) Jomat Sour man 4 wf
Ann M to W O Block burn « g l .
Bog no 40* N Of SW cor. of Govt
Lof 1 Sac &gt;4 W i t . afe . 1)00
Shodowboy. L»d to Emaebon 4
Marad R atify Inc . Lot 4J.
Shtdaobay. Un Ona. ta 1.000

(Q C D ) E m orion A Hared
Rrolty Inc. tg Em onon A Herod
M y , I t 41". HOB
The Huskey Ca to kuhl A Brink
man Inc .la # I. Bit C. Swretivalrr
Oaks. tac. IX SM.40B
U S Hama Carp ta Huttom p
Clsaaban A wt Bahlla H . Oafat.
Lo*t H A I X Poiwood. Ph II, First

TONIGHT'S TV
SATURDAY,
EVENM

U S Homo Carp to 0 Nelson
O tCairp. Jr., t g l. to* U . Bik A.,
O otcrttl. I D 000
U S Horn. Carp to Jomat I .
I tomold A wt DoOoroh. Lot 44.
Pommad. Ph. II, First A d d n .

10) A U CREATURES GREAT

MO
a r r PLORKLA'S WATCHP40
a f lO ) THM OLD HOUBB The old
nsolal gwogoo coma #owi and bdm
t p i n ) goat as, av contehonwsg
|R)0
O (17) BASEBALL San Dago
Podroa at A noma Brora*
fcOO
• ID
TH « MANOREU SMTERS Guv.it
OoayPartoaJohnSchnvidvr (RJ
( I ) O MOVIE. PosdPW, ( t t l l l
Ootdte Hewn. Chevy Chooo A defty
librarian unwittingly bocomoa
vwohod si a buario and aoonvngfy
ivwipsomobta w a s ot murdor and
kidnapong attompta |R)
®
O
EIOMT IB ENOUGH
Joromy s tamer shows up to lake
him te lo t Argu n to krv and
David goat to hn Ngh tchno*
'***l5l iio VALLEY
(10) UEETPK1 OP k4MOd
Steve A im Ion* with Ektoboth
Benoit Browning Sun T i l Son

r

ChfteEfdol
M L f d V ffte U b lrt
Potalo Rounds
K rrsh Apple
MUk
M ID D L E S O IO O L S
O iresedof
Barbecue ski B uji
SUsrd VtefteUblei
P olite Hounds
Stewed Tomatoes
K r tih Apple
MUk or Shake
S E N IO R H IG H
Cbeesedog
Barbecue on Bus

h
f

M lird Vegetables
Potato Hounds
Stewed Tomatoes
Fresh Apple
MUk or Shake
EXPRESS
Cbeesedog
Barbecue on Bun
Mixed Vegetable!
P oU ts Rounds
Fresh F r a il
MUk or Shake

7

W E D N E S D A Y , M A Y27
E L E M E N T A R Y SC H O O LS
Southera P ork Loaf
Buttered Rice
Tu rnip G retas
F ra il Cup
Peanut Butter Cake
Fresh Raked Rotla
MUk
M ID D L E S C H O O LS
Southera Pork lo af
Ta ro Bur { r r
Buttered R lre
Turnip C m os

Cora
Frail Cap
Peanut Butter Cake
Milk or Shake
S E N IO R H IG H
Southera Park Lost
T a c o R w je r
Buttered Rice
Tu rnip Greens
Cera
Pratt Cup
Peauul Butter Cuke
MUk or Shake
EXPRESS
T u b s Salad
Ta te Burger
Cole Slaw
Oraflfe Juice
MUk ar Shake
TH UR SDAY, M A Y It
Submarine Sandntck
Cara
Tossed Salad
Ire Cream
MUk
E L E M E N T A R Y S C H O O LS

M ID D L E SCHO O LS
Submarine Sandwich
Cheeseburger
Cara
Green Beaus
To o e d Salad
Ire Cream
MUk « r Shake

ieOO
O r r u YEARS OP COLPtTRY
htJBK: Pvrtormort hduteng John­
ny C om. Roy Chorioo and Loratta
Lynn pun hoots Otar Compbvo Roy
Clark and Doty Pkrton ter § uAiie
IC country muhe &gt;R)
® O LOVE BOAT taaac Irsao to
pooaongw brvigs along hs pos m V
and a woman helps her ot-husband
ptat out 0 now wd* |R)Q
(H (35) POP! O C f l THE COUN­
TRY
8 ) (1 0 ) MYSTERY Svrgvmt
Cnbb A Co m OI Spvvs

S E N IO R H IG H
Submarine Sandwich
Cheeseburger
Cura
Green Beans
Teased Salad
Ice Cream

Sandwich
Frank on Dun
Freih F ra il
Tooted Salad
Oraage Juice
MUk ar Shake

mat Pm N*« no* nod on man* w t
throughout htetory *4 they contvsuo
thaw tospnoy down me 1 000 nkelong Hirer to the MtOHnsre t s
(Pw t«|K|
I I (17) HAZEL

1030
0 ( 1 ) M O W “^onf Caprata *fC|
( ftSJl Cbanion Haalon Rhonda
flaming A paw of cowboy haroaa
Kalp lo 6nar6 mat Iba maa goaa

ItvouoA
O TX f LAW ANO YOU
Q HAST BAPTIST CMUftCH
(17) M O W
Sargaanf York
H M D Gary Coopar Wanar Brannan Aftar bamg ra&gt;*ad mhamosm*
tama of TtnraiMB a young man
bacomoa a World War I Karo by on*
g O ta y ta fy capturwsg a Garman

(D I 10) V C BflAOCN | If NNtS

rC A TH firuTuM w y i awowOT r Vtc BTMtan i hom% M M r t Ihbf

11 (3 5 )
ROAD

1130
l PACE THE NATION
I TONY BROWN I JOURNAL
15) MOV*
Btandw HO*
feflfVMlI Trosibia IB/YY111*401 Pen­
ny Smgteton. A/lhm L4AI Btandw
and Dogwood knd (hot the mm won
they ro Iteytag vs 10 haunted
( S 1 10) EAST FORM ARO

m
J

AFTERNOON

10:00

1200
(1) Q BLACK AWARENESS
(7) O m m ANO ANBNBR*
(D (101 RUN AldtRCA. RUN
Medic a* authorises and common
tow dtecues the horwds a
Msafneweng |R|

1030
( D Q FOG the captevs ot a cargo
•Tup •flOT'pU k&gt;
Nt potftiow
m a o p u of 4 luaurf Inu
(It (35) NO«PtNOCNT NfTWOAK
12 (17) NASI SOCCBR A nemo
Chsotl rs San Dago BocAoro

1100
) (D O (7 O N fw i
~ MNNV*
tm x
10)
11 30
O T l) ftATUROAV NQHT LfVt
HoK Ify TofMn Uuucol q u m !
(R )

J l O ft«
UO
6vV &lt;« Tkepoe * Tfs# W « b
U uM un fC» I t t l l l R n
(D O H O W
Start And SlnpM
loruvbr" (C) (t»S l) CMton WUbb.
Dubf • Rapaf Altar tav««ng thm
M a m Corpv B«nd Jobn Pta»p
•o u m form • band of tat ovn
(H&gt; (35) WRflTUWO

12:30

O

fI M l I T THE PRESS
| M MPPJTES

(D (T O )n O M O A fO C U B

1:00
(£) TH I A N Q ilN
tTA N TACK
DMCUBBON ‘Cl G u m !
Mayor i d Iradanc*
61 (35) M O W “Alrporl 197S“ (C|
( I t 14) Chariton Haalon. Karan
Macs Whan ma c#aa of a ?4? la
katad m a fcaak axemant. ma that
ataaardaat muaf pool fha huga yaf
(D 1 10) WACfdNQTON WVCK 94
N B W W (N )
1:30
0 (D M O W
flaming faathar
(C| | tH l| 5twang Haydan. AHaan
Whatan A band of w^aniaa rtdaa
•o lha raacua of a atata ivoman
caphKad by a inba of ranagada
(7) O WRBSTIP4Q
( 0 (10) MALL STREET MEEK
Dancing Up Wok SUeot ’ Guatt
Arthur SAwro* 1*1
Q (17) THM WEEK M BASEBALL

200

1:30
®

CAROL BURNETT AMO
1:49

CD O MOV* "tn lose And Mar
(Cl |IBM) Robert Magnet. Jam*,

SUNDAY.

Moving S t« Tha
atarfd of Ngh- and 190-apaod phofograohy la capturad 0%Itaa pro*
gram ofach M o a t lha tip arm o v
taf work dona ai lha Itafd and Hi
poaaibta appkcaliona |R)y

»02&gt;gt02t«if
OrUitao

lid )

iwteegenteM#
ARaefa, Oa
O rl«
PvbftC
I r M l u t t i A f tyttam

Cl) O M OV* ‘ Ju d y On And
Tha UonMlsrr U m itat lC)(t|M |
Ktagb DtaugH M«4o A Uh cuntury
d c a m m*oMng thtM «r*M. • on*
•mud f*tan and • daad mont
CD O
MOW
Thraa On A
. Matcn (BAVH lftU) Jo
Dafta Oavta ItaM woman

m

1200

17) M O W
Oamsc (tM 7)
Simona Bignoraf Jamas Caan

12:30
® O M OV*
The Americano"
|C| 11*311 Gtann Ford. Pi ant Lorv#oy
O (C DAA.Y DCVODONAL

MONDAY,

II ( 17) LAST OP TH« MILD

8:00

5:00
I I (35) MOV*
Blood And
Bond' (Cl (IS 4I) Tyrone Power.
Was Hayworth A buOhghtor ctuta*
hm own dootruction whan ho obond an# has ante lor another woman

P ( i 0) n R m a i M
I I 117) RAT PATROL

5:30
1 2 (1 T ) WRSSTLMQ

(D

O MARCUS WELBY. U O
(TUE-PR0
O
32 (17)
(1)
(WED)
8:3 0
( I I ( 1 BUtteMER SEMESTER
17) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
(THU. PRO
8 :4 0
12 (17) WORLD AT LAROE (TUE)
8:59
I OAXY DEVOTIONAL
id a a t w o r o

600
g « i)ji)O J iO N c w t

• IW

N S O f ATONY Moddrng
Cartar. lormor praM tpokaaman lor
tha Siata Oapanmam. looks ai how
•oa tha n**» conaumar « aarvtcad
t*V PEMI fRVEBRB

630
)T N B M U f f f T f
) CBS NCWS
) ABCNCW3
) AONONSKY ANO COMPA­
NY
IX (17) NCC P fO N il Host Oav«d
700
( f C M N C Tt WONOCATUl
W ONU) Tha Acadam y A * «d «9*n
rang Mm ” Tho Thraa l iftta Olga

•6

$

( f l O » MMUTCB
O M Y t T i m B Of TH I BCA
Man 1 advanturaa ctairngai and
tha 0 pntf • ocaana
nays 0 # saptorad. Wtfham Hohtan
narrataa (A)
(IT (35) WHO KMOOOM
CD (1 0 ) CONO BY SONG
Shatdon barrack M*canl Mu
tin Juka McKanna Oavta K^nan
and «par«ai guaaf Howard d*Sha
parform tonga bom f tadtar On
Tha Noof.**
Cha lovoa M#.“
' FtaraBa' and “ Tha Appts Traa bi
Ifwa tnbuta lo fynoal Shataon Marack (A)
12 (17) TVJBH Moat BdTuah

7:30

6 t(3 S )M O N T tA n c in

630
(fl o M O W
t a r n Buaaa
I l i f t ) Oana wadar. jm C b y W p
A mad-mannarad boob adNor accidantaby bacomaa aniangiad m
romanca and tha buarra plot of a
cunning art thml during a cross­
country bam rtaa (A)
f l j (35) DAY OK OMCOVMY
(D (1 ^ ) T H I COUSTEAU OOYBBEY Loot ftaaca Of Tha Sso~
ocaon a boor
fha mosf t «
forth (A)
IX 117) M O W
Wondar Man
( 1B4l| Danny Kaya. vwgraa Mayo
A ragMclub antapfamar • ta*n
brothar m accuaad of murdor

8 30

600
O i l l TODAY M FLORIDA
O THE LA W ANO TOU (MON)
O SPECTRUM (TUE)
I BLACK AWARENESS (WED
lU lU r u T S iiT m r )
I HEALTH P*LC(PRn

S

35) JR4 BAKK1R
(17) HOUYW OOO REPORT
9:3 0
( D O E O ALIEN
649
8 ) (10) A M WEATHER
(710

6 55
GOOO MORNING /LORCA

700
0 111 TODAY
(|) o UORNMG WITH CHARLES
KUfLALT
m a OOOO UOR44MG AMERCA
11 |TS|BU04BUNttY
0 (10) TOOAT M THE l EG it LATURE
I t (17IPUNTA4E
7:25
0 11) TOOAT M PLORCA
(7 O GOOO MORNING /LORCA
7:30
O ll lT O O A Y
lY) o OOOO UOR#*MQ AMERTA
(ft (3 5 ) TOM ANO JERRY
Id )
( l l Q CAPt AJN KAJ4GAROO
H (35| FRED /LINT I TONE ANO
/RM4CB
8 1 (1 0 ) VXLA ALSO/*
12 ( 17 ) IDREJLU OP JXAN44*
8.2 6
o ( £ TOOAT M PLORCA
(7) O OOOO MORtdtM PLORCA
6 :3 0
0 (J&gt; t o d a y
(7) O OOOO MORNdiG AMERICA
11 (351 GREAT SPACE COASTER
0 ( 1 0 REBOP |R)
5 f 17) MY THREE SONS
9:00
I ® HOUR MAGAZINE
1 ElDOttAHUE
I MOV*
IG O M IR P Y IS
) I f SAME STREET v
) HAZEL
9:30
,IJ (3 5 ) ANOTOtePPlTH
(1 (1 7 ) ORE1N ACRES

1000

IJ ) (35) JIN NY fA L W t ll

000
(J)

O
MOIANANOUft **C&lt;W”
Soma day covaraga of th# aorta •
graafaaf auto rsea bom lha indtarv
spool Motor Spaadaay. Jm McKay
hoait
0 (10) MABTERPRCE T MEAT BE
FESTIVAL OP PAVORfTEB Tha
Oo*d*n Bow* Saved on a novel by

P 4 B U L IS E T E
(|) Q RCHARO BBIM0NE
U (35 I L O W LUCY
0 ( 1 0 BOOKBiRO|MON|
0 110 MATH PATROL (TUE. PfV)
0 ) ( 10) MATHEMATCAL RCLAnCNEtkPB (YtefO)
81 (1 0 ) ALL ABOUT YOU (THU)
11 (17 ) MOV*

9:30
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Spinach
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Canned Peaches
Fresh Baked Roils
M ilker Shake
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Submarine Sandwich
Cheeseburger
Fresh Frail
MUk ar Shake
T a ile d Salad
F R ID A Y , M A Y W
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Sliced Turkey
with G ravy
Buttered Noodles
SpUach
Canned Pearhes
Fresh Baked Rolls
MUk
M ID D L E SCHOOLS
Sliced Turkey
with G ravy
Frank on Bun
Buttered Noodles
Spinach
Tow ed Salad
Canard Peaches
Fresh Baked Rolls
Milk or Shake
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BBVAN t . B B N N B T T
Airman Bryan l Benner1. ton ot
M r and Mrt Jerry D Bennett ot
CMituota. hot gredueled trom the
U I
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ty t lim t equ pm m t repo.r court#
at Charnde Air Pare. Bata. Ill
Graduate! a# tha coun t Warned
how to imped and repair Intricate
aircraft fuel tytitm t
Bennett will now torv* with the
aaltm Cqvipmont Molntononco
Squadron tt George Air Pore*
Bat* Cant

(A O C ! Orleete#

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100

JB P P C .t O P T IN
Ale Paect H I t l Jett C lo ftm .
kon o# Joyce Lollm o# lit Devon
Court, longwood. hot pradsiotod
trom u S A ir Ptrco Hgfiter load
in ironing at Holloman Ale P orct
Bata. N M
Owrksg tha ed.encrd e t r i week
court4. tha pita* learned lighter
ta d K i ter combat tituoHont
Le*tm Will now tar vewlththo am
Tactical Plgnlar Squadron it
Holloman Air Porta Bast N M
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IN THE SERVICE

(Jl Q ALCE (R)
1] (3 5 ) DC* VAN DYKE
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CAtat Cb

1* eteteme* te ffH cneenefi u tle X cabieyitte* lebtcnSe/t may fee* te 4* leBygenteve# cRa*e«4 M.
tt Prferiber*. ty tewing te ckanwe# •. feel eg te chawetl 11, w Kk K cerrfet l*er*l a*4 lb* Cb/liMSK
■reetecaibwg NetwerS (C B N ).

Garner P Bohannon A wt Bdtt*
I to M !!l» r . Burton A wt Em m a
M at. Lot V . Sanford Heights
(QCOI Bornott Banks T r ate ta
Michael K u lm i A wt Lillian, la# X
l i t R. Longwood P o rt. IMS
(Q C O I Moyne 0 Pugh A w«
Agnot te Michael Kutmo A w#
Lillian. La# X Blk B. Longwood
Park. I I N
Michael Kuima A w# Lillian ta
John A l a Centra A wt Kathryn,
la* X Blk R. longwood Pork.
M.BB9
Equity Realty Inc ta Rodney S.
Cook A w# Mary C . Un IIX Sandy
Cave. 111,400
Equity Realty Inc. te Rodney 1.
Cook A wt Mary C A Brvco M
Tenter S wt Jean. Un 1M. Sandy
Cava. 111.400
ShuOert Conttr Ca to Potrkla
A 44*1mi A hb l tv tea S I f 0# lo t
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Level 4 X U1.S00
M arrm E . Mllllamx Trv tfte A
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above. # parent. U H OOO
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Barbara te Roy E Wettormen A
Chariot Hmm ertoa Tr.. N O ' ot
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Robortt C P t r k t r (F o rm
M cC lo ryl A Mb Charll* la
Raymond A. Mehenuon l w#
M trB u trita , Lot IX
B it K ,
Carr log* Mill Un 1 1*0 000
Raymond H a fltrn tn etc to
Lswrenci E Raid A wt Ares B . lo t
X Blk G. f os moor Un I. IL ] too
Gary M Rogrrt A wt Despmo to
Ronate R T Ho 1 wt H U v Jtio.
LM I K Spring Oakx Un 1. M l 000
Packar Assoc Realty Inc. to
htn ry P Hanley A Raipn C
H rsittt.LM X Ateme A c rrv l i t too
*'JC 01 Jot Graham A wt Cara ta
Rot orl E Parker, N 19 •« I M l I I '
t# E N 9 at Let I. i lk IX
Jamotlosm. 11X000
Equity Realty Inc. la John L
Mtuto X wt Barbara 1 , Un 41,
In te r Covo. m e ®
M a rk 0 Connotenga Spicer to
M R Aldermen A wt Merlono. lo t
14. lo ti part. Plk A. West Brantley
L O U Rood Haights. I D . 000
(O C D ) Linda Clark, tr utter to
complete inter tors. Inc.. N M U ot
Ni&lt;% ot n w h M loc i* 11 H etc .
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tim e r w aidm er. Rape. B tl
Eli# C Stent I t LlndoM Gardner
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Addn. te lonttrd. I ! 1.000
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latter A wt Irene V.. Lot I X v m # i
at C41thberry Phot# I. 110 100
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S E E M IN B U S IN E S S F O R 5 6 Y E A R S
IN P R I V A C Y O F M Y H O M E

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C o rn s lo A rlh u r TiBschd# i and Mi up o n dg h cio u t
Db II b t drppgt) N ortli Atlantic W h i lt l n h For o p en
srs. w a will s o rre you ttuss psacst of fish, our big.
c ru n c h y English styls chips, tw o go ldsn bro w n
h u ih p u p p is s s nd tssty coleslaw ll that d o s in '! fui
you u p yo u c a n g o sack lo# m ore hsh tn (a ct. a ll
the hsh y o u ca n s#it But rem em ber, this otter is
only go o d o n Sundays and you must sat all your
liih in tha dm tng room N o tB*&gt;« q v ( s .

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I # — iT t f r if U H f * t i f a w h rt, H ________ iowday, M i y l l , )W 1

Two Arrested By FBI

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611_______________ 831-9993

In Extortion Scheme
JA C K S O N . M ill. ( U P I l Tlx* F B I announctd Friday the arrests of two men in the
infamous " B .A . F o x " eitoftion eaae Involving
the mailing of letter* containing alleged di»ra*e-Infested insect* and m a ll bombs to
various U 5 . corporations and businesses.
F B I Mississippi special agen t-b x h a rge
John K elly said Leon CordeB Horten, S3, and
A rtis Odell Reed, SO, were arrested Thursday
on federal extortion charges.
Kelly said Horton was arrested In Houston,
Texas, and Reed was apprehended in Irving.
Texas. Both have been arraigned before a U 5 .
Magistrate in those cities, and authorities
have asked the men be extradited to
Mississippi.
If convicted, Horton and Reed each could be
sentenced to a m axim um of 20 years In Jail, or
fined tIO.OOO, or both.
The F B I said the Investigation into the extortion-bombing case began in October 1975
when numerous corporations around the
United Slate* received letters from a " B A.
F o x ." The letter* were postmarked from
Jackson.
A federal grand Jury relum ed a sealed in­
dictment Wednesday against the two men.

charging them with conspiracy to extort the
businesses and conspiracy to disrupt com­
merce.
Specifically, Horton and Reed were charged
with conspiring to m all these extortion letters
under the name " B .A . F o x " during the period
from August 1975 to Feb rua ry 1977 to
numowUa corporation*.
Kelly said the extortion scheme Included the
mailing of le tte n containing licks ( (he insect)
lo feeding corpora lions' officials with a note
saying the ticks had been infected with various
diseases.
He said the men also were accused of
mailing a num ber of bombs lo various
businesses around the country,
Kelly said one of the m all bomba exploded in
the offices of M e rrill Lynch and Co. of New
York in 1978, earning Injuries to employees in
the mail room.
Horton and Heed are further charged with
conspiring lo poison food and medicinal
products on the shelves of retail stores to be
purchased by cuslom en.
Kelly said between December 1978 and
January 1977 food and medicinal products —
found to contain rat poison — were purchased
in many stores around the country.

Former Scottish
Warrior Commands
Marion Pipe Band
P E K IN , III. (U P I) — listen closely to the hlgh-piichcd skirl
of Donald Lrgge's bagpipes and you m ay hear the musical
remnants of his unusual life story.
It begins with a Scottish w arrior who fought for his country
and cheered the injured with his bagpipe music and Highland
dancing.
It tells of a killed piper who traveled the world to perform for
millions — including the royal fam ily of Great Britain.
And It tells of a Scotsman who fell in love with an American
lassie and followed her to Pekin, where his doses! link to his
heritage is a small, struggling pipe band in the tiny town of
Morton.
l* g g e, a soft-spoken men of few words, prefen to let his
pipes tell It ail.
" T h e pipes can convey death, battle, a number of emotions.
You can rraDy make them ta lk ," le gge said, referring to an
old Scottish belief that bagpipes can speak by themselves.
le g g e , the 30-year-old pipe m a jo r of the Morton llighlanders, was bom in Fife, Scotland, and began piping at the age of
I. B u t he did not seriously study the wind instrument until he
became a Junior soldier and piper with the lamed Black Watch
at the age of 12.
D u ring his 10 years with the F t n t Battalion of the Black
W atch — known worldwide as the oldest Scottish regiment —
1jegge, a lance corporal, eerved in * U rtm n trin and loured aa a
Highland dancer and piper in four more.
"W e were soldiers first and pipers second. Thai was our
d u ty," U g g e said with a thick Scottish accent. "Sometimes
we'd go out for our normal patrols in the mornings and then
we’d visit hospitals and perform in the afternoons "
Th e only time he feared for his life, he said, was In Ncrthem
Ireland during the turmoil of the early 1970b.
"W e were on (he street* trying to keep peace," he said.
"Once there was a gun hetile in the middle of Beifsal. Two
policemen were shot and anyone who had a gun Joined in.
There was a tot of sniping and it was our Job to clear them out, ’
A s fate would have It, a Black Watch tour of the United
States led to romance far the short, small-booed, mustachioed
Scotsman. While performing in Illinois, l^egge met Pekin
native Karen Simms and m airted her six months later in a
traditional Scottish wedding in Inverness.
Th e couple spent a few years In Northern Ireland and E n ­
gland, where U g g e was stationed, before moving to Pekin in
1971.
Although U g g e now calls this sm all central Illinois city his
home, he carries on his homeland's traditions by leading the
Morton Highlanders. Th e 10-member band was struggling to
stay alive when U g g e first Joined It about two years ago.
Now about 21 pipers and d rum m ers — some from nearly 100
miles away — gather every Thursday night at the American
le g io n Hall in Morion for three hours of practice. Lrgge's
wife, Karen, it a tenor drum m e r.

Altamonte Springs
Asks Voluntary
Water Use Cutback
Altamonte Springs City Commissioner Jeff Etcbberger
presented city commissioners with 10 ways of voluntary water
conservation to preserve the city's water supply.
Ordered by city commissioner* last week to devise
measures far eliminating waste, Etchberger called a special
work session for the commission to consider taking action on
the package.
Although officials declined to pass any resolution on the
package they dkl agree lo ask that Altamonte Springs
residents lim it their lawn sprinkling to early morning hours.
Etchberger said the city's goal would be lo reduce water
consumption by 20 percent. Utilities officials said the demand
( for water was up by SO percent o v t r this time last year.
After his week-long Study of ways Altamonte residents could
cut down on water usage, Etchberger said: every faucet
should be checked for leaks because a slow drip can waste IS lo
20 gallons a day; cutting shower time and the level of bath
water would be helpful; don’t do diihes or laundry in machine*
unless there Is ■ full load.
Additionally, Etchberger suggested toilet Rushing not be
,u*ed to dispose of scraps since each Rush takes five lo seven
gallons of water; lawn and gardens be watered during late
evening or early morning hours to reduce evaporation losses;
in d car* be washed from a bucket, using the hose only to rinse
It off afterwards.
Th e water conservation package also suggested three
mandatory provisions which could be considered lor future
in ip lc m rn u d o n by the commission.
Those Included banning all vehicle washing except i t
com m ercial facilities that recycle wash w ater; imposing oddeven days and specified hours of irrigation far different sec­
tions of the city; and requiring food service establishments to
serve water only when requested. —
GANDY

S Y B I L M IT C H E L L

Legal Notice

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
H OURS

RATES
) tomacutivg times l.tfslin d
I eomecutiva limts .M b Hr*
4 M Minimum
I Lings Minimum

DEADLINE
Noon Tuesday
A ll Classified A d ve rtis in g also appears in Its* E ve n in g
H e ra ld an W ednesday preceding Its* H erald A d v e rtis e r Th *
rates show n above a r t *or hells days

1—Card ol Thanks
We wish to Thant our friends and
neighbors lor the netp and
kindness and many donation*
shown us during th* rrcm t
lots ot our hom* du* to lira
You will never be forgotten
S-gntd Tnttn-.o Brewer. Terry
Cooper and Tam m y Green#
= 9 E B S S 9 9 W

4 -Persona Is

Lonely? N tw singles m ag
stamp addrasa rrwaiooa lor
If re Inf*.
Sea
S it (141
Boynton. F L H a ll
Mala — Ret,rad. financially
sreura
Hobbles
Include
fishing, boating, golf Would
Ilka to meet lady compalabl*
with above Pirate reply to
Rea M C o Evening Herald
P 0 Boa ISS), Santord. F la

P LATE
C O LLEC TO R
(C e ra m ic * ) interest#* In
buying, setting, or i f 00mg
direct with other collectors?
In fo rm a tio n -w rit*
Plat*
Eachang* Club In te r. P O
Bor MX Ashbboro. NC If 301

Legal Notice

• ABORTION •
1st Trimester abortion 1 IS w k s ,
1144-M tdiceid SIT*. *1 14
wks. IM S -M e dica id SITS: Cyti
Clinic W
Piranancy irstt
mala
ile r llia f lg n j
fra*
counseling Professional cart
su p p o rtiv e
a tm o s p h e re ,
confidential
C E N TR A L F L O R ID A
WOMAN S H E A L T H
O R G A N IIA T IO N
40VColonial Dr .Orlande
tea ma&lt;
TMI Fro# 1 i n H I ISM
Lenity C V N IIa n Singlet
Meet Christian Single* mi your
area. Write Southern Christim
Single* Chib. P O Boa I I I )
Summrrviitr. SC 1VMT ar call
Wiil Social Security p ry whan
you re 1ST Supoirmenl your
retirement
H I 4141
lor
benefits

A— C h ild C a r e
Special Summer Program Mr a
II yr olds Wkly swimming.
SAefing A movies H I 4*41.
Senfard E a rly Childh***
Camay
Oo you lav* yourkIdaT Th*n ghee
them tn* car* may datarv*
XM wk lor 1 .141 w* tor I Call
M l SMS______________________
SPUR OF T H E

m om ent
b a b y s it t in g

n s viaa

Have some camping equipment
you no longer use? le i) if *11
w.th a Ciessit ed Ad In The
Herald Can H I I T ) I or M l
set? and * friendly advisor
will http you

C O U H TE R S A LE S
doe
i
I t e r r if ic b e n e f i t s I
General knowledge ot nimeer

DON T STOR E IT , S E L L I T with
• low cost Class-lied Ad.

aaa Em p l o y m e n t
Low Fee
IW ks Salary
H U French Ave
IT ) 1174

a s e c o n d in c o m e ? s
Mrs or In s per week, could
*Srn I MOV pgr mo TIS-IMO

need

It- House) Unfurnished

MISC VARD W ORK B llwn
mowWi* M l.im u m JdkyS wk
• to S No weekends Pry ter
refer4 Call H ) t i t ) for kept
Semirole Garden apartments

Security Guard foe weeervxt
night shift Apply m person *1
CoOia Boat Com pany. (OR
Silver Lake Rd . Santord.

] Bdrm. I Beiht, C HA. ttnead.
no pets 1st. )tsf A Sec l k »
mo H I M il_________________
saniorti i Dorm ) Beth. Garage,
r t V r -Old Brick hom* H I )
mo n o Fee
TH E B V W A TB * CO M PA N Y
REAL T O W ____________*44 7)00

F U L L CMC SEC
MISC VARD W ORK s lawn
mowing Maaimum Jdays wk
I to S No waekands Prafrr
rrtirrd Call H I t? U for appi
Sam.notr Garden Apartments
Part lima Bartender waitress
Apply M e ytd r Country Club.
Cnty Chib Rd. S*nf H I 1S)1

o f f ic e m g
I700MO
i o p e n in g n e w o f f i c e i

T yping shorthand
predict

10044

a censed Practical Nuria ' IT •
Shift Full or pari tlm*. San
ford reveling A ConvalescentCmfar Contact Mrs Brown

M t llaa_____________________
tP M -P o tt rung r i * P M S u n
Apply Lakovlaw Nursing
Rpgiar. Olf E . ktd S I.

handle

Stmland ) bd( m. I&gt; &gt; beth
fenced y*rd. 1)71 mo
« l ll)f
L A R I M ARY * Rmi
Full
Kitchen. Carport. 1)7! » s
7)00
IA V ON R E N TA LS R E A L TO R

NEEDED

) BORM. newly remodeled,
ir i w k e ufilifies
Call U ) M il

Telephoiw SoBchorj,
Port-Tima
Evening Hours.

__________________

intersIHItr Photography needs
Models All typed, me actor*
Rtas Portfolio. H I HO I.

A

AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
lowest Fee
T wks salary
igUFTbochAve
T1SSH4

Need E itr* income while you
ar* *f horn*? FS may bo the
antwei Free details Encloa*
stamp** envelop* Fr* nch
Wyta. Bos A M ). N&gt;M*. liunoit

nm
A Mata" Del mg Service All
ages. P O Boi ta n . Clear
water, FI H S IB _____________
L m a t y Y w r it e 'Y f mglng pee at*
together Deling S o r v K f f All
•gas A Senior CIHIwte P O
m i. g d n it f Haven, f la He*Q

C IT V O F L O N O W O O D .
F L O R ID A
NOT ICE OF F U B L IC HEAR IN G
COM PAT A p A TF
TO W HOM I T M A Y C O N rF O N
Take I minute to liilon lo
n o t i c e is H E w e a v g i v e n
recorded
message— t IM t i l
by I N City el l onq w od. Fierida.
MSI MSI or write Compel A
ih «i the City Commission will hold
Oat* P O
Roe I I I ) Sum
« public hearing i i l S y m
on
morvilte. S C IVet)
M anley. June S. 1SSI. le
e l Consider e request lor
Funned
U nit
Development
Conditional Ute Application lo
•How lor torwlriKtionol o Funned
IN T N l C IR C U IT C O U R T FOR
Unit Development In * R J toning
S E M IN O L I C O U N TY . FLO R ID A
detuticeiien. te-d property betne
f r o ia t r d iv is io n
situate m the City or Lonpwoed.
File Number t i m e r
f ior m# end drieribed ot toilowi
OtytoMo
From the Southeast corner ol
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
Section 11. Township H South,
W ILIAAON D A V ID JACKSON
Hinge TV f e t l. run N M draftee
Dec reted
IT* 77" W. along the South Ine ot
N O TIC E OF A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
i n d Section IS. r distance ol IS SO
The
edminisrralien at th* astat*
tret, thence N SO degrees SI' U ‘
ot W ILL MON D A V IO JACKSON,
W. • dittence ol IS SO tee! is &lt; pan!
ore eased Fit* Number at I I I C F ,
on Ine North rlfh f ot w ry ot
•s pending In the Circuit Court lor
lonowood Markham Word lor r
Seminole Covad y, Florida. Probate
Point ot Beginning. Ih m ct N IV
Division, th* address ol which It
degrees 47' I I " W. Iltn g u .d r .gM
Post Of lie* Drawer C. Attention
ol w ry , r distance ot II 1 M Irri :
Probata. santord. Florida Th*
Ih m c t N 00 degrees n* 0»" W, r
names
an* address of tha personal
dittonctol ISM P7 leaf. ih m c tS IV
raprasantatlyf and th* personel
degrees II* *1” E , e diUoncr ol
representative's attorney e rr set
rvaostort. thenc* S 44 degrees I f
tor in below
or" f . r ditience ot 1V1VS troll
Alt intorrstod persons tro
ihmco S 00 degrees gi- it - E , o
required to til* with this court,
ditience ot CM IS leet, thence N If
W ITH IN T H R E E M O N TH S OF
drertoo i f I I " W. o d-itonto ot
t h e f ir s t p u b l ic a t io n o p
M OD leet. thence S to degrees S r
THIS N O T IC E
( I ) oil claims
W C . o diitence ot Sit J* teoli
age.nil the eotat* and (It any
thence N ( t degree* u I f - W. o
eatectwm
by
an
iaaeve*tee
earsen
eiltm ce ut l OO N f t , ttwnce V SB
nrgrret O f Sa" E . • distance ot te whom notice wes melted met
ituiiengei
the
validity
ot
mo
will,
I d IS leet to the Po-nt of Beg*
the Qua M nations oI the personal
mno Contem.no ye Sit o e rn mart
rypreseniotivo,
venue.
er
or trie
iuaisdictien el th* court
cm
Th r North 1100 trrt ol Ihr
A
L
L
C
L
A
IM
S
A
N
D
OR
South CO SO trrt ot thr West If CM
JE C TIO N S N O T SO F IL E D W ILL
tret at Iht F r i t SVtVS l t d ot
RE F O R E V E R B A R R E D
Section IS. Towm hip IS South.
Publication ot ih u Notice hat
Benge it E e il end olio less
Boom ot 0 po -nt IS SO le d W rit end begun on May U . IN I
Par tenet Nrpaetmiatiy*
cS 00 tret North ol the Southron
Rot* L. Jackson
tot net ol Section IS. Township IS
Pest Ottict *oi lie
South. R m ge I t e m , thence N SO
Santord, Florid* H IM
drgrrro SI’ St" Mr. t diUoncr ot
Attorney tor Personal
SO 00 le d thence S 00 degren I f
Rrpfttontativ*
IS" Ml. e dietetic to t lot t i l e d lo r
Ruion D Munns. E ta uirr
poml tying d) 00 le d North ol the
South 1‘nro t told Section IS and 1*0 R O O IN. M U N N S , M U N N S , A
SIMON
ted W rit ol thr Fowl d Eogm
Suit* toot
rung. Ih m c t S St d rg rrtt Of I I "
Pen American Rank Building
E . 0 distinct el 140 00 fret It the
P O Boa ISO?
Feint ot Beginning
Orlando. Florid* H40I
I t tie ihr gm erei locellon dvr
T air pi-one MS 4)1 II I?
North d Tibet on. XW E o n ot
Publish May 14, It. (M l
ShMOW Hill On E E MtillUmton
O
i l 111
Bond. Long wood. Florid*)
The Public M tin n g will be held
F IC T IT IO U S NAM R
m me City Hell. City bt Longwood.
Nolle* IS hereby glean that wa
r ioridr IIS W ell W t rr m Aytnge
art
tngagrd
In business a* IDS
F llp n
on June I. n i l . er ot
Orlando Hwy. I Fam it. Longwood.
toon thortotttr ot peuibie ol
SamlneU County. Florida under
which lim e -nuretled pertiet lor
Iha
fictitious
nam a
at
end ogomii me request tided
G U L lf D O E I O A E A O I . and thal
m ove will be heerd Sold herring
a&gt;e inland fa regular s a d nama
moy be continued from l-n u to
with th* C ltrk a f Mr# Circuit Court
time until I mol action It t u r n By
Sam mol# County. Florida Mi *c
in* City CommtiBian
tor dam t with tha prorll torn of lh*
TH IS N O T IC E shell be pound In
Ficlilleui Nam* Statutes. T o w n
three 111 public pieces witnm the
Section 1410* Florida Slalvltt
City ol longwood. Hondo and
IVU
published in the Evening Her old. o
Sig Jamas E . Oui ledge
newtpeper ot general tlrtu ld im
Gail A Gulled*#
in the City ot Longwood. ona lime
Pubiisn M ar II. H II A June 1.
d ite ii IS da rt prior lo lh*
IN
I
doreteid hearing end one lime el
DC I I I
leetl S d o rt i » * r to th« otoroted
tearing In addition, laid notice
shell be pooled m the ore* le bo
N O T IC E U N D E R
considered a! least tittam (IS)
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E S T A T U T E
days prior tolh e datea l the public
TO W HOM I T M A Y CO N CER N
hearing Any person deciding to
Nofk* is hereby given thal lh*
appetl a decision mad* by th* City
u n d trtlg n td . pursuant I* Iha
rcwnwiHelen a* to any matter
" F ic lille u i
Nam e S ta tu te ",
considerad el this mere mg will
Chapter 444 OF. Florida Statutes,
need a record ol lh* pfocatdmgt
will regular with th* Clerk of in*
end tor such purpose you mutt
Clrcv.l Court ms and far Seminal*
m turo thal a verbatim record ol County, Florida, upon receipt of
proceedings is made, which record
lh* proof at publication of m il
includes the testimony and
Nofica. Ih r lid it lout nun*. M wit i
rvidtnc* upon which th* appeal It
I LOR ID A D EP R ES S IO N GLASS
based
SHOW under which I am engaged
City ol Longwood.
in thr busintsa at Peat Of flea Boa
Florida
I K Lake Monro*. Florida D ia l
O l Terry
By: Sara K M ean
Clly Cleft
DAT CO of Santord. Seminole
Publish M oy 10. 1 Tune l It ll
County, Florid* this lain day at
D E I gg
April. ITS l
Publish May S. TO. 11, 14, t i l t
D EI II
N O T IC E U N D E R
F IC T IT IO U S N AM E LAW
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
n o t ic e u n d r r
that lh* undersigned, desiring Ig
F IC T IT IO U S NAMR LAW
engage in butm ait under lh*
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
flc lllia u l nam e ol L E N D E R S
thal IS&gt;* undrr signed, desiring t*
D I V E R S I F I E D S E R V IC E S *1 wvgagr mi businrs* under th*
number SSS Montand Avenue, in frctitleus nam* of LOS al number
th* Clly el Altamonte Springs
MS Maitland Avm u*. m th* Clly al
Florida, intends to n g u ie r th* Altamenl* Springs. Florida, las
said nama w&lt;m m* Clark at the lands la regular th* said nam*
Circuit Court ot Sommel* County,
with th* Clerk of th* C Mctilf Court
Florid*
al Sammot* County, Florida
Dated *1 Alternant* Springs.
Da ltd al Alternant* Springs.
FSonde,this 11thday otM *r. I t l l
F tor id*, this n m day ot M ay. 17*1
Automobile Dealers insurance
Agiamebile Dealers insurance
Services. Inc
Sarvices, Inc.
By. I. Talmadg* Luke.
By I, Talmadg* Luk*
Prrtetm!
President
FALLO T. PO FPELL.
P A LLO T. P O P P E L L .
GO O DM AN R IL D T R IC K
GOODM AN A SLOT NICK
Attorney tor Applicant
Attorney lor Applicant
ISO* Allred I Du Pool fl-dg
ISA# Alfred I DuPont Bldg
Miami. Florida U IS I
Miami, Florida U I J l
Author Had by Michael C Holme* Author li*d by: Michael C SMtnich
Phone I I I » a
Phone I I I T IT )
Publish M ay II. 14. )1 t June I, Publish May II, 14. ) l A June 1,
it l l
Ml
D * l* l
D EI 44

■A

+— P e rs o n a ls

Avail %1. Ntw 3 B*e 7 baffi, M
ap pi. carpeted, drapes N a ptfs TUSOO ID S Ridgewood
Day TVS 447) E v « H I I7H

NURSES AIO ES CaFIrtied
Aides with e.perlence Good
peysMtiJItt Apply Longwood
HeoilhCore Center 1ST* Grant
St

Retired
or
l t m l r*flr*d
salesperson E « t comm For
appf Can Harold M l 4701

l.SR Slits*

IM A M
- IM PM
M O N D A Y thru F R I D A Y
S A T U R D A Y t Noon

AVON
R E P R R S iN T A T IV t S
Senfard TafTISaeSai **aUaM*.
44A H I f calMct MSS-*t*B.

3 lA -O u p f e m

t t - H tlp Wifrftd

H - W b W t e l N d _____

Coil 322-2611
E v e n in g H e m ld
LO O K IN G FOR A C H A L
LEN G E? we need e mature,
career minded D E N I A L
A SSISTA N T
E .o e n e n c e
preitrrtd It mterestecr. send
resume to Bou 04. Evening
HteoW, Boo IASI. Senior*,

LOCAL D R IV E R ssaoiouco Mo
(E X C E L L E N T B E N E F I T ! !
F CL. load A unload truck*

24—Dullness
Cfcporfunfties

A AA E M P L O Y M E N T
---------- rr
) was salary
I t ll Frtncti A r t
M l 1174

LANDLORDS
OuAi f fPiJ ffftanlt awaitIpiq
Ho ♦## 33f 7300
Sav On
R E A L TO R
C A S S IL B IR R V , S Rmt. Kids.
Pets XMO dn 1)00 ) )f 7100'
SAV ON R E N TA LS R E A L TO R
)

Bdrm. I's Bath, screened
pel a . appliances. Can HA,
Geraoe. imeed S)S0 H I OH*

Eetia nice 4 Bdrm Available
July 1st H I OUT

Evonlng Herald Piper Routt
Net sisot wk. Les* man r i
hrk * day delivery time Coil
H I 4H4_________________

Case Mia al Sanfard
Waitress Wanted
Apply in person
H ) iota

SHAKLRR h r r b T A B L R T X
WR ORLIM RR
M S I 4*1

C O N V E N IE N C E
S TO R E
C A S H IE R S -W e alter 1 were
pew vacation every • months
Now looking tor npyrlenckd
people ready to work For
interview phone the manager
at
A.rport Bird H ) 4111
Cttkti berry H I 1711
Celery Av* H i a H l
Lak* Akgry M l IMS
MAIDS POSITION O P E N
Apply m person
Days Inn I 4 S S I Rd 44
W A N TED Professional Jai Alai
Players I M S yrt e&gt;p
Canlect Orlando Seminole
ja iA ie i U t a » l _____________
RN Full lime •-a shin Sanford
Nursing and Canvalescant
Center Canted Mrs Brown

XTSAS4A
M E C H A N IC L a rg e
national Ituck leasing &lt;• h*s
opening at Sanford. FI* ter
qualified truck mechanic
E .c e lle n l ooporlunit y
S
benefits Cell Auglo IMSI » )
Me* d e n alt t**e eves

Plumbmg O IV. H ardw ire end
Electrical m a -i end repair
Bukined W WO Real Esfal*
Bell Trrm i 114)000 Wm
Malic towski R E A L TO R H I
7SX) Eyes TH )M7
We are seeking a mature in
di.lduol or couple who wants
to run Ihalr own busmass Wo
will set you up in th* Led-es
Sell Swvica Shoe Businad lor
an inyeslment of I I .100 to
S) 004 No r ip no ctsury W*
will Show you now W* Will
invesl ue to 111000 inventory
tor your store For detoils call
Day Id at 004 7)1 T i l l

28— A pts. Sr Houses
_ I# « v ir R
f

L A K E M A R Y A R E A ) Bdrm. I
bath double garage Energy
efficient, kit fully (quipped
hi

) Bdrm. I Beth. Unlurrushed
home Coyefed carport and
utility Mb tliO Mo US M M

3J—Houses Furnished
CASSELBERRY Laktfrenl
7700
SAV ON R E N TA LS

a usam vine Ripe Tamatats )
IM SI DO. M lbs 14 SO
laiiwood Carn U SO a crata
Crimson sw tai w ttarm atons.
ST.n A up
Boggs Produce. 1*15 Sanford
At* 1)1 TM I
Vatlow Squash
4 ( b i l l SO
Acorn Sauash
) tar II M
A*n*n*t
1 lb* Itc
Cukes
10 lor l l OO
Green Beans
X b tllO O
Watermelon*
S IM up
Itrga leo **
T tor II4 S
Gre*n Onions
) bundles I I 00
THIwood ydttowcern 1 Me SI St
Pickling Cucumbers bushel S4 04
I Bring your own conlAMiarl
Fla Peachrt. Nectar mes it a*c
lamatoas
1 lbs I I 00

N o w ! 2 L o c a t io n )

17 92 n ext to
V i lla g e

S m o rg a s b o rd

W e T a k e F o o d S ta m p s
L e R o y F a r m s , S R 48 &amp;
U p s a la

R d .,

S a n fo rd

11—Instructions
Tanms instruction U S P T A
Car if led Group or Privet#
Ip*torn Children a specialty
Doug Msiictowsii. t h i m v

N U R IIN O CO O R D IN A TO R
immediate opening E.perKnee
with slatting *tid public
r*i*tian* Call Med-cal Can
cepis M l OUI
C O N V E N IE N C E
S TO R E
CLER K — Good company
Donalds Apply Handy W*y
Food Sipris, laniard art*
R O O FE R S iD rito n a era *)
Shingle laying only SS a
square Musi hay* own loots A
transport anon TH 7S4T
Full time worktr Skill** lawn
m am ltnanc*
A
generoi
oparlm tnl w alk tor large
comply* apply in per ken t I
Tuesday
Geneva Garden
Apart man Il ISOS W ISih S I .
Santord
I1H Per Week Far I Tim* at
Ham* Webster. A m e ric a ’*
foremost dictionary company
needs homo workers lo update
Weal mailing lists All ago*.
Mperiencr unnacetsary Call
I 714 441 Skill E . l 1047

JB—Resort Properly
L A K E r R O N T Furntfhcd
I &amp;&lt;Jrm 1350 Mo

— R t« t wkly &amp;
n u » Ufll Inc KIMOO
(W l Adurn M l 7M l

37— B usiness P ro p e rty

IA N F O B O

Room for rtrtf
PrlviltmfrBiiHo

m3i»

\wn

C o m m ffflg i
BvjMd*Af
t«l
French A v # , Sanford 1.700
Sq Ft G irp tf. C#nt a*f and

IHtSia______________
(w n m m i i f «p#&lt;« on 17M
ICK0 tq fie pri&lt;9d r&gt;gMIMt
C#il iD av 'V F a r r i R#al E t i i f i
Vu(vrrM#rU 1 R tailor

WSII41
30-A p a rt merits

31- D—Rental Offices

11 1 taty I* puce a Classified Ad
We'11 i,a n help you seord
If C4II H I M il

REAL ESTA TE
ASSOCIATES
l i t e r leM l* or loot Mcantod
Join l i i l s i f ' l Soles Ltoderl
Wo Off or:
• Lorgosf Hshng unesN ry i*
Somle*lo County M LS tor
vie*.

117— H e lp W a n te d

•CstokoJet Training
•Fvlltimo Oilico Seaport
• IR A NoHaaal R ttorrnli A
•Homo Wortaery Frogrom.
•temlaglo. Oranga A Vtiysik
•MLS tarvlco.
-Oymioakl TV, Nawspoaor A
•Magotihf A lrO itlua g
.Fieetl Off Ico FtCINIWs.
-Frolesslonol. Coogoeiol S
•Sectm lol Asiociaits os yaer
Carver Fortners
11 yog wont So list an* sail.
Nobody Gee* It Belfort Call
H ir h Itto stram *r L t i
Albright *1 11J 1410 for •
tnendly and cMfWenttal Itster vrrw tkdar and drscore. ns*
*1 itronc*1

a m B I 1 I * e I
C P A S
And CPA Candidates
Ta Manage
Accounts* OffKes
in their aryes
Full Tim a
Call Rabart Gnsson al 004 H I
*40 or write Girsbcn A C a .
PA
TO) E
Silver Spring*

oi.o. Ocaia. Fia.
Inquires confidential

t h is

DAY S H IFT Fane* assemblers
A saw epetaton A general
labor Apply between hour i ot
1 lo 4 p m Amer Can Wood
Products. M ill Office. ISO
Akrrvin A y * , Longwood
N EEO LECR APT LOVERS!
A m e rica s fostext g tp w in t
neddlecraff company needs
drmorntrelors in this area
Don't miss this o c ltin g new
way to sell n**dt*cr*n Call
Jackie tat inlerview
XTAAJOf

•• ' J

*

LUXUR Y
A P A R TM EN TS
Fam ily l Adults sari for.
Pools Ue ) Bdrm i Maslgr's
Cove Aprs H I rno Open an
L A K E JE N N IE APTS I. I ' i A 1
Bdrm on Lake Jennie In
Senior* Pool, rec room,
outdoor R B Q. tennis courts A
dispookii Weis to slapping
Adults only Serrynopett M&gt;

1000 14 I f . Air Cendfioned and
carpeted lor professional
office or busewst ) H 7MO or
•)4 SSP4

40— Cotxlo m in iu m s
Sandalwood Villas For Rant 1
Bdrm. I Bath all Kitchen
Appliances SIM mo t SISO
Deposit I D 7741

071)
Available June HI Nice I Bdrm
Mai ur i persot pr tier red s i l l
June
F o n lg
R eally.
R EALTO R TH MIT
Sanford lovely 1 Bdrm. • D m .
Air. crrpefrd. ceramic bain
Furn ova ll SITS Adum B4I

TOM
I BDRM Gaeago Apt
SHI
Call H I It II Evenings

41 -Houses
4 Acres Waterfront on SI Johns
with I Bdrm Frame B I Br
AAob.le * I Bdrm Fish Camp
Unbefieyebi* m a x
Moving Set* ) 1 BLK. Carport,
large fenced corner
In
county Cash and Assume T \
mortgage Reasonably priced

BATEMAN REALTY
I K . real E H a lt Becker
TaaB Sanford A vs.

• M E L M A V E Just remodeled
carpel, ceiling lens. I Bdrm
H IS X ) Bdrm l ) U • dtp
Eve US 71)0 or 1)1 1X4S
Royey reentry llvtagl I Bdrm
Apis. Olympic l l
Fael.
Shaaandeak Vitiate Open S S

321 0759
iryou dcm’l bafwvetnel went ads
bring resultv try an*, and
iitttn ta your phone rmg 01*1
H I N i l or (SI m i

n s ins

G E T THOSE L U X U R Y ITE M S
r o t a f r a c t io n o f t h e ir
COST FRO M TO D A Y S W ANT
ADSI

CPA F IR M LO OK I N O FOR

r ea lto r

Modernu mg youe Horn*? Sail no
longer naedrd but useful Items
with a Classified Ad

n i f If 7

Scrap mete I buyer — m ull be
r»P Reply Sot *) t O Evening
Herald. P O S o. ITS7. San
ford, FI._____________________
BURGER k i n g No om Santord
now accepting applications lor
part tune days II I II Apply in
person I M S p m Equal Op
portvnity Employee

a

Rms A ir. Kids. Pets SIS4 U t

Unfurnished

9—Good Things *o Eaf

________________

29— R oom s

WhAltYTtr th# occasion, Inara tl a
clait'M d ad to tofva ft Try

xm i
Thinking about that summer
vecalign? Get a better car
ihfevjn th* ciets-Had ads mi
today i paper

son

SAN FO R D C e lt College Kids
SIM dn. H IS ) ) « 7700
SAV ON R E N TA L S R E A LTO R

to t h a n }
'Bdfm NHrt*1, 11:10 t
load
em it l * i « M *ff m 4U1

Help Wanted Full and er Part
tlm* G*S Station Att Reply to
S O I I t c a Evenln* Herald
P O Boi tall. Santord, FI*

String Fever Sri*
Watkins Products
T H sort

imif m,

0*101

f le e t

U-Health I BMutY

i
u m #««'
M D#J»ona

j

i

ST EN ST ROM
RMlty-RMltor*

Manner's Village tn Lake Ad*
11 Bedroom Apis Irom ITT*.
Lockied I ) n I lAI South af
Air purl Bird In Sanford All
Adults H tSklB

Jd U L T IF L B L U T IN G E B A L T O V

Sees H I M I )

FROM UtS large 1,1 A 1 Bdrm
a**s F?ol. Iannis court

HISCTO
M tllonelll*
( rac*
Apis
Soar out. modem ! Bdrm. I
Bath apt
C u p e le d
kit
equipped.
CH BA
Near
hospital A lake Adults, no
arts llfo H I sis)

BI—Apartments Furnished
FumttiVd apartments tor sen-or
Ciiitent Ttl Pkimerto Ave . J
Cowan »o ghono calls.
Lake Mery Furn Elf Apt
Smgie male, no children, pots
h i

im

31A -O jpkacs
Largo Ntw I Bdrm. A ir Haal.
Carpffod. anniiancts No pelt
U H Mo I IM Dap ID TU T

E i«

H IJC H

Santord Lak* Mery art* Ntw
D upNi, 1 Bdrm, )'&gt; R4th.
Cent H A No pots all ap
pl anets IM N i t Alt 4 p m

LABORERS
SUM m o n t h l y
I W ILL T R A IN !
Meet * Woman, hot* s your
chancel

*f E w — 1401 M E LLO N V IL L E
7 BR. 1 Balk, Kil. A ppf, A C. No
pefs.SMP i Deposit Eve. a il

A AA E M P L O Y M E N T
lowest Fo*
1 wks saury
H U Fttnch Ay*
m in s

O U F lE X , I Bd'm. ale. Kids,
pool STM me Say On Rentals
Heritor ITT TH*

IMS For* Ortvo

KALCOCMRT REALTY, aq

seal

107 C JSftilt
1

Bdrm . I S bath, graal
assumption, super ere* Clean
as a pin. move right ut Only
Ilf.e X

Res Pius income ) Unit! lo4*l.
Croat location Super than
c mg Only S if.TX

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
IS a e lF tvn c h Av*
U l *1)1
Alter hours 147 W *
'H I N il
Wonder what to X wish Tw o )
Sell Ona — Tha quick, easy
W ant Ad way Th# magic
lyiipiu* is m m i *y m yggs
i B d rm . I Bath « ST. Rd Q )
Closed porch, alt athud star age
, carport Set 000 IT ) run
M.ddm La** Estates ) Bdrm. )
bath, spilt plan home Cent.
Meal, fir c community pool in*
CiuCftouse All Sgr U T.7 X
A L G E R 4 POND R E A L TY INC.
fB A H S IM )
4 1, synkfik L B , Cathedral
cwling in FB
Special *1
Sdl-SXI Dae* F e r n Ra*|
Estate SuparMarktf, Realtor
P ) f lu
) Bdrm . Ms Bafh. U rg e d lanced
corner W . eppli included,
meg are* U l . c e H le o i)

�I l l *

Sunday. M ay id . I N I - 9 S

E v e n in g H e ra k l. Sanford. FI.

41—Houses

41— HoutCS

42—M obile Homes

f»'iOAA V 4Hdrm, blk home on
•" »&lt;f« ol land Scr patio.
I m M m Ub.SOO i n Oil*

Obi Wipt 1 H U -. I Bdrm. 1 Both
At IB *, intprttl
Down
payment and fat* uvor
Pdymtntt Call aH a » ns
beto

I 1i new rood, pamt, mmaculate
condition, good cash 10 mor
•0*0*' U ! MC 0*v* r i m
Real Estate SuperM arkrt.
Realtor 771 0141

ST JOHNS RIVER I Canal) -1
bdrm t polo, central boot (IT.
woll &gt;0 *011 Carpet. i cor
garage immaculate con
d i t w SOO.IW Principals only

m i m g r i n i)04
lt d r m . 2 Ualh,
I fireplace*. dm. large til
tr&gt;*n. tulle equipped including
nrw Jenn Air conm l Ion o»»n,
grill, refrigerator. dun
n iir r r , noli 10 *011 corptl.
rentral no4i a r, 1 cor carport,
lorgo workshop. located on 1
loro Oot Irto t. ticeltent
condition
Many titr o t
I I I . »00
Principals only
Residence 11} 757*. M n n i
M l 1771 ( I I A IS MonFrl

Dog--------------------------------.
n iid ti
Evt ns let*
O W NER M O T IV A T E D '
Nettled undtr largo Oot troov
ttnt 1 Bdrm homo hat a lorgo
family room w th ovtrp .n
tuiolton lo r soundproofing
Ownoo tayt ho II hold mot
'go gt too' Avtmg S IM M

lochadboR

STENSTROM
REALTY -

REALTORS

o p e n h o u s e sun i s
H I MILL r u n

TH E CROSSINGS
O P F LAKE M AR Y BLVD
BtoutiiuM I Bdrm. 1 born homo
on loro* corner Ipndicopod k »
E it r b i include i f &lt;&gt;' bdrm
plon. grtot rm with liroplaco.
dining rm. Fid rm. CHA. ww
carpet A plIW I A Droom

M .~ : r». ■ » “ ! : Coma ram
your hotlott. Loo Albrigbl.
Realtor Associate.
TO D A Y !

CALL ANYTIME
IT E M F f R AOINCV
REALTOR llla ttl

IMS

■ vet H I M i 111 It H n l IMS

Fart

Mvllipit Lilting Sot,let

322-2420

Harold Hall Realty
R E A LTO R S , M LS

ROBBIE'S
REALTY

DayorNlQht

COUNTRY LUXURY. Hrm It
*cft W t»l l l linear* ) M rm ,
) B ilh . Law dawn Living rm ,

limity run* brick ftrtflaca
Vtideo L i l t Woodi 1 ml. W
©&lt; M intranet i n i Wff

l l i l S FrtfKh
Suita 4
Sanfari

COUNTRY laniard homt
w tli Omn#f funincling. Big lot,,

l ik e

•fhtfd, w tf| | 14*000

24 HOUR ffl 322-9283
Q U A L IT Y C O U N TR Y L IV IN G
Sprawling I ' i oert ced ed
pool With largo 0 BR IB
family homo Rood, lo move
in P n c v d lo g o a l I44.M0 Call

KH W . lit si.

SLM in o l e w o o d s eiecu'iu*
homesne — S plut term by
owner Call Orlando 777 WO
wortoart after p p m

20 ACRES m Northwest Orange

real

LO V CLV Cauntnr Hama I
Bdrm,. Hu Bath, AiMmakia
mai *«*•«, L a ri# tfauila
iiltd yard. M it N

es ta te

RRAl ’ OR. I l l Jodt

• v1
f \ H A l . 11s t

P iN tC R C lT Naal I Bdrm
U to lli wifi law dawn Balanca
payabit
ta ty
manffilv
pjym tnH
l

ASSUMPTION. Na qualify inf
CkaKf I Bdrm, t Bath la rd y
art a. incfudai Family Rm.
and Pail 1*1.SO*

CALL 323*5774

vn •

_____________ a

121*0041

M LS

LOCH ARBOR * Bdrm. 1 Bam.
Fam ily R m . Int.de Utility.
Carport, h r . Coni H A. large
loncod yard IS t.lM
SAN FO R D 1 Bdrm. 1 »*m. Old
brick
I.replace,
pantlod
Fam ily I n , Egu.ppta Nil
ebon. Now carpet and vinyl,
la rg o Opt chided lot Slil.dM.

STENSTROM
RIALTY -

REALTORS

S a n f o r d 's S a le s L e a d e r
w i l is t a n d s e l l
M O B I M O M IS TH A N
A N T O N I IN T N I
U N F O ftv A B E A

TH E F O R E S T I Bdrm 1 S llh .
Split Plan family rm. D o it,
near Clvb Haul* Ptal. and
Sauna SSI.IM
R E D U C E D S Bdrm. 1 BallL
Rtnevalion almacl lamploled
a ttw g SSI.IM
Matt rap.
tenable oiler
D e a l won r* BUY Real lila c *

SUV Rddl E m it and wdlIMt
LA W A N A R IS H

A T T R A C T IV E 1 Bdrm 1 Both
homo Ip Bo! Awl l or to c tenor
lot. *41 in til , pol.o wllti BBQ.
ipOil bdrm plon. F P L. CHA A
• llr t ll ISt.lM
JU S T FOR YO U! 1 Bdrm. I bom
homo ip Iv a liR d l FtPCtd
r » 'd Flo rm., lorgo porch A
polto. utility rm A mprol Lplt
ol potontroi I i n to*
PA CK AG E D EA L Two 1 Bdrm.
I both homier Good I"
vttlm onll Sold in p i it cond
tw e e d yprdtl G if ol IPCOlitn
in Droomwpldl »*0.M « total
R ID G EW O O D ACR ES' Duplet
loll lo atd. pH utilities. povod
rto d t.
Nope
S H II
Will
tobprdinpt* lor keiiden Buy
now! Build row to loleei Jvtl
II k m From gid.lFSI
M A Y F A IR V IL A A S ll AS Bdrm.
I Bom Conte v.iiot M i l la
Moyloir Country Club Soled
your lei. note plon A wittier
dtcprt O ullity ctatlrucltd by
Skoomotoc lor MJ.Md 4 apt
Open Sprvrtfdt I* ! t I td A

Home tile overlooking Crytiai
Lete w.lh largo lawn area
Suitable loo lorenis, putting
range, or Gardent Over I
Acre, cleared tome citrut
Teemt tie 000
laii terry M l atei
OONALDG JACKSON INC
r ea lto r
h i sns
No crual.lying 1 Bdrm l&gt;c Bain
Cent M A Family Rm Fenced
Yard SI.000 Down Assume tail
Mo Owner jjg SI70

Reel Cttale Bcoher
m a i ls
45-A — O u t o l Slate
P r o p e r ly

REALTY - REALTORS

oo Mpontnetd Call Herb
Sltnilrtm ar La* AlbngM lo

O P E N SUN. II M l M
M A Y P A IR VILLAS
ON W. t4 A
ACROSS— M A Y F A IR
C O U N TR Y CLUB
OdirgiMIul 1 A I BR. I I cool*
hornet. Itafuring lutery tppl .
lanced patio A 4 lloar plane an
bdpulclol wttded Idle, n city
caav., pdlactnt t* Mayldir
Country Clutl Oual.lt contl
by SAbomattr
ASSO C IA TES N E E D E D ' New
or eeptntecod. Call Herb
Slenitiam er Loo Albngbt
today A d.uovof todCtiti

C A L L A N Y T IM E
tu i
Per*

322-2420
REALTORS

C A L L A N Y T IM E
Part

322- 2420

C A L L A N Y T IM E
IMS

«ldb 0»
•M f
L i . Mary

fttvd.

323- 2222
323-6363
R EA LTO R S

M u l l l p i t L i s t i n g S e r v ic e

jada r *f&gt;Q. S pf O if^ofxn all
around equal* 1 Ciraf S3 000

Black Mafrii opal rinq NX
gokl S*S0 1331 W tvet

51— H ousehold G oods
19YI Skngar Futur* Fully iufo.
rtpcnim vd, utid vary khOfl

lima OrtamalSSf).

SHI or

111 mo Agifil S31* IB *

M ilt ip t i Listing Service
41B- C o n d o m in iu m s "
F o r Sale

sandalwood VILLAS 1
Mrypt, I toithi, w , dw, WIO«
c AH pool, u r pjftO SD.S00
m i*40
42— M o b ile H om es

Very Clean, Untwmithad U .100
m iisg or u i m i

leee a cylinder Dodge Dart w,m
A C , *0-000 rules, exetleni
cond. sees m ifb a All. a SB

Oil

7 7 - Ju n k C a rs Rem oved
BUY JUNK CARS B TRUCKS
From SIB lo SJB or mort

’71 Pinto, a Speed
NiceCar Ibes
111 III*

caii in tala nitaao
Tap Dollar Paid tor Junk A Used
c a rv trucks A heavy equip

Classllied Ads are the smallesf
tug news items you will find
anywhere

mtnl. I l l SbbO

62— Lawn Garden

• M E M O R IA L D A Y *

F i l l DIRT A fO PS O IL
Y E llO W SAND
Call Clark AH, ft M l IS*0

M O N . . M A Y 25 7 P .M .

tb Pont C T O . Runs A drives
good Nredt body work. 1710or
will trade lor antiques ol equal
vatu# BIS* &gt; Maple

7 9 -T r v d a A T r a lk r i

LAWN MOW ( R M I C . 1 ttgr
Special Available nowhere
but Western Aula, Santord

E v e r y d a y is b a r g a in o a y
IN THE WANT ADS 121 M il or
All bWl

45-Pots Supplies
L arga M jit 8#iw t

• S A N F O R D A U C T IO N *
• 1215 S . F R E N C H •
323 7340
♦or iif f lf f, Commtrciil or
RfftfcfffflHlI Auction* A Ap
prffiMU
U t MTV

JII3ISE FIRST ST

m i*33

4 NEW orvan cruthfd vtlva?
turlvtl rockfri, 1170 Mth I
maleti«ng oHoman, 1*0.
323 1431

bo-

Autos fo r S alt

71 Ford nation Wagon l T O
Brougham, t ilr a clean, new
tires, air, PS, PB. t * » o r make
otter 1*1 le tl_______________
let* Galas it M I Aulo Trans. Air
condition, Claan, E v c tlltn t
condition, t t m o m sa*a

C A IN FOR YOUR CAR
Martin Motor Sales
701 S French
H I Ilia

1170 VW Beetle
StlOd
c a u m a tn

Runs Perfect

I I G r a n d Prlv -Goodcond New
Iron! m d alternalw A slartrr
Atkina StOO cash 1121111

setl Chrysler Newport
Air. PS. PB. Cruise Contra!
saw t i l Wbb

Calf D alit Auction

110 0*11)310114

WILSON MAI EX FU R N ITU R E

*1 Chavy PanafirwcfL ai i»,
11000 Cash Phonff 3)311*0
afffff * o m

Good assortment ol furniture,
Including an I dues and modern
also TV s and household Brlc
and Brae Home Mede Bated
goods lor Charily Sale
It Cash Visa MC IS

5 %

Bottr Pun AKC. * Wffffh*
Fa*n of tflhdtff Pacfffdt on
prcm ,m ||tS 32)4141
H IM A LA Y A N K IT T E N l H 7 )
Bluff Point, Safi po nl 1)1 7«30

ilffffff 4

I

75— R ecre atio n al Vehicles
17 ft Holiday R«mbJ#r lital for
tNvffllno *4 cimping. Twafva
0#k% Cffrnpqround inquir* if
Lo4 •* San for d I Mi W on 4*

S*dt by S«da Rttf Hi S?ova uppar
ItMrfr, birvttt gold, prac

D'iA Y T O N A A U TO AUCTION
Mwy bl. 1 m lk west c* Speed
way. Daytona Beach, anil hole
a public A U TO AUCTION
every wapnatday alb pm li t
lha only on# In f lor ida You tes
the reservad p e n t Call 1041
111 I 111 tor lurthor details

F O R O G a lasy. 1*7* 1*00
l « l Chase Ave.
m in s
VW Ibai Pick Up Truck
Good Mechanic el Condition
la w 111 aaae

CONSULT OUR

llU lIv new Hammond Organ

wufhi InitrurntnlB rtv a rtra
Bluff&lt;lfi WMlff anfsqiut

matlif bedroom i«f Ch/fftn
tllff Culfem draper y and
matching bffdiprffad. bluff

la w your equity and crtdtt from
Vofidoturt (a lio property
wtfft hwi equity and atuimabie
mot ffaipei #Mlv'ad, i Fr ica «nd
ler mi npqotiibii C all 111 «A*1
for confidently appoint men!

EitrM . tifrat, ffilra% W rA
day* aft * p m JSI 3433

W« buy equity In H iuttie
apurtmanti. vacant land and
ACfiioe
I.U C K Y
IN
V E S TM E N if, P O lee 1SB0.
Sanford. Fla. m u . m a i n
Lac hinge I Bedroom. 1MJ Elm
City. Norm Carolina House I
fireplaces, pecan treat, e
beauty I M l I l W a _________
Cletlilied Aat will always give
you mort
Much . Much
More man you eipect
investor
Buying
Income
Ptoperly Principals only no
brotert Aigrean, Boa a«a)
W.rdyr Pact. PI H i l l
HAVE CASH
FOB YOUR FARM
OR BUILOINO LOTS,
luka C a ryd iliM i »k SIIIM4
ar 1)1 N i l

47 A — M o rtg a g e s Bought
4 Sold
We pay cath lor HI A Ind
mortoagtt Ray Legg. Lie
Mortgage Brottr 11* rite
4 9 -C o u n fry P ro p e rty

IB Acres with River Rigntt A
tram# Log home ] Bdrm. 1
Bain with dec*, goal, left of
ditrat SiM.000 Owner fInane
ing penno i* with r eat down
pymt maaoi_____________
it you don I tall paopte. hew ere
they gemg to Snow? Tell them
w.m a claitrlied ad. by calling
i n m i or tsi m i

On Hamtmgi Mutt
liguidaio tract. heH price
Cavaiitc4Solannn.Hv.lI. el. 1

Freeior. I l ls F irm Chaw type,
n cu It M l Cherotte Lana.
Sunland Ettatat
Dm mg Rm. Suite. Batten B r a n Wood. Cana. Gleet.
Table with beveled gleet &lt;n
tart*. » chant A tiled china
S I.IBB Call aitatg*

M IC R O W A V E
Brand Nrw, puih button centrof
ha&gt; p ro v Originally U lt,
baianct lift, I lf monthly
____________ I B t B * ___________
M IC R O W A V E
Brand rwpw lappan microunawe
ffv»n Only luq 131 fo *ffll at
thr* pr»cff liw cam or S70 a
month NO MONEY DOWN
Fra*hum* trial. No obligation
Call M3 SB 4 day or nit*
Waihffe rinpo UE dfflusff mod**
M td«rig laot IV into tnurl
lima. Bai t llf 14 or Sit IS mo
itnmora parti li r v X i . w»ad
woman MOONEY APPLl
ANCES 1710447
REF REPO Iff cu tl frottfraa
Ong 1134. now 170S or Sit mo
Agent 334 13*4
Larpff ftfffffctlon Apartmenl tu t
gat rangat Ouaranlaad
Sanford Auction, 17IS $
Franch 33)7)40

51—

T V -R a d

i d - S te re o

TR LB VISION
RCA. 14M t* lawnon X L 100 Solid
Staff
Color
Porfoblo
Warranty Pay 1144 or Sid
Monthly Financing No Down
Ply man?
• A K l MM N Millt Avo I I I 43)

Orfanito 1-0*4.104*
C O LO R T E L E V IS IO N
lanilh IS " color TV Original
price aver SIPB Balanca due
SIN er fate ever payments lib
per month Still Ml warranty
NO M O N E Y D O W N
W ill
dtlivec Free home I r lei Call
M l sn* dev er mte
Good Used T V t . t l S A up
m il l e r s

M il Of lends Dr

Ph HI01S1

rtee Inditin' H pretip good. Bui
the Imd in 'tt tm d e 'p o o rly ...Ill
ye' grl la the WAN TA O S
TV repo I f Zenith Sold ong
tael IS ttai SHI 1* or 111 mo

Agem Mf »lt*
TV i FOR RCNT
Coke A Black A adi.la Frea
dtliyefy A pxtup Jim m y *
TV Rental P*ww Anytime
n s u t a ______________

54— G a ra g e Sales
Moving Sale Sot*. I I t . vlnyli
matching eha.r A ottoman.
*nd tablet, drop leaf dinette
table A Chaus, lamps, brown
carpet IB* II, m i clothes u
aa. latf.et n . II, rugs, ting tile
bedspread ».nvl ingle, a de
chest, luggage, wigs. Oviedo,
Central A Vma StSHBI
Gat age Saia

ARM Y N A V Y SU R PLU S
Ft L o ite r. Irvn A t. OwNta Bags
SIB Sanford Ave
m in i

C y .ia n a .w ill Pel ■ IU pieces,
tarlntone natural fabric
Sco k "guarded, tesd t i l H U
N£ E D A IE RV ICE MAN J You’ll
imd him listed m our Rut matt
StrveCd Directory
VLB MOO N CB. S ill. Go Cdrt.
S IN . Id Ft, Aluminum boat.
mo*or and trailer. SMB For
self or TreeSe lor IB F I er
long Canoe i n a m Alt t o m

Raiian Game Set Glatt lopped
taw* A a chairs. U00. W.cter
snail unit. SUB Rattan bar
itools (I ). ISO aa. tldatdt

To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

Nil RctarclitlaSi
Sal A Sun AVON Collectors old
A nee* G i r l s ZB" bike,
womans A gtnt’ clothing A
rtusc aaa Long wood Circle
North
Y A R D SALE Sal. Sun A Mon
Jpf S. Sunland Dr ttlll I Misc

55—Boats &amp; Accessories
lets IS II cobea Trt Hull, as Hp
Eamrude.
lap.
lankt,
gal trailer 111 ten
Johnson Outboard mglor. tS Hp ,
IttS model Used ver. little. In
a ) cond pn m i n e

59— M

j s iu iI

Merchandise

Couth and chair, avocado green,
good condil.cn. 1100 R S JdM
el ler t p m

TR U M P E T "C a m "
Etceilent Cond
Call 121 Mat

Iro n w o rk s

P a in tin g

W.rataw Guard*. Door Guard*.

TE R R Y ’S INTERIORS
Waflpffptrtng, painting Lo*
pr*c#» Guar *r»cV 11*431*

Concrete Work

A i r Condition

Cbr»% * ’H ttfvicff AC i. rfffriq,
trtfftffn. w ii» f rooirn, m*»c
C#H 331 *777

Anything Concrffta
ll#t&gt;».
Dr&gt;vffw«yi. ConcrHff co*of *ng.
KlC

Quality

wort

«t

Sliding Glass Door vn&lt;knurrs.
P a lis and Foal railing*,
rentes. Gales, fa * Escape*.
Slaol Siaifk, Ornamanl*! Hon
Furniture, Etc. Come see our
d splay, IBB I E ISIhrighthera
in Sanford' Ab'l'ty Ironwockt.

Utr

prkffi Ron 333 4*7) Aft 5 pm
CiikfMliffd ads i c f ir rh#Luy-fo i.
iffiling commundy «v «ry d«y
Rffffd 1 utff thffm Off*«

A lu m in u m Siding &amp;
S c r w n Rooms
Aluminum Appl leal ion Service
Alumn A vinyl siding. SOlflt,
screw rooms, windows, doors,
gutters U b ltS e e s e i

lha MrfffihHPf it parfacf tot tt
backyffrd
Ifffa
tfll
ffvaryfhlng fail Miffs « want td
Caff 3)3 3*11 or *31 444)
1M AN . QUA l 11 r u »'t w A T ION
t y n tap PafaM, O rlv tw iy i.
Hi
B#41 )|f I )||
loncfRtt Work, loot art, liopn &amp;
pool* Landicffpmg L tod

stork Fraa ail 33) 9Ml
C yp re ss M u lch

WANT ADS ARE BLACK A
W HITE AND REAO A LL
OVER

n s !*oo
La n d s ca p in g
spring Yard Claan Up Mowing,
bed* mulched, shrub pruning,
wrest,ng. bask yard care
M onthly totes
Cell lor
rtt John Mb IBS* Am Pm
II

you r# In the bus ness ot
bu.td.ng your business use
the Cleeiified Ads otten

TCP Quality Mulch delivered lo
homeor business I S Yds SSI
MB Can Den 111 trtt

B eauty C a re
Fen ces

The "Good Ol* Days’’ hava
never tilt me Classihed Ad
»
The B u ll are Mill The
Best'

Boarding &amp;Grooming
Animal Haven Bearding and
Cream ing K e n n tli. Shady,
imulalvd. s c re w lly proof,
w id e , outside runs Also AC
cages Weceler your pels 111
P M _________________________
Snewhill Kennels pvpud 16 an
muncaihoaod'i.onai Larry A
Ratty, formerly with Animal
Haven tt Hour Caro Full
Service. MS V I I
The Bell lu y In Town coal Ciauif ed Ad

A low

S e rvice
C a rto n

up*. Hauling IIS Obf*
The Evening Herald Cltst.licd
Ad* otter no toncy da.m
t

H and ym e n

P re s s u re

Bill C o rlo. lla 'e Certified
B u ild in g
C g n tra d o r
Residential or Commveckl.
New or Remodeled M l Baba

B u rg la r B a rs
C#H Atoilitr fronwor a »
for A in&lt;h&gt;* 4 Door Guirot

J21 ?tec
C a rp a l C lean in g
Shampoo A Deep Staam Li*,
Dm Rm , Hail, tl* SIS aa
additional rm. SI I Babb

Ceramic Tile
m e in t z e r

t il e

New sr repay, kaky shower* bur
Specially, IS its E tp Mb d a l

R e m o d e lin g
Complete Home Repair* A
Remodeling, Painting, none
additions, drywtll, etc N yrs
r.p Call 771 Sdff ryes

Remodeling Specialist'
W* hffifvfIff tht
Whqlff Offllaf W*ff

B. E. Link Conits
322-7029

^Maintenance Service
E mane Ing A ^ w e b if

The personal touch!
M107T7

R o o fin g

A lla w n C a n

All RAasak. ippQ uaiitl
Handyman Relirad W-|i *i,
almost anything in Ina home

Low prices R o t

i

va s tb l

Lawn Mawiag

M l 1011

• rusk Htmtvai
H T. LACKEY

H a u lin g A
Y a rd W b rk
Hauling A Yard Work i e \ * lt
with Ad 1IJ-IIS1 no an* Ml
lael Larry. Joyca Bryant

Home Improvement
ALL PHASES REMODELING!
Plumbing. Elec .Carpentry
II YM Esp Qua 1.1, Work
Rtat R a in Fra* E li H I 011*
Ik y Kids Looking lor on fair*
dollar? Ask Mom A Dad to let
you have a cla s illitd ad
garage tele
Remodeling A Repair. D ry WdA,
Hanging. TealuredCatling* { ,
r. Belli*. B W
111*441

ROOPS. k t t i rapaitad. Raptaca
raft* t a r n and shiagla work,
llcentad. insured, bended.
Mike irs asil

nM bai

M asonry

S a n d b la s tin g

A ll Type* ol Mason Work.
Spocioilling in Fence* and
Addition* 111 ISBI

N E W Concrete EulUm gi. alt
tile*. SIB A up Al I a A SR e*

I a industrial Park mtObi

S A N D B LA STIR O
OAVIS W IL D IN G
171 a m . SAN PORO

Fa.nting. Reeling. Carpentry
Lie Bonded A Guaranteed
Free E ilim a le i 171 tail

Lxhffwff* N ufifng Cqitfffr
414 E Wcond I f , U n ^ f d
13)4303

P a in tin g

Us

H O U II PAINTINO
inter iarAlaltrsar
H .T.LA C K R Y 1111*41

Hom e R tp a in
QUALITY AT A FAIR P R IC El
Gen Repa rs A Impros 17 t f »
locally Sw io r O ne a l l«s.
Carpentry A Remodel irg
No lob too smell
72? MSI or Altera 10

T a x &amp; A c c o u n tin g
S e r v l e t _________
Or

Business and Individual*
EluabelhA G rlndkC P.A.
» ? lias

Nursing Center
OUR HATES AMI LOMER

CENTRAL FLORIDA HOME
turS O V CM CliTS

Heilman Painting A Repairs
Quality wot* Frea Esl Otsc
tg Sanigrg »]*A*W Ratar
hosts#

Pamiar 1st Class WerVv
reasonable P'-ces IS yaarl
cap Kavsneth Noll Ml SIS*
anytime altar 1

Paintllsg-Ra.
larwr interior
Ravnoduiing,
Lie in* Fro* tt&lt; I aat 1)17 -

^ ^ T n je S e r v ic e ^ ^
SELLING IT MAKES CASH
PLACE A CLASSIFIED AO
NOW Call 111 1*11 or i l l m
HARPRR t t R t l SERVICE
Trimming. rtmovmQ 4 L**d
K « p » q Ffff* E|l S3) 0313
T y p in g #

Bookkeeping
WILL DO typing, rakumg,
reports us my horn* on I AM
cor rotting srleclnc
Also
bookkeeping IT ) KMC

CLASSIFIED ADS DO A JOB
WHICH CAN dE HONE NO
OTHER WAT CALL M ila n

Protessional

Insulation

C lock R e p a ir
GWALTNfcY JEW ELER
K a l ParhAat
m*tB*

Cleaning

Mobile Home*. Houles, Root*.
Truck*. Trolier, Etc PorMbi*
Unit Harold R a n tm llllt S S

M ini-17 lock

Building Contractor

OR

FO N S ECA P LU M R IN O
Can
llrucllon. Repair*. Emargan
Cy Lie . Bonded, Ini MS 4075

BeoutificaUonend

Jp.
■V ' J l i

LAR O E

Freddie Robinson Plumbing
Repoir*. faucets. W
C
Sprinkler* 11) 1110. 121 0704

CrockalP* Learn
H

TO O

P lu m b in g

Juki Ram list

•

JO B

SMALL Qualify a must f «•»
J3300M. 13) m i Fr— E|f

S e r v ic e

Dad and Day* Lawn Care
Shrub A Trt* Removal, Clean

&gt;'

B rush C utting
CUSTOM WORK
Reasonable
Rate*
Fra*
Bslinsala Call E a rl, A M. or
Eve S I ewe or I MSI 1*1 Ilea

Law n

Complete lean care S71I7TJ

M A K E R O O M TO S TO R E
YOUR
W IN T E R
IT E M
S
SE LL DON T NECOS FAST W ITH A W ANT AO
Ptsona 111 Jail or 111 feel and
a le w d ly Ad Viter will http
rw.

NO

LARGE TR t E INSTALL * R

L a w n A G a rd e n

Rustic Whale Rail, cyfresl lim e
and pail Da il vavrsatl ar wt
install 111 0471 ar 1114141
F r ia Cstimatas

P a in tin g A
P r o s s u r t C le a n in g

Landscaping. Old Lawns Re
placed 1411101

TOW ER S B E A U TV SALON
F O R M E R LY Harriett’s Beauty
Nook SIT C 1st SI . 112 1741

On Now Al

SCURA TANK. Aluminum
•Ocu tt Just inspected
u s can m i n i

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

52— A p p lia n ce s

E n e r o v a o o llar si
Balt A Blown PRONTO IN
Su l A T ION CO US a m or oa
U R Free E si,mat is

save

T l Eicon* lie to

NO v u n E y OOw n Payments
SIS month 7* Cougar XR 7,
PS. PB. Au*o. AM FM iter to.
a&gt;r A many other ettral 11b
•100 or bla aoOS Dee let

N E E D A SERVICEMAN’ You’ll
i.nd him listed m our Bus mess
Drretory

72— A uction

Niofafffvt Y1- Wf

J l - A — F u m it u r *

Original

do, A ditto,or tuccoti t

is**

1 Bdrm A frame cottage I Acre
lot with good act rtc AN
located in cool green western
N C near Late, while water
rivert A grey Smottet Call lor
mare information on tr.it L
other colleges, acreage, larmt
A butmettet Call collect I
IB*ill MOa or write Tel Stale
L end Co P O Boa U L Mur
phy. N C 1*W* ___________

SO— M is ce lla n e o u s lo r Sale
O PEN HOUSE

STOP D O LLAR S ..

For your car or true!, regar
dies* ol cond Prefer running
tree lowing ait tall Agent

thag carpeting, lawn m o »ff

N O R T H C A R O L IN A
M O U N T A IN S

dream house

STENSTROM

lie isssor m obi I
"ibis Cepri V b Rebuilt engm*
and brakes Newpainl Secant
Into . H IM 111 4i*t

• A U C T IO N •
ifiu tifu l Tr#n»tvcenf C ra m

ftam

dream house

Son Noon SI
A k b U C IA lR t N P b O b D i Now

R EALTO R

321-0041

JU S T L IS T E D I Bdrm. 1 Both
homo m H.ddon L o ttl Spill
bdrm plon. decar touchoi.
CMA. now IAIN c or Pol Ftp
Pm
porch. BB A mtcol
tsp.tgg

50-A — J e w e lr y

IbbSFORDGalaiy
Good Cond AC SW0

J aPontiac brand#.lie
Good Peris tor Sale
ail E M'hSl 111 bill

48-W a n t e d to Buy

Diamonds

80— A u to s f o r Sale

76— A u lo Parts

A N T IQ U E A Modern dolls.
Kewp.e dolls A llpurm es.
Ai*sendee dons aaa sail

qant 319 cua

s i r

f r e e horse w o rm cr

Aluminum, cans, copper, lead,
brass, silver, gold Weekdays
• a SO. Sal t l ko K oMo Tool
Co bid W 111 SI 121 1100

County taS.OOO IB S Dow",
balance al IB % .nl 111 *404

47— R m I E s ta te W a n le d

CallBart

i

Of tour choice w.lh purchese ol
■B bags ol Horse Feed
wiice Seiet-Mey aaw, I Mi w
el i a laniard I I I li f t

07 7*7}

u!1

AT FOR OABLC. Naaf, ) larva
B d rm
B tim rd (til&gt;R|t.
larva thru Kite*** FHA VA
Imancinq Onif 111*901

47— L ive s to ck P o u ltry

C*NR*«» * 6| v t i « i « a

R E A L TO R . MLS

HIDE YOUR NORSK •« !•»•«?.
quit t. itflcvd p tllvrt with
B#mi CiuMry ) Idrm. cm
crrfff bio&lt;k. p#w*fffd fftffMlf
in . wrfflf t#wffllC4rv*f Mtffff 1
I jnd Wffbtv* Rivtr Mort m
Cill today m oo* Fr##t» an
SR 40

on

isrg Dodge Tiavco Camper Vm
&gt;, ton high lop. Air. Cond.
AM FM tape, Cruise control.
Stove.
R fttlg .
Suit.
Bathroom Sleeps I Mull
saeril.ee Si 700 Day JSI M il.
Eve lisaaab

Paintings Oriental Rugs
Bridges Ant,guvs
i n H 01

B o b M . B a l l J r . P .A .

R EA LTO R S
I t , M* • d • O.

•iRfMT^Af 4**41Mo4j o&lt;t V 4C t2

75— R e cre a tio n a l Vehicles
Saddle and Accessaries
For Sale I too
Call H I OOaBor H I 107*

Anliuuas

Tomocnrw may be the day you
tell tnal roll a way bod you've
rwwhoreioroll ewav
tl you
place a Ciatt.ind Ad today

OPEN HOUSE

46—Horses

i

4j —Lots- AcLeege

R EA LTO R )

r e s l c a i c I Bdrm Iroiloc m
Ottaon v i a lo r 1 oduitt only
ITS mo Discount lotto

323 5774

HEAPS W ITH TH E M A N M l f i i
E D IT O R ?
r E J C B iK P T H E jc io m n c
T E S T l M OF M Y
______ ' HAW. l u . MAKE
I T E W Y ,' ME C A N B C U V E
FWTER'S CHINT
WELL \€ $ HERE
H I5 C « N O F F T H E W A L L !
F
A
TH E N P R A S H IM AWAY 6 0
T H E T P U R I 6 T 6 P O N T THIN K
C E M C N &amp; T R A T IC N '.
H E '6 A N O T H E R
R EP O R TER
B L E E P IN '
c it y
I T O F F .'
ro n v
(},
w hen

we have leveret 10 acre tract!
near DeLand I* 00* cath v
410 000 with S1.S00 down
Uta IS per mo lor I Veart

a iw u

IN V E S T IN O R A N G E S 1 +
Ac col ol Orang* grow with ]
bdrm. 1 bom. brict homo
Ovor 1.000 to It ol living area
* greenhouse. double gar ago
A m ort lirsOOO

Concord 11,1!,*0
Fair cond . Unfurnished. *5500
Call SI) ISIS

te e rrm

1 ttory Capo Cpd. 1 1. Irg r m t .
tupoc oatrpt Oort Farr t
Real t u p l e S u p o rM p rttl.
Realtor I I ] t i l l

IM M A C U L A TE I earn. 1 bain,
im c o irt d.n.ng rm , living rm
with be let lirtp lo tt. ler cvnnd
poren New root A carpal,
m an, v illa s Lorga shaded
lot Good area Only tll.SOO

LOCATION LOCATION W.thrn
• ait ng diiianco Irom a
number ol but messes 1 Bdrm.
1 Born homo. Central air A
noat. liraplac*. loncrd A mora
Only S47.SOO

boo Our beautiful .tow BROAD.
MORE. IroW A rear BR't
GREGORY M OBILE HOMES
WO] Orlando Or.
SIS SIM
VA A FHA Financing

w ith Major Hoopla
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
HOW A B C U T HAVIN' HIM R J T T
ACE. VO Y0U RECALL

Custom Decorating Paudug.
irdtr.or ealerior. piaster mg,
wallpapering Oual.ly work
Rea* Free Eit m trts

W aitpipering
Wallpapering Free E*t It
tr*. Eqp Call A L I Mat I
McKinney 777 4440 I* m 7pm

�U R — E v e n in g Her*Id. V en lord ^ F L

S v n d e y , M e y } « . IW )

BATH TISSUE

|
« o H » S
» S » A V

„
,ov*

im i
♦ '■

* '/&amp;¥ i . ]

. « , •; ' » *

T f

*

aU S i
O |J I
; a
I

d
.v r f * i f W

a

1-LB.
QTRS

. .

¥

SAVE

.

ta n r m r I
l r

* 1

bAVfc 3 0

*1

BEEF PAniES

ASTOR FRUIT

BEER

COCKTAIL

16

-o s.

CANS
I H » n MAO tA ltltt (SICIIVMAIVH)

P o o rs............2 X X ' l "

PACK

PAPER PLATES

T

12 - o i .
CANS
C R A C IM OOOO ll

.Potato Chii

CORN

HARVIJI I H IM

U « l » - W M U I A N O C l CtlAJM
U l l OR C l CHAM

Avocodoes

Sandwiches . .'I S »1

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                    <text>4 B— E v t n ln i Ha ra id , h n U r d , F I.

BLOND!E

HOMEX NOU PROMISED
TO DO THE
. DISHES

T u t» d « y , A p ril 14, l t l l

by Chic Young

A PINK APRON W ITH
L A C E RUFFLES?/
NO WAV/

H E R E S AW APRON F D R N O U

§

I R EFUSE//
%

vou

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61
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n n
62 Baseballer
n n
Musiil
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63 Actress
ran n
□
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64 Ward off
so n
n
65 Canto
43
Insect egg
11
Bohemian
66 Come by
19 Public vehicle 45 Scouting or­
DOW N
21 Year (Sp )
ganization
23 Culmination
(abbr.)
1 Indication
25 Put on solid
2 Protuberance
47 Goblet
food
on a camel
26 Omelet like
49 Foundling
3 Montreal
27 Implement
50 Split
world a fair
28 Philosopher
4 Sneepill
51 Gusto
Mari
5 Congeal
52 Inner (praf)
30
Fir
(prefn)
6 Short race
31 Potential steel 54 Small shoot
7 Ingested
32 Touch
6 Formal
55 Grant
35 Detergent
speech
56 Warmth
38 Good fortune
9 Suffis
59 Bronte
40 Riant
10 Ten (prefn)

ACROSS

n e w I PUT,
M V FOOT DOWN
AN D IN S IS TE D ON
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12 Unit of
illumination
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athletic group
14 Active perion
15 Baieball
official |abbr |
16 Criterion

ill

17
18
20
22
24

E
by M o rt W a lk e r

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

H O W D O YOU
S E T YOUR HAT
TO STAN D UP
S O S TR A IG H T,
C O O K IE ?

Passageway
Age
Rumor •
Macaw
C om pitt
point
Illegal alien
Port of Rome
Conceit
Christian
holiday
Slav
Eager
Cupid
Mae West
role
Kind of cloth
Luminous
Use a spade

25
29
33
34
36
37
39
41

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44
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by A rt S a n so m

T H E BORN LO SER

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A R C H IE

H O W D O YOU
ERASE A HOLE f

I T S DIFFICULT
GETTING U S E D TO

54

53

52

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55

56

60

57

58

61

62

63

64

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•1

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For Wednesday, Apr// 15, 1981

by H ow ie S c h n e id e r

EEK &amp; M EEK

T

THIS WEEK. WE
HAVE.CDMHDST!

__________ ,NO...LAST
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INSffffft VOL)/FELLOW/
TOUW GVW ON

TO YOU*

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Competitive situations
aren’t likely to be your cup of
tea today. If at all possible,
try to avoid them . Let
challenges be taken up by
others.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Be careful today when
dealing with persons who hold
equally strong views. They
won’t appreciate your trying
to make them over into your
own mold.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Even If things have been
running
p retty
smooth
financially up until now, don't
take m atters for granted
today. There may be a fly in
the ointment.

Folic acid will not replace
your need for B-12, B-12 is
essential
to
prevent
degeneration of nerve tracks
in your spinal cord and proper
function of your nervous
system.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am a
policeman and was recently
assigned to work the midnight
shift on a permanent basis. 1
have a very hard time trying
to stay alert and fresh. Arc
there any type of vitamins I
can take or beverage I can
drink lo help keep me awake?
I took No-Doze tablets but
they nauseated me.
DEAR READER - It is
habit and your body has
established a rhythm. You
can change it and may have
succeeded by the time you
hear from me.
The first thing is to be sure
you have a definite regular
sleep pattern that cannot be
Interrupted during your off
duty hours. That helps
readjust your cycle.
The second is, while you are
trying to stay awake at night
to use coffee then. The caf­
feine in coffee is a brain
stimulant and if used sensibly
could be a help. I’d rather you
use that than take pills.
Vitamins won't help.
F inally, when you feel
sleepy I hope you can be
physically active. Physical
activity stim u lates your
biological system and helps
keep people alert. That Is why
I recommend that people
should not exercise shortly
before going to bed if they are
having a problem sleeping.

WIN A T BRIDGE
diamonds
There was considerable
thought before the play lo
N O R TH
4-14 41
(rick iwo Finally. South
♦ K 106 5 3
rulfed a diamond and led a
»9
spade lo his queen West pru♦7
duced the ace and played his
♦ AKQHIt
ace of trumps and cashed (wo
WEST
EAST
high diamonds,
4 J 9 13
♦ A7 4
"You had Ihe wrong hand,
WA6J1
4 54
partner," said South
♦ KQ J 104
#952
"Not exacliy." replied
♦ 784 1
♦ 5
North. T had’ the wrong
partner
SOUTH
North was right. South must
♦Q
make an unusual play at trick
♦ KQJI0I7
one and refuse to take it.
♦ A861
♦ J9
If West leads a trump.
South can clear the trump suit
Vulnerable: Both
while still in control of dia­
Dealer: North
monds and may even get an
overtrick if West doesn't take
W eil
North E o tl
Sooth
his ace of spades
14
Pass IV
If West leads a club at trick
2#
24
Pass 44
two, South wins in his hand,
Pass Pais Pass
ruffs a low diamond in dum­
my and plays a spade to his
Opening lead4K
queen and West's ace. Eventu­
ally. South will get to chuck
his last low diamond on the
king of spades or a high club
and lose just the first trick
and two aces
By Oswald Jacoby
If West leads a second
and Alan Sonlag
diamond. South ruffs in dum­
South wasted no thought on my and leads the spade. Once
trick one. He knew that aces more he will be able to dis­
were invented to take kings card his last low diamond.
and he took his ace of (NEWSPAPER ENTEHI’KISE ASSN\

by Leonard Starr

I DON’T KNOW
WHY YOU TRIED TO
COVER UP FOR ME,
PR. CHOORS.BUT
I WONT HAVE IT //

i

WHV, W ITH A P I T O F E F F C W
YOU COULP IV E U - P EC O M EA
H l f l H M LOW ER FORM OFUIFEi

LET YOU BE
EXPOSED AS THE
“GRAYAVENGER?
DR. LIXIR-

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Pa y i n g v &gt; p e r c e n t

*

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
S erio u s re s p o n s ib ilitie s
should not be shelved today in
hopes they'll c a re for
themselves. That which you
neglect may compound itself
and cause new complications.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) In social situations
today It may prove unwise to
appoint yourself chairman of
the entertainment committee.
Friends won't like to be told
how to have a good time.

1551, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.

e n j o y

g O fl/? o w iN 6

’

LIBRA (Sept. 2W)ct. 23)
For one who is usually tactful
and diplomatic, you could find
yourself
in
fru stratin g
situations today because of a
failure to use these assets.

DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
taking folic ad d and my
doctor prescribed B-12 shots
with It. I have read a report by
the
American
Medical
Association that B-12 wasn t
nexessary for people of ad­
vanced age, that B-6 is more
essential, as are the other B
vitamins. Could you please
enlighten me?
DEAR READER - I feel
fairly confident that members
of the American Medical
Association would rapidly
disassociate themselves from
your quote. We all need B-12.
We should get it in sufficient
quantities in our diet not to
need anymore.
But, if your system does not
absorb B-12 you must have B12 shots or you will develop
pernicious
anem ia.
A
frequent reason for failure to
absorb B-12 Is an absence of
Intrlslc factor. This substance
is m anufactured by the
stomach. In some people,
particularly as they get older,
the stomach does not produce
enough intrisic factor and B12 absorption is inadequate,
By taking a B-12 shot the
medicine is abosrbed into
your circulation and you are
not dependent upon the action
of the stomach.
We all need an appropriate
amount of all the B vitamins.
Again, it is best to get these
from a good nutritional
program. Those who do not
eat a proper diet, whatever
the reason, or who cannot
absorb food or have Increased
demands because of illness
will need supplements.
Your prescription of both
folic acid and B-12 suggests
your doctor is concerned
about the possibility of your
having pernicious anemia. I
strongly recommend that you
follow his advice.
To help you understand the
full consequence of this, I am
sending you The Health Letter
number 4-5, Vitamin B-12,
Folic
Acid,
Pernicious
Anemia. Others who want this
issue can send 75 cents with a
long, stamped, self-addressed
envelope for it to me, in care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, Radio City Station, New
York. NY 10019.

A N N IE
by Bob T h a v e s

0= ( iK lls ) O K l@

buslnesswise and financially,
especially with persons you
feel have stung you In the
past.

Prevent Anemia

r~

FRA NK AND E R N E ST

t -------------------

iA t

VOL1R BIRTHDAY
April IS, 1981
Success in your chosen field
is likely this coming year, but
you may have to work harder
than usual in order to attain it.
Be prepared to pay the price.
ARIES (March 21-April 19).
Coworkers arc likely to have
their own problems today, so
be careful not to lay any extra
burdens on them. Yours may
be the straw that breaks the
camel's back. Find out more
of what lies ahead for you in
the year following your bir­
thday by sending for your
copy of Astro-Graph. Mall $1
for each to Astro-Graph, Box
489, Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify birth
date.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Don’t take too seriously today
things m eant to be fun.
Making a few bum shots in
tennis shouldn't be allowed to
spoil your whole day.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Your staying power may not
be up to par today. Too many
distractions will get you offcourse and inhibit your will to
finish what you start.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Stand up for what you believe
In
today,
but
don't
deliberately Introduce con­
troversy
into
your
discussions. The less said the
better.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Normally you are very
generous, but today you may
not be too eager to share with
others things they had a hand
In helping to bring about.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Be very careful today

B-12 Essential To

1-M

N O .&amp; H t O L t t J l

kir

our. ^

------------

�73rd Y ear, No. 202—W ednesday, April 15,1901—Sanford, F lorida 32771

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...A p p ro a c h

...L e v e lin g O f f

...In c h e s To G o

Columbia Landing Gets Shuttle Off The Ground

Thousands Cheer Successful Flight
EDWARDS AIK FORCE BASE, Calif.
( U1M i The space shuttle Columbia
dived down from space so fast it seemed
to materialize like manic just above the
dry lake IhhI, awing thousands of spec­
tators whose delighted cheers rang for
miles across the barren Mojave Desert.
From the man-in-the-deserl to the
celebrities in their special tent, from Roy
Rogers to ‘Mr. Spock" of the "Star
Trek" TV series, they tipiled the landing
as an American victory, the beginning of
a new age.
"E at your hearts out, Russians," was
the slogan on a T-shirt worn by one
female spectator.
Although TV cameras picked up the
shuttle 100 miles away, it was moving so
fast, more than 200 mph, most spectators
did not sight the Columbia until it loomed
overhead, nose down and diving for the
surface of hard packed dry mud, just
seconds before landing.
Cheers filled the air us the rear wheels
touched, raising a trailing plume of dust.
In Houston, jubilant over the space
shuttle Columbia’s near-perfect per­
formance on its shakedown cruise,
project officials quickly picked a twoman crew to fly its next mission, possibly
In September.
Just hours after John W. Young and
Robert L. Crlppen glided in to the softest
of landings on the California desert
Tuesday, it was announced astronauts
Joe 11. Engle, 18, and Richard H. Truly,
43, will be next to take the world's first
reusable space ship up.
Today, Young and Crlppen start filling

in shuttle managers on what they learned
during their 544-hour, 36-orbit mission —
an exhaustive process that will take eight
to nine days.
That information, along with an inchby-inch inspection of the spacecraft, will
determine how quickly Columbia can be
"turned around" for another test flight
aimed at putting the shuttle into
operation as "the space workhorse of the
future," as test chief Donald K. Slayton
put it.
Crippen, arriving with Young to a
rousing welcome in Houston Tuesday
evening, summed up how everyone
connected with the program now feels
about the shuttle's future: "We are really
in the space business to stay."
"The space shuttle Columbia is a
phenomenon," Young told the cheering
crowd of thousands on the astronauts'
arrival at Ellington Air Force Base near
the Houston space center.
“Any time you can take something that
big and luunch it Into space and land it,
you've done nothing short of a miracle, 1
believe. 1 think Americans are going to
get their money’s worth out of tills
baby,"
Crippen, whose sheer joy ut being
weightless during the voyage was seen
by millions on television, said:

"As the rookie of the group, I can say
that waiting 12 years to get my flight in
space was well worth it. And I'll stand in
line for another 12 years if that's what
it'll take — but I don't think It will."
From their breathtaking blastoff
Sunduy at Cape Canaveral, Fla., until

Young babied Columbia onto the sand
runway at Edwards Air Force Base,
Calif., at 1:21 p.m. EST Tuesday, the
astronauts were bothered only by minor
malfunctions aboard. Afterwards, only
some discoloration of the shuttle's heat
shield was noted by ground crews.
A crowd estimated at up to 350,000
people, including everybody from local
residents to celebrities like Roy Rogers
and Leonard Nimoy of TV's "Star Trek"
series, watched the 80-ton shuttle glide to

Earth and hailed it as an American
victory, the beginning of a new age of
space travel. President Reagan issued an
invitation to the astronauts to visit the
White House soon.
The “ 100 percent" success, as test boss
Slayton called, blew away the frustration
built up over 2 4 years as problem after
problem cropped up in development and
construction of the shuttle.
P roject m anagers obviously were
anxious to take quick — but careful —

Spacecraft Set Many Records
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI) The space shuttle Columbia is the
world's first reusable spacecraft, but
that's only the latest of its half a dozen
space firsts.
When it was launched Sunday
morning from Cape Canaveral, the
Columbia became the first spaceship
to carry a human crew on Us maiden
flight. All previous
manned
spacecraft have first been tested in
Earth orbit without humans aboard.
The Sunday launch also made the
space shuttle the w orld’s first
spacecraft to ride piggyback on its
main fuel tank — until the 154-foot-tall
cylinder was jettisoned into the Indian
Ocean just before reaching orbit.
The Colum bia's twin booster
rockets, blasted loose from Columbia
and parachuted into the Atlantic
Ocean to be recovered and reused,

were the first solid-fuel rockets ever
used for a manned space flight.
They also were the biggest solid-fuel
rockets ever used in the space
program, with a total thrust of 5.3
million pounds.
Columbia also became the first
winged spaceship, with a wing span of
78 feet and a tall 46.3 feet tall,
The space shuttle Is about the size of
a DC-9 airliner and has a cargo
capacity about 14 times as great as
an Air Force C-130 cargo plane. The
entire package that blasts off stands
164 feet tall and, counting fuel,
weights 2,227 tons.
Although the sh u ttle’s twcuieck
cabin is built to accommodate a crew
of seven astronauts, it could carry as
many as 10 In an emergency. The 60foot-long cargo bay is big enough to
hold a Greyhound bus.
___

advantage of the breakthrough and
develop a system with ships like Co­
lum bia reg u larly shuttling between
Earth and space, carrying people and
supplies up and bringing people and
broken or obsolete material back.
The selection of Engle and Truly to be
the next crew was announced by flight
control chief M.P. Frank.
Engle, from Abilene, Kan., and Truly,
of Fayette, Miss., acted as backup crew
for Young and Crippen. Both are Air
Force test pilots but neither has flown a
spacecraft before, although Engle has
been to the fringes of space in the X-15
rocket plane.
The Columbia set a batch of firsts with
Its flight this week:
It was the first spacecraft to be tested
in space the very first time with men
aboard.
It was the first to hurtle into orbit with
the aid of solid-fuel rockets.
It was the first to- return to Earth
without the aid of parachutes; the first
ever equipped with wings, so It could
come back and land like a plane,
It will be the flrst to make more than
one trip to space. And that ability is the
key to America’s pushing ahead of the
Russians in space, since re-use will cut
the cost of operations immensely.
Guided virtually all the way by com­
puters on board — the ones whose failure
to communicate with each other caused
the flight to be scrubbed with just nine
minutes left In the countdown Friday —
the craft followed its flight plan precise­
ly.

It landed within a minute of the
scheduled time. And despite the fact it’s
as big as a DC-9 jet, but has no engines to
help adjust its landing approach, It
smoothed onto the sand with less of bump
than most airline passengers experience.
The one big worry about the
Columbia's searing return through the
atmosphere was dispelled by a post­
landing inspection.
The insulating tiles on the nose and
underside of the craft withstood the jolt
and buffeting of launch, and during re­
entry successfully deflected heat pre­
dicted to reach up to 2,600 degrees.
But in light of the fact some of the tiles
on the upper aft section of Columbia were
knocked off under the stresses of Sun­
day's blastoff, the entire insulation
system Is certain to get a thorough goingover.
Christopher C. Kraft, director of the
Houston space center and an old hand In
the space bualnws, had aw ry summation,
of what the Columbia's sterling per­
formance meant:
"We just became infinitely sm arter."
Meanwhile, Defense Secretary Caspar
W einberger today rejected Soviet
charges that the space shuttle’s main
mission is military, saying such uses are
"really secondary" to civilian and
scientific applications.
"It has a great deal of scientific goals
that can be translated into civilian ap­
plications of great value," Weinberger
said of the reusable shuttle.

Renovation, No Expansion For Sanford Library
*»

i

M

at?
o

i

By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
Seminole County applied today to
Secretary of State George Firestone’s
office for a $50,000 grant to aid in the
renovations of the county branch library
In downtown Sanford.
The county's application for the
money, which was set aside by the
legislature for library construction or
renovations for Seminole County a year
ago, Is expected to be approved and
forwarded to the county In the next 30-60
days, Commission Chairman Bob Sturm
said lodby.
Actual construction is expected to
begin in late September or early October,
Sturm said. He said after receipt of the
funds, an architect will be selected to
prepare plans for the renovations and
then bids will be let for the construction.
The majority of the commissioners
Tuesday opted for renovations to the
1917-vintage building at a cost of $110,000
to $140,000.
The former U.S. Post Office building
serving as library is leased to the county
under a long-term arrangement with the
city of Sanford.

I T

U

w

\

The commissioners considered several
options for renovations and expansion of
the facility ranging from renovations
alone at $110,000 to renovations and
expansion by building a two-story facility
on a lot adjacent to the 64-year-old

l

J

structure at a cost of $762,000.
The options were contained in a special
study done by the Altamonte Springs
architectural and engineering firm of
Green leaf-Telesca.
That study was
turned over to the county on Monday and
discussed during a work-shop Monday
afternoon. Cost of the study was $5,000.
Commissioner R obert G. F eath er
voted against spending any additional
county money on the library service now.
He said he preferrs to wait until voters
decide In a future referendum whether
they want more county money spent on
libraries. He said considering the other
priorities for county funding, library
service is a "frill."
Commissioners Sandra Glenn and Bill
Kirchhoff said their preference was to
renovate the current facility and to
construct a two story building on an
adjacent lot, owned by the city of San­
ford, but offered to the county at no cost.
Kirchhoff and Mrs. Glenn said they felt
the best course with the adjacent
building would be to build a two-story
building but to provide interior finishing
for only one of the floors.
Neither believed the second floor space
is necessary now and neither was sure
th at ad m in istrativ e office space,
warehousing and binding operations for
library books should be located in San­
ford. But, both said constructing the
building now would save money when the
building does need expansion.

Kirchhoff said such a plun removes the
necessity of removing a roof to expand a
one-story building later to two-floors.
Asked if any county money would be
available for a $400,000 project —
renovation and construction of the ad­
ditional building — Eleanor Anderson,
management and budget director, said
the county has $50,000 set aside for
library capital reserves. This money is to
be used to match the state grant.
In addition, she said, the county has
another $142,000 set aside for capital
improvements and none of this money is
currently designated for other projects.
She said the county also has some
$116,000 in federal revenue sharing funds
which are unspent.
Ms. Anderson, cautioned, however, if
the county uses this fund for library
construction the county will have to abide
by rules which can be expensive — such
as a requirement to pay union wages to
persons used in the construction work.
Kirchhoff argued against the idea a
Sanford library should be in a more
central location. He said another study
shows that library patrons from all over
Sanford, Lake Mary and from as far
away as Geneva and Oviedo use the
Sanford library at its current location.
Kirchhoff said it would be more cost
effective to expand the current downtown
library than to build a new one in another
location. He and Mrs. Glenn said the d ty
of Sanford and the citizens of Sanford had

Winter Springs Manager 'Outstanding'

*

ttorald Photo by Tom Vinctnt

IDYLLWILDE HOSTS ALIENS
As thousands journeyed to Cape Canaveral to watch America’s first
space shuttle launch into space, the third grade classes at Idyllwilde
Elementary was showing visiting aliens around. In a production
entitled "The Aliens’ Visit To Disney World," aliens from the planet
Kuzz experienced the wonders of Disney with vacationing students
as guides. Above. Mrs. Nancy Morace helps her son, Joey Morace, 8,
out of his robot costume.

4-ww#•'

By BRITT SMITH
Herald Stall Writer
Winter Springs City Manager Richard
Rozansky got his report card Tuesday
night and was rated ’outstanding.’ As a
rewan), the city council gave him a pay
raise.
While coundlmen gave Rozansky high
marks for his overall ]ob performance,
what In common term s would amount to
a ‘B’ (he could have received the one
higher rating of ‘Superior’), they were
somewhat hesitant to couple the pat on

aa f4*

m ldtA «fl£

n«e

the back with more money.
Rozansky, who has been the Winter
Springs city manager for two years,
currently earns $20,000 annually, a sum
coundlmen Wilfred "Hap" Arnold and
Maureen Boyd thought was sufficient.
But council members John Torcaso,
Jim Hartman, and Martin Trencher said
the d ty has to keep its salaries com­
petitive with those paid In other similarsized municipalities in order to attract
and retain competent employees. They
went along with Mayor Troy PUand’s

recommendation that Rozansky be given
a $1,500 merit increase and a 10 percent
cost-of-living raise.
Even with the extra money, Trencher
said Rozansky will still be underpaid,
noting that the average salary paid d ty
managers In d ties the size of Winter
Springs is $25,000 a year.
Also T uesday, the council gave
unanimous final approval to rezoning
changes for three separate parcels of
land from a rural or residential
classification to commercial.

indicated strongly they wanted the
facility to stay downtown.
"The people of Sanford have given a lot
of support," Mrs. Glenn said. "The
people have indicated what they want
done."

TO D AY
AcUon R eports............................ 2A
Around The Clock...................... 4A
Calendar ..................................... IB
C lasslfledA ds....................... 4B-IB
C om ics........................................ 1C
Dear A bby................................... 3B
Deaths......................................... 2A
Editorial...................................... 4A
F lo rid a........................................2A
H ospital....................
SA
N ation....................................w..SA
Ourselves .............................. 1B-3B
People......................................... IA
S p o rts..................................19A-12A
Television................................... 2B
W eather.......................................!A
World............................................2A

Tax Deadline
1$ M idnight
WASHINGTON
(U P I)
Americans have until midnight to
file their 1980 Income tax returns or
face the possibility of being
assessed a penalty by the Internal
Revenue Service.
Any taxpayer unable to (lie a
return by the deadline may have a
6M ay extension for the taking, but
It la not exactly a free ride. Ih ey
must fUe Form 4161, estimate their
tax bills and pay today.
The extension Is for filling out the
return, not for paying the tax.

Principal Don fftynoMsj
stocks fh t
Loko Mary pond.

�M - 1 vnli&gt;f Hero M, U nford, FI.

Wtdntsdsy, Aprl III, 1W1

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Polish Officials Retreat
From Rationing Statement
WARSAW, Poland (UPI) — Polish authorities said today
an announcement of drastic food rationing was premature
and the Solidarity union labeled the move a government
retreat In the face of labor opposition.
One day after the official news agency pap announced
emergency rationing of butter, flour, rice and other cereals
starting May 1, a spokesman for the government said the
"information spread by the mass media w u a simple
misunderstanding" and had not yet been approved.
In Moscow, the Soviet media criticized the Polish
situation far a third straight day, singling out Solidarity as a
force of Instability, It was the most concerted attack since
Soviet President l«onld Brezhnev Indicated last week
Poland would be left to solve Its own problems.
Solidarity had Issued a communique from Its
headquarters In Gdansk after the PAP announcement
complaining bitterly that the rationing w u announced
without consultation. The rationing Is the first since World
War II.
"Maybe they tried to surprise us, thinking that If
Solidarity does not re a d , then that means they agree to It,"
a Solidarity spokesman said. "We Issued our communique
to all regional union branches and that is probably why the
government changed Its mind like that."

Baffling Case Closed
Coke Invades M ainland China
PEKING (UPI) — The guest raised red paper cups of
Coca-Cola today to mark the opening of the American soft
drink's first bottling plant in the People's Republic of
China.
"To Stno-Amerlcan friendship," the toasts rang out.
The American guests, including Coca-Cola Chairman of
the Board Roberto C. Gotzueta and Charge d'Affairs J.
Stapleton Roy, downed the Coke with gusto — straight from
the SVfc-ounce bottle.
The Chinese, still strangers to the American soft drink,
took cautious sips.
"It's okay," u l d one food offldaL "Not bad," another
Chlmeae' remarked politely.
Despite the potential market of 1 billion people In China,
the 46 million bottles of Coke that the plant Is capable of
producing yearly will Initially be sold almost exclusively to
foreign visitors.

Suicide H elper Charged
IANDON (UPI) — A court charged a member of the
voluntary euthanasia society EXIT with murder for helping
a 90-year-old woman commit suicide by giving her brandy
and sleeping pills and putting a plastic bag over her head.
Prosecutor Roy Amlot said Tuesday EXIT member Mark
Lyons, along with the group’s Secretary General Nicholas
Jam es Reed, also faced charges of aiding and counseling
suicides or conspiring to do so In the deaths of eight other
people.
Amlot said Lyons w u charged with killing lu b ella Ward,
90, by giving her brandy and sleeping pills and then putting
a plastic bag over her head.
Reed allegedly referred Mrs, Ward and eight other
suicides to Lyons, who, often using false names, used his
"suicide kit" to help them take their own lives, officials
said.

No Hassles For Recruits

But Can Marginal
Soldiers Win W ars?
ByTOMTIEDE
(Last of Two Parts)
U.8. Army recruits today are guaranteed
■oven hours of sleep a night, and splt-shtned
boots are no longer necessary. Knee bends
have been dropped from the physical training
activity, und the men may wear mustaches.
The recruits are even allowed passes to
"fadUlatc the military socialization process."
The Army says It docs not want basic
.training to discourage trainees. That’s why all
activity must now be modified, or halted, when
outside temperatures get too hot or too cold.
One training commander has told his men to
treat recruits with the dignity they would give
members of their own families.
This mesne no harassment. No "un­
necessary stress." It also means severely
limited penalization Drill weyrant* are net
allowed to “r u n e or AeUa*'' rwentfis. vc
tough them Ui any way. U a areycurt irh rrt i
trainee to do pwaN^a.b e ■ w ^m aka mwrihiUi
not done on rocky «r itite r r a a npirmui will

And woebetide
wrpmnc who UuuDuvn,
CapL Barlotta says rrcrutu jc [Tot JhirHaun
‘-once received qpesCMums ra, artictt n pratta
their caches. BasuaHy. th* hnatt—s wanasked if they liked their drill sergmoca. unt
the answers were then passed on to At
training school’s commander.
. Bartotta says the questions ire was insane.
;And others here think that such nonsense
destroys authority and moral. "A leader has to
be In control," says Drill Sgt. Ricky Gibson,
"but we no longer are In this Army. I don't
think there is any way we can train good
soldiers under these conditions."
So here is the nut of it. The Army may no
longer be training good soldiers. The Pentagon
Insists the average recruit — 5 foot B, 150
pounds, 11.6 years of schooling and almost 20
years old — is bigger, better educated and
more mature than ever before, but, sigh, does
he know what he's doing?
Sam Nunn Is one who thinks not. He's a U.S.
senator from Georgia, a Democrat who says
Jlatly that many people trained In the modern
Army are turkeys. He claims almost 35 per­
cent of the people who enter service drop out
before completing their enlistments, and
many of those who stay in are no prizes either.
Nunn says that the Army's own figures for
troop efficiency are "appalling." In 1979, for
Instance, the results of the Army Skill
Qualification testa indicated that 43 percent of
those examined failed as combat engineers, 67
percent filled in communications, and 83

percent failed at transportation.
Overall, Army statistics suggest that 45
percent of its recruits are just barely able to
pass qualification testing. This means that in
recent years, almost half of the basic trainees
going Into the regular service are marginals,
and Sen. Nunn says marginals aren't the
people who win wars.
Many officers here agree. One tells of
commanding a unit in Europe where "every
other troop was out of condition, and most of
them locked some of the skills they needed to
fight. I remember with horror that 10 to 20
percent of my men and women did not know
how to properly zero their rifles."
Win wars? The latter officer says his
European command could not beat an all-elf
orchestra. "They just weren't motivated.
TV&gt; wanted higher pay and less work. You
Wtt » v m, luantOtst on Friday, then you bad to
cigvuk ik au. Xum&amp;v „ feooiwssr fix? (ergot it
avfar the wntHumil fftmOfe ttr s b w l’*'
Hi m i n 'inc. ltur tiH rcm\i mug: ir.Ilmc i*
trvmj ti tin romrttiing iMmtC ill Lam itti UU
IIh truminj ant! tiieiPiiH unmmonifi iik&amp;tif am
v/«H tin itaisii trimutu, a n t ■tr ie rn j s u re
jityuraL tottng. Jtibn: fi* enn~xntmf sand
crania if wiitltt in St* h care iaefade more
cdR huif,. lin-macs aed c ta ta d e testing.
Rtf ciron ttf S c changes will not be made
jmmwiaflrily. The Pentagon thinks It will be at
least a year before all units can become in­
volved. And anyway, many critics of the
system say the changes will not be enough,
even when fully implemented, to stay the
decline of the Army's rank and file.
Thus Jerry Anderson will likely continue to
get angry when he visits the base here. And he
adds that he'll pray there Is no war. "These
people today, they aren't soldiers, they're
clowns. Look at them. It makes me nervous. I
see the Russian soldiers on television, and
there is no comparison."
Capt. Barlotta: "The U.S. soldier has no
idea of self sacrifice, national pride or
dedication. They do not wear their uniforms
properly, they show no respect for public
places, and they condone the use of drugs. I
submit that these people cannot begin to un­
derstand the importance of their profession.”
"Like I said," Anderson adds, "it’s a mob.
They are aimless, they don’t have goals, and
they don't care about anybody but themselves.
I have my old uniform in the attic, and I've
always wanted to be buried in it. But not now.
It doesn’t seem to mean as much anymore.
I’m very sad about that.”

Hy United Press International
In the European evening nnd the middle of
the Aslan night, the world gathered around
television sets to watch a new era in space
exploration dawn with the return to Earth of
the Columbia space shuttle — “ the first
covered wagon on a new American fron­
tier."
"Touchdown!" an Italian commentator
shouted as Columbia's wheels met the
California ground Tuesday. "A stupendous
landing. Unforgettable, incredible images.
A perfect conclusion."
Most of the world agreed. Live TV
coverage was carried across Western
Europe and much of Asia. Newspapers
splashed their front pages with pictures and
headlines hailing America's triumph.
Viewers of the Jap an Broadcasting
Corporation’s "space show" from Edwards
Air Force Base at 2:30 o.m. heard a com­
mentator chortle, “The success of space
shuttle resembled Lindbergh's first flight
across the Atlantic."
Australians saw the Columbia land at 4:20

*'■***&gt;

a ita e l Saturday Or
H tra M . lac.. MS N . Franca A r t .. laaferS. F la . t m i .

TM

LONDON (UPI) — The UJS.
dollar edged up at the opening
on m ajo r world money
m arket! today and gold eased
lower.
Gold opened at $482.50 an
ounce in London, down $3
from T uesday’! close of
$485.50. It opened $1 down in
Zurich at $481.50 from $482.50.

tacaae Class Fatiaea Fate at iaalar*. Florida iz r r i
Hama OaUvarvi Waafc. H A S ; Maatft, M i l ; &lt; Mantas, IM .M i
Vaar, M A I . I t M a ll: Waafe *1.1*1 M a n * . *1*1; * Mnntbs.
U S A S ; Vaar, U F A #

Tha average Lapp aats a
pound of reindeer mail
•ach day.

★

F ire s
★ Courfs
*

P o lic e B e a t

Celeste Jannotti told police that she was leaving Richard’s
Market, 1506 W. 13th St,, about 3:30 p.m. when a man about 23
years old walked up to her and pulled a pistol.
The bandit reportedly took Jannott's purse containing 129
and fled on foot.
BEEFY HEIST
The Arby's restaurant at Interstate 4 and Slate Rood 434 in
Longwood was broken into early Monday and robbed of $900.
Seminole County sheriffs deputies said the bandit(s) en­
tered the restaurant after cutting a lock on the drive-through
window..
Once inside, they pried open the office safe and stole an
estimated $900 cash.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Rivers from Iowa to Ohio, deluged
by fierce thunderstorms that thrashed the Midwest for five
days, surged to dangerously high levels today. Remnants of
the relentless wind-driven storms, which were blamed for two
deaths and two serious injuries, dwendled to rainshowers
along the New England coast and from Pennsylvania to the
Carolinas. Thunderstorms pelted the Southwest from Texas to
Arizona and Utah. At midday Tuesday, the mercury fell to 27
degrees at Sault Ste. Marie, Mich.
AREA HEADINGS |9 a.m .|:tem peruture: 77;overnight low:
64; Tuesday's high: 88; barometric pressure: 30.34 and rising;
relative humidity: 73 percent; winds: East Northeast at 7
mph.
THURSDAY’S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 6:16
a.m., 6:35 p.m.; lows, 11:50 a.m., 12:08 p.m.; PORT
CANAVERAL: highs, 6:08 a m ., 6:47 p.m.; lows; 11:41 a.m.;
11:59 p.m.; BAYPORT; highs, 11:37 a.m., 12:09 p.ni.; lows,
6:09 a.m., fi:29 p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
50 Miles: Winds mostly east 10 to 15 knots becoming nor­
theasterly around 20 knots by tonight continuing Thursday.
Seas 3 to 5 feet Increasing to 5 to 8 feet tonight.
AREA FORECAST: Fair today becoming partly cloudy
tonight and Thursday. Not so warm with a slight chance of
thundershowers Thursday.
EXTENDED FORECAST — Mostly fair and mild Friday
through Sunday. Ixws mostly in the 60s. Highs mostly in the
80s.

hnSQ

AREA
DEATH

UWIMKS®

MRS. RUTH MAY BOYE
Mrs. Ruth May Boye, 64, of
2810 Magnolia Ave., Sanford,
died Tuesday morning at
Seminole Memorial Hospital
as the result of a traffic ac­
cident. A native of Sydney,
Australia, she came to San­
ford four years ago from
Random Lake, Wis. She had
been a missionary to Papua,
New Guinea for many years
with the New Tribes Mission.
She was a member of the
Sanford Bible Church and
active in the Jail ministry of
Good News Mission.
Survivors include her
husband, Roland Philip Boye,
Sanford; two brothers, Cyril
Parry, Gosford, New South
W ales,
A ustralia
and
Raymond P a rry , Cambelltown, New South Wales; a
sister, Mrs. Marea Gordon, of
Semaphore, South Australia.
Gramkow Funeral Home is
in charge of arrangements.

auTH m a y Funeral services for M rs. Ruth
M ay Boyt, 44. of 2110 M agnolia.
A v a .,
Sanford,
who
d ie d ’
Tuesday, will be at 1 p.m.,
T h u rs d a y , at Sanlord Blbla
Church with Chaplain Bln Austin
officiating, a u ftia d by tha Rav.
■tarry Jordan. Frlandt may pay
the* respects. 7* p.m . today at
G re m k o w
F u n e ra l
Hom e.
Memorial gifts m ay ba made to
New Tribes Mission or Good
News
M ission.
B u ria l
In
fcvargreen Cem aitry. Gram kow
In charge.

HUN f M O N U M f N T CO

Sanford

Action Reports

Gold Down

Wednesday, April IS, I H I -V o i . 73, No. 202

FeMtiwil OeUy sue s w e a r ,

a.m. and stations ran saturation coverage
tlurough the morning peak viewing period,
with one Sydney station showing the landing
four times In an hour.
"The first covered wagon on a new
American frontier," The Australian Sun
said of the world's first reusable space ship,
"Just like the Old West."
In Japan 800 would-bc adventurers were
so enthused they formed the Society of
Shuttle Friends and started saving money to
realize their dream of joining a space trip.
China's official Chinese news agency
Xinhua called the flight A "historic voyage"
The excitement was not completely lost in
the East bloc as East Germany reported the
landing nine minutes after touchdown,
much faster than, its usual reporting.
In Western Europe, viewers were given
live coverage of the shuttle mission from
delayed launch Friday to the return
Tuesday.
“Oh, fabulous," a British television
commentator cried as Columbia touched
down. "Just fabulous."

U . David Higginbotham said Lake Mary police have been
unable to find any apparent motive for the slaying, adding that
there were no signs of forced entry to the house.
Dead is George H. Armbruster of 756 Sun Drive whose body
was discovered about 5 p.m. last Tuesday by his wife. Armbruster’s .22-caliber pistol was found under his body.
GUNMAN ROBS SHOPPER
A 30-year-old Maitland woman was robbed by a lone gunman
Saturday afternoon as she exited a wesWde Sanford market.

Dollar Up,

nova, Mas.

E v e n in g H e ra ld

The case baffled Casselberry police from the very begin­
ning: a classic whodunit,
They had a 26-year-old woman shot to death at her 1501
Carlisle Drive home and no apparent motive. At the time of the
shooting, the woman’s 71-year-old husband of eight months lay
in a hospital bed with a malfunctioning pancreas.
The death weapon — a ,32-caliber pistol containing only one
cartridge — was discovered under the mattress of the bed
where the victim was found by officers who were admitted to
the mobile home by a 24-year-old male friend of the dead
woman.
In a supreme bit of understatement, Casselberry Police
Chief George K archer described the circum stances
surrounding the slaying as "very peculiar." But after nearly
four months of probing the Dec. 28 death of Louise Poe, Karchor is closing the case as a suldde. “There is no evidence to
suggest foul play," he said today.
There was no suicide note, “but in the face of her own
statem ent—she said something like ‘I shot myself,' or 'I did it*
— there was nowhere else to go with the case," Karcher said.
"It could have been suicide or an accident. We have nothing
to prove otherwise."
The decision to close the case did not come easy. Disturbed
by the peculiarities of the case — "we still haven't figured out
how that gun got under the m attress" — Karcher requested the
Stale Attorney’s office enter the investigation in February "to
make sure we had left no stone unturned.
"We turned them all over, but nothing crawled out," he said.
INVESTIGATION CONTINUES,,
Police are continuing their probe into the shooting death of a
76-year-old Lake Mary man who was found on his living room
floor with a bullet wound in the head.

World Watches Shuttle's
'Unforgettable' Landing

Funurol Nolle*

Because the A rm y does not want bask training to discourage trainees, all
activity must now be modified, or halted, when outside temperatures get too
hot o r too cold. Capt. Sam Barlotta, who has been in the drilling cadre, says
the p rim ary goal of modern recruit training seems to be to avoid hurting
anyone's feelings.

Death Ruled Suicide

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Natural Mom Turns Him Down

NATION
IN BRIEF
Richard Kleindienst
Indicted For Perjury
PHOENIX, Arii. (UPI) — Former U.S.
Attorney General Richard Kleindlerut, who
resigned at the height of the Watergate
scandal, was indicted on 14 counts of perjury
for statements he made to a Bar Association
committee investigating his dealings with a
convicted racketeer.
Kleindienst, former President Richard
Nixon's law enforcement chief for 14 months
until May 1974, could be sentenced to up to 14
years in prison on each of 14 felony counts
handed down Tuesday by a Maricopa County
grand jury.
In 1974, Kleindienst became the first federal
attorney general to plead guilty to criminal
charges for giving false testimony to a
Senate committee investigating an Inter­
national Telephone &amp; Telegraph payoff
scandal.
The Indictment Tuesday alleged Klein­
dienst lied in appearances before state bar
committees Investigating his ties with a
convicted racketeer.

Atlanta Officials Ired
ATLANTA (UPI) - FBI Director William
Webster’s remarks at a Washington press
lunch on the investigation into Atlanta’s 23
child murders have incurred the wrath of the
police, the mayor and the City Council, who
viewed them as an “attack on the credibility
of our government.’'
| As a small crowd gathered Tuesday to bury
I-arry Rogers — the 23rd victim and second
consecutive mentally retarded black youth
slain, Mayor Maynard Jackson fired off an
angry letter to Webster,
The FBI director’s remarks the day before
seemed to indicate the FBI had "sub­
stantially solved" three or four of the killings
— each an isolated case. It was not reported,
however, W ebster and investigators in
Atlanta have been saying that for months.

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Prison Escapees
Are Gunned Down

Agent Backs W ebster
ATLANTA (U P I)-F o u r of the 23 Atlanta
black children found slain were killed by their
parents because they were "nuisances," an
FBI agent claimed Tuesday night.
Agent Mike Twibell told a Macon, Ga., civic
club that his boss, FBI Director William
Webster, was correct Monday when he said
there were suspects in four of the slayings.
Twibell said some of the children were from
broken homes and that their slayings were
domestic killings.

Miner's Reject Offers
WASHINGTON (U P I) - The nationwide
strike by 160,000 soft coal miners, now in its
20th day, is expected to drag on without
progress until at least Friday.
After five hours of new negotiations
Tuesday, United Mine Workers President
Sam Church Jr. said industry officials
“rejected everything we gave them."
"There’s been no progress," said chief
industry negotiator Bobby R. Brown,
president of Consolidation Coal Co. Hie two
sides agreed to return to the bargaining table,
but not until Friday.

Bradley Wins Again
LOS ANGELES ( U P I) - Mayor Tom
Bradley won a landslide victory Tuesday to a
third term as chief executive of Los Angeles
and moved into an excellent position for a
possible race next year to become the nation’s
first black elected governor.
Defeating former Mayor Sam Yorty by a 2-1
margin, Bradley, one of the nation's highest
ranking black officials, became the first
mayor in Los Angeles history to win a third
term without being forced into a run-off
election.

WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W. Va.
(UPI) — America's publicity-shy former
hostages enjoyed horseback and tennis at
their reunion at Uie posh Greenbrier Hotel but
on today's agenda are workshops about such
possible legacies of their ordeal as marital
stress.
Workshops dealing with such subjects as
marital stress and encountering another
hostage crisis were planned for today.

ftampag/ng Rodents
ORLANDO, (UPI) — Hungry rodents are
ignoring poison and invading new residential
neighborhoods a few months ahead of their
usual August Invasion in search of fruit, dog
food and other food.
Roycc Roberson, director of the Division of
Pest Control in Orlando, said Tuesday the
rats are ignoring poison left by Orange
County Health Department workers and have
ventured into the neighborhoods In Orlando
and Winter Park.
"The freeze earlier this year played havoc
with the fruit," Roberson said. "It destroyed
the early and mid-season fruit that the rats
love."

One Court To Another

Another Robbery

Wrongful Death Bill

Casselberry Approves
$50-Per-Day Race Track Tax
condominiums in Casselberry, but I am op­
posed to lowering the maximum building
height to 35 feet. Such action closes our options
in looking at other projects that may be
beneficial to us in the future," Sheppard said.
Joined by council members BUI Grier and
James Lavtgne in denouncing the proposed
amendment, Sheppard denies favoring con­
struction of the 100-ft. condominium structures
proposed by Bonalr.
In the last few weeks, the Casselberry
building height ordinance has become a major
issue with city officials since they rejected the
Bonair building project
With the unanimous adoption of the 1504day tax on the Seminole Greyhound Park, the
general fund will collect $50 per racing day
from the track effective on the scheduled
opening, Monday, May 4.
Council acted on a Florida statute that gives
any city or municipality in the state the right
to impose a tax on radng facilities within their
boundaries. Tax on dog racing "is not to ex­
ceed 9150," according to the ordinance.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Semin*** Memorial Hoifitol

April 14
a d m is s io n s

Sonlord:
Belinda A . Holloway
Oabbit L . Lai
Ernett Moody

jo tl

Wedneiday, April IS. )M l— 3A

Leukemia Patient Needs Bone Marrow j
MIAMI (UPI) - Maria Pinon is 16
and Jam es George is 33, and both
must have a bonemarrow transplant
from a blood relative if they are to
conquer their leukemia.
The difference is, M aria's sister is
willing to be h er donor, and
businessmen in Tampa have come up
with the money to pay for the
operation. But George — an orphan
given up for adoption by his unwed
mother — cannot find any relatives
willing to donate their bone marrow.
George heard from his natural
mother Tuesday for the first time in
his memory — through a Kansas City
Judge who forwarded to her affidavits

from George’s doctors saying his best
chance to survive leukemia Is a bonemarrow transplant from a genetic
relative.
The Judge refused to break Missouri
law by opening his adoption records,
but passed on a message from George
asking his mother to let him contact
his half-stster, who doctors say would
be the most compatible donor.
His mother, in a letter to the Judge,
said she couldn't cooperate.
"The letter said she had a very
difficult decision to make, and had
decided not to cooperate because
people would be hurt if she did,"
George said.

"I don't know what to think. It’s sort
of a combination of understanding
that it could be a messy situation, and
she could be making what she thought
was a correct moral decision. But I
don’t know the other side of it. I don’t
know what she thinks is the problem,
who would be hurt. I’d like to know, so
I could make my own decision.
"I don’t want to hurt people, but it’s
In everybody's hands but my own. It's
in the hands of the Missouri
legislature, it’s in the hands of the
Judge, it’s in the hands of my mother.
But it's my life."
George, a computer systems ac­
countant who lives in Miami Shores

with his wife Marilyn and two young '
sons, said he will now set out to fin d *
his father. The problem is he doesn’t j
even know if there is a father listed in
his sealed adoption records.
"He could have 18 children with •
another woman," George said. "They :
would be half-siblings. If they all say j
no, than I will start living my life
differently."
George's disease is dormant now ;
but could erupt at any time, his •
doctors have told him — either
ravaging his body itself or destroying ’
enough protective white blood cells
lhai some other disease would kill
him.

Kick The Iranians Out, Say Florida Legislators
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) - Two legislators
said today 1,200 to 1,300 Iranians should be kicked
out of state colleges and universities to protest the
holding of the 53 American hostages In Iran.
Rep. Ted Ewing, R-Sarasota, and Sen. Dick
Langley, RClermont, said they have introduced
bills banning Iranians from public educational
Institutions.
The proposal (HB 935) would force between 1,200
and 1,300 Iranians to drop out of state colleges and
universities, Ewing said. He doesn’t know how
many Iranian children are attending public schools,
but doesn’t believe the number is high.
"We see no reason why the taxpayers should
continue to underwrite and pay for the education of
students from a nation that has treated American

citizens in such a shameful manner," the two men
said in a statement.
"Many of us endured the disgraceful treatment of
American hostages in silent anger, knowing full
well that this Iranian action against American
citizens ... was, in fact, symbolic of their hostile
feelings toward all of us as Americans, and our
nation."
The proposal no doubt will face substantial op­
position in the Legislature from lawmakers who
don't think it is constitutional. If the bill does
become law, it certainly will be challenged in court
and probably will withstand the challenge, Ewing
said.
"I don't see any reason why the Legislature can’t
do this. We set policies for education,” he said. "It's

constitutional until the appropriate court says it is i
not."
The proposal probably should be worded so that
Iranians who have fled their country and want to
become American citizens can attend public j
educational Institutions, according to Ewing.
"I’m sure some provision could be made for a
genuine refugee. It is not our intent to ban genuine ;
refugees, people who don’t want to go back."
Thousands of Cuban and Haitian refugees have'
fled to Florida in recent months, straining already
overcrowded public schools. Gov. Bob Graham and
other officials are complaining bitterly about the*
federal government’s failure to provide money to
help Florida handle the refugee influx.

Hostage Workshops

ZEPHYRHILLS, (UPI) - A dash for
freedom took one inmate just a few feet from
the 10-foot-high fence of the Zephyrhills
Correctional Institution and another about a
quarter of a mile, prison officials say.
Guards with shotguns downed both Wayne
Emory, 28, and Vincent Flgley, 22, as they
TALLAHASSEE, (UPI) - Attorneys for
tried to flee Tuesday night. Both were treated
at the Dade City Community Hospital, a 120 prisoners facing execution In Florida hope
to get the U.S. Supreme Court to chastise the
hospital spokeswoman said.
state
Supreme Court for its review of capital
Vernon Bradford, Florida prisons system
cases.
spokesman in Tallahassee, said the men
A coalition of 84 lawyers, including some of
made a run for the chain-link fence, topped by
barbed wire, while walking in the prison yard the country’s leading opponents of capital
punishment, couldn’t convince the state court
after dinner.
it violated the U.S. Constitution by reviewing
confidential reports on the inmates when
deciding whether to uphold their convictions
MIAMI (UPI)— Another Briton fell victim and death sentences.
to Miami’s crime Tuesday while area tourism
officials worried about losing 360,000 British
tourists this year because of four assaults this
TALLAHASSEE, (UPI) - The Senate has
month on British tourists.
In the attack Tuesday afternoon in the sent the House a liberalized wrongful-death
restroom of a beachfront park, Neville Ash, bill and warned that it won’t accept too much
40, of Wembley-Middlesex, England was tampering with it.
The wrongful-death bill SB 150 by Sen. Paul
robbed at knifepoint.
Police say a young white man walked up Steinberg, D-Mlami Beach, would allow
behind Ash and said "Ok buddy I have a knife relatives of a person killed in an accident to
in your back — give up your wallet — I’ll not file suit even If they were not financially
hesitate to kill you." Ash surrendered an dependent on the victim. It would also raise
undetermined amount of cash and the from 21 to 23 the maximum age for parents to
sue for the loss of a daughter or son.
assailant fled.

By SYBIL MITCHELL GANDY
Herald Staff Writer
Casselberry City Council voted unanimously
Monday night to Impose a 850-a-day tax on the
Seminole Greyhound Park as expected, but
continued the maximum building height
controversy at least until May 4.
A motion which supports lowering the city's
building height ordinance from 100 feet to 35
feet, would have obviously passed with a
majority vote from Councilman Frank Schutte,
Tom Embree, and John Lelghty.
But a minor technicality in the language of
the amended ordinance prevented Its formal
adoption. City Attorney Kenneth McIntosh will
rewrite the document and submit U for vote at
the council's regularly scheduled meeting on
May 10.
Mayor Owen Sheppard, who has adamantly
opposed the amended ordinance, said he ex­
pects p r —fg* in formal vote whenever it is put
before council.
"I'm not in favor of building high-rtie

Evening Herald, unford, FI.

H . B u e n ile , A lta m o n la

Spring*
Eliiabalh Heigh. OaBary
t . B. Zlpparar. DaBary
Jacob M . Garrett, Jacksonville.

Fla.
R o m M . Jones. Oranoe City

D IS C H A R O IS
Sanford:
Norval G . Angle
Virginia C. Wallace
M ary Woodberry
R u u e ll E .
McCain, Deltona

2 0 % to 3 0 % off

�Evening Herald
(UIPS « t MO)

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, F LA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2811 or 831-9993

A round

W ednesday. April 15. 1981—4A
Wayne 0. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

Home Delivery: Week, |1.00; Month, *4.25; 6 Months1,*24.00;
Year, *45.00. By Mall: Week, *1.25; Month, (5.25; 6 Months,
*30.00; Year. 157.00.

A Critical Look
At National Parks
While the Reagan administration is laboring to
scale down the federal budget, the National Park
Service remains awash in unspent money from a
trust fund bestowed by a negligent and
magnanimous Congress.
Itie availability of almost limitless funds for the
asking during the last 10 years has led the park
service into a vast acquisition program. New
parks thus acquired, many of them in urban
areas, have changed the nature of the National
Park System, and some say, for the worse.
Ih e park service’s bonanza is the Land and
W ater Conservation Fund established by
Congress in 1964 to pay for expansion of the
National Park System. The fund receives a share
of the government's income from the sale of oil
and gas leases, a modest $200 million in 1966, but
this year with a windfall from the intensified
search for energy, nearly a billion dollars.
With all that money to spend, and with the
nation's prime scenic treasures long ago locked
up in the park system, the National Park Service
has been investing increasingly in second-class
real estate. Its money has gone into scenery that
is merely pleasant, rather than noble, and into
urban parks that big city dwellers should be ex­
pected to provide for themselves.
The park service bought 2.8 million acres of
such land in the last decade. But even with this
unprecedented level of acquisition, there remains
an unspent $1.1 billion in the Land and Water
Conservation Fund. The park service, never­
theless, is land poor. This money cannot be spent
for operation of the parks it buys.
Worried about the cost of improving and
maintaining new parks, Interior Secretary James
G. Watt has wisely halted the purchase of ad­
ditional parkland. And, quite properly, he wants
to divest the government of some urban parks.
Moreover, the Reagan administration wants
Congress to unlock the Land and Water Con­
servation Fund and put those surplus millions to
work in the general fund, or at least to permit
some of this idle reserve to be used for park
maintenance and operation.
Although some ardent conservationists are
objecting, the state of the economy requires
Congress to terminate this trust fund that has
outlived its purpose. If and when more parks are
needed in the future, Congress can always ap­
propriate the money to buy them.
Meanwhile, Watt shows an adm irable,
pioneering spirit in seeking to give private
business a larger role in the management of
national parks where they already operate guest
facilities. We trust he will show the same boldness
in examining closely the restrictions on access to
some parks that should be open to everyone,
rather than a few hardy backpackers.

Gavin Road Clear
Retiring Ambassador to Mexico Julian Nava
has some advice for his successor.
TTie United States’ role in Mexico, Nava said,
must be that of a partner, not a tutor. Enlightened
self-interest, he added, demands that we join
hands with Mexico to meet the needs of its
burgeoning population. Estimates are that the
increase by the year 2000 will be 50 percent — to
about 100 million.
And Nava believes that actor John Gavin,
President Reagan's choice for the post, is wellprepared. “1 think the road is clear for John," he
said.

BERRY'S WORLD

The Clock
By JANE CASSELBERRY

There is a lot of alarm these days about the
m m ber of lives taken as the result of violent
street crime being on the upswing. Although this
type of crime m ay be more sensational, the
families and friends of victims killed In traffic
accidents are just as deeply affected.
More than 41,000 people have died on Florida's
streets and highways In motor vehicle crashes
during the last 10 years, according to Florida
Highway Patrol records. "And every year the
total continues to Increase," said Colonel Eldrlge
Beach, Patrol director.
"When the other 2,700,000 persons who were
Injured during the same 20 years are added, the
result is staggering."
The patrol’s records show that traffic deaths in
1981 are running about 20 percent ahead of 1900,
which had 2^71, an all-time high record.
It has been estimated that half of the people
who die in traffic crashes die as a result of one of
the d riv en using excessive amounts of alcohol
Beach said.
“ Apparently the old admonition of 'If you
drive, don’t drink,” failed to convince driven
involved in many crashes," he added.
"Possibly a better warning would be for people

SCIENCE WORLD

A New
Insulin For
Diabetes

to learn their limit. With the body burning up
about one ounce of alcohol per hour, drinkers
should pace themselves up to their limit."
It has been proven that some people are
physically affected with only one or two drinks
while others can handle more. A beer is usually
compared to a one ounce drink.
“With Florida setting an all-time high in
traffic deaths in 1980 with just under 3,000 people,
and half of those killed as a result of alcohol,"
said Beach, “our drivers need to take stock of
their driving habits before it gets worse."
Funding for the arts is expected to feel the axe
under President Reagan's proposed budget.
Graasroot culture has been nourishing in the last
few years mainly because of government grants
and matching hinds from the community, local
governments and businesses.
According to a recent American O mcil for
the Arts publication reflecting current trends in
and attitudes toward the arts U.S. business
support of the arts readied a record level of *436
million in 1979, up from only *22 million in 1967.
The arts are receiving a larger share of
business' overall philanthropic contributions

than ever before; of the total business con­
tribution in 1979 to all philanthropic causes, the
arts received 13.3 percent - up from only 8.9
percent In 1970.
Twenty seven percent of the companies
responding to a recent survey said they intended
to increase their arts support over the next three
years, and 58 percent said they planned to
maintain their current level of support.
By a majority of 59 percent to 39 percent,
Americans reject the Idea that the arts are only
for a privileged few.
Eighty one percent of the public*feels It im­
portant to have more and better arts and cultural
facilities for both the performing and visual arts
in their communities.
An eighty six percent to nine percent majority
feels that it is important to the business and
economy of their communities to have such
faculties.
Fifty one percent of Americans favor paying
an addlUonal *25 a year in federal taxes to help
support the arts, and an overwhelming 70 per­
cent are willing to pay *5 additional

RUSTY BROWN
S l Q N 'a
ROCKY WT*.
NEVrffc -NEA

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) — A new type of
synthetic insulin, the product of genetic en­
gineering, may soon be available to help
many of America's 10 million diabetics who
suffer aUerglc reactions to the animal insulin
currently on the market.
The new drug will be tested on dlabeUc
patients at the University of Tennessee
Center for the Health Sciences.
The biosynthetic insulin was developed by
researchers from Eli Lilly and Genentech
Inc., who used a special technique to splice an
insulin-producing gene into bacteria. The
bacteria in turn produce insulin similar to
that made by the human pancreas.
The University of Kansas School of
Medicine conducted pilot tests of the new
insulin on five diabetics last year and a
handful of clinics and hospitals have already
begun additional testing.
The University of Tennessee center is
applying for a contract with Lilly to compare
the biosynthetic insulin with beef and pork
insulin — the types commonly used by most
diabetics today — in a threew ay test using
about 30 diabetic volunteer*.
“We hope to get started in April," said Dr.
Abbas E. Kitabchl, program director of the
Clinical Research Center at the center.
Volunteer diabetics will be periodically
examined at the center and reactions to the
new and old types of insulin win be studied
snd compared for at least a year, Kitabchl
said.
The tests could have a special meaning for
more than 10 million Americans who suffer
from diabetes, a disease In which the body
cannot make use of sugars and starches in a
normal way.
With diabetes, the pancreas either cannot
produce enough insulin or the body cannot
properly use the Insulin that la present
An injectible mixture of pork and beef in­
sulin is the most common treatment for
diabetes, but there are sometimes problems
with side effects and allergic reactions.
“One of the problems wife nonsynthetic
insulin is that It Is coming from animal tissue.
It’s a foreign aubstance," said Kitabchl a
past president of the Tennessee Diabetes As­
sociation who heads the department of
diabetes and endocrinology at the cantor.
“ We think, but we’re not sure, that these
animal insulins m ay inhibit your own pan­
creatic insulin." the doctor added.
One solution would be for diabetics to use
human Insulin, but that is not practical,
Kitabchl explained in a recent Interview.
He said there is “ no way to get it (Insulin)
from humans."
"It breaks down very quickly after death.
That’s one of the reasons we’ve had trouble
with it," he said. “Only those samples where
patients have died and the pancreas was
immediately removed could be used. And we
only got small amounts then."
Kitabchl explained bow the biosynthetic
insulin was produced.

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Because this year
marks the 10th anniversary of the effort to
overhaul federal laws governing the finan­
cing of political campaigns, it’s an ap­
propriate time to assess the success of those
reforms.
Prior to the passage of the Federal Election
Campaign Act of 1971, the financing of
campaigns for the presidency and seats in the
House and Senate was governed by a pair of
statutes dating back to the early 1900s.
Because those laws were riddled with
loopholes and seldom enforced, enactment of
the FECA — and the 1974 amendments
establishing the Federal Election Com­
mission—offered the promise of a new era of
full disclosure, vigorous enforcement and the
elimination of “ fat cat" influence In politics.
To a very substantial extent, those hopes
have been fulfilled — especially In com­
parison with the pre-FECA years when
wealthy donors seeking to “buy” (or least
“rent") politicians could make five- and sixfigure contribution to office-seekers that
never were even disclosed to the public.
But the same members of Congress who
never have been especially reluctant to pass
legislation establishing regulatory agencies
to oversee the work of assorted Industries and
profereions have been notably unenthuslastic
about the commission th at supposedly
regulates their conduct.
Noting that Congress repeatedly “ has
undermined the integrity and independence
of the FEC,” a new study produced by
Common Cause aptly describes the com­
mission as “ an agency born of necessity but
truly unloved by its parents."

"Scientists in California were able to tra in '
bacteria to make the units of insulin," he said.
“You grow two types of bacteria. One bac­
teria has a message for the A-chain (of DNA).
The other (or the B-chaln. Then you break the
cell, separate the A-chain, and B&lt;hain. Then
put them together by a chemical reaction."

An earlier study, conducted by the highly
reflected Administrative Conference of the
United States, suggests that “ If the FEC can
be analogized to an automobile, any con­
sideration of (the law) must conclude that
more legislative attention was lavished on the
brakes than on the engines."

Warm
Thoughts,
Cold Door

ROBERT WALTERS

Time For Reform, Again...
Through constant oversight of the FEC that
has, on numerous occasions, bordered on
( harassment, Congress has attained what it
sought from the commission — an agency
that treats wayward members of the House
and Senate (and the president) with
deference and delicacy not accorded to
others.
That situation has produced a commission
with the characteristics of the neighborhood
bully who regularly picks on the little kids
unable to defend themselves but scrupulously
avoids confrontations with those who can
fight back.
The refusal of those who wield power In this
capital to properly insulate the FEC from the
pressure of politics was vividly demonstrated
by the metamorphosis earlier this year of
Max L. Friedersdorf.
After serving as a member of the FEC for
two years, he abruptly resigned as its
chairman and was immediately Installed as
the chief congressional lobbyist for the
country's most highly politicized institution—
the White House.
Like too many FEC members, Friedersdorf
came to the agency from Congress, where he
held a variety of staff position. Indeed, the
commission has long been a haven for retired
or defeated legislators and their aides.
The president and Congress can remedy the
situation by appointing and confirming future
commissioners on the basis of the standards
explicitly set forth tn the law: “Members
shall be chosen on the basis of their ex­
perience, Integrity, impartially and good
Judgment."
Congress should abandon Its insistence
upon holding veto power over FEC
regulations and should surrender its privilege
of having two non-voting FEC seats reserved
for representatives of the Clerk of the House
and Secretary of the Senate.

Someone had his head on straight when he
Invented the refrigerator door.
Not only does It keep the food cold and the
flies out; it provides a nifty place to put things
that you would otherwise lose.
I feel secure all summer knowing that the1
dry-cleaning claim ticket for our winter'
clothes Is safely anchored under a butterfly
magnet on the refrigerator door. I would have
to spend an entire weekend looking for It if it
were to float around the house from May to
September.
The refrigerator door provides a multitude
of services. Ills a place to praise the children,
for example. My friend Carol has posted son
Andy's perfect spelling paper — the one with
two stars and a smile sticker from the;
teacher.
“But Carol," I said the other day. “Ttiis
paper is from January. Isn’t that kinds old?"'
"It’r never too old until there’s one to ’
replace it," she said.
Carol, you aee, Is really a philosopher In ,
housewife disguise. She doesn’t dig the
neatness bit that most homemakers are
expected to emulate. To reassure herself that &lt;
she Is OK anyhow, she keeps on her ■
refrigerator door a New Yorker magazine1
cartoon showing two people on a heavenly »
cloud. Om is dressed in the usual immaculate t
white robe. The other, hair awry, eyes askew,
Is wearing a splotchy, spotted garment with,
the hem faking out. The immaculate one i s ,
saying to the messy one: “Well, you were &gt;
right Neatness didn’t count!"
I
A lot of friends keep diets on the
refrigerator door to halt themselves when
tempted to read) Inside for a goodie. But one, (
who haa given up the fight, has a cartoon
character eating a gooey sundae and chirping
smugly, “ Man should not live by bread
alone."
"P e rfo rm a death-defying act. Quit
smoking." That message was found on the,
door of a friend in the midst of her anti-weed
struggle.
1
Joanne, who runs a travel agency, has*
posted the Itinerary for her upcoming trip to&gt;
Malaga. Handy for the stay-at-homes, she*
lays, "also the police if they come looking for
me and the burglars If tlwy’re going through,
the house.”
She says the refrigerator door is the must ’
place for must messages to the family, things;
such as: “There will be no laundry service ’
here for ID days beginning April 25. Please!
make other arrangements."
Parents of teens say they have to leave
warning! to scavengers on the door: "Don’t
eat the chicken. It’i for dinner."
And kids who get uptight if they think mom'
Is nagging take more kindly to unspoken but
posted reminders. I read this note under a n ,
owl magnet: “Betsy, you must write Grand­
mother a thank you for the birthday gift and
tell her how you've been doing at school.” ,
Still others use refrigerator doors for new
snapshots of family members, magazine
photos of dogs that look like theirs a n d ,
newspaper dippings with locations of auto;
license bureaus, antique stores, etc.
Yea, the refrigerator door Is a must in every,,
home. If I ever design my own house, I'm 1
going to have one wall of the kitchen done in
refrigerator doors.

JACK ANDERSON

Bad Guys Do Better Than Good Guys

"It the United Slates wants to get belligerent
and militaristic, we can start playing that game,
too "

m urrm N — Unde
iiw U Sam
a&gt;m has an im.
WASHINGTON—
im­
pressive arsenal of weapons to use against
taxpayers who intentionally or aeriAwitsMy
skimp on what they owe the government
Without warning or court order, the federal
apparatus can seize all or part of your bank
account confiscate your paychecks or slap a
lien on your business or personal proprety.
But for some reason, while the fads are
som etimes oversealous in their p u n u lt of
■naQ-time chlaelsrs and
* ^ hmm
they have been strangely negllgrat In their
pursuit of drag tra f fid u n and big-time
rackdtesn.
Two apodal acta of Oongreas, passed In
1170, em powv the Justice Department to
adse mobsters' assets In addition to dv tl
fines. Yet the number of (ortsiturei ondsr
there provisions can fairly bedsecribedas
paltry. In sh o rt racketeers are getting better
treatment than ruo-of-the-mill tax evedart.
Through March 1980, assets forfeited and

ootential forfeitures In
nercotica cases
potential
in narcotics
cares
proeacuted under the two statutes amounted
to a piddling *3.8 million. Yet law en­
forcement officials figure that the Illicit drag
trade generates about *54 billion a year.
My associate Tony Capacdo haa searched
the records and found some of the moat
flagrant exam ples of mobsters being let off
the book by federal bloodhounds who track
petty tax cheaters to their financial graves.
Hare they are;
Valenzuela’s organization raked In
$10 million to 111 million a year from its
heroin operations, which extended from
laboratories in Mexico to the sidewalks of
New York. Valenzuela lived high off the hog;
be spent *83,881 In caffi on luxury care during
one three-year period, and put down $396,000
— mostly in cash — to buy and redecorate a
mansion in San Marino, Calif. Valenzuela and
88 members of his dope ring were convicted,

but only 955.000
waa assessed in fines. No
*55.000 was
erects were adzed.
—The “ Black Tuna" marijuana-smuggling
ring headed by Robert Meinster and Robert
Pattahom handled more than ■ million
pounds of dope, earning groat receipts con­
servatively estimated at *300 million. The
gang spent thousands on yachts and executive
jeta - and even ran up a *80,000 restaurant
tab In a single night Yet when the feds at­
tempted to aelte two residences worth
$780,000, five yachts and an auction business
that was used as a front, they wound up' with
818,000 worth of assets.
—in his prime, Leroy “Nicky’’ Barnes ran
the biggest heroin operation In the United
States, according to the Justice Department
He and his gang earned millions pushing Junk
at the retail level In the streets of Harlem and
the South Bronx.
Barnes himself bad five Mercedes Bernes,

___ u
f .
a Cadillac, ■ Corvette and a Citroen Maaerati.
HU 1974 and 1978 tax returns listed a total of
*527,000 In “miacellaneoui" incorot. He had'
11.5 million) invested in Michigan real estate.
The G-men put Barnes away for life and1
fined h i m - a r t you ready? - *125,000. There
were no criminal (erfaituree.
1
A convidad associate of Barnce,Joeeph’
8284,140 In
miscellaneous income on his 1|7K7(
tine — and forfeited not a penny.

i

- J a im e Araujo beaded a heroin syndicate'
baaed in Los Angeles and Mexico before*
federal agents brought him In. He was sen-"
tenced to 38 years in prison and fined i
whopping 11,2 million. But he had to forfeit
only $310,000 in n h i d r e and real ertate,’’
thought it waa established that his dope ring)
had earned *33 million and had Invreted *1.9
million in real estate In the United S ta te s.‘

�Evening HerakLSanlord, FI.

he 1981 Pulitzers:

Wednesday, April IS, 1»81— 5A

Joy Mixed With Sadness
NEW YORK (UP1) - The — Clark Hallos and Robert B.
sjaff of the Charlotte (N.C.) Lowe — were selected from a
q b serv er celebrated their record field of 159 entries for a
1 &gt;81 P ulitzer Prize for P ulitzer for investigative
n meritorious public service (special local) reporting. The
^Uh champagne and cheers pair uncovered irregularities
but Thelma D. Toole, the in the University of Arizona
r lOther of the fiction award Athletic Department that led
v inner, marked the moment to the resignation of the head
with bittersweet memories of football coach and his in­
r dead son John.
dictment on 88 felony counts
“This is just exquisite and stemming from an airline
the same time I am ex* ticket fraud.
riencing a great deal of
D etroit
F ree
P ress
T aro
pair and sadness," Mrs. p h o t o g r a p h e r
le, 79, said.
Yamasaki, 35. won the feature
Her son, New Orleans*born photography aw ard for a
John Kennedy Toole, commit* series of pictures taken over a
tfcd suicide in 1969 at 32 — 11 10-day period at the state
years before publication of his prison in Jackson, Mich.
Shirley Christian of the
Pulitxer-wlnning comic novel,
"A Confederacy of Dunces." Miami Herald won the
"H e
• yearned
for
recognition," Mrs. Toole said.
"He killed himself when he
couldn’t get it published. He
was so distraught."
The Charlotte Observer won
the 1981 Pulitzer Prize gold
medal Monday for its series
on the failure of government
and industry to fight "brown*
lung" disease in the nation's
textile mills.
Three awards went to news­
papers owned by the KnightRidder organization — the
Observer, the Miami Herald
and the Detroit Free Press —
and two went to The New
York Times. The 1981 prizes
won by Times staffers John
M. Crewdson for national
reporting and Dave Anderson
for commentary, bring the
total number of Pulitzers won
by The New York Times to 48.
Winning teams gathered in
their newsrooms for cham­
pagne celebrations and at the
Observer, after speeches and
cheers, a belly dancer per­
formed in the city room.
In New Orleans, however,
Mrs. Toole quietly recalled
how she took her son’s
manuscript to publisher after
publisher — all of whom
rejected it.
"I tried eight publishers
and died each time they
returned it to me because 1
believed In It. And I thought to
m yself,
‘These
stupid
publishers,'" she said. . ijt'jMVj y
Finally she got novelist"
Walker Percy to read it.’
Percy
persuaded
the
Louisiana State University
Press to publish it in 1980.
Critics have since called it a
"rollicking, foot-stomping
wonder" and "a masterwork
of comedy."
Two reporters from the
Arizona Daily Star in Tucson

P ulitzer for international
reporting for her dispatches
from Central America. The
Longview (W ash.) Daily
News won the award for
distinguished local reporting
for its coverage of the
eruption of the Mt. St. Helens
volcano.
Mike Peters of the Dayton
(Ohio) Daily News was
aw arded the P ulitzer for
editorial cartooning. In the
criticism category, Jonathan
Yardley of the Washington
Star won for his book reviews.
In feature writing, Janet
Cooke of the Washington Post
won for the story about an 8year-old heroin addict.
In arts and letters, winners
were:

—Drama, Beth Henley for
“Crimes of the Heart."
—H is to r y , L a w re n c e
Cremin for “ Am erican
Education: The National
Experience, 1783-1876."
— Biography, Robert K.
Massle for "Peter the Great:
His Life and World."’
—Poetry, Jam es Schuyler
for “The Morning of the
Poem."
—General non-fiction, Carl
E. Schorske for “Fm de Siecle
Vienna:
Politics
and
Culture.”
For the first time since 1935,
the Pulitzer board did not give
an award for editorial writing
and for the first time since
1965, no award was given for
music.

H trtid Photo by Tom Vlncont

SOCIAL STUDIES
FAIR W INNERS

W in n e rs of th e All S o u ls S c h o o l’s S o c ia l S tu d ie s P r o je c t C o n te s t d is p la y th e i r
e x h ib its at a r e c e n t s o c ia l s tu d ie s f a ir . E r i c W illia m s ( r ig h t ) w on 1st p riz e
w ith h is s c a le m o d e l " T lie A la m o .” T in a V in c e n t (s e c o n d fro m r ig h t) w ith
h e r " I r i s h V illa g e " a n d K a tie C ook (s e c o n d fro m le ft) w ith h e r " C o tto n
P la n t a t io n ," tie d fo r 2n d p la c e . T im o th y F a ll won 3 rd p la c e w ith " A n
Iro tju o is L og H o u s e ."
S H O P S A N F O R D A N D O R L A N D O D A I L Y V :30-» :J 0 , S U N . 1 J4 .
‘Shop L e e s b u rg , D e L a n d , K is s im m e e d a lly t - t . Sun. 114
Shop M t. D o ra , C la rm o n t d a lly f t . Sun. 11-4

Job Reading
Books And A
Pulitzer, Too
WASHINGTON (UPI) Washington Star book editor
Johnathan Yardley says he’s
lucky to be getting paid to
read books and it’s doubly
nice that he won a Pulitzer
Prize as well.
When notified of his
selection Monday for a
Pulitzer in criticism, Yardley
said, "It’s fabulous."
Yardley has been a book
reviewer for 18 years and
said, "I guess I’m one of those
few people who gets paid to do
what I want to do. As a friend
of mine who’s In the same
business once said, ’it’s quite
extraordinary to be paid to
read books.’"
Yardley said his greatest
pleasure in reviewing is
finding
new
w riters,
"discovering people who are
good and helping them gain
recognition through my
writing."
The author of "R ing:
Biography of Ring Lardner,"
Yardley said he is now in the
early stages of preparing a
biography of H.L. Mencken.
His area of special interest
and exp ertise Is con­
temporary American fiction,
"m o re narrow ly southern
fiction. But as a book editor on
a
general
circulation
newspaper, I have to touch
bf f on a lot of different
writers and stylet."
Yardley M id he drifted Into
criticism while working as an
editor on the G reensboro
Daily News in North Carolina.
He later was a book critic for
the Miami H erald before
coming to the Star 2W years
ago.
Yardley said he may buy
some furniture for his front
porch with the $1,000 dollar
prize that accompanies the

Net Cost
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Back In Business

Jerry Lewis Is ’Hardly Working'

PEOPLE

By DAVID HANDLER

IN BRIEF
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassls
'Queen Of Decadence1
By GLENNE CURRIE
Jacqueline Kennedy Onaaaia has been named New
York's "Queen of Decadence," by Shop Magazine.
Publisher Nick Monjo’s tongue-in-cheek, 10-moatdecadent list also Includes Lauren Bacall, Refine and
Glorida Vanderbilt.
Monjo defines decadence as "the placing of personal
pleasure over the demands of society." But ho
shouldn't be taken too seriously. The samp issue of the
magazine lumps together new fashions from SoHo and
Seventh Avenue and calls them the "New Decadwica."

I

M artha Raye A Rag Doll?
Martha Raye Is being mentioned as a possibility for
the leading role in a new Broadway musical. Hie show
is "Rag Dolls," — what the fashion world calls runway
models — by Chris Anderson and Sharon McCabes.
The main character is a model agency boas named
Rosalind Rosenberg. They're talking about a $1.5
million production for Broadway in the fall with Joel
Grey directing and Oleg Cassini
designing the
costumes for the fashion show within the show.

Tribute To Stanwyck
The Film Society of Lincoln Center held a special
( 125-0 -head gala benefit Monday night to mark Bar­
bara Stanwyck's 50 years in show business. Miss
Stanwyck, now 73 and living in semi-retirement, made
85 films in a career that began in 1990. She caught a
couple of Broadway shows while in New York for the
Avery Fisher Hall benefit, also attended by bw old
friend William Holden.
Miss Stanwyck never remarried after divorcing
Robert Taylor In 1960. But she says, "Sing no sad songs
Stanwyck. Whatever I had, It worked, didn't It?"

NEW YORK (NEA) - The signs are all
there. His hotel suite is hopping, crammed
with assistants, cases of photo equipment,
sound equipment. Jars of jelly beans, dishes of
hard candy and the French cigarettes he
chain-smokes, novelty lighters, a mammoth
electric typewriter, piles of stationary. Tom
Snyder is calling. The dog is barking.
Jerry 's baric. Fresh from an audience with
the president of the United States—his eighth.
After a 16-year absence from the big screen,
an admitted addiction to prescription drugs, a
busted m arrisge, bankruptcy — Jerry's back.
Decked out in a* blade silk monogrammed
shirt, blade slacks, black boots, slick black
hair and pancake make-up — Jerry Lewis at
ace 56 is baric in business.
"Hardly Working," the film he directed and
starred in for a Florida combine and released
lest year in Europe, is being distributed here
by 20th Century Fox now. In June, he starts
filming "The King of Comedy," director
Jdartln Scorceee's new film in which he costars with Robert De Niro. The big time.
Not that Jerry Lewis would tell you that he’s
ever been anywhere but on top of the heap. Not
that he'd ever tell you that sharing the screen
with Dean Martin had anything to do with that
suing of box office winners in the 1950s. Or
that the string of critical and financial flops
Lewis wrote, starred In and directed after he
established his solo career had anything to do
with self-indulgence. Or that his career for the
past 10 years has been confined to nightclubs,

talk shows and his annual muscular dystrophy
telethon.
But he knows he’s been out of circulation.
"Hardly Working," a low-budget comedy
about an unemployed clown who finds true
love and happiness In the U.S. Postal Service,
opens with a five-minute compilation of his
funniest bits from his old films — "The
Bellboy," “The Errand Boy," "Cinderfella,"
"Who’s Minding the Store," "The Patsy.”
Quick bits of the young Jerry, the hyperactive
burrhead, the innocent moron, the kid who
could spend 10 minutes trying to get out of a
pullover sweater and keep you howling with
laughter the whole time.
"It's very Important to re-establish Jerry
after a 10-year absence," he explains into the
tape recorder. His tape recorder. He has every
interview he’s ever given on tape — some
25,000 cassettes, along with an archive of 15
million feet of film, every newspaper story,
every photograph. "Jerry has to come on
correct right away. I also figured I’ve got a lot
of young people out there who don't know that
fella. So I established his demeanor fast. And
the circus Is right for him. Any time I can
create Jerry in a clown setting it works. He’ll
excel.
"I have a great love for clowns. There's a
sadness that pervades their lives. I’ve studied
that whole world. We actually know so little
about it. The Barnum and Bailey clowns once
let me make up with them and go on with
them. It was a great honor. I appeared in front
of 75,000 people and they didn’t know who I

was,
Lewis made another film about a clown In
1972, the last film he made before "Hardly
Working." It’s called “The Day the Clown
Died ” He says: " It’s about a concentration
camp in World War II and children. I play a
has-been clown who’s 78 years old. It's the
proudest work I’ve ever done."

AMERICAS FAMILYDRUGSTORE
Y O U 'R E
G O IN G T O
LIKE
OUR

f

E a s te r

i

\

Superstars Dance Together
Ballet superstars Mikhail Baryshnikov and Rudolf
Nureyev danced in the same ballet for the first time
Tuesday evening. They were Joined by Harmlone
GIngold and Gwen Verdon. The occasion was a gala
performance at New York's City Center to benefit the
Paul Taylor Dance Company.
The two Russians have danced previously in works
by fellow choreographer Taylor, but this was tha t i n t
time they've appeared in the same ballet. It was
Taylor's comic "From Sea to Shining Sea," which haa
opportunities for guests whether they can dance or n o t
Ticket prices for City Center’s 3,517 seats were $15 to
$50, plus another $100 for anyone wanting to Jobs the
stars at a party afterwards.

CLOSE • UP

MAYBELLINE

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'Tltantlc' Worth Gigantic
Millionaire Texas oilman Jack Grimm has even
more reason now to mount his search for the UUatad
Titanic. The only piece of china to be removed from the
giant ship before it sank on that "Night to Remember"
in 1912 is valued at about $20,000. But the small saucer
was stolen in Los Angeles over the weekend during an
annual remembrance of the disaster.
Grimm, however, thinks mure Titanic artifacts will
be found from the ship's watery grave in the icy North
Atlantic. He has alreiuly sunk $1.25 million to finance
efforts by a team of crack oceanographers to locate
and phtotograph the ship. He says be hopes his quest
will be achieved this summer and said the recovered
artifacts alone should repay the coots.

f t

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CAPSULES’

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SCHRAFFT’S
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Caret.11 .........
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lates A confections

■-La.aann.aaMa-***

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1 M u „ o 1 9 "

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with candy sugar shells

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WITHSPECIALSt EMI OffIk-

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Latest movie to start shooting In Hollywood, with
Donald Pleasance as star, is "Hollywood D ." R's being
produced by Pumpkin Pie Productions. Does Linus
know about this?

You'll going to Ilk* tCKIBD'S PHOTO OPPH,
TWICf TH* PtINTt, TWIC* THE HIM ond now

Quote O f The Day

2 PAIR OF NO NONSENSE
PANTY HOSE...FREE!
Fonfy hot# otter, worth 1311, it pood thru Sal. Apr* 25»h

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WATCHES V

25% ft

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The Name's The Thing

Joe Kerwin, a physician who spent 21 days In space
aboard Skylab, says in Omni magazine of the upace
shuttle Columbia: " I think of the shuttle as a railroad,
but we sorely need a station at the other and."

r

Oltfjftiuty

File**
D m ply penetrating facial

Hero Describes Feat
Secret Service agent Timothy McCarthy said be
moved In front of President Reagan when the president
was shot March 30 In a "kind of mindless reaction I had
been trained for ... I reacted to the sound where the
shots were coming from. I knew we were being fired
upon and, I was pretty sure, by one person," says the
nine-year Secret Service veteran. McCarthy was shot
in the stomach and fell to the ground.
He says he didn't lose consciousness until he was
a ne the tired at George Washington Hospital before
surgery to remove the bullet that passed through his
liver.

149

Pncae ........... I
4 shadows m onektl
wilh applicator Limit 1

p t m

New S ian Bom — In Spoco
Shuttle astronauts John W. Young and Robert L
Crippen became hot television stars this weekend —
choosing to transmit their space premiere from of all
places, a spot more than 170 miles above Hollywood. As
the Columbia passed the California coast and whined
by Hollywood at 17,500 miles an hour, shuttle pilot
Crippen turned on his TV camera Sunday.
Millions of earth-bound viewers ware treated to a
spectacular view of the shuttle's flight deck, with sun
pouring in the windows.

my,

Jerry Lewis In "Hardly Working," a low-budget comedy about an unem­
ployed clown who finds true love and happiness In the U.S. Postal Servir*- '**
have a great love for clowns. There’s a sadness that pervades their lives . . .
we actually know so little about it.”

Most Respected Women
Nancy Reagan, Margaret Thatcher and Mother
Theresa were among the "10 Most Influential Women
in 1900," reports a poll of 1,500 members of the
University of Southern California Panhellic Council.
The USC students also placed on their list Los
Angeles Rams owner Georgia Frontiers, octrees
Goldie Hawn, Princess Grace of Monaco, former
Congresswoman Barbara Jordan, psychologist Irene
Kassorla, Imelda Romualdes Marcos of the Philip­
pines and actress Barbra Streisand.
"They share one thing In common," says Erin
O’Brien, president of the group representing all USC
sororities. "All are trendsetters whose activities
present women with new options."

The film was never released.
"IPs still sitting in Sweden. I’m not a lo n £
Bergman has two films stuck on the shelf
there, Godard has one too.
"I wanted to release ’Hardly Working’ over
there first to pay them back for being
fans," he says. “They’ve sustained m y:
cinematic career in Europe.

NORELCO

.

M

CURL FRIEND DRY * *

HAIR8ETTER

S3.
1 A 99
I m i e ...........R ^W
14 cur lor*. 3 SUe*. Easy to
peck tor travel

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI,

Wednesday, April ) i , 1H1— 9A

'...More Fun Than
Just Hiding Eggs'

f

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1 M

Htrald Photo* by Tom Vincent

LEADERS OF THE PACK
S a n fo rd C u b S c o u ts to o k s e v e r a l a w a r d s in th e r e c e n t P in e W ood D e rb y fo r w h ich
th e b o y s b u ild , p a in t a n d r a c e (h e ir ow n m o d el c a r s . W in n e r fro m C u b S co u t
P a c k 508, sh o w in g o ff t h e i r s p e e d y d e s ig n s (a b o v e , le ft to r ig h t) a r e : C ra ig
C a r t e r , B u ck A le x a n d e r, M ic h a e l F c tte r h o f f , S h a n e P r e v a i l , M ike F u lle r a n d
M ic h a e l T in d a ll. S h a n e P r c v n t l w e n t to d is tr ic t c o m p e titio n a n d won 1st p la c e fo r
d e s ig n a m o n g e ig h t-y e a r-o ld c o m p e tito r s . T a k in g a tr ip le c ro w n w a s C h a rle s
S m ith III (le ft p h o to ). C h a rle s to o k 1st p la c e fo r P a c k 508; 1st p la c e fo r th e
S e m in o le D is tric t a n d 1st p la c e in th e C u b S co u t C o u n cil fo r C e n tr a l F lo r id a .

r-

AMERICAS FAMILYDfyUGSTORE

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PALMOLIVE GOLD

vinyl. B r a n tilling*

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so flsp ru r or steady stream

2 4 -I N C H I N F L A T A B L E

F I L L ’N T H R I L L

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F O A M S W I M R I N G or
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A color to Easter b ail*els

SCRIPTO
LIGHTERS

No 200 C

9 c

Choice of colors For tun at
beach picnics or home

KODAK
C O L O R P R IN T

FILM
PRINTS
YOUR
CHOICE

Kodak film
4

Forgotten People
Helped To Survive
Without Preaching

ECKE
GARDEN HOSE

MARKSVILLE, I.a. (UPI) - While the
rest of the nation dyes gaily colored
Easter eggs and readies Jelly bean trails
leading to baskets of chocolate bunnies,
French-speaking Avoyelles P arish
prepares for Easter by laying bets of $100
and more on the annual eggknock.
Thousands will gather around the
Marksville courthouse square Easter
Sunday morning to "knock eggs," a
tradition traced back to their French
ancestors.
Once an Easter morning ceremony for
children in the home, egg-knocking has
gone big time in organized contests with
stiff competition, wagering and prizes for
adults.
" It’s more fun than just hiding eggs,"
said Brent Scallan, organizer for this
year’s knock. "We’re like kids again. I
wouldn't miss one if I had to."
The idea of egg knocking is to find a
chicken egg hard enough to survive a
knock from a competitor’s egg without
cracking. The pastel-colored eggs are
boiled and knocked point-to-point until
the weaker one cracks.
At the contest in Marksville, Scallan
said three rounds of 50 contestants each
will knock-off Easter morning until a
winner is found in each group. Then the
three finalists knock for first, second and
third prizes.
Contests also are scheduled for a
knock-off of guinea eggs — smaller and
harder than chicken eggs — and a match
for children.

9

ffi
■

tOO AB A Y our choice ot
110 t?F or 135 s u e tilm

IG L O O M O LD E D

GENERAL ELECTRIC

IC E C H E S T

LIGHT BULBS

By DAVE SCHWEISBERG
DETROIT (UPI) — The forgotten people line up in the late
afternoon amid the dingy shadows of industry, awaiting the
man whose free beans and bread will help them survive
another week.
Tiie men wear ragged overcoats and stubbled beards. The
women, some with children in tow, wear stained kerchiefs and
anguished expressions.
They wait each Saturday on a corner in a rundown factory
neighborhood of Delroit, clutching dog-cared bags and boxes.
They arc unnoticed by most passers-by and quickly forgotten
by everyone else.
Everyone, that is, except the man they know only as Tom.
Tom always remembers.
He shows up every Saturday, as he has for the past six years,
to hand them perhaps their only good fortune of the week —
food, free of charge with no sermons.
"1 used to cat at the mission, but I couldn't stand all that
religion stuffj" said a wizened woman who ts a regular at the
corner. "Hut Tom don’t put us through that. He Just gives us
our food.
"1 don't know if I could make a go of it without him."
The Good Samaritan is Clarence M. Dunkie, 76, a World War
II veteran and retired steelworker who likes to be called just
"Tom."
"I used to just help the alcoholics, help them get something
to eat now and then or find a place to sleep, oh, maybe 20 or 30
years ago," Dunkie recalled. "But it really became an ob­
session. Once 1 storied, 1 had to keep at it."
With classic humility, Dunkie dislikes discussing himself.
And when he does, he is deliberately contradictory.
He believes in Christ, but does not call himself a Christian.
He is a fervent Bible reader, but siiuns organized religion. He
will not admit to being "born again," but describes an
Epiphany he experienced years ago as a “mind resurrection."
He allows he served in the artillery in Europe during the
war, and toiled in u Great 1jikes Steel mill for 39 years until he
retired in 1971.
But then he retreats.
"The Good Book says you should give to the man that askswithout hoping to receive,” Dunkie explained, "It isn’t that
I'm a wealthy person, but I have enough to get by. And this
gives me peace of mind."
What brings the people doesn’t matter much to Dunkie.
Some drink too much, others work too little, but most are Just
down on their luck.
"If they'll stand in the cold for what little I can give them,
they've got to be hungry," he said.

.N
IIO. 4 / 1 "
M O S T ....B U L B S I
Choose60.75.or tOO watts
Limit 1 pac* ol 4

e u s A Sif * *

WMt

Supples
tu t

Rag.
$11.19
Reg.
$4.99

25-PACK

now
Supplies

30-GAL
TRASH BAGS

PHARMACY SERVICE AVAILABLE ED HOURS IN STORES LISTED BELOWI
reO P LE TR U S T ECKERD FOR D U ALITY PRESCRIPTION SERVICE at low, low pricoal

Sale Prices good thru Sat. Apr 1118th
We rtstry* lh# right lo limit quantities.

SUNDAY 10 A.M. til 7 P.M.

SANFORD: 950 State St. Sanford Plaza
LONGWOOD: Hwy, 17-92 at S.R. 434
434 Center, 949 S.R. 434
C A SSE LB E R R Y : Seminole Plaza 1433 Semoran Blvd.
A L T A M O N T E SPRINGS: 974 West S.R. 434,414 E. Altamonte Drive
O R A N G E C IT Y : Four Townes Shopping Center

Last

H e a v y -d u ty 2 -p ly b a g *
hold up to 60 Ibal Each
box in clu d es 25 baga
plus twist ties.
TV325

LH. ROUND
POINT SHOVEL
Features long wood han­
d le; h o llo w b a c k , h e attre a te d ,
h ig h -c a rb o n
steel b lad e w lro lle d
shoulders.
C2LRCSX

�S P O R TS
Parker Chop Scores Two In 8th

R e d -H o f R a id e rs K a y o V C C

Triple I Sinks Flagship
To Forge 3-Way Deadlock
Anthony Davis pounded a pair of
doubles for the losers.
Gay Hickman pitched no-hit ball for
the first four innings against Butch’s
Chevron, while he and his teammates
were piling up eight runs.
The Butch's Chevron bats finally came
alive in the last two frames, but the four
hits was too little, too late. Three of the
four hits were for extra bases.
Hickman, who finished with a dozen
strikeouts, also paced his team at the
plate with a home run and single.
Steve Warren homered for Butch's
Chevron, while teammates Ronnie Hayes
and Gary Derr legged out triples.
Seminole Petroleum broke open a close
game with three runs in the top of the
fourth and edged winless Jack Prosser
Ford behind the hitting of Tommy
Mitchell and Rodolfo Orsini. Both had a
single and double.
Marvin Killlngsworth was the winning
pitcher, with relief help from Mitchell.
They climbed for 12 strikeouts, including
five by Mitchell In the last two Innings.
Flagttilp Bank
Triple I.I.I. Tru ck

173 O O - * f
034 77— I* 17

W P— Mike Edward*. L P — Johnny Wright.
Hitter*: Flag*hlp Bank — Anthony D avit 7 3
two doublet. D e rrlt Little* 31. John Lewi* 1-7
double, Johnny Wright 17 double, David
Martinet 1-3. E ric Hanten 1-1, Jack Jackton 11; Triple l.t.l Trucking — Mike Edward* 11
double. Keith Denton 1 4 home run, double,
Bernard Mitchell 7 4 triple, Sammy Edward*
7 4, Reginald Bellamy 11 doubt*, Bobby Bew 1

7.

Seminole Petroleum
Jack P r o m t Ford

O il 3 0 0 - 5 * 3

100 100- 7 7 0

Milton
Rlehman

person Louis was.
Louis was an easy mark everywhere
he went.
I recall Interviewing him once years
ago backstage in Harlem's old Apollo
theater where he was making a oneweek appearance. There was a knock
on his dressing room door. When he
opened it and saw who was standing
there, he went into his pocket and fished
out a bill without a word.
"The guy is a moocher,” a friend of
his in the dressing room grumbled to
Louis. "He keeps coming around every
day and you never turned him down.
"That's OK," Joe shrugged It off. "I
started out glvtn' him 10 and now 1 got
him down to five.”
He simply didn't know how to say no.
Freddie Sommers, a boxing publicist
and one of Louis' closest friends,
arranged to have Schmellng villi this
country to referee some bouts In 1054. It
was S c h illin g 's first trip back here
since Louis had flattened him 16 years
before.
Seeking to effect a reconciliation,
Sommers brought the former German
champion to Louis' home in Chicago.
When Louis who had been out playing
golf, returned, Sommera got up to greet
him and inform him Schmellng was in
the living room.
"I don't wanna talk to him," Louis
said. "Get rid of him."
"Joe, the war is over," Sommers

010 101 106—4 7 3
020 010 03x—6 10 1

Valencia
SCC

WP — Birchmeler. LP — Fawbush
Htreld Photo*

JIM MELLIAND
Scores for SCC

by Scott Smith

te e e /fE U

S P R IN G S A L E

WP — Tom m y Mitchell (17 itrlk e ou ti). L P —
Alex Wynn. Hitler*: Seminole Petroleum —
Tom m y Mitchel 7 3 douBle, Rodolfo O rtlni 7 3
double. Met Hlnet 17, Lewi* Wed* 1 1; Jack
Prower Ford — John Hendrick* 1-7, Alex
Wynn 1-7.
Butch'* Chevron
Atlantic Bank

000 0 7 7 - 4
071 5Ox— |

W P— Cloy Hickman (17 (trlke ou lt). L P —
M yrlel Reid. Hllter*: Butch1* Chevron — Steve
Warren 17 home run, Ronnie Haye* 1-7 triple,
C ary Derr t-1 triple, Tony Haye* 1-7; Atlantic
Bank — Clay Hickman 7-1 homa run, Eddla
Korgan 11 double, David Rape M , Lett I*
Thom at M .

S A V E W IT H
C O N F ID E N C E !

KOC, Moose
Show dow n
Junior League season is scheduled for 5
p.m. today at Chase Park, when Moose
and Knights of Columbus collide.
Knights of Columbus, the pre-season
favorite after finishing second last year,
and Moose are both 2-0. The winner of
today’s game will move Into a tie for first
place with defending champ Kiwanls.
In tonight’s other game, Rotary and
Elks tangle at 7 p.m. Regardless of
which team ends up in the tie with
Kiwanls, It won’t last for long. Kiwanls
plays Moose at $ pap. Friday and then
meets Knights of Columbus at 7 p.m.
Monday.

Louis Punch Brought Blacks, Whites Together
NEW YORK (UPI) - As long as I
live, and as long as I can still
remember, I’ll never forget how one
young man turned an entire city upside
down and brought blacks and whites
completely together In less than three
minutes.
Joe Louis, only 24 at the time,
m anaged this rem arkable ac­
complishment on June 22, 1636, by
knocking out Germany’s Max Schmellng In 2:04 of the first round at
Yankee Stadium.
Television was practically unknown
then. Everybody listened to the fight on
the radio.
Louis was defending a lot more than
merely his world heavyweight Utle; he
was, In a sense, defending the national
honor as well as his own. Hitler was on
the march in Germany and Schmellng,
quite possibly unfairly, had been
portrayed as a Nazi sympathizer. All
the Ingredients were there, especially
since Schmellng had put the only stain
on Louis’ record by kayolng him in 12
rounds two years before.
"I came to find out Schmellng was a
pretty decent fellow," Louis would say
later, "but that second fight with him
was the biggest kick I ever got out of the
ring."
Referee Arthur Donovan had hardly
signified the fight was over when people
throughout New York City began cele­
brating. It looked like New Year’* Eve
in Times Square, and Harlem went
absolutely crazy. I was only 16 when
that happened but I still remember all
the Joy and delight that spilled over Into
the city’s streets.
It all came back to me on Sunday
when I heard Joe Louis had died of a
heart attar* to Las Vegas a t « . One of
the things I thought about was what an
uncommonly generous and giving

inning when Mee moved Scott Matthews
into scoring position when his pickoff
attempt salted Into right field. A twcwiut
single up the middle by catcher Ron
Bunnell gave Valencia an early 1-0 lead.
SCC answered in the bottom of the
inning when Mee led off with a walk
before Clarke belted a two-run homer
over the left field fence.
With two on afld no one out in the
Matador sixth, Mee pounded on a
sacrifice attempt in front of the plate but
his throw to third was high loading the
bases. Keith tied the game for Valencia
with an RBI fielders choice, but Birchmeier came on In relief of starter
Kevin Smith and shut down the rally.
Clarke’s two-hit, three-RBI day led the
SCC attack. Melliand and third baseman
Vince Rlva each had two hits In four trips
while Hernandez and leftflelder Jim Opie
had a pair of hits each for Valencia.

reminded him.
Two minutes later, Louis was shaking
hands with Schmellng and making
arrangements for a big dinner together
In a Chicago restaurant to celebrate
Max’s visit aRer all those years. They
were good friends at the end.
Few people I ever met In sports were
more honest than Louis.
He had his opinion pi the modern day
fighters but generally kept it to himself
and rarely downgraded any of them.
The best fighter he ever saw, he told
me, was Henry Armstrong, who won
three different titles, and ne also said
Jack Dempsey was his idol.
Louis thought Muhammad All was an
outstanding fighter. I don't think he
thought All was better than he was, and
having seen them both, I know 1 would
pick Joe Louis.
One of the saddest sights I ever saw in
connection with I/mis was the way he
was knocked out by Rocky Marciano In
1951 when he was 37. He was just a
punching bag for the tough-fisted 26year-old Marciano and shouldn't have
even been In the same ring with him.
"Of all my fighta, that one gave me
the least pleasure," Marciano told me.
Louis had not complained of feeling
poorly before his death last Sunday. On
the contrary, he seemed to be doing
well after having had a pacemaker
implanted four months ago. So well, In
fact, that Sommers, dropping by his
house in Las Vegas n week or so ago,
had said to him:
"Champ, you look so good, when are
you gonna make a comeback?"
Sitting in his wheelchair, Joe flashed
that familiar smile of his, the one he
used when he didn’t want to let anyone
know what he was really thinking.

H IA C K W A II
S A IJ: PHICI.
$ 3 0 .1 5

$ 3 1 .7 0

$1.61

1:78-14

5 3 5 .0 5

$ 3 6 .8 5

$1.75

178-14

$ 3 6 .7 5

$ 3 8 .7 5

$2.14

(178-14

$ 3 8 .1 0

i 4 0 .0 5

$2.28

U 7 8 -l.ri

$ 3 9 .2 5

$ 4 1 .3 0

$2.36

1178-15

$ 4 1 .1 5

$ 4 3 .1 5

$2.57

1178-13

Power Streak 78

Plus I T T
W H ITE W A L L no Iradr
SAU ih ic i:
needed

A 7 8 -I3 blocItuell.
pin, $1 M il I T.m t
llrtlte needed

O llie r Sizes Sale Priced. T ik i *

- Ilu* strenijth .uni tesil
letuvoi pniyvslcr corrl
- 1Vutv nf KMil i|nppiiH)
i'ilili's fm .ill around
traction
Ilk* performance
ili'|H’inliil&gt;ility o{ Imos
ply construction
S a l t • f i n d * April 2 5

SA V E ON
P O LY G LA S!
Cushion Belt Polyglas

l
i

Triple I.I.I. Trucking pounded
Flagship Bank 16-6 Tuesday night, and in
the process threw the race for first place
In the Sanford Little American League
Into a three-way tie.
Atlantic Bank topped Butch's Chevron
8-4 and Seminole Petroleum nipped Jack
Prosser Ford 5-2 In other Tuesday
games.
Triple I.I.I. Trucking, Atlantic Bank
and Seminole Petroleum are all 3-1, while
Flagship Bank Is 3-2.
In today's action in the Sanford Little
National League, Sanford D.A.V. plays
the Railroaders at 5 p.m. at Fort Mellon
Park, while Cardinal Industries plays
Sunniland Corporation at the same time
at Westside Field. Poppa Jay ’s plays
Clem Iionard Shell at 7 p.m. at Fort
Mellon Park.
After falling behind 3-0, Triple I.I.I.
scored three runs on three hits in the
bottom of the second to tie the score.
Flagship Bank bounced right back with
three runs in the top of the third, but the
Truckers charged Into the lead with a
four-run third Inning.
Triple I.I.I. then pushed seven runs
across the plate in the fourth while
winning pitcher Mike Edwards blanked
Flagship the rest of the way,
Edwards and Keith Denton led the
winners with three hits apiece and they
each hit safely In the second, third and
fourth frames. Denton finished the game
with a home run and double and Edwards
had a double.

answered reliever Steve Birchmeier's
fastball by lining it off the scoreboard
over the right field fence for a solo home
run and a 4-3 Valencia edge.
Seminole catcher Jim Mee answered
the bell for the eighth round by drilling a
curve into left field for a single off loser
John Fawbush.
Mee moved to second on an infield out
before designated hitter Tom Clarke tied
the game with an RBI single to leftcenter.
Pinch hitter Mike Ripa sent Fawbush
to the showers with a single, and rightfielder Jim Melliand greeted reliever
Jack Dietrich with an infield hit to load
the bases for lead-off hitter Bob Parker.
Parker chopped a one hopper to second
base, but the speedy redhead forced
Valencia shortstop Jeff Keith to throw
the ball away trying to turn a double play
scoring pinch runner Loren Levy and
Ripa with the winning runs.
“We almost threw the game away,"
Pantellas said afterwards. “ It’s not like
us to throw the ball around the way we
did today."
The Matadors scored first In the second

• (IllKISC tillSlICIHpil III litM'tyl.iss mill lu lls
• Plus llll&gt; I II,ti­
ll Hirtl riil,- nl
icsdtcnl |uil\vsli'i
1178-13 whitewall.
pin. I t HO I I I. no
trade imsxL xI

•G o o d r o .u lrim tar t am i limy
m ileage. loo

Save Now

Th ro u g h

aS

Raider third baseman Vince Riva (13) goes high in the air to snatch
a throw from catcher Jimmy Mee. Valencia loaded the bases, but
could only score once as second baseman Bob Parker gunned a
runner down from short right field to complete a double play.

By BENTON WOOD
Herald Sports Writer
“1 guess we don’t start playing until the
eighth inning."
Once again, Jack Pantellas' Seminole
Community College's baseball crew felt
out Its prey before delivering the
knockout blow in the eighth round. A
three run rally helped the Raiders to
their 16th TKO in their last 16 bouts as
they dumped Valencia 6-4 at home
Tuesday afternoon.
The win marks the 11th division victory
in a row for SCC, who is now the number
one contender in the division for the title.
The Raiders have already earned a slot
in the state JuCo tourney In a couple of
weeks.
"I'm really proud of ’em; they've
[ought back all year," said winning
trainer Pantellas whose fighters have
knocked out 21 opponents In 36 outings
including Valencia three out of four. "I
felt like we'd beat 'em If we’d stay
close."
The Raiders were even on the
scorecard until the seventh when
Matador first baseman Larry Hernandez

April 25

Ynu
Save

Ptus E I.T
No trade
needed

$ 4 4 .0 0

$ 9 .8 5

$2.04

$ 4 6 .0 0

$ 9 .9 5

$2.14

560.75

$ 4 9 .7 5

$ 1 1 .0 0

$2.44

II7 H .11

$64.55

5 5 3 .0 5

$ 1 1 .5 0

$2.62

G 7 8 -I5

$62.15

$ 5 1 .0 0

5 1 1 .1 5

*2.50

1478-15

$67.00

5 5 5 .2 0

$ 1 1 .8 0

$2.72

Whitewall
Size

Regular
Prit *

1)78-14

$53.85

1.78-14

$55.95

(178-14

« lain i lux k. Avuirmy hillin' delivery el the advertised prtre

P R O LO N G TIRE l i F t . B O O S T M PG

Front-End Alignm ent

*19
I'a il, and additional
servh r» ratia it ra iiln l

• Im p e ti all lour tire* • Correct air
piessute • Set from wheel m intier,
raster. am ) toe to proper aliijnmenl
•I ms|h *i l su,|M'nsiim and steering sys­
tems • ( I S ears am i Im ports with
■nipisIn tile suspensions. Ii Hindi's frontufw el drive, Chevetlev trucks. and ears
rei|uiring Mat lln -rso n Strut correct ton
extra.

SAI

V ans &amp; R V 's

T r a c k e r L T . .. A L ig h t T r u c k
F a v o rite T h a t 's A l l M u s c le
■Tire strength nf lemiM-red,
lontj-wearing nylon cord
• Hie deix-ndablllty of rugged
bias-ply ronsl ruction
• Hat tread radius promotes
long, even wear

M AIN TAIN S TO P P IN G D IS TA N C E

Brake Service — Your Choice

*88
Additional |U(H and
services eslia l( n m ln l

2 -WHEEL EHONT DISC: Install new
front brake pads and mease seals
- itt-siirf.it e front rotors - Kerraek front
wheel liearings • Inspeel call
t alim-ts
lie n and

G 7 8 -IS
black wall.
T u b rlr,, load
Hang* C . plus
S3. I l l I T No

hydraulic system • Add fluid K toad

test ear.(Iku-s out Iim lode rear wireels).

OH
4 -WHEEL DKDM: Install new Iwake lining. all 4 wireels • New
front grease seals • Kesnrtiee drutm • i(e|Mt k front wlreel la-arums
• Inspect hydraulic system - Atkl fluid ft toad lesl car. • Most ll.S.
cars, stmu' Im|*nr1x.

Just Say
Charge It * [■vi

Goodyear
Revoking
Charge Account

Ilade needed

8 75-16 5
black wall
Tutu-It s , load
Kang* IJ, ulus
S3 82 H T N o
trad* heeded

Safe Ends This
S a tu rd a y A p ril 18th

Use any of these* oilier ways to buy Master Cart i •Visa
•American Express Card •Carte Blanche •Diners Club *Cash

GOODpYEAR
m toun in w e t s o o n M a im eon me m u c i *n o c m on u a u i mice ■ * nd c m do r i a u t a i s h o w n at co o o tt an m m u c i o u i ,
_______
_______________________________ M a v ro a r rot*Ntwaeaeta tituner* m o i avaoaau a rt t a n n in lo c a t u m
iro n e * m a u co w u u tm ifi

GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE

Jim Hemphill, Manager

S A N FO R D

SU W. First itrasi

“

M on .-Fri.7 ilU , Sat. 7 :1 U

322-2121

�E vening Herald. Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, April » , 1981— 11A

Rockefs-Launch 3-2 Series Edge

Mighty Mite Murphy Dusts Off Spurs
By United Press International
Calvin Murphy who skeptics said
would be drummed nut nf the league
in a few years on Ik?inn selected on the
second round of the 1970 NBA draft,
scored 3G points to lead the Houston
Hoekols to a 123-117 victory over San
Antonio Tuesday night.
All-Star center Moses Malone added
34 and the Rockets now have a 3-2 lead
in the Western Conference playoff.
Murphy. 32, the smallest and oldest
man on the court, gave a dazzling
performance, hitting 1Gshots from thefloor and 4-of-l from the free throwline, where he shattered Rick Barry’s
consecutive streak earlier in the
season.

Murphy, who sports a 20-point
career average in post-season play,
credited his teammates for giving him
shooting- space.
"They set such great picks for me
tonight," Murphy said. "We slopped

their fast break and George Gervin's
not getting 30 points does not hurt at
all."
Houston dominated the final three
quarters despite a sellout crowd of
16,114 at San Antonio’s HemisFair
Arena. Rookie forw ard Reggie
Johnson kept the Spurs close, hitting
25 points, but Gervin, the league’s
third-leading scorer, was held to 23.
Mark Olberding added 21 for San
Antonio.
Murphy, who has never played for a
championship team in 10 previous pro
seasons, earned the respect of San
Antonio Coach Stan Albock.
"He had his rhythm and he’s a
tremendous pro," Albock said.

In the other Western Conference
semifinal, the Kansas City Kings can
elim inate the Pacific Division
champion Phoenix Suns with a victory
in Phoenix Wednesday night.
The Kings finished the regular
season under .500 and their 3-1 lead in
the series is even more startling
considering Kansas City is playing
without its starting guards, Otis Bird­
song and Phil Ford.

JCPenney
Auto Center

We won’t steer you wrong.

In the East, the Atlantic Division
champion Boston Celtics, having
rudely dispatched the Chicago Bulls in
four straight, await the winner of the
Milwaukee-Philadelphia brawl. The
76ers and the Midwest Division
champion Bucks are tied 2-2.

f t .
i

M

Reynolds Stocks Lake Mary Pond
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
"Everybody’s going to have to sing and dance
the first year."
The fiddler calling that tune is Lake Mary High
School Principal Don Reynolds, whose job it is to
stock the I ,ake Mary staff pond.
Reynolds' problem is, he has a large, complete
school with just 906-1000 students, but must offer
a complete curriculum of activities.
The Lake Mary staff will be made up of 24
teachers for its initial year.
Twenty-one of those instructors will come
from I^ike Brantley (11), Seminole-Crooms
(five) and Lyman (five).
Because of the transfer of students, the
teacher reduction at tiio.se three high schools is
I^ake Brantley (15), and Seminole-Crooms and
Lyman five each.
With the smallness of the staff nobody’s going
to do just one thing," said Reynolds. They’ll have
to sponsor clubs or coach a sport or two.
"It presents a problem of getting everything
done. We’ve got 13 or 14 sports to cover, Thiit’s
over half the faculty coaching a sport," pointed
out Reynolds.
Thus far, to stock the pond, Reynolds has
shown an inclination to lead toward younger
coaches who have not had the opportunity to
coach iit a varsity level.

Roger Beathard (33). Willie Richardson (34),
Don Smith (34), Cindy Henry (25) and Mike
Gibson (31) were appointed to coach football,
basketball, baseball, girls sports and track and
cross country respectively.
"I really don't have a philosophy as far os age
goes," countered Reynolds when queried on the
staff similarity. "If Roger (Beathard) had been
25 or 80, I’d have given him the shot."
Reynolds likes coaches who have put in their
time or paid their dues at Uie junior varsity level.
He doesn’t feel its necessary to hire a veteran
varsity coach.
"Everybody’s got to have a shot at it
sometime," said the personable principal.
"These people have earned their shot.
"Fve had coaches that have got out and
wanted to come back. They've had their shot, let
someone else have one.
"It would be very, very disheartening to work
real hard, do a tremendous Job and not get a
chance to be a head coach because you’d never
been one before," concluded Reynolds.
Beathard served under Reynolds at Seminole
for eight years. Smith worked as a junior varsity
coach at Lyman for nine years.
Richardson served his apprenticeship at Lake
Brantley as JV boys basketball coach for five
years and girls varsity coach one year. Gibson

was at I^ake Brantley since its inception and
built a solid track and cross country program.
Henry has been at Lyman for three years. She
has coached girls volleyball, softball and
basketball.
I^ike Mary will have a 10-gnme freshman and
sophomore football schedule next year.
"We'll play a Junior varsity schedule against
the county schools the first year," informed
Reynolds.
The Rams will play small 3A and 2A schools
the next year and "hopefully" move into the Five
Star Conference when the school has all four
classes.
Reynolds does not feel this situation will
hamper his selections. “We’ve got a lot of ex­
cellent teachers in Seminole County," said
Reynolds. “We’ve been flooded with ap­
plications.
Once Reynolds receives an application, a
negotiating process begins with Hie county
principals.
"Another principal might say, 'Don, if you
take this guy, you’re going to kill me," said
Reynolds about the negotiating. "I'll have to
reconsider if another principal can’t nfford to
lose a teacher.
“ It's kind of like a chess game, but a number of
good people have applied, so I’m not worried
about getting good people," insisted Reynolds.

Sale 4 for s140
El Tigre 278
Reg.

$ 4 4 .on. plus fed. tax." Size A 7 8 - 1 3 W W . El T i g r e 278s h ave a
2 p ly p o ly e s te r b o d y w ith 2 lib e rq la s s belts. W h itew a ll.
R og

Sale*

Size

R e g.

Sale*

A 7 8 -1 3

$44

$35

G 7 8 -1 4

$64

*51

B 7 8 -1 3

S49

$39

H 7 8 -1 4

$66

$53

C 7 8 -1 4

S53

$42

G 7 8 -1 5

S6S

$52

D 7 0 -1 4

S57

$46

H 7 8 -1 5

$69

$55

E7 B -1 4

$59

$47

L 7 8 -1 5

$74

$59

F 7 8 -1 4

$61

$49

165.15

$54

$43

Size

Plus fed. tax fr o m 1.66 to 3.12 each tire. Sale prices effective through
Sa tu rd a y.

m

Valenzuela Victimizes Giants On 4 Hits

R e g . $50 ea. p lu s ted. tax.* S ize
A7 0 -1 3 . H i g h p e r f o r m a n c e
S e a l Tra c S u p e r A F / X has a
p o ly e s te r c o i d b o d y w ith 2
fiberglass belts.

S3
8

!■

Sale
2 for *80

lA

.

Berenyi Plate Leaves Padres Famished

-»

By United Press International
Bruce Berenyi found the plate Tuesday
night — and sent the San Diego Padres home
famished.
Cincinnati's young righthandef, whose only
question mark was control, tossed a
masterful two-hit shutout in helping the Reds
to a 4-4) triumph in San Diego. He struck out
four and walked four, yielding only a line
single by Terry Kennedy to open the third and
a seventh-inning infield hit by Luis Salazar.
One frustrated observer, who knows a little
about hitting himself, thought the Reds have
themselves a true phenomenon.
"Based on what 1 saw, barring injury, he's
got a helluva future in baseball," said San
Diego Manager Frank Howard. "Overall I'd
say it's about as fine a pitched ballgnmc as
you’re likely to see."
"In the [last, control's been my problem,"
Berenyi said. "1 feel I have the stuff to get

these batters out if 1can get Rover the plate."
The Reds struck early with three runs in the
first inning oif loser John Curtis, 6-1 as Dave
Concepcion hit a two-run double and Ron
Oester chipped in with an RBI single. George
Foster's second homer of the season made it
4-0 in the third inning.
Astros 8, Braves l
Joe Niekro, continuing Ids role as stopper,
tossed aseven-hfttprto lead the Astros to their
initial 1981 victory in five games. He also
knocked in two runs with a single in winning
Ids first game In two starts. Bob Walk,
making his Atlanta debut, absorbed the loss.
Dodgers 7, Giants 1
Rookie left-hander Fernando Valenzuela
pitched a four-hitter and Giant-killer Ron Cey
drove in three runs with a double and a
sacrifice fly, enabling the Dodgers to extend
their winning streak to five games. Vida Blue,
0-1, took the loss.

Fisk, Luzinski Support Socks

* «- -.V:
aM’V’S-s
U s A n g e le s D o d g e rs ’ Ito o k ie F e r n a n d o V a le n ­
z u e la c o n tin u e d his fin e s p r in g w o rk b y b e a tin g
th e S a n F r a n c is c o G ia n ts l-l T u e s d a y . T h e y o u n g
le f t- h a n d e r is 2-0 fo r th e y e a r a n d h a s b e e n a so lid
r e p la c e m e n t fo r Don S u tto n w ho o p te d fo r fre e
a g e n c y a n d s ig n e d w ith th e H o u sto n A s tro s .

With the likes of Carlton Fisk, Greg
Luzinski and Ron Ix*Flore in the lineup, the
Chicago White Sox arc expected to be one of
the stronger offensive teams in the American
league this season and Tuesday they
demonstrated their potential.
Sparked by Fisk's grand slam, a two-run
single by Luzinski and three hits by LeFlore,
the White Sox hammered the Milwaukee
Brewers, 9 3, before a Comiskey Park homeopening crowd of 51,560.
Tigers 6, Royals 5
Rick Peters’ opposite-field single scored
li)u Whitaker from second base in the ninth
inning to give the Tigers their victory and
spoil the Royals’ home opener.
Indians 7, Rangers 1

Toby Harr ah and Bo Diaz each drove in two
runs to lead the Indians to their first victory of
the season and hand the Rangers their first
homeopening game loss in six years.
A’s 5, Angels 2
Mike Norris tossed a four-hitter and Cliff
Johnson scored a run and delivered a two-run
single at Anaheim, Calif., in helping the
undefeated A’s to their sixth straight victory.
Geoff Zahn, 1-1, was the loser.
Twins 5, Mariners 4
Ron Jackson hit a pair of solo home runs
and Jerry Koosman ran his lifetime record
against the Mariners to seven victories
without a loss in sparking the Twins to victory
at Seattle. Glenn Abbott absorbed his second
straight loss.

Hey Tough Guy!

THI TOUGHEST GUY IN CENTRAL FLORIDA
COMPITITION

'Supermen' Fights Friday

SUPERMEN
FIGHTS

So you think you’re tough?
Well, Sun Belt Promotions and the Kissimmee Veterans of
Foreign Wars are going to give you a chance to prove it.
Friday April 17 and Saturday April 18 at 8 p.m. Sun Belt and
the Kissimmee VFW are holding the Supermen Fights at the
Hyatt House on 1-4 and Highway 192 at Kissimmee.
*
There are two divisions with cash prizes of $5Cu for first, $200
for second and $100 for third in the lightweight (130 pounds to
180 pounds) and heavyweight (181 pounds to 300 pounds).
Prize money Totals $1,600. Giveaways include an
automobile, cases of soda, free meals, free drinks and more.
The entry fee is $25. Most fees are paid by the sponsor of the
fighter, whether it be a local bar or a local church. The fee
should
paid to a qualified Sun Belt representative only.
"This Isn't no freak show," warns promoter Kent Foyer.
"Each fighter will have to undergo a physical exam before
allowed to fight.
"We'll have a qualified physician at ringside. Sun Belt is
dedicated to safety. Only AAU and Golden Glove certified
equipment wil be used,” assures Foyer.
Contestants will fight three two-minute rounds. Fourteen
ounce gloves will be used. AAU boxing rules will apply and
only members of the same sex will be matched for fights.
„£ arly entries Include police officers from the Orange and
Osceola county departments and a member of the Orlando
Police Department.
Tickets are $7 for general admission and $12 for ring side.
CRUdren under 12 accompanied by a parent are admitted free.

"EVERY BOUT IS A M AIN EVENT"

S ize

*L

Other

sizii
■Iso on

ulel

Wheel balance.

4 for $16

A 7 0 -1 3

$50

$40

E 7 0 -1 4

57

4 5 .6 0

G 7 0 -1 4

64

5 1 .6 0

G 7 0 -1 5
5 2 .2 0
65
Plus fed. fax fr o m I.B3 t o 2.47 each tire, j

Sale
107.89
Brake overhaul.
D is c / d r u m 119.88
D r u m / d r u m 119.88

Wheel
alignment.

14.88

C o m p le te p re m iu m brake o ve r­
hau l lor m os t A m e r i c a n a n d
im p o r t e d cars. W e ll r e b u ild
w h e e l c y lin d e r s o r calipers,
re s urfa c e d r u m s , install n e w
lin in gs , s p r in g s a n d seals.
A d ju s t p a r k in g brake. B le e d
a n d refill h y d r a u li c s y s t e m .

Sale 79.99

Craig' AM/FM car stereo.

R e g . 99.99. G r e a t i n - c a r s o u n d for c o m p a c t cars! C r a i g " A M / F M
in -d a s h unit has a cassette p la y e r w ith lo c k in g fast forw ard/eject.
Mix and adjust y o u r s o u n d w ith s te re o / m o n o . b a la n c e c o n tr o l,
m u tin g p u s h b u t t o n , se pa ra te lo ca l/d ista n ce .

Sale 24.39 &lt;*■ Sale 95.90
2-way door
speakers

R . S . 29.91. 2 w a y stereo speakers
are only l ' z " deep, yet can handle
25 w a tts of music power. Equipped
w ith 4.5 oz. magnets, 6 " woofer,
1" d om e tweeters. A ll h a rd w a re .

Hyatt House

W IN A N A U TO
&gt;
GIVEAWAYS GALORE
$1,600 PRIZE M ONEY Ft(ht«n 1st, End, A 3rd Places

pr. Inst.

Reg. 119.11 ea. 20 % off pairs of
M a c P h e rto n strut replacem ent
cartridges installed. F o r im ports
with M a cP he rso n suspensions.

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
APRIL 17th &amp; 18th-8 PM
INTERSTATE 4 &amp; HIGHWAY 192
$7.00 GENERAL ADMISSION
’
$12.00RINGSIDE

R e g . | Sale*

SANFORD PLAZA
AUTO CENTER
H w y. 17-92 A Stats Street
Open M ondey-Saturday 8 a .m .-l p.m .
Open Sunday 12:30-5:30 p.m .

�HA Kv t w t a iH f Id, Sanford. FI.

Wtdnoday, April» , m i

SCOREBOARD
Cast; 4. D r. Dunkinttrin. 5 Squirt
Scott; 4. Hey Arlene; 7 Uptown
Ashling; 4. R K's M y Kaly
11th — 7 14. D : 1. W h irs Cal, 7
Mist Free; 1 Kerry O 'H a ra , 4.
Revel. S River Best. 4 PK s
Nero; 7. Naples Virtuoso. I
Another Clanton

DOGS

Atlaa*#re-Ort*i»de
T'aaaBay ntatitratufti
lit r a n - m i , B: l l . i l
) B ru n t Outlook
1.40 I N 1.40
1M.L. Blu
4.10 1.00
4 Boohar To m
4.00
B ( M l 14.H i T ( M l ) 111.44
t M r a e o — M l , O i 11.17
SWoOotcha
15.00 4.40 4 00
Ma|or League Standings
] O W 'i Lomon Drop
5.40 1.00
By United Press International
1 Bud'* Blnky
1.40
National Loague
Q (1-51 44.MJ P ( M l 115.441 T
East
( M U 1A44.Hl D O ( M l 145.44
W L Pet. OB
IrB ra c t— M l , D i l i . t l
7
1 .447 —
IDovonoleoy — - V
lOO lo o . N*w York
1
1 .500 4 Society'* Bait
4 » 410
I
t .SCO
’ •&gt;
1 N tv frtn d L t «
1.40 Montreal
I
1 SOO
&lt;i
0 ( M ) M A l P ( M l 57.14) T (1- S'- Lout*
1 7 .133 t
M l 147.14
Plttiburgh
1 1 .333 1
4 1 k r a c o - M I , O i 11.51
Chicago
IT a c c o Bad
10.40 l «
m o
____________
4 Sword Bearer
4.00 5.10
l Manatee S llllt
4.M

BASEBALL

West
Los Angeles
S 0 I 000 —
Cincinnati
4
467
Atlanta
1
600 1
San Fran
1
311 1V»
San Diego
1
3)3 l ' j
Houston
t
100 4
Tuesday's Results
Chi at M il, ppd. rain.
St.Louis si N Y , ppd, rain.
Houston I , Atlanta 1
Cincinnati 4, San Diego 0
Los Angeles 7, San Francisco
I
Today's Probable Pitchers
(A ll Tim es E S T )
Chicago
(Reuschel O i l
at
Montreal
(Rogers
0 0).
135
pm .
St Louis IS Martinet 0 01 at
New York (la e h ry 101, 1:05
pm .
Pittsburgh
(Bibby
0 01
at

American League
East

w

Pet.
750
.467
667
SOO
SOO
333
333

1
1
1
1
1
1

Detroit
Milwauke
Baltimore
New York
Toronto
Boston
Cleveland

West
6
7
1

Oakland
Chicago
California

OB
V»
Vj

I 'i
IVi

0 1000
I
3

667
500

1'1
3

-C u r t is ( O i l
Foster (1).

Cily IG ura 0 1), 8.35 p.m
Oakland
(La nglord
10)
al
California Uetlerson 0-1), 10 30
p.m.
Minnesota (Erickson O i l at
Seattle (Gleaton t 01, 10:35 p.m.

I
1 333 3’ ,
Kansas City
1 3 ISO 4
Texas
1 4 .700 4’ j
Seattle
t
4 100
4Vi
Minnesota
Tuesday’s Results
Balt at Boston, ppd rain
Chicago *, Milwaukee 3
Detroit 4, Kansas City 5
Cleveland 7. Texas I
Minnesota S, Seattle 4
Oakland 5. California 1
Today's Probable Pitchers
(A ll Tim es E S T )
Baltimore ID
Martinet 0 01
at Boston (T o rre t 0 0), 1 p.m.
Milwaukee
(Haas 0 0)
at
Chicago (Trout 0 0 or Burns 0
0). 7:15 p m
at
Cleveland
(Barker 00)
Texas (Medich 0 0), 6:55 p m
at
Ne*
York
(M a y 10)
Toronto (Todd 0 0), 7:30 p.m,
Detroit IP e lrv 0 0) al Kansas

Philadelphia
(Byslrom
0 0).
7,35 p.m.
Atlanta (Boggs 0 0) at Hous
ton (R ya n 0 0), 8:35 p.m.
Cincinnati (Soto 0 1 ) at San
Diego IM ura 0 01.10.05 p m.
Los Angeles (Hoolon 10) al
San Francisco (Whitson 0 0),
10 3S p m

H R -C In cin n a tl,

Kan

City

Oil 000 0 3 0 - 5 l l t f

Clcvlnd
401 000 0 7 0 - 7 80
Texas
000 001 0 0 0 - I 107
Los Ang
000 100 171- 7 '0 0
Walts and
D ia l;
M aliack,'
^
F ran
000 000 0 ) 0 - I 4 7
Babcock (8) and Sundberg W-J-.
Valenzuela and Yeager; Blue,
Walts (1 0 ). L — Maliack (0 2)
'
Mollllt IB), Holland 1*1 and
Sadek W — Vdleniuela (7 0). L
Minn
100 tIt 100- 5 10 6
- Blue (0 1). H R -L o s Angeles,
Seattle
000 017 100- 4 11
Yeager (1 ).
Koosman, Corbett
(6)
and
American League
Smith. AbboM, Clark (81 and
Milwak
000 010 007 - 3 7 0
Bulling,
Gulden
(7).
W—
Chicag
007 610 OOx - * 11 0
Koosman (1-1). L -A b b o lt (0 2).
Vuckovich,
Cleveland
(4),
H R — Minnesota, Jackson 2 (2)7
Augustine 16), Lerch (8) and
Smalley (1 ); Seattle. C ru t ( t ) ,
Simmoms. Yost (8 ); Baumgar
JAnderson ( D .
ten. Hickey (*l and Fisk. W liaumgarlen
1101.
L — Vuck
Oaklnd
000 003 0 0 7 - i 12 0
ovich
(0 1)
HRs— Milwaukee,
Calif
000 00C 002— 2 4 3
Money I D . Thomas 171; Chica
Norris
and
Heath;
Zahn,
go. Fisk (2)
Renko (91 and Downing W —
000 103 10 1 - 6 13 2 Norris (1 0). L -Z a h n ( I t).
Detroit

M alor League Results
By United Press Intern it Iona I
National League
Atlanta
000 070 O O O -l 7 )
Housin
700 731 O O x -4 13 0
Walk, Hanna (4 ), Mahler (5),
Garber
(7)
and
B e n d I c t,
Pocoroba
(» );
Nlekro
and
Ashby. W — Nlekro
(ID .
L—
Walk ( O il . H R -P u h l (1).
Cincl
301 OOOOOG- 4 6 I
San Dgo
000 000 000- 0 7 0
Berenyi and O ’B e rry; Curtis.
Lollar
14),
Urrea
14) and
TKennedy. W — Berenyi (1 0 ) L

-J

Q(Ml 17.44/ P (M ) 51.14;
T (1-4-1) 111.44
Ilk ra c e -s -1 4 , C i l t . i l
I B B ' i Parity Boy 5.10 l . K 140
1 Big Ic o n
4.40 1.00
I L a M a r i Poppy
1.10
O I M ) 14J4; P (1-1) l* .t t ; T (1M l *4.44
4 M ra c o — M . B i l t . l l
1 Lucky Suila
I f .10 » . »
4.10
T Up To Data
5.40 4.00
IL a k e A rla n a
100
Q 0 -1 ) 45.44; P ( M ) 144.I4|T(1M ) 1,111.44
?(k r a t e - M l , C i 11.54
I JR
7.00 5.40 4.40
• Bootty White
11.40 *10
4 Lake Freddie
4.40
O (4-4) 144.44; P (4-4) 115.14; T
(4-0-41 111.44
4tk ra c e -5 -1 4 . A i 11.14
4 Olympiad
11.10 M 0 1.10
I M y D o r li
4.40 1.40
1 M r. Buckingham
1.40
Q 0 -4 ) 1*44; P (4 1 ) 1*1.14; T ( 4
4 1 ) 144JI
fin ra c e - 1 - 1 4 , 1 1 11.44
1 Tiger Shawn
14.00 l*.40 1.00
4 Lullaby Lady
15.10 100
4 Wander Ball
1.40
Q (4 5 ) 141.44; P (4 5 ) 714.44; T
( 4 M ) IA 1 M 4
l4 t k r a c a -4 l,A iii.* 4
IW rlg tu Fielder
f.40 1.40 1 00
1 Wiped Slick
1.10 M O
4 Lake Spaed
1.40
O ( l - I ) I M S ; P (4 1 ) I 4 J I ; T ( 4
1-4) 40.44
ilt k r a c a -l-ll.D ill.f 4
1 Dan M urphy
7.10 1.40 140
I C lK o K Ic k
4.10 4 00
1 Ronda'i John
1.10
0 0 -4 ) 11.44; P (4 4 ) *4.11; T (14 1 ) 1S7.44
m k r a c a -i-4 .C ilf .il
1 Lloyd Rockway 4.40 4.10 M O
lO ra n n y
14 40 7.40
4 American Ac*
1 40
O (S -f ) 44.44; P (4 4 ) 71.44; T ( 4
4-4) 111-44
A - M S I ; Handle 1144,147.
T a M g M 'i antrlat
Pett Tim a 1 4 p.m.
lit — 5-14, C : I. River E a rl; 1.
Mary'a Boy; 1. J R 'i Half H H a ll;
4. Punkln La Ju ; 5. Worthing; I.
M ill Mockary; 7. Fawn Leader; I.
Uarutw h f f
2nd— M , C: 1. Ah Pick YOU; 1.
Stolen C harm ; 1. Annie Scott; 4.
Drywood; 5. F roit Proof Mo; a.
' Information; 7. Oambtln Ron; l.
; cra n U n carol
Srd - 5 14, D : 1. Wright Bran
flay; I . Satfy Bella; 1. Black D art;
A Linda P u rl; I . incredible Hulk;
4. Manafaa Swamper; 7. Sierra
Sarah; 4. Ramblin Dandy
4th — 5-11, D : I. Day* Hanlon; 1.
J.R .'a Hot Stuff; 1. Manatee Heidi;
A M B’e D r. F re d ; S. Felt Good; 4.
Wright O lrl T a lk ; 7. River Dim a;
4. Tad'* Stormy
Sth — 7-14, C : I. A P ic k ;}. Birth
day O lrl; 1. Hay M a ry ; 4. B u n in
O ve r; 5. Lao Scott; I . Wright
Deka; 7. Cowboy Booti; 4. Rosy
Devil
Ith S-14, At 1. Check; 1.
Wright Contact; 1. M K ’s Nancy
Hanks; A Hello C alh y; 5. Mltl
Im m ortal; 4. N K 'i Godfather; 7.
Brain Scott; 4. Biaketon
7th- 7 )4, B : 1. Dasher Bell; 1.
H u tk ar H a rv e s t; 1. G y p s y 's
Assasln; 4. Georgia Gold; 5.
Symphony; 4. M n . Ju g ; 7. Btackla
Sunny; 4. Sisley Scott
Sth- 5 1 4 , A : 1. Flaming Effort;
1. MU'* Ta ra Brooch; 1. Persuade
M a; A Wright A rch ; 5. Say
Nomore; 4. Taper Scott; 7. RR's
Luka; A Five Card Kid
* 1 1 - 1 4 , A : 1. Big J .C .; 1. Will
Ha Past; 1. Michelle R : 4. Ja y ’s
Skylark; 5. Ta* Pa* Ball; 4. F ly To
Choota; 7. Motor M an; 4. RR
You la*
14th — M A T A : 1. Mont* Scott;
I . Fra* Spirit; 1. R R's Teddy; A
Kano's Note; 5. R R 's Charlie; *.
Gainer; 7. Shogun W arrio r; 4.
Keystone Gam bler
11th - 14, T : 1. W right Happy
D a y ; I . M allta Baby; 1. La M a rt

POST TURK 1 t »

K f B llC

15

RACE
DAYS
LEFT
SANFORD£ ORLANDO
1 KENNEL CLUB

LORD

BLEND

C A L y ilT

LITER

W h ite W in e

CASE OF 12 - 75.95

GIN
RUM
VODKA

GOOD AT ALL 153 ABC’S IN FLA.

AMERICA’S LARGEST WINE &amp; SPIRITS DEALER
SA V I Off TO 4 0 % — AS MUCH AS 63 A BOY.

99

ABC HAS THE LOWER EVERYDAY PRICE

59.2 OZ.
SHORT '/&gt; GALLON

★
★

2 5 .4 O Z .

90* GIN

K N IO H T S a a lD O l

MOST OTHERS ARE 80*

GILBEY’S
80* GIN
CASE

C O O

9

LITER

1 .7 5 LTR. PARTY SIZE
ABC HAS LOWER PRICES

itWJfJ
tru iS i
itauaj

lUDAl

.99 o
1

BRILUANTE ROSE &amp; WHITE spun
NICOLAS BORDEAUX BLANCjruce
NICOLAOU MAVROOAPHNE
ST. GERMAIN ROSE ANJOU juice
LA FERRIERE WHITE BORDEAU juice
NICOLAS CHAT. LAMANCEAU rnuicf
BACCHUS ROSED'ANJOU
ST. GERMAIN COTEAUX DU LAYON

CAS&gt; OF b

Earty Tlmos Brfa. 68.94
Kentucky 6~*_~ 63.95
Old Crow life.
66.95
Passport Scotch 74.50
DowarfmiNUM 119.94
Cutty SoHk 4at*b 110.95
s Scotch 76.95

Including W.nl*. D»»uU«u, O .lltlogi. Souwriin.
M in .jo u S.b* ltl.nl, San
Merlin,
Louie
Martini.
Ctw t . 1 Krug, IngMno.k. Atm ie n .
Paul
Mateon.
Taytor’e California C ttl.ri.
Gallo. Carlo Roetl. ABC
Crlbart, ChrUUan Brothare

D O M ESTIC
Z&amp;4 07.

S I B A B T I A N I C a li f .

ALTAM ONTE

■Sr

mi

'T V l i l M il l'

SCOTCH

99

9

J

4

4*9

69

LITER

CASE OF 12 - 111 45

u mt
iecmmtvtu ’

m

vu e

io io z .

ir.

CASE OF 4-18.75 LV___ - j

_ M R . ED

CANADIAN

« f

LITE

4 5BLA 8M H1 CASE 54 9 5

MINIATURES

VODKA. GIN. CAMAOUN. SCOTCH
• K Y . V O D___________CANADIAN
KA
______________
CtUB
\m #1 K
. 4Y . G IN
JAB SCOTCH
t* w h io g m in w um itxn SEAGRAM'S GIN

B 4 .B * C A N A D IA N
’ THE PREMIUM IS IN THE
BOTTLE NOT THE PKICE *

.4 9
.8 0
.9 0
.7 9

o a s iw n ’ti

49
' 0 # LITER

311

OZ.

5 IM A BT JHl CASE 61 95

7.50 EA. IV THE CASE W .05
LOCO W1D AFUJl IS

S C H iN L E Y

LITE R

HOC H U N T A M IL If

tooc iri. *f*ii 11

M U

C 4 9 VODKA

Izintindel
[Chenin Blanc
|Monlaray Riesling
|Cabernet Sauvignon
|Chirdonniy

90*
GIN
U N I OKI 7 1 8 C U 1 T 0 M IW

SAXONY I
C0UF0*

1

99

S 1 .IU V / C N fp

_ _

11 1 o i

LM TM E Pf B CUSTDMII

tooc TMUIS LPtit 14 2 3 .4 O Z .
N ° IL L Y

17

uur oat n i cuiroau « counm

G A LLO 1 6

__

6.49
6.49

5.99
7.49
5.291

CASE OF 24-6.99

0 6 9

uy a N j a afSTm■ ay,
IS iS f f lL J

GALLO Calif.

4.49
3.99
4.69
3.79
3.49

6 S S I . 7 Q
6000 U ' Am il

A 0 C

PRAT
" J V99
S COLD
|DUCK
VERMOUTH J k

[Mountain Chablis
|Grenachi Ross
|Cabernal Sauvignon
|Pinot Chardonnay

3.19
2.99

ABCBSIIbt ALS

1M 0L

2 5 . 4 OZ.

V IN ROSE
U H I OK H A O IIID M ) * U ‘yn&gt;*

4.99
5.49
5.49
5.99
6.99
2.69
3.19
2.69
3.19
3.79
3.79
4.49
4.79
4.99
5.49
3.99
3.99
4.69
4.99
4.99
6.49
7.49

ALMADEN Calif.

ICE
COLO

OLD
C79
CROW...®
u h i ox! n » evs tew«*&gt; couFvt

2.69
3.19
3.79
3.99
3.99

MIRASSOU Calif.

a

J. V. Baiujolais Garalli
J. V. Cole du Rhone
Nicnlas Muscidat
Nicolas Siuvigaon-Touraina
Nicolas Rosa d'Anjou
Josa Pamartia Cream Sharry
Josa Pamsrtln Amontillado
Josa Pamartia Fiaa Dry Sharry
Hirvay's Bristol Crssm Sharry
H in n y 's Tlco Sharry

L IT E R

[Mountain Burgundy
iBurgundy
Chianti
Gimsy Beaujoliis
| Zinfandel
Barbara
Pinot Noir
Cabernet Sauvignon
[7 0 Vin. Burgundy
172 Pinot Noir
|'72 Cabernet Sauvignon
[Mounlsin Roso
IGrenicha Rosa
[Mountain Chablis
Chiblis
Ichanin Blanc
[Green Hungarian
Pinot Noir Blanc
iGewurztraminnr
I Johannis Riesling
|Pinot Chardonnay
[Dry Chablis
[Burgundy

3 LITER
Jftn BLACK &amp;
V WHITE CALIF. WINE
SCOTCH
29

3.79
3.49
3.79
3.99
3.99
3.99
3.99
3.99

ABC HAS THE LARGEST SELECTION
OF CALIFORNIA WINES

IM P O R TED

Piper Heidtieck Extra Dry Champ.
Mumm'i E xtri Dry Champ,
Mumm'i Cordon Rouge Champ.
★ it C A S S E L B E R R Y opensunoay
Moei El Chandon Extra Dry Champ.
D IS C O L O U N O E 4 PKG STO R E HI W AY It f l A T 41.
Rulnart Blanc 1e Blancs Champ.
★
it 'DISCO'* LOUNGE &amp; PKG A COCKTAIL LOUNGE A PKG
CHARGE IT
La Due Brut
DAILY i.LCSf 0%
Vilc!:enbarg Madonna
HAPPY HOUR S TIL6 OlSCEyVS A
1
Blue Nun U «b .
HALLER’S 86'
Black Tower Ueb.
Lancer's Rosa, White Rubao
FIN E ST BLENDED
Mateus Rose. Biaaco
Yiflo Sangria
Real Sangria
Riunile Lambrusco, Blanco. Rose
a w
Baccaro Lambrusco
^
QUART
QUART | Bacchus Lambrusco
2 F U L L P IN T S P LE A S E
CASE OF 12- 11*30
Calls Lambrusco
5 9 .2 O Z .
Glscobszzl Lambrusco
“ SHORT” 1 / 2 G A L.
| PARTY S IZ i
BUV A CA§f A 6AVE
CASE OF e
ABC SAVES T o u t
Mouton Cadet Rad White
CASE OF 6
Raiska
Vodka
54.95
Pombal Rose
JOB Scotch
104.95
Canadian Club 99.95 WhHahall vadha 47.95 St. Germain Chenin Blanc
Canadian Mist 69.95 Smirnoff m*v**» 69.95 Bolla Valpolicalla. Bardolino, Soiva
Asti Spumanta
Windsor Canadian 71.94 Kahlua llquour 149.50 Viclorl
71.95 Martini &amp; Rossi Asti Spumanta
Rich 9 Rare Can. 64.95 Bacardi Rum
Tripiche Chardonnay (Argentina)
Tanquaray
Gin 104.95 Calvart iitn b u u 71.50 Trapicha Chenin Blanc (Argentina)
Tanqui
Gordon’s Gin
65.95 Saaaram’s 7 bu*4 71.94 Tripiche Pinot Blanc (Argentina)
101
Trapicha Rlesliag (Argentina)
ROYAL DELUXE Franz Rah Zeller Schwarza Katz
oz.
Franz Rah Plesportar Goldlropfchan
iB "
* VODKA
Franz Rib Wiltingsr Scbsrzbirg Ksbiait
•GIN *RUM Bacchus Zeltar Schwarza Katz
• CURET a CHABUS
• VIM ROSE ABC
Royal da Nauvllle Sparkling Rosa
• n n u u w if
Chantatlaur Rad, White, Rosa
IT WUUI1.. ADM
Nicolas Canteval Rosa. Rad
TAJIK CJLX TAJTT. ABC
—
.....
★

WHISKEY

C59

0 U T IB

7I.B5

6®

CHARM n
C O C K T A IL L O U N G E A PKG STORE
HI W AY 17 » l N E A R 4 ). O P E N S U N D A Y AT ABC

CASE OF 4 - 27.95

IMPORTED WINE
UNDER *4°° Z5 4 0J

DISCO LO U N G E 4 PKG STO RE
HI W AY 414 ONE BLOCK
EAST OF I 4 O P EN S U N D AY

C A S E O F 12 - 95.60

CASE

12 71 95

LONGW OOD

★

SC O TC H

63.95.

SA N FO RD
C O C K T A IL LO U N G E 4 PKG STORE
HI W AY 17 *1 S O U TH C IT Y L IM IT S

J o h n n ie
W a lk e r Red

IMP. WINE
LAMBRUSCO "LABELLA"
TORO D 0 R 0 SANGRIA
LIZZA N0 M E R L0T RED
MALVASIA RED
CURONE ITALIAN S0AVE

3 LTR.

125.4 OZ.

BACCHUS CORBIERES
PREMIAT TARNAVE CASTLElobmu
FRANZ REHlIEBFRAUMIlCHtUMu
LISBOA ROSE PORTUGAL
ST. CLERMOND RED/WHITEtmrce
ST. JOHANNIS MAY WINE-k i h u
MICHELANGELO CHIANTIjtu t

•
•
•
•
•

101 OZ.

ANY 12 - 35.85

75 4 OZ.

6 DAY SALE ^

SAXONY

1254 OZ.

IMPORTED WINE
UNDER *3°°

59.2 OZ.
___SHORT Vi SALLOW

ROSE

CHOICI
2.25 EA. BY THE CASE 26.95

C ALIF.

GRENACHE

CHAMPAGNE
• WHITE
• PINK

Canteval

5 9 .2 OZ.
SHORT 1 /2 GALLON

VODKA

M

ANDRE’ S e b a s t t a n i

"F R O M F R A N C E 'S
LA R G E S T W IN E R Y "

39

LITER

L I T I R itauam
Sarrf— Nb Obb
UftfarNABnHM

KESSLER

3 3 .3 O Z.

Jett Off U.S. 1741

•91-1000

YOUR NIT COST 10.99

WOLFSCHMIDT

(ClHad SmSoy)
MON.-WBD..SAT.
Pitt Tim# itis p.m.
D u n Open at lliM

YOUR NIT COST 4.S9

3 3 J O Z.

CASE OF 1 2 - 61.95

Doan Opan At Neon

MATINEES

"BACK IN STOCK”
FINE

$1.50
REFUND
D IR E C T FR O M DISTILLER

.$
1.5
0 REFUND
—
D IR EC T FR O M DISTILLER

•ALL I

PLUS 1c
TAX

fI

|l U T i r t |

MiTITJi.fWJUt

[Chenin Blanc
iGewurztriminer
[French Colombard
[Sauvignon Blanc
Ijohannisberg Riesling
[Rad Rost
IChablis Blanc
iHearty Burgundy
[Rhinagartan
I Rosa

3.19
3.79
4.99
4.99

�OURSELVES
Evening Herald,Sanford, FI.

Briefly
Singles O f Sanford Ask
Interested To Supper
The Singles of Sanford will meet Friday at 6:30 p.m. In
Fellowship Hall of the First United Methodist Church, Fifth
and Magnolia, for a pot luck supper. All members are asked
to attend and all singles of the Sanford area are welcome to
come. A program will follow the dinner,
The following have been appointed to serve as temporary
Board of Directors for the club: Georgia Anderson, Lou
Baker, Kay Cull, Paul Ertsman, Estelle Humphreys, Susan
Orwig, Miriam Romero, Mike Rowell and Ralph Cowan.
A summer program is to be planned for fun and
recreation for members. Any single age 16 or over is invited
to join.

'Creative Job Search' Set
The Office of Community Services at Seminole Com­
munity College will offer "The Creative Job Search" class
beginning April 30. Class will meet in Room L-206 from 7 to
9:30 p.m. for six consecutive Thursday evenings.
The class will be taught by Diane Goshorn. Fee is (8.00.
Registration may be completed in the registrar’s office.
For Information, call SCC.

Rummage Sale Scheduled
A Rummage and Bake Sale is scheduled at Ascension
Lutheran Church, Casselberry, April 24 from 6:30 a.m. to 4
p.m. The public is welcome.

Maundy Thursday Service
Maundy Thursday Communion Service is scheduled at
7:30 p.m. (Thursday) at First United Methodist Church,
Sanford, Park Avenue, at Fifth Street. The chancel choir
will sing under the direction of Jam es Thomas, organistdirector. The Rev. Leo F. King will deliver the sermon. The
Lord’s Supper will be served. The public is invited.

Violet Show Saturday
An African Violet Exhibition is scheduled Saturday at the
Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce building, 400 E.
First St.
The exhibition is being sponsored by Jean Norris and the
Downtown Merchants Association. There will be door
prizes and prizes to the winning exhibitors given by the
Merchants Association and Mrs. Norris.
All African Violet growers In the surrounding area as well
as local are encouraged to enter. The show will have certain
guide rules to comply with but, it’s not a requirement to
know the correct name of your violet.
The main requirement is that the plant be free of any
disease. There will be a panel to inspect all plant for exhibit.
All entries are requested to have their name and address
label on each pot, then cover with a piece of aluminum foil,
dull side out.
Entries will be accepted between the hours of 8 and 9:30
a.m. on April 18. Judging will begin at 9:30 and the
exhibition will be open to the public at 11 a.m. until S p.m.
Admission Is free. For Information and a schedule of the
show call 322-3976 or write Jean Norris, 601 Celery Ave.,
Sanford, 32771.

Republican Women To M eet
Sanford Republican Women's Club will meet Saturday at
11 a.m. at Holiday Inn 1-4 and Interstate 4 and State Route
46. Rocky Pennington, of State Republican Headquarters
will be guest speaker.
Area women are invited to attend the Dutch treat lun­
cheon, speaker and business session.

CALENDAR
THURSDAY, APRIL II
National Spinal Cord Injury Foundation, Central
Florida Chapter, Ramada Inn, 4919 W. Colonial Drive,
Orlando. Dinner at the Gangplank Restaurant, 7 p.m.
and program at 8 p.m. featuring three short films.
Open to persons with limited mobility and guests. Call
Joanne Leber at 831-3304 for Information.
Cancer Victims &amp; Friends Central Florida Chapter,
7:30 p.m., First Federal Savings &lt;■ Loan, 2424
Edgewater Drive, Orlando. Speakers from the Central
Florida Macrobiotic Study Group.
SATURDAY, APRIL II
Sanford Republican Women’s Club, 11 a.m., Holiday
Inn, 1-4 and State Road 46. Speaker, Rocky Pennington
from State Republican Headquarters.
SUNDAY, APRIL II
Dusty Boots Riding Association, Inc. Open Horae
Show, beginning at 9:30 a.m., Wllco Sales Arena, 4
miles west of 1-4 on W. State Road 46. Lunch break
Easter egg hunt for ages 1-6 and Easter egg fun class
for ages 6-13 and 14 and older. Spectators free.
TUESDAY. APRIL 21
Annual Spring Charity Bazaar, Winter Park Mall.
Humane Society of Seminole County, 7:30 p.m.,
Longwood Community Center.
Lake Howell High School PTSA, 7:30 p.m. In the
school commons. Presentation by Mike Hargis on
Career Awareness. Election of officers. Refreshments.
Senior Citizens, noon, Sanford Civic Center. Bag
lunch program by Jean Norris on plant culture and
flower arrangements followed by business meeting.
THURSDAY, APRIL23
Senior Citizens tour to Ft. Lauderdale far Jungle
Queen boat ride and dinner plus Kennedy Space Center
stop. Leave Casselberry Leeds 10 a.m., pick up Sanford
Civic Center 10:30 a.m. Return nest day, 3 p.m. Call
322-9148. .
FRIDAY, APRIL *4

' wine Tasting P arty sponsored by South Seminole
Lioness Club, 7-9 p.m., Quality Inn North, Longwood.
Wine and hors d’oeuvres. Proceeds to buy equipment
for Kradle Rare Nursing Home.
SATURDAY, APRIL 23
B«ni«.i&gt; County Association of Media Specialists’
Seventh Annual Author Luncheon featuring Mildred
Lee, 11:30 a.m., Lord Churaley’s Pub, Altamonte
Springs. Call 322-5218 for reservation.

*» *- — - *-

Wednesday, April IS, 1*11— IB

Cook O f The W eek

Working Mom: 7 Find It Hard To Cook'
By JANE AKERS
Herald Correspondent
‘'As a working mother, I find it hard to cook. There just
aren’t enough hours in the day," says Pat Shaver. “ I have to
plan and schedule in order to provide good meals for my
family."
This is the era of working women—who have husbands,
children. aud_ interests of their own. Pat Shaver is no ex­
ception.

COCONUT LEMON BARS
4 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons lemon Juice
4 tablespoons shortening
teaspoon salt
4 cup brown sugar
1 cup coconut
1 cup sifted flour
1 cup nut meats, chopped
2 eggs
*3 cup raisins
1 cup brown sugar
Mix butter, shortening, l3 cup brown sugar. When well
blended, add flour and blend into crumbs. Sprinkle over 9x13
pan, pressing evenly. Bake 350 degrees for 10 minutes. Cool.
Then spread with topping made by combining remaining
ingredients. Bake 25 minutes longer until topping is set.
APPLESAUCE CAKE
1 cup unsweetened applesauce
1 teaspoon soda stirred in applesauce
1 teaspoon cinnamon
l1* cup flour
*3 cup butter
1 cup rnistns
1 cup sugar
1 egg
Mix. Bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour.
BLACK BOTTOM PIE
Crust:
1 cup vanilla wafer crumbs
6 teaspoons melted butter
Blend together. Line 9" pie plate. Bake 300 degrees 10
minutes, then chill.
Chocolate Layer:
2 4 teaspoon knox gelatin
1 l-3rd cup milk
2 tablespoons cold water
3 egg yolks
's cup granulated sugar
l 13 square bitter rhorolate
2*3 tablespoons cornstarch
4 teaspoon vanilla
salt
Sprinkle gelatin on cold water and let soften 5 minutes. Scald
milk in double boiler. Beat egg yolks lightly, stir in sugar,
cornstarch, salt. Slowly stir in milk. Return to double boiler,
cook, stirring over hot, not boiling water until custard coats
spoon. Remove from heat, add gelatin and stir until dissolved.
Melt chocolate, remove from heat. Stir in slowly half of the
custard, add vanilla. Beat until smooth. Cool until little
custard drops from spoon mounds. Pour Into crust. Chill.
RUM CUSTARD LAYER
3 egg whites
4 cup granulated sugar
cream of Tarter
2 4 teaspoons nun
Beat eggs with cream of tarter until moist peaks are formed.
Add sugar gradually. Beat until stiff. Carefully fold in rest of
custard and rum. Pour on chocolate as much as will hold. Chill.
Add rest of rum custard. Top with shaved bitter chocolate.

r?

Pat and David Shaver have a 15-month-old son, Geoffry, both
work and both have interests and hobbies of their own.

itJ

Like most young women. Pat keeps herself busy. She is
employed by Seminole County where she is secretary to the
county librarian. Pat is a member of Theta Epsilon Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi sorority where she is vice-president elect.

h

» n

M'

As a member of the First Presbyterian Church of Sanford,
she is kindergarten Sunday school teacher. Her hobbies are
plants, sewing and family.
Pat does a lot of meal preparation ahead of time. "I set
things out I need for breakfast the night before," says Pat.
When possible, she says she prepares meats and vegetables
in the morning and places them in the refrigerator. After work,
she Just slide them into the oven. The crock pot is a great way
to prepare a meat and main vegetables while at work, Pat
says.
"David usually gets home before I do," admits Pat. "So he
sets the table and gets things started.
When two people work, It takes team work. "David and I like
to enjoy ourselves, hobbies and each other. If we work together
we have more time for the things we enjoy and love, especially
Geoffry.”
Pat suggest the following recipes and most can be prepared
ahead of time.
LASAGNA
1 lb. ground beef
Small onion
Salt, pepper
2 cup Ragu sauce with meat
6 oz. can tomato paste
1 carton (1 lb.) ricolta cheese
1 lb. sliced Mozzarella cheese
Parmeasan cheese
I^sagna noodles
Brown beef with chopped onion, salt and pepper. Mix Ragu,
tomato paste and ricotta cheese with meat and simmer until
hot. Meanwhile: cook 4 lb. lasagna noodles. When
ingredients are hot, grease 9x13 pan. Reserve 1 cup Ragu. Add
in layers — noodles, sauce with meat, thin slices Mozzarella
cheese. Repeat until all ingredients arc finished. Pour 1 cup
Ragu over cheese and sprinkle with parmeasan cheese. Bake
at 350 degrees for 25-30 minutes.
BARBECUED SPARERIBS
Place 3 lbs. sparerlbs in baking pan. Bake 350 degrees for 30
minutes. Pour off fat. Meanwhile, combine 1 cup tomato sauce,
V«cup vinegar, 4 cup Worchcster sauce, 4 cup brown sugar, 2
tsp. salt, and 1 tsp. celery seed. Baste spareribs with half of
sauce. Bake 1 hour uncovered. Turn, baste with rest of sauce
and continue baking 30-15 minutes or until tender.

y-

1= ^

Put S haver p rep ares lllack Hottom Pie.
MACARONI BAKE
4 cup chopped onion
2 tablespoons margarine
1 can tomato soup
4 cup water
1 cup shredded cheese
2 cups cooked macaroni
2 tablespoons butter
Bread crumbs
In pan, cook onion until tender. Stir in soup, water 4 cup
cheese. Heal until cheese melts. In qt. casserole, mix sauce
and macaroni. Top with bread crumbs and rest of cheese.

Curry' Leftover Pork, Apples
All cuts of pork are reasonable buys. But, what docs one do
with leftover pork?
Turn it into a very special curried pork with apples. To do
this you’ll need merely a cup of cubed, cooked pork.
Combine this with apple wedges, green beans and cream of
chicken soup, plus seasonings for a special dish to serve with
rice. Add such condiments as toasted coconut, chopped pepper
and sliced green onions to pass.
For a light dessert, serve fresh fruit and almond cookies.
CURRIED PORK WITH APPLES
4 cup sliced onion
4 cup diagonally sliced celery
1 tablespoon curry powder
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
1 can (104 ounces) condensed cream of chicken soup
4 cup water
1 cup apple wedges
•
1 cup cooked cut green beans
1 cup cubed cooked pork
1 teaspoon lemon Juice
Cooked rice
In saucepan, cook onion and celery with curry in butter until
tender. Add remaining Ingredients except rice. Heat; stir
occasionally. Serve over rice. 4 servings.

BEGONIAS
IN
BLOOM
Decorative
Hexagon
Hanging Basket

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Reg. *3.9*

Curried Pork

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HOME APPLIANCE

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3224113

�IB— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, April IS, m i

TO N IG H T’S TV
W EDNESOM
EVENING

6:00
O CD QE) O d ) O n e w s
ffi (10) IT'S EVERYBODY'S BUSI­
NESS
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6:30
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P M MAGAZINE An a»du»iy# Swiss rejuvenation dime. ■
front-lm* Navy pt pilot. Chal Tan
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Sassoon has soma •taros## to do
m bad. Cathw Mann looks at spacial aftacts m TV commaroals
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o

7:30
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Jana Lapotiara
QX (1 7 ) SANFORO ANO SON

8:00
O ® REAL PEOPLE Faaturad
Sarah PurceN takas part in a rottar
darby, a satl-stytad garbotogtst. a
crowing contast lo» roostars; a
tamala window claanar and rapair­
man at tha Empira Slat# Building

(R )Q
( D O ENOS
( D O THE OREATE8T AMERICAN
HERO Tha mothar ol one ot
Ralph's students gels hersell
involved in an espionage operation
and Ralph has lo gat her out
OT) (3 5 ) THE ROCKFORD FILES
O ) (10) HALL OF FAME Dear
Liar" Tha legendary 40-year eorraspondanca between playwright
Georg* Barnard Shaw and British
actraas Mrs Patrick Campbell is
brought to television m a two-act
dramatisation by Jerome Kilty
Edward Herrmann and Jana Aletander star
H i (1 7 ) NIGHT QALLERY

6'30
flX (1 7 ) B ASEBALL Atlanta
uravas at Houston Astros

O

0:00
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Arnold davalops a strong attach­
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mothar ( R ) n
(D O
MOVIE "Wa re Fighting
Back" (Prarmara) Kevin Mahan.
Paul McCrane A group ot New
York City youths band together J*»
tight crime in their neighborhood
(7) O ALOHA PARADISE Sydney
rekindles an old love. Elliot and
Dianna band together to |au up
their plain eitartors and Evaratt
attracts a beautiful woman with his
noneslslent wealth
01H 35) STREETS OF SAN FRAN-

9:30
O 3 ) THE FACTS OF LIFE Soma
ot Mrs Garrett's charges taka a
(oyrlda m a stolen van and wind up
at tha pokes station (Part 1|(R)
a
(1 0 )
M ARK R U S S E L L
America's madcap marksman per­
forms kva from tha staoe ot tha

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Katherine Cornell Theater on the
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New York at Buffalo

O 9 ) d a il y d e v o t i o n a l
31 (1 7 ) B A8EBALL Atlanta
Braves at Houston Astros

10:00

2:20

O (£ i QUINCY Sam proves that a
suspected rapist can't be guilty
because his leelh marks don't
match those left In the victim (R)
QD O VEGAS While searching lor
the peop'e who killed a man during
a robbery. Dan stumbles across a
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(U) (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
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CD (10) THEY TELL IT FOR THE
TRUTH: OZARK STORYTELLINO
John Allman's documentary
eipioras Ihe little-known folk cul­
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MORNING

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MARCUS WELBY, M O
(TUE-FRI)
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5:55

a ® o ax 07)

(

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0 9 ) TOOAY IN FLORIDA
f l) O t h e LAW ANO YOU (MON)
(S )Q 8 P E C T R U M (T U E )
5 0 BLACK AWARENE8S (WED)
5 0 THIRTY MINUTES (THU)
1 } ) 0 HEALTH FIELD(FRI)
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(IX (3 5 ) JIM BAKKER
ax ( 17) HOLLYWOOD REPORT

6:30
I D O ED ALLEN

Raymond L. Whltage A wf
Bonnie to Daniel R. Patton A wt
Alleen, LI 2, Blk H , Summerset
North Sec. 7 (51.200
Earle M . Oakley A wf Manelte to
Darwin A . Shea A wt Sandra L.,
Lot 20 A EVi ol 11, Edgewood
Manor (77.500
FI. Resld. Comm, to Eugene A.
Vacantl A wt Florence I., Lot 47,
The Highlands Sec. 4, 1st Repl.
(45,500
FI. Resld. Com m ., Inc. lo M ary
K. Meehan A Dorothy A . Yelle. Lot
25, The Highlands, Sec. S li, 1st
Repl. (55,200
FI. Rettd. Com m ., Inc. to Mark
S. Klelbl A wf Janice E ., Lot 22,
Tiber on Cove (41,500
FI. Resld. Com m ., Inc. to Linds
Q Herlgodl, gdn. tor Roseanoe
Roberts, Lot 44, The Highlands
Sec. S li First Repl. SSS.S00
FI. Resld. Com m ., Inc. lo George
L. Lugo A wt Hilda, Lot 21, Tlberon
Cove, (40,500.
Jim Hughes, Inc. lo Frank
Miller A wt Gloria A ., Lot 141,
Winter Springs Un. 2, (114400
Sol Dale Bldrs., Inc. to Arthur P.
McDonald A wt Rosemary O ., Lot
205. Winter Springs Un. 2, (122.400
Manuel F . Csssrava 1 wt E l i u
S. to Manuel A. Tor Toro A Wt
Dora C., Lot 524, Spring Oaks, Un.
2, (41,000
R CA to Randall A. Almond A wt
Karen L .. Lot SI, Hidden Lake Ph.
II, Un. 1, (44,i n
Bel Aire Homes, Inc. to Marie D
Chowanskl, s g l, Lot 221, Bet Aire
Hills. Un., 2 (50,000
F R C Landings Assoc, to Frank
Celise J r A Rochelle Byrne, both
sgl.. Lot 45. The Landings, (61.500
Springs Landing Venture lo
Jouph Kantor A wf Malka, Lot 12.
Springs Landing, Un Two, (25400
Dorothy t
Nicholas, wid., to
Robert A . Carneel. Lot 21, Blk H,
Long wood Park, (4,100.
Ja ck W . Cruckshank A wt
Kalheleen E . to C. R. Gucken
berger A wf Sandra L ., Commence
at N E cor of NW of N W U of SW U
of Sec. 21 70 20 etc. SII.S00

(Q C D ) Gary L . Bradford A wf
Pamela L . to G a iy L. Bradford,
from SE cor. of EVj of S'* of Sec.
21-20 22 etc. (100
Robert S. West, J r. A wf Patricia
to Peter J. M ariano A wt Kathleen
M ariano, Lot 25, Markham Place,
(24.000
(Q C D ) Donna H . McCotter to
Crystal C. Lewis, N 205.46' of W
110* Of E 251.2* Of Lot A , Blk 1,
Amended Plat of Blk 1, Rett
Haven on Lake Harney et al, 2
parcels (100
Crystal C. Lewis to Donna H.
McCotter, Commence pt Inlersec
line of E line ot Lot A, Blk 1 Rest
Haven on Lake Harney, 2 parcels
(100

7:00

by Larry Wright

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1:15
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%
V i

C

A M A L IA C H A L IO TIS
A irm a n
A m a lia
C h allolls,
daughter of Jean Dellutrl of 1424
Hastings Court, Casselberry, has
graduated from the U.S. Air Force
electrical
power
production
specialist course at Sheppard A ir
Force Base, Texas.
Graduates ol the course learning
how to operate and maintain
electrical
power generating
equipment, and earned credits
toward an associate degree in
applied science through Ihe
Community College ot the Air
Force.
Challolls will now serve at
Hancock Field, N .Y .
C Y N T H IA L. K O L L E
A irm a n C ynth ia L . Kolle,
daughter ot retired Air Force
Master Sgt. and Mrs. Gerald L.
Kolle ot 725 Celery Circle W.,
Oviedo, has been assigned to
Chanute A ir Force Base. III., alter
com pleting A ir Force basic
training.
D u rin g the six weeks at
Lackland A ir Force Bese, Texas,
the airman studied the A ir Force,
mission, organliatlon and customs
and received special training in
human relations.
In addition, airmen who com
piete basic training earn credits
toward an associate degree In
applied science through the
Community College of the A ir
Force.
The airm an will now receive
speclallted instruction In the
aircraft malntenanca Held.
P H IL L IP M . B I N N I T T
Sgt. Phillip M. Ornnelt, son ot
M r. and M rs. Charles H. Bennett
of 1200 Anglles Road, DeBary, has
arrived for duty al Fort Lewis,
Wash.
Bennett, an engineer mechanic,
was previously assigned at South
Korea.

B IL L Y O . DAVIS
Stall Sgl. Billy G . Oavls, whose
wile, Linda, Is Ihe daughter of T .N .
Stafford ot Route 2, Sanford. hat
computed the A rm y wheeled and
tracked lank-automotive equip­
ment noncommissioned officer
(N C O ) advanced course al
Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md.
replace wheeled and tracked tankautomotive equipment.
Students learn to adlust and
maintain the mechanical, electrlca, air hydraulic systems and
other me|or components and
assemblies of wheeled and tracked
vehicles.
The alto perform maintenance
operations In a Held environment.
The advanced course Is part of
tha continuing education ladder lo
keep mtd eareer NCOS up to dale
In lhair specialties.
R IC K Y L . A V I R S
A ir Force Sgl. Ricky L . Ayers,
ton of M rs. W .G . M cCrelett of 201
Bam boo D riv e . Sanford, h at
graduated from Ihe U.S. A ir Force

LONOWOOD

"

,

JO S E P H V E C C H IO J R .
Arm y Pvt. Joseph Vecchio Jr.,
son ol Joseph Vecchio Sr. ol 224
Jefferson Drive, Casselberry, has
completed basic training al Fort
Jackson, S.C.
During tha training, students
receive Instruction In drill and
cerem onias,
weapons,
map
reading tactics, m ilitary courtesy,
military fustic*, lirst aid, and
Arm y history and traditions.
T E R R Y W .D A H L B E R O
Pvt. Terry W. Dahlberg, son ol
Chuck Dahlberg ol 17002 Student
D riv e , O rlan do , and Darlene
Dahlberg ol Oviedo, Fla., recently
com pleted One Station Unit
Training IO S U T ) al lha U.S. Arm y
Infantry School, Fori Banning, Ga.
O SUT Is a 12 week period which
combines basic combat training
and advancad Individual training.
Tha training included weapons
qualifications, squad tactics,
patrolling, landmlna warfare, Held
com m unications and combat
operations. T h is qualifies tha
soldier as a light weapons in
fantryman and as an Indiract lira
crewman.
Soldiers were taught to perform
any ol Ihe duties In a rifle or
mortar squad.
M A R O A R . C L IF T O N
A irm a n M a rg a R . C liflon,
daughter ol Navy Senior Chlaf
Petty Officer and M rs. G ary R.
Gontermanol I l f Cherokee Circle.
Sanford, has been assigned to
Sheppard Air Forca Basa, Texas,
after completing A ir Force basic
training.
D u ring lh a six waaks af
Lackland Air Forca Basa, Taxes,
the airm an studiad tha A ir Forca
mission, organliatlon and customs
and raceivad special training In
human relations.
In addition, airmen who com
piete basic training earn credits
toward an associate degrta In
applied science through the
Community College ol the A ir
Force.
Tha airm an will now rtcalva
spec tall led Instruction in lha ac
counting and finance Held.

(3 0 5 )
8 3 1 -4 4 0 5

F u n , Prizes,
E nte rta in m e n t,
. . .m ee t the
Easter B u n n y
in person.

3:30

ax (3 5 ) DAFFY DUCK
O H I O OVER EASY
IX (1 7 ) SPACE GIANTS

4:00
0 ® MOVIE (MON. WED-FRI)
0 9 ) SPECIAL TREAT (TUE)
(D O JOHN DAVIDSON
® O MERV GRIFFIN (MON. TUE
THU. FRI)
( S O O N THE QO (WED)
ilX (3 5 ) WOOOY WOOOPECKER
2 ) (10) SESAME STREET n
OX (1 7 ) THE FLIN TSTO N E^

4:30

a

®
AFTERSCHOOL SPECIAL
(WED)
I X (3 5 ) TOM AND JERRY
31 (1 7 ) THE BRADY BUNCH
0 ® SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN
(TU R
aX (3 5 ) I DREAM OF JEANNIE
© 10 MISTER ROGERS (R)
OX (1 7 ) I LOVE LUCY

5:30
( D O m * A 'S ’ H
( 7 ) 0 NEWS
a I (35) WONDER WOMAN
© (10) 3-2-1 CO NTACT (R) n
(MON)
v
©
(1 0 ) ELECTRIC COMPANY
(TUE. WEO)
© (1 0 ) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
(THU. FRI)
OX (1 7 ) BEVERLY HILLBILLIE3
I r j F lo y d T h e a t r e s l
4
4»— . ( _«...

^ 7

la

7a

T W IrA -

MAT H*f t r i l n iM O i f \ f \ c
WED.
ALL S E A TS
J

»:4J ONLY

( PLAZA

II )

2.14 ONLY'

HELPFUL ADVICE UN A U AFFAIHS

NEIL DIAM OND

• LIFE * LO V E a M A R R IA G E • BU SIN ES S

THE JAZZ SINGER

H O U R S 8 A M. - 9 P.M. Closed Sunday

MOVIELA^jL

3 BLOCKS NORTH O T D O G TR ACK HD.
OW HIGHWMS l? .«4 S I
too* toa tm xio ami x hch-ss
Atiaea Ike Barest Ire* The ABC Itqvaaa
110 00 Rredm* lc* ISOOU.lh It .# &lt; erd

S a tu rd a y

!» APRIL 18

HUNT
Join us foi i traditional Easier Egg Hunt! Saturday. April IS,
10 00 - 12 00 until all eggs are found 3 age groups; limit 5 egg
per child, all eggs will be numbered and ptlres (theater passes.
electronic games, k e cream treats,
sub sandwkhes) will be awarded
Regular admission prke Includes
i admission to Ihe loo and Eg "Hunt.
A
Entertainment! Fun!

n«, irsjs

in tin

» *• I HAPPY HOOKER
ti;**

p ic t u r e s

Features...
Our fantastic

ooty
no? &lt;

I C O

Matter ^ 2 2

Have your picture taken with
the Easter bunnyl

323-647T

WEDNESDAY
IS CHICKEN DAY

Two whitefish fillets, our famous chips,
hushpuppies and coleslaw.
%
A great value from a great little sea­
food restaurant.
Available at all participating Orlando
and Sanford area Arthur Treacher’s.

FAMOUS RECIPE'S REGULAR DINNER
1 ptacas honey-dipped tried chicken, mesh
potatoes and gravy, cole slew and 3 hot butter
testin' biscuit*. Honey upon request.

ALL FOR ONLY*! 99
V A L U E 1240
Good All Day Wednesday

lo t i.

SEAFOOD

la m m fa c fp e
^

FRIEDCHICKEN

rA rth u rT re a c h c r’s

ll-You-Can-Eat

“ IT'S HONEY DIPPED"
OPEN ll:M a.m. -

to p.m. Except Fri. A Set. doling

IMf French Avt.
(Hwy. 17-fl)
Sanford

10:20 p.m.

41N. Hwy. 17-fl
Cette Berry

% A f

*3-*-

PO

BEEN IN BUSINESS FOR 5 0 YEARS
IN PRIVACY OF MY HOME

ArthutTVeachers

W IL L IA M V . T O O T L E
William V. Tootle, son of M r. and
Mrs. William A. Tootle of 1202
Thomas Circle, Casselberry, has
been promoted in the U.S. A ir
Forcelo the rank of senior airman.
Tootle Is a fuel specialist al
Hurlburt Field, Fla.

R O N A L D R . R IP P JR ,
Air Force Staff Sgt. Ronald R.
RIpp Jr., son of Shlrlay M . Ripp ol
720 Alm yra Drive, Lake M ary, has
arrlvtd for duty al Hlckam A ir
Forca Basa, Hawaii.
Ripp, a personnel specialist, was
previously assigned In Malatya,
Turkey.

a

PALM •CARD •CRYSTAL BA1J READING

IN THE SERVICE

W AYN E M. DUK E
Marine Corps Lance CpI. Wayne
M. Duke, son of M r. and M rs. John
Duka of 112 E . Crystal Drive,
Sanford, ra cantly racelved a
parachutist badge upon com
pletlonof Ihe three week airborne
course the first week of training,
students underwent a rigorous
physical training program and
received Instruction In lha theory
of parachuting. Tha second week
they received practical training by
lumping from 24 foot and 250 loot
towers. The final week included
live slalldlne parachute lumps.

3:00
0 ® TEXAS
ID O O U ID IN G l ig h t
(2 D
GENERAL HOSPITAL
O X(35)TH EFLIN TS TO N ES
ffl j 10) POST8CRIPT8
aX (1 7 ) FUNTIME

MADAME KATHERINE

9)
POLICE STORY Joe Forres­
ter runs into trouble trying to get a
rapist-murderer convicted

vehicle repair course al Chanute
Air Force Base, III.
Graduates of the course learned
to service and repair general
purpose vehicles used by Ihe A ir
Force, and earned credits toward
an associate degree In applied
science through the Community
College ot the A ir Force.
Ayers will now serve at Indian
Springs Auxiliary Airfield, Nev.

OX (1 7 ) WHAT IN THE WORLD?

PLAZA I

P a s t — P re s e n t — F u tu re

M IC H A E L D. CHIN
A irm a n M ichael D . Chin,
nephew of Iris Lee ot 212 Brittany
C lrc la . C asse lberry, hes been
assigned to Chanute A ir Force
Base, III., after completing A ir
Force basic training.
D u ring the six weeks at
Lackland Air Force Base, Texas.
Ihe airmen studied the Air Force
mission, organliatlon and customs
and received special training In
human relations.
In addition, airmen who com
piete basic training earn credits
toward an associate degree in
applied science through the
Community College ol Ihe A ir
Force.
The airm an will now receive
speclallted Instruction In the
aircraft maintenance field.

2:30
© (1 0 ) (XCK CAVETT

5:00

1:00
O 9 I 0 A Y S 0 F 0 U R LIVES
ID O
THE YOUNG AND THE
RESTLESS
(D O ALL MY CHILDREN
(1 0 ) LETTER PEOPLE I (MON)
10) ALL ABOUT YOU (WED)
CD 10 MATH PATROL III (THU)
CD 10) COVER TO COVER I (FR!)
aX (1 7 ) MOVIE

11:00

O 9 ) TOMORROW Guests sing­
er Michael Murphy, author Stephen
King; stock market analyst Joe
Granville

2:00
0 ® ANOTHER WORLD
(J ) O AS THE WORLD TURNS
® Q ONE UFE TO LIVE
(T) (1 0 ) FOOTSTEPS (MON. WEO)
(D (1 0 ) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
(TUE. THU)
£D (1 0 ) THE NEW VOICE (FRI)

2:50

O f T l CARO SHARKS
( 5 1 0 ® O NEWS
CD (10) INSIDE/OUT (MON)
CD 10 ALL ABOUT YOU (TUE)
CD 110) MATH RELATIONSHIPS A
(WED. FRI)
CD ( 10) BOOKBiRD(THU)
OX (1 7 ) FREEMAN REPORTS

9:00
O ® HOUR MAGAZINE
( D O DONAHUE
® Q MOVIE
(35) OOMER PYLE
_
10 SESAME 8 T R E E T n
OX (1 7 ) HAZEL

9:30

O
(3) TONIGHT Host Johnny
Carson Guests Diahann Carroll.
Maureen Murphy
( D O NBA BASKETBALL Playoff
game
C D Q ABC NEWS NIOHTLINE
OX (3 5 ) WANTED: DEAD OR AUVE

o

TODAY
(7J O GOOD MORNING AMERICA
OX (35) FRED FLINTSTONE AND
FRIENDS
CD (1 0 ) PACIFIC BRIDGES
a X (1 7 )M Y TH R E E 8 0 N S

fD (1 0 ) INSIOE/OUT (WED)
© (1 0 ) LETTER PEOPLE II (THU)
J D 1 10) LETTER PEOPLE I (FRI)

11:45
© (1 0 ) MATH PATROL III (MON)
CD i 10) MATH RELATIONSHIPS A
(TUE. THU)
CD (10) MATH PATROL II (WED)
CD (10) LETTER PEOPLE II (FRI)
AFTERNOON

0 ®

6:00

6:55

(S) O SUNRISE 8EMESTER
aXj(1
(177)| lUNTOUCHABLES (THU)
ax (1 7 ) RAT PATROL (FRI)

NEWS
35) BENNY HILL
10) TOOAY IN THE LEGISLA­
TURE

d a il y d e v o t io n a l
d a il y w o r d

CD (1 0 ) A M. WEATHER

5:30

11:00

CDO

O (7) PASSWORD PLUS
CD( 10) MATH PATROL II(MON)
© (1 0 ) INSIDE/OUT (TUE. FRI)
© 110) COVER TO COVER (WED.
THU)

8:25
0 9 ) TOOAY IN FLORIDA
CD O OOOO MORNING FLORIOA

6:45

5:05
ax (1 7 ) RAT PATROL (TUE)

ax (3 5 ) AMERICAN LIFESTYLE

cd

5:45

i) Ij (3 5 ) POPEYE
CD 10 VILLA ALEGRE (R)
OX 117) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

ax ( 17) WORLD AT LARGE (MON)

09)

CD O MOVIE
Strike Up The
Band (B/W) (1940) Judy Garland.
Mickey Rooney

10:30

o a)

I X ( 17) WORLD AT LARGE (TUE)

(D O N E W S

2:50

CD O CAPTAIN KANGAROO

5:35

12:00
J. O. Cassady to J. D. Cassady,
Randall D l e l Julia Roger A. 1
wf Pamela, Jamas D. 1 Sandra C.
Thompson 6, Robert V. hb, SVi of
N E U , of SEi* of N E ' a of Sec 23 20
20, S acres (100
Barbara Jean Jackson to Effle
P. Rosa, arid.. Lots 22 22 &amp; 24, 2nd
addn Parkview (500
(O C D I Patricia P rall (form.
Johnson) 6, Helena M. Pratt to
Marie Pratt A Helene Meyers
Pratt Jt. ten Lot 1, Blk 1, Blk J,
Fosmoor, Un. Two (100.
Edward A. Gregorio A wf Vera
to Patrick J. M cGroarty A wf
Carole P „ Lot J, Blk B, Spring
Lake Hills, (140,000
Clare A. Balmer A wt Lllliam to
Austam International Inc., Lots 10
A 11, Blk A , Pine View, (45.000
A mean Balawl, sgl. to Mohamad
A. Badlra, Lots I A f, Blk 12,
Sanlando The Suburb Beautiful,
Altamonte Sec. (124,000
Magnolia Svc. Corp to Blue
Ribbon Bldrs., Inc. Lot 21, Weklva
Club Ests., Sec. I , (20.000
IQ C D I George M . Elnslg J r . to
Eva Mae Elnslg. Lot If, Blk 22,
Suburban Homes (100
Magnolia Svc. Corp., to Ron
Meyer Constr. Co., Lot 57, Weklva
Club Ests., Sec. I , (21.000
Reed Te rry to Lawrence 0 .
Kelley (m a rr.) Lots 5 A 4 Blk C,
Seminole Heights, (100
Lewfleld Apts., Inc. lo Tina A.
Gibbons, Un. 04 7512, Cedarwood
Village Condo. I, (40.400.
James C. Gamble A wf Eydie J.
to John J. Hoteling, III A wt Anne
K „ Lot 2, Weklva Hills, Sec. Six.
(V0.400
Sabal Point Porp Inc., lo Ron
Meyer Constr. Co., Lot 20, Sugar
Ridge al Sabal Point, (22,100
Alma Jean Judd A hb Bllboy G .'
to Thomas A. Downs A wt Bernice
A., Lot 5. Blk F, Glen Arden
Heights, First Add., Ut.tOO
Sidney A. Young A wt Patricia
A. to Allan P. Chin A wt Rosemarie
Ann, Portion ot Lot 24, Weklva
Hills, Sec. 2, A Part ol Lot 22,
(104.000
F. Scott Kenneth A wt Connie to
Gerald D. Patterson A wt Judith
L ., Lot 7f. Blk 2, North Orlando,
2nd Addn., (47,fOO
Dorthy A. Loental, wtd., to
Claude W. Bates A wt Kathleen.,
Lot 5 Blk 17, repl. part ol Townslte
ot Norlh Chuluota, (45,000.
Terrence M . Hamilton A wt
Laura A Mabel H., sgl. T . to
Terrence M . Hamilton A wt Laura
W ., Lot 2f„ Granada South, (21.100
(Q C O ) David F . Small to Bonnie
P. Small, part of Lot 70, Map ol
Lotts Farm s, (100
Imogrne G . Gilbert A hb Fred to
Malcolm B., Goslee A wt Lynne A.,
Lot 4. Blk A, River Run, Sec. Two.

11:30

.

7:30

In addition to the channel* lilted, cabltvltion subscriber* may tun* In to independent channel 44,
St. Petersburg, by tuning to channel 1 ; tuning to channel 12, which carries sports and the Christian
Broadcasting Network (C B N ).

( D 0 LOVE BOAT (R)
9 1 (3 5 ) MIKE DOUG I AS
00 (1 0 ) PADOINGTON BEAR
(MON)
CD (10) BEANSPROUTS (TUE)
© 1 0 FREESTYLE (WED, FRI)
CD ( 10) RAINBOWS END (THU)

/

Try A rth u rT re a c h e r’s

/
Special
SALAD BUFFET / CHICKEN SANDWICH
only $1.69
/
only $1.19

»

�i

I

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Gigolo ServiceMore
Than Dance Partner

m

DEAR
ABBY:
I ’m
courious. How many hun­
dreds of letters have you
received from
gigolos
protesting your hurting their
business by telling folks that
gigolos do not provide sexual

Dear
Abby

services?

_ 'w

: *
■*
•
.2

k

z ' * &lt;■

•• *• • •

.............. i i * ■ ,• ,* • *

Herald Photo by Tom Vincent

I t ’s not e v e r y d a y t h a t a p r e tt y la d y re c e iv e s a
" M a n Of T h e Y e a r " a w a r d . B ut V in ce n t B u tle r,
p r e s id e n t of th e L a k e M a ry C h a m b e r of C o m ­
m e r c e m a k e s th is p r e s e n ta tio n to M rs. S h irle y
H ipp in h o n o r of h e r l a t e h u s b a n d , Ito n a ld B. H ip p
S r. M r. H ipp, a r e ti r e d fire d e p a r t m e n t lie u te n a n t
fro m th e N ew O rle a n s a r e a , is th e im m e d ia te p a s t
p r e s id e n t of th e L a k e M a ry C C . In m a k in g th e
p o sth u m o u s a w a r d B u tle r s a id M r. H ip p e a rn e d
th e a w a r d fo r h is " o u ts ta n d in g w ork in th e
c h a m b e r of c o m m e r c e . H e w as a v e r y d e d ic a te d
m a n fo r th e c h a m b e r a n d w e a ll a p p r e c ia te w h a t
h e d i d ."

W ID O W AW A R D ED
‘M A N O F YEAR '

Surprise: ’Come As You Are’
About 7 a.m. Saturday,
m em bers of the Social
Committee of Xi Theta
Epsilon Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi in two teams of 2
began ringing door bells of
their sisters to gather for a

“come as you arc" coffee.
When planning the social
calendar
last
August
some tiling appropriate for an
April Fool's theme seemed In
order, according to Buth
Gaines, and the desire to plan

DON'T GAMBLE
with your insurance!
-C A L L -

T
I ft
V

f

TONY RUSS1
INSURANCE
312-0285

L O W C O S T A U T O IN S U R A N C E
F R E E S P IN A L
E X A M IN A T IO N
D anger Signa ls of
- Pine had Nerves:
I. H iid t c h t t , O l i t i M U . L o t i it S lllp
N ic k P iln . Tig h t M u i d u
J P iln Dow n Arm s. Shoulder Pain
4 N u m b n m In H in d i or F l it
5 P iln b it w it n (h i S h o v ld iri
8. P i I nig I J c ln li. N i r v o u m u i
1. H e i r Back P iln . Hip P iln . P iln D o w n lo g i
I.

Why F R E E T Thouiands of area residents have spine
related problems which usually respond to chiropractic
care.
This is our way ol encouraging you to find out It you have a
problem that could be helped by chiropractic care, It Is
also our way ol acquainting you with our staff and
facilities.
Examination Includes a minimum of 10 standard tests for
evaluating the spine and a contour analysis photo as
shown above.
While we are accepting new patients, no one need feel any
obligation.
Most Insurances Accepted

SANFORD PAIN CONTROL
CLINIC
H I T $ French Aee ( Acre*, k v m P in a H ut) Sanford

3 2 3 -5 7 6 3

-

Froo E x a m Does Mat Inc kata X -R a v i or Treatm ent

M

a uniquely different social
from others held each month
during the year.
In the fun-filled April Fool’s
mood members Joined others
in a variety of early morning
attire, for chatter, laughs, and
a buffet of breakfast rolls,
orange juice and coffee ol the
Winter Springs home of
Norma Wood.
Ms. E arly Morning Xi
Theta Epsilon was crowned
and presented a gift. The
crown of gold foil and the gag
gift a small book on ap­
pearance. Members voted by
paper ballot nomination and a
three • way tie was broken by
a second balloting.
Everyone had a fun time,
Mrs. Gaines said, and un­
derstood why the social
committee, at the April 1
meeting, Indicated the social
printed in the Yearbook for
April 11, 7 p.m. had been
postponed "until probably
sometime In May".
Those attending were social
chairm an Sherry Taack,
social committee members A1
Kurtz, Ruth Gaines, Normn
Wood,
m em bers:
Tina
Bojanowski, Mary Johnson,
Linda Dunn, Diane Gazil,
Vicki Hall, Linda Morris,
Becky Molenaar and Ginny
Hagan. Only three members
missed the social.
DOES YO U R O LD
F U R N A C E G IV E Y O U
T H E C H IL L S ? T H E N
IT S T I M E T O C M A N G F

Ge neral

1AJ A I I
* * * * f c l*

Girl Scouts Honor
Adult Volunteers
At its Annual Meeting on April 11, the Citrus Council of Girl
Scouts honored three members by presenting them with the
highest award given to adults in Girl Scouting.
Tills award, the Thanks Badge, is given only for recognition
of the most outstanding service. It is used to hunor adult
members of the movement whose service has been so
significant that no other award would be appropriate.
This award requires approval of the council’s volunteer
Board of Directors before presentation. Receiving the award
were Harriet Bolin, DeLand; Doris McCormick, Winter Park;
and Martha Grimes, New Smyrna Beach.
Harriet Bolin is currently an adult Training Coordinator for
Volusia-Flagler counties and a member of the Del .and Service
Team.
Doris McCormick is presently serving tier second term as a
member of the council's Board of Directors and chairing the
Girl Scout committee working with the lAtdy Citrus Golf
Tournament.
Martha Grimes is currently serving as the council's First
Vice-President and is the leader of a Cadettc troop in New
Smyrna Beach.
Also awurded at this meeting were appreciation pins to
Penny Cunningham, Orlando, and Karen Helln, Cocoa.
Receiving engraved plaques for service were Sidney
Easterling, College Park, and Diane Young, Melbourne.

HEATING

*

372 6462
P L U M B I N G 8.
H E A t IN G IN C

Fully Cooked

BONELESS
SMOKED HAMS
Young All Whit* Moat

|I 7 !

U.S.D.A. Choica Rolled

SIRLOIN TIP or
RUMP ROASTS
!

W F I G H T L O S S C L IN IC S IN C

Call today for a free
no obligation consultation.
Monday-Friday 7:30a.m. lofep.m.

V

1 4 9
A ■ Lb.

Aged U.S.D.A. Choic*

EYE ROUND
ROASTS

A

VISA • MASTERCARD WELCOME

Springs Plasra 1402 Montgomery Road Longwood, Florida

L

fa d in g

By M E D C O

The Harvard Medical School
Health Letter recently
reported on several studies
which have indicated a
potentially dangerous link
between alcohol ingestion
and the pain and feverreducing agent commonly
used in popular aspirin
substitutes. TTiat agent, ace­
taminophen, and alcohol ap­
parently produce a reaction
to each other within the liver
which,
according
to
research ers,
has
the
potential of increasing
possible hazardous sideeffects of the aspirin substi­
tute compound. Research
suggests persons consuming
large or continuous amounts
of alcohol should be cautious
to restrict the intake of
aspirin substitutes con­
taining acetam inopphen.
Check with your doctor as lo
how much restrictio n is
advisable.

MEDCO DRUGS
17-W AT 27th ST.
SANFO RD

IT S VER T natural - m p jli. areola. n e i|M , shape and color You target »oj
are weaung t prosthesis Its tataify d iffe re n t-w e a r in regular or sheer
bin No poctel needed R rn U tle m ill s e ts W on't slip or press on s e n
No h e il build up W on't ibsorb n ite r fin ta ilie lor sports
mu

}

m m sm m

for much

msrrnis

A C C E P TIN G MOST D E N TA L PROGRAMS &amp;
D E N T A L INSURANCE
t #

V

Hours: Mon.-Frl.
la.m .-S p.m.
Sat. A Evenings
By Appointment

3 2 3 -8 1 7 4
° r 3 2 3 -8 1 8 5

PENNYSAVER_

I

FOOD STAMPS WELCOME

A S SO R TED

Pork Chops

Hams

3-lb,
or more

Great Dog

Franks

9 9 * lb

Hamburger $]29 lb

79‘
Fryers 49
G O L D KISS

M A

Pork
Neckbones

Baking Hens

4 ib,. M 98

Sirloin Steak

ib,.

59’

USDA

Pig Feet or Tails
4

*2 ”

Dutch H olland

IceC ream

1»«*'

S]29

Generic

n 98

Bath Tissue 4 IT 7 9 '
Jill* Corn

Schlitz Beer

M u ffin M ix 4
Southern Roll
Margarine

4 pack

cans

warm

(

12 oi.

SM OKED

Picnic
Shoulder
6-8 lb . a v g ,
W HOLE
OR
SLICED

loi

SI 00

lixtliex

Patties
Bananas
Celery
Cabbage

1

ft!

U.S. No I While

P o ta to e s
R-C
Cola 8 p&gt;"i

it* * ! 19

5

piux
$1 yj
Oepoxll
I

T.G. Lee Orange,
Punch. Lemon, Lime

Fruit Drinks

oei 9 9

Trend

phi, bury
Out term I Ik

D etergent
$119
ol
8
box

Biscuits
00

,re n u

Quality I Service!
Savings)

*1°°

4 o!*1

1100 West 13th St.f Sanford

TS UIPPE R-MTA ROK EPT

.N E V E R B E F O R E

W \ NEVER A G A IN !!
1 0 *

j

Hundreds &amp; Hundreds Of

O R IG IN A L O IL
P A IN TIN G S
Will Be Sold At A Fraction
Of Their Value.

Lb-

Our Own Homamada

BULK BREAKFAST
SAUSAGE
GROUND
CHUCK

$ 1
|I° »
_

,LJ . ‘ r.0 '

S i 8 9
Lb.
I
CAVALIER M OTOR INN

N E X T T O M R . C'S F R IE D C H IC K E N

8 6 2 -7 9 9 9

Prescribed

C O M P U T E D REALISTIC BREAST PROSTHESIS

S O &amp; V

Fresh Daily Laan

Nuke the bed of your fl/e
for the real of your fl/e...

A fm
S I199
! Lb.
^ —

$1

TURKEY
BREASTS

drily Mulhil
Ou nt’ S n o o ly lo t flourrqur

EMKdN

iTiitftiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiutiTniniu

After Mastectomy

OLD FASHION B U TC H ER SHOP SERVICE A Q U A L IT Y

1007 S Sanlord A ve
Sanford

B illy M a lh li ii a charming lady.
Poised, radianl and conAdenl.
She » rig h t 113 graceful pounds and
wears a sire 7. Just a short lime ago.
Busy urore a sire 12 and weighed 133
pounds. She also had 30 estra unwanted
Inches.
Il was Just about one month ago lhat
Busy discovered European Weight Loss
Clinics, and our unique program slatted
by espetlenced nutrition counselors and
trained nurses.
We show you huw to lose weight and
the secret of keeping II olf . . without
gimmicks . . without (ad diets, .w ith,
out special foods . . . without strtnuous
exercises.
Call Eurupean Weight Loss Clinic to­
day. and set up a free weight loss con­
sultation. You'll see why we lose more
satisfied customers everyday.
Like Bilsy.

Do you have questions
about sex, love, drugs and the
pain of growing up? Get
Abby's new booklet: "What
Every Teea-ager Ought to
Know." Send $2 and n long,
stam ped (28 cents), selfaddressed envelope to: Abby,
Teen Booklet, 132 Lasky
Drive, Beverly Hills, Calif.
90212.

103 West Ohio A v tn u i. Oeland - 904 736 1846
Monday Saturday. 10 4 M 5 P M

We Sell Only
U.S.D.A. Choice
Naturally Aged
Western Beel

I’m th rille d a b o u t th e place.
B ut I w on’t go b ack .”
f

CONFIDENTIAL TO J. IN
WACO,
TEXAS:
To
paraphrase an old Jewish
saying, “ From constantly
rubbing up against a rich
man, a poor man will get a
hole In his sleeve."

LEDIARD'S UNIFORMS

IOWA
MEATS

TO

E le t Ir ic

CENTRAL
CALL

FRED M. IN HONOLULU
DEAR FRED: None so far.
and-so calling" are the ones
But I've heard from plenty of
who irk me!
readers who hastened to
IRKED IN PAIjO ALTO
advise me that 1 was wrong.
DEAR IRKED: Let's hear
Read on:
it from the East Coast:
DEAR MS. VANBUREN: I
DEAR ABBY: IRKED IN
was amazed to read your
EDEN, N.C., com plained
reply to JUST WONDERING,
about people who let their
the 15-year-old girl who asked
youngsters answer the phone
why a gigolo wasn’t con­
when all they say is, "Who is
sidered the same as a hooker.
this?"
In fact, they are quite
When that happens to me, I
similar. The Random House always say, “This is Santa
Dictionary of the English Claus!"
language describes a gigolo
That always brings a
as follows:
grownup to the phone quickly
"1} a man living off the with plenty of commotion.
earnings or gifts of a woman,
OTTO IN CLIFTON. N.J.
esp. a younger man supported
DEAR ABBY: What is your
by an older woman in return opinion of a person who helps
for his sexual attention and a man cheat on his wife by
companionship; 2) a male carrying messages and acting
professional dancing partner as a go-between for a couple
or escort."
of back-street lovers?
While a gigolo might be
DISGUSTED
defined as the latter, as you
DEAR DISGUSTED: He
informed
JUST
WON­
DERING,
the
former I nr she) probably looks upon
definition is far more it as doing a friend a favor.
prevalent. I feel that a 15- I'm reminded of something
ycar-old should be told the my fath er used to say:
entire definition, as I believe "Never look for an honest
that a gigolo is just another person to help you with a
name for a male prostitute. crooked deal."
INFORMED IN HOUSTON
DEAR ABBY: What should
DEAR ABBY: You missed
it with IRKED, who is irked a man of 87 do with a
when a child answers the collection of interesting' old
phone and keeps saying, letters? I had over 1,000 until
today, when I burned over iOO.
"Who is this?"
People who place calls and 1 felt like a murderer, but
do not have the sense or storage space is limited.
My children would not be
courtesy to say "This is so-

interested in them, as most
were from friends and
relatives I knew before they
were born. Some were from
very distinguished people
whose literary style was quite
wonderful.
"GEORGE FROM GEORGIA
DEAR GEORGE: II your
children aren't interested in
these letters, perhaps their
children nr grandchildren will
one day appreciate them. T(
burn such letters is to destroy
a part ol history. Offer them
first to someone In your
family. If you have no takers,
give them lo any interested
friend.

Wednesday. April IS, 1981—IB

SANFORD, FLA.

PHONE ORDER AHEAD
lit Ready When You're Ready

3100 5. ORLANDO DR. (17-Ml
I

3 2 3 -4 5 2 1

WED thru SUN |
APR. 15 to 19
1 0 A M -9 P M

M A S T E R C A R D . V IS A . P E R S O N A L C H E C K S A C C E P T E D

t

�&lt;B— Evtnlng Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wtdnwday, April IS, 1711

Legal Notice

le g a l Notice
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice it hereby given that we
intend to engage in business at 1715
So French A v ., Sanford. F L .,
Seminole County, Florida under
the fictitious name of S A N F O R D
A U C T IO N R E A L T Y , and that we
intend to register said name with
the Clerk ol the Circuit Court,
Seminole Couniy, Florida in ac
cordance with the provisions ot I he
Fictitious Name Statutes, To Wit
Section *65 09 Florida Statutes
19S7
George W. Pinkerton,
Reg. A E . Broker
Wayne H. Blecha
Publish A pril 15, 77. 79, &amp; May i.

.

i

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T O F
T H E I I T H J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT ,
IN
AND
FOR
S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
CASE NO . I1-77ACA4M C
F L A G S H IP B A N K OF O R L A N D O ,
a Florida banking corporation,
Plaintiff.

vs

TH O M A S B. C A T E S and N IJ O L E
A C A T E S , his Wile, el al,
Defendants.
N O T IC E O F S A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
thal the real and personal properly
located In Sem inole C ouniy,
riorida. described as follows:
Lot 51, T R A IL W O O D E S T A T E S .
S E C TIO N O N E , according to the
ISII
Plat thereof as recorded In Plat
D E H IJ
Book 14, al Pages 77 and 7t, of Ihe
Public R ecords ol Seminole
County, Florida.
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
will be sold for cash in hand to the
Notice is hereby given that I am
highest and best bidder at the West
engaged in business al 7*75 Der
Iron! doors of the Seminole County
byshire Road, Maitland, Seminole
Courthouse, Sanford, Florida, at
County. Florida under the tic
the hour of 11:00 a m. on the Ith
lltious name ol S U E 'S V IO L E T
day ol M ay, I f lt , by A R T H U R H.
P A TC H , and that I Intend to
B E C K W IT H , Clerk ol the Circuit
register said name with Ihe Clerk
Court lo r Sem inole County,
ot Ihe Circuit Court, Seminole
Florida, pursuant to a Final
County, Florida in accordance
Su m m a ry
Judgm ent
ol
with the provisions ot Ihe FlcForeclosure entered In this cause
titlous' Name Statutes, To W it:
bearing date Ihe fth day of April,
Section I4J07 Florida Statutes
I t ll.
D A T E D this tJlh day of April,
IT ST.
Sig. Susan F. Sauter
Itll
Publish A pril IS, 77. 7* A M ay 4,
(S E A L )
A R T H U R H. B E C K W IT H JR .
17*1
C L E R K OF T H E C IR C U IT
o e h 10
COURT
B Y : Cynthia Proctor
N O T IC E O F M E E T IN O
As Oeputy Clerk
The Seminole County Industrial Publish A pril 15, 77, I t l l
Development Authority will hold a D E H 7 f ________________________
meeting on Friday, April 70, i t ll,
N O T IC E T O P U B L IC
at the Longwood Village Inn, State
Notice Is hereby given that the
Road 477, 150 East Lake Street,
Longwood, F lo rid a . Tim e ot Board of Adjustment of the City of
Sanford w ill hold a regu lar
meeting is 1:30 a.m .
meeting on April 74, I t ll In Ihe
Matters lor discussion include
Issuance ol Industrial Revenue City Hall at It:JO A. M . In order to
Bonds lor Pacific Pools. Inc. lor consider a request lor a variance
construction of a new distribution in the Zoning Ordinance as It
facility, and any other business to pertains to rear yard setback
requirem ents in M R .I toned
come before Ihe board.
Persons are advised that, It they district in Lois I, 71, 70, 37, 34, 35,
decide to appeal any decision 47, 41, 40, Jt, 31, 44, 47 A 14,
made at this meeting, they will Mayfair Villas, Sanford Seminole
need a record ol Ihe proceedings, County, Florida as recorded in PB
and, lor such purpose, they may 77, Pp f A tO.
Being
m ore
specifically
need to Insure lhat a verbatim
record ol the proceedings Is made, described at located at Mayfair
which
record
includes
the Villas.
Planned use of the property:
testim ony and evidence upon
Single family dwellings.
which the appeal Is to be used.
B L. Perkins
Publish April 15, IfSI
Chairman
O E H If
Board ol Adjustment
Publish A pril l , 15. IM I
DEH77
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T FOR
If iM IN O L E C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T FOR
P R O B A T E O IV IIIO N
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
File Number IM 4 4 -C P
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N
Division
File Num ber ll-M S -C P
IN R E i E S T A T E O F
Division P R O B A TE
R OBER T E. R ANDALL
IN R E : E S T A T E O F

On?CMil'll

N O T IC E O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
T O A L L P E R S O N S H A V IN G
C L A IM S
OR
DEM ANDS
A G A IN S T T H E A B O V E E S T A T E
A N D A L L O T H E R PERSO NS
I N T E R E S T E D IN T H E E S T A T E :
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D
that
the
adm inistration ol the estate ol
ROBERT
E.
R ANDALL,
deceased, F ile Number I t 144 CP,
is pending In the Circuit Court for
Seminole Couniy, Florida, Probate
Division, Ihe address of which Is
Seminole C ou niy Courthouse,
Sanlord, F L .
Th e personal
representative of the estate Is
R U T H H. R A N D A L L , w hole:
address Is T il E . First 51., Sanford,
FI. The name and address of the
personal representative's attorney
are set forth below.
All persons having claims or
demands against Ihe estate are
req u ire d,
W IT H IN
TH R EE
M O N TH S F R O M T H E D A T E OF
T H E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
T H IS N O T IC E , lo tile with the
clerk of the above court a written
statement ol any claim or demand
. they may have. Each claim must
- be In writing and m u lt Indicate the
basis lor the claim, Ihe name and
addressof the creditor or his agent
or attorney, and the amount
; claimed, tf the claim Is not yet
due, Ihe date when It will become
due shall be slated. It the claim is
contingent or unliquidated, the
. nature of the uncertainty shall be
! slated. II the claim Is secured, the
security shall be described. The
1 cialmant shall deliver sufficient
| copies of the claim to the clerk to
enable the clerk lo mall one copy
; to each personal representative.
;
All persons Interested in Ihe
. estate to whom a copy of this
; Notice ol Administration has betn
•mailed are required, W IT H IN
‘ T H R E E M O N TH S FR O M T H E
D A TE
OF
TH E
F IR S T
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
T H IS
N O T IC E ,
ol A d m in istra tio n :
•they may have thal challenge the
! validity of Ihe decedent's will, the
qua llllcatlons of the personal
representative, or Ihe venue ol
; jurisdiction ol the court.
• A L L C LA IM S . D E M A N D S A N D
I O B JE C T IO N S N O T SO f i l e d
'W I L L B E F O R E V E R B A R R E D
Date ot the first publication of
; Ihis Notice of Administration
. ■April l, I N I .
•
a Rulh H Randall
As Personal Representative
■
of the Estate ol
R O B ER T E. RANDALL
a tto r n ey

for

personal

R E P R E S E N T A T IV E :
s Douglas Stenstrom, Esq of
S T E N S TR O M , M d N T O S H ,
JU L IA N , C O L B E R T l
; W H IO H A M P A.
P.O. Box 1130, Sanlord, FI. 37771
Telephone: 305 377 7171
Publish A pril I , IS, I N I
D E H ?3

ZINN B E R T R A M B E C K
Deceased
N O T IC E O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
T O A L L P E R S O N S H A V IN G
C L A IM S
OR
DEM ANDS
A G A IN S T T H E A B O V E E S T A T E
AND A L L O T H E R
PERSO NS
IN T E R E S T E D IN T H E E S T A T E :
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D
that
the
ad.
ministration ot the estate of Zinn
Bertram Beck, deceased, File
Number I1 1 I4 C P, Is pending In
ihe Circuit Court lor Seminole
Couniy, Florida Probate Division,
the address of which Is Seminole
Couniy Courthouse, Sanford, F L
37771 The personal representative
of the estate is Nileh Beck Brenen
whose address is 1774 Wth Ave.
Nth, Lake Worth, F L 33440. The
name and address ol the personal
representative’s attorney are set
forth below.
All persons having claims or
demands against the estate are
required, W IT H T H R E E M O N TH S
F R O M T H E D A T E OF T H E
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF TH IS
N O T IC E , to file with the clerk of
the above court a w ritten
statement of any claim or demand
they may have. Each claim must
be in writing and must Indicate the
basis lor Ihe claim, the name and
address of the creditor or his agent
or attorney, and Ihe amount
claimed. If Ihe claim Is not yet
due, the dale when It will become
due shall be stated. It the claim is
contingent or unliquidated, the
nature of the uncertainty shall be
stated. If the claim Is secured, the
security shall be described. The
claimant shall deliver sufficient
copies of Ihe claim to the clerk to
enable the clerk lo mall one copy
to each personal representative.
All persons Interested In the
estate to whom a copy of this
Notice ot Administration has been
mailed are required. W IT H IN
T H R E E M O N TH S FR O M T H E
D A TE
OF
TH E
F IR S T
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
T H IS
N O T IC E , to file any objections
they may have that challenge the
validity ol Ihe decendenl's will, the
qualifications ol Ihe personal
representative, or Ihe venue or
jurisdiction ol Ihe court.
A L L C LA IM S , D E M A N D S , A N D
O B JE C T IO N S N O T SO F IL E O
W IL L B E F O R E V E R B A R R E D
Date ol the llrsf publication
notice of Administration: April 15.

lilt.
Nileh Beck Brenan
As Personal Representative
ol the Estate ol
Zinn Bertram Beck
Deceased
A T T O R N E Y FOR P E R S O N A L
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E :
Douglas Stenstrom
Sianstrom, McIntosh. Julian,
Colbert A Whigham, P.A.
P.O. Bo* 1330, Sanlord, F L 37771
Telephone: (3051 377 7171
Publish: April IS, 77, I N )
D E H 41

legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice is hereby given that I am
enqaged in businesl at Rl 4 Bo*
1760. Hwy IJ-tJ, Longwood, F L
tjfTO. Seminole County. Florida
under the fictitiou s nam e el
RENT
R IT E
IN C .
DBA
LO N G W O O D A U T O R A N C H , ,»nd
Dial I intend to register said name
with the Clerk ot ihe Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida In a&lt;
cordance with the provisions of the
Fictitious Name Statules, To V/it;
Section 145 Of rior.da Statutes
US/ 1
S,q E R IC T A Y IO R
Publish Apr. 1, I , 75, 77, 1VI1
D E G 144
N O T IC E T O P U B L IC
Notice Is hereby given that the
Board of Adjustment of the City of
Sanlord w ill hold a re g u la r
meeting on April
in the
City Hall at 11:30 A .M . in order to
consider a request for a variance
in Ihe Zonino Ordinance as It
pertains to side yard setback
req uirem ents In SR-1 toned
district in Lot 7, Blk F, Country
Club Manor, Unit 7, PB II, Pg 100.
Being
m ore
specifically
described as ’located at 114
Mayfair Circle.
Planned use ol the property:
Carport wllh roof.
B. L . Perkins
Chairman
Board of Adjustment
Publish Apr. I , 15, 1911
DEH7*

H—HttoWtented

CLASSIFIED ADS
S em inole

O rlando - Winter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

0 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
Itlm # ......................... SOc b Um
HOURS
1 consecutive tIm ts. . joc a lint
1:04 A .M . - 5:30 P .M .
M O N O A Y th ru F R I D A Y
S A T U R D A Y f Noon

7conMcutlvgtlmM .......... 43c
10 comacutlv* tim t&gt; . 37c • lint
M.00 Minimum
'3 Lina* Minimum

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
S u n d a y-N o o n Friday

74, itll

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T , IN
AN D FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C IV IL A C T IO N NO. I t H7 C A 4 4

E
IN R E : T H E M A R R IA G E O F
D E N E S E A . JE N K IN S
Petitioner
and
M IC H A E L TH O M A S JE N K IN S
Respondent:
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO :
M IC H A E L
TH O M A S
JE N K INS
R E S ID E N C E U N K N O W N
LAST KNOW N AD D R ESS:
Britney Hall No. 17S E.
174 Millwood D rlv t,
Nashville, Tennessee
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D that an action tor
dissolution ot marriage has been
tiled against you, and you ara
required to serve a copy ot your
written defenses lo it, If any, on
C A R R O L L B U R K E , Attorney for
Petitioner, whose address is 417
Sanford Atlantic Bank Building,
Sanlord, Florida, and tile Ihe
original with Ihe Clerk of Circuit
Court, Arthur H Beckwith, J r. on
or before Ihe 11th day of M ay,
A.D. I N I . otherwise a default will
be entered against you lor the
relief demanded in the Petition.
W ITN E S S m y hand and official
seal on this the 3rd day ol April,
A D. IN I.
(S E A L )
Clerk ol Circuit Court
Seminole Couniy,
Florida
By June I. Curtis
Deputy Clerk
Publish: April I, IS, 17, 7f, I N I
n E H 36__________________________
P U B L IC N O T IC E
The Seminole County Board of
County Commissioners as Prime
Sponsor lor tha Comprehensive
Employment and Training Act
(C E T A ) announces the submittal
ol a modification ot tha Com
prahanslva E m p lo ym e n t and
T ra in in g Plan ( C E T P I and
programs fundad under C E T A
through tha U. S. Department ot'
Labor. It it the purpose of the Act
to pro vide tra in in g and ampfoyment opportunities lor the
econom ically
disadvantaged,
unemployed and underemployed
parsons in order to enhance their
economic potential.
The specific purpoae of the
m odification It to ra v lta Ihe
original
grant
applications,
pursuant to directives by tha U.S.
Department ot Labor to rafted
reduced allocations announced for
F Y I I , as a result of deferral and
reclaton action taken by the Ad.
m inistration. Specific subparts
being modified and the lull funding
amount It now at follows:
11 1 011011, M O D 007: *770.471
II I 0110 40, M OD 007: 101,t$4
11 1 0110 S, M O D 001:
743,574
Thera Is a 30 day comment
period and Interested parlies may
review this g ra n t plan and
modification between the hours ol
•: X a.m. and S-.Q0 p.m . Monday
through F riday, Planning Sad Ion,
100 East Flrsl Street. Sanford.
Florida, 31771. Wrltlan comments
concerning Ihis submittal should
be dlreded to Planning Sad Ion,
Manpower Division, 100 East F lrtl
Street. Sanlord, Florida 37771.
Phona 373 4330 a d . 103.
Subsequent modifications to tha
Seminole County C E T P will not ba
subject lo these publications and
announcement requirements. Any
Interested groups, organltallons
or individuals desirous
of
ravitwlng any such subsequent
modification may so notify the
Prime Sponsor In writing at the
above listed addrass.
Publish A pril IS. t t ll
DEH-S4
N O T IC E O F S H E R IF F 'S S A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that by virtue of that certain W rit
of Execution issued out ol and
under tha seal ot tha Circuit Court
ot Dade County, Florida, upon a
linal judgement rendered in the
aforesaid court on tha n th day
ol February, A. O. t»7l, in that
certain cate enl tiled, M arilyn Kay
F a rn a n d a i, w hich
aforesaid'
Sanlord Kay and Rcbtcca Kay, his
wile, Defendant, which aforesaid
Writ ol Extcution was dallvarad to
me as Sheriff ol Seminole County,
Florida, and I have levied upon tha
following described pro perty
owned by Sanlord Kay, said
property being located in Seminote
County', F lo rid a , m ore p a r ­
ticularly described at follows:
One t?74 Chrysiet Cordoba, tan
In color, ID No. SSllM eRISBlM
being stared al 17 71 Shall.
Casselberry, Florida.
One t t l l M e rc u ry C ou gar,
Mack tan, ID No. IH«3KSt7JS7
being stored at Foster's Auto
Clinic, Longwood, Florida
and Ihe undersigned as Sheriff ot
Seminole County, Florida, will at
11:00 A . M . on tha 7th day of M ay,
A. 0. I N I , otter tor sale and sail to
tha highest bidder, for cash,
subject to any and all existing
nans, al tna Front twaatl Door of
tha Semlnule County Courthouse In
Sontord, F lo rid a , Ihe above
described personal property.
That said sale is being made to
satisfy tha terms of said Writ of
Execution.
John E . Polk, Sheriff
Seminole Couniy, Florida
Publish A p ril IS. 77, I t A M ay 4,
with tha sale on May 7, I N I
OEH4I

4 -fersonals
^ L o n e l y Christian Singles
Meet Christian singles In your
area. Write Southern Christian
Singles O u b . P.O. Box 1173
Summerville, SC 7t4«3 or call
1 103 471 US0 14 hrs.
W HY B E L O N E L Y ? W rit* “ Get
A M ate" Dating Service. All
ages, P.O. Box 4071, Clearweter. F I.33411.
COMPAT A D A TE
Take I minute to listen to
recorded message— 1103 4719*52 9(51 or write Compat-AOate P.O. Box m 3 Sum­
merville, S.C. I t 443.
L O N E L Y ? Naw singles Fla.
mag. IS + la x ; SSSM (14) Box
440. Boynton, F L 3343S.

*

*

*

*

*

Meet M A N Y single, divorced,
widowed, end separated Man
and Women by Advertising
with pictures and details about
you In tha weekly newsletter
Single Scene. W O M E N A D ­
V E R T IS E F R E E . Man pay
115.00 tor to weeks. 305 773
4171 anytime or P.O. Box
4f 57 Aloma Branch, F L 31713.
Lonely? Write “ Bringing people
together Dating Servlcal" All
ages A Senior Cltliens. P.O.
1141, Winter Haven. Fla. 331*0.

6— Child Care

H — Help Wanted
W A I T R E S S — Experienced.
Days 127 0530. Eves. 4301770.
A sk for John._________________
S E C U R IT Y G U A R D S
Applications being taken for
qualified individuals seeking
lull lime employment. Must be
willing to work »nv hours,
dependable. Able to quality for
Statt Guard Llctnse and have
own transportation and phona.
Interested eppllcanta can
apply at P lnk a rto n's 3103
Lawton R d „ Sulfa ISO Amherst
Building, Orlando. Fla Equal
Opportunity Employer________
""
B E A U T IC IA N
Temporary tor 1 weeks In M ay.
Call 373 7430___________________
AV O N B U Y OR S E L L
Work around your
Fam ily's hrs. 444 3077
T Y P IS T — M in. SS wpm, handle
phone orders. Shorthand e
plus. Medical, pension end
profit sharing. Unilad Solvents
3731400.______________________

COOKS
F A S T F O O D O P E R A T IO N
No txperlanca necessary, will
train, good salary, hospitalliation, other benefits. Call
3733443._____________________ _
R N . Full time 1-a.shllt. Sanlord
N ursing and Convalescent
Canter. Contact M rs. Brown
133 1544.

T E C H N I C I A N T R A I N E E lor
cutting A polishing optical
crystals. Dcllcata A precision
handwork. Apply In parson
Q ua ntu m Te ch n o lo gy 1410
Iroquois Ave., Sanlord.

C A S T IN G
Need 300 extras for Ma|or Film .
Call Debbie or Jim 10 4
_________ 331 7754__________

C O S M E T O L O G IS T
W A N TED
with 3 yrs. exp. A following
Ceil 373 7530._________________

Modern geriatric center. Exeellent pay A benefits. Exp.
only. Call Mrs. M cCranlt,
Longwood 337 7300___________

P roduction E xp e d ito r with
experience In Fiberglass or
Boats helptul. This Is an Entry
level iob with advancement tor
Ihe right man. Coble Boat
Company Silver Lake Rd.,
Sanford, Fla.

O lflce Assistant, and G irl
F rid a y . A ccu ra te typing
required, working with writer
and publisher. Call lor Ap
potnlment. 313 4071.

Quality Control with experience
in Fiberglass or Boat building
helpful. This is a good op­
portunity with good benefits
lor the herd worker. Cobla
Boat Company, Silver Lake
Rd., Sanford, Fla.
Fiberglass Mold maintenance
and Builders needed at once.
Good pay for good producers.
Cobla Boat Company, Silver
Lake Rd., Sanlord.
Boat Riggers. Steady Work.
Coed pay and benaflts for real
workers. Cobla Boat Com ­
pany, Silver Lake Rd.,
Sanlord.
S E R V IC E personnel wanted:
Exp. only Weekend, lunch
shift. Lake M a ry restaurant.
333-7I I P bet. 3:00 4:00 p.m.
Canvasser. Door to door. Ex
perlenced preferred, but not
necessary. Exce lle nt com
mission schedule plus gas
allowance 444-4717.
COOKS
Experienced only. AM A PM
shifts. Salary commensurate
with Experience.
S A L A D PER SO N
Part time only, apply In person.
Deltona Inn, Deltona. 305-5744473.
Excellent
O p p ortun ity
for
persons I I or older lo make
good money. For appointment
Call 313 7711 attar 1 p.m.
Wa a rt currently seeking new
and
experienced
Salas
x asocial es. For confidential
interview call Marcus Brown
at 311-0700 today.

ia—ttelp Wanted

it—HstoWtonted

L P N 11*7 Shift

Exp. Waitresses wanted Apply
in person. Plrra Roy, Sanlord
K mart Plata. 373 3004.
Aluminum Installer lor screened
room , ca rp o rts , and pool
enclosures. Some experience
required. 373 4475.

AAA EMPLOYMENT
CAN P U T A S M IL E
ON Y O U R F A C E
W IT H A JO B
O F Y O U R C H O IC E
W A R R A N TY C LER K
A ccu ra te ty p in g , super iob,
sweetheart for a boss. tlaO to
start.
T E C H T R A IN E E
Polish, cutting A fabricating ot
crystals. *574 mo.
M ANAGER t r a in e e
R e s ta u ra n t
b a c k g ro u n d
p re fe rre d , but w ill tra in
Learn all phases. *700 wk. to
start.
C L E R K T Y P IS T
Accurate typing, handle busy
phones. *140 wk.
ROOFERS
Exp. or will train, tw o A up.
W AREHOUSE
Forklift experience. Chance lo
advance. *1S0 + benefits.
C A B IN E T M A K E R
Exp. with formica A wood. *4.10
hr. to start.

1917 F R E N C H A V E .
323 5176
Corner of M lh A French
Your future our concorn

P A R K F L A C K ASSOC. INC.
R EALTO R S

STO C K M EN —
E xperien ced.
Needed. Food Barn. Inc. ISth
St. A Park Ave.
T

p N.

Full tim e 3-11 P M. Shift.
A p p ly La k e vle w N ursing
Center. 717 E . 7nd St.________
O A I ATTEN D A N T
Phillips 44 Slalion
Longwood

Good pay, Company benefits.
Apply 701 N Laurel Ave.,
sanlord
Nurses Aides 3 11 11 7. *160 per
h r.
Experie n ce d
only.
Longwood Heellh Care Center.
339 9700__________________ ___

BOYS 4 GRIS
A G B 13-17
EARN EXTRA 55
AFTER SCH001
CALL 322-2611
Evening Herald
Want ads are black 4 white 4
read all over.
Evening Herald Paper Route.
Net *150+ wk. Less than 3Vi
hrs. a day delivery time. Cali
173 4341.______________________
C O N V E N IE N C E S TO R E
CLER K
Full lima positions. Experienced
pre fe rred . 4 Locations in
Sem inole C ou nty. F o r In ­
formation call 371-1441.
SHO R T O R D E R COOK - Part
lim e , w ill tra in
M a y fa ir
Country Club. 377 7531.
Licensed Practical Nursa. 121
shift. Full or part lime, San.
lord Nursing A Convalescent
Center. Contact Mrs. Brown.

m ist*_________________

R estaurant Help W anted—
M inim um wage, must be neat
A clean. Apply In person 7 a m.
to 6 p.m . Sluckty's, St. Rd. 46
4, 4. 4. No phona calls piaasa.
C O N V E N IE N C E
STO R E
C L E R K — Good company
benefits. Apply Handy Way
Food Stores, Sanford area.

Are you a working Mother? If so,
call about our Unique Child
Care Facility. 333 m m
Loving care lor your child by
grandmotherly lady, In my
home. 373 43St,_______________
Excellent child cere facility.
Discounts avail. If you qualify.
Call 333 5470_________________ ;
babysitting in m y home. Intentsup Lots ol T L C . Two hot
meals a day. Lake M a ry arta.
333 S7?t or 130 7313
Will babysit children, any age,
during A alter school hrs. Also
during the sum m er. Call 373
5344.________________ _
Child Cara m y Home. Fenced
play area. Mon. thru F rl.
Voyager St. oft Providence.
Reasonable 574-5473.
Child care In m y home tor pre­
school ages. Weekdays only.
Previous child care counselor.
Ravenna Pk. 373IOJ4.

4-A

Health* Beauty

Accounting A
Tax Sarvlca
La rry L. G rim m A Associates
307 E . 1st Street
Sanford, Ft.
373-7074

DM SO
too* oura

solvent— 14 oi. Itt.tS
plus *1.50 T P A H Distributed
by
Nu R em .
We
ship
anywhere. 1305) 313 4371 ‘
SHAKLEE HER B TAB LETS
W E D E L IV E R
313-7473
Spring Fever Sale
Watkins Products.
313 5017

9— Good Things to Eat
S T R A W B E R R IE S
S T R A W B E R R IE S
S T R A W B E R R IE S
Why go to Leesburg
or Plant City when you
can buy them here? 3
pints 11.25, 15.50 flat.
Cabbage W ar Goes On
11 or more for 11.00
Lettuce 3 for $1.00
All Purpose Potatoes 5
lbs. 89c; 10 lbs. $1.69
We Take Food Stamps
LeRoy Farm s, SR 46 &amp;
Upsala Rd„ Sanford

11— Instructions
Tennis Instruction ■ U .S .P .T.A .
Cerllltd. Croup or Private
lessons. Children a specialty.
Doug M ailciowski. 377-7307.

11-Special Notices

EMERGENCY
ARTSALE
Must sail truck load of art — up
lo 7 ! * savingal Hundreds of
btaullful oil paintings. Many
prlcad lese than *4. Portraits,
s ta s c a p a s ,
la n d s c a p e s ,
orientals, etc. AM reduced.
Sale prices on frames many
styles A sites. You m u ll see
these
paintings
toda y!
Banquet room - C a v a lie r
Motor Inn, 3700 South Orlando
Drive (17-71), 10a.m. 1o7p.m.,
T u n thru Sun. (A p ril 14-17).
S TO R IN G IT M A K E S W A S T E ­
S E L L IN G I T M A K E S CASH.
P L A C E A C L A S S IF IE D A D
NOW . Call 377 1411 or &gt;31 7771.
A L O I M IS T
AM Products contain stabllliad
Aloe Vera enriched w-Vitamln
E A Protein designed lo r:
Problem Skin, Body A Aging
Skin, Health Drink, Cosmetics.
Free Dem 347 5410.
K IC K T H E S TO R A G E H A t I T .
Sell those useful, no longar
needed items wtln a Herald
Classified Ad. Call J2I M il or
131 7773

A ir Condition
Chris will servict AC's, refrig,
treaters, water coolers, mite.
Call 333 #737._________________
IF TH IS IS T H E D A Y to buy a
new car, tee today’s Ciattlf lad
ads lor best buys,

Aluminum Siding A
Scretn Rooms
Aluminum Application Service.
Alumn. A vinyl tiding, soffit,
tcrean rooms, windows, doors.
Butters, l i t *754 eves

Baa uty Cara
TO W E R 'S B E A U T Y SALO N
F O R M E R L Y Harriett's Beauty
Npok 517 E. 1st St.. 373 5747.

Boarding A Grooming
Anim al H ava n B oarding A
Grooming Kennels. Therm .
Controlled Haat. OH Floor
Slatping Boxes. We cater lo
your pets. J37-S7S3.
Make room In your attic, garage.
Sell idle Item s w ith a
Classified Ad. Call a friendly
ad taker at 111 t i l 1or 111 7771.

Brush Cutting
CU STO M W ORK
Reasonable
R a ta l,
Fre e
Eatlmata. Call Early A . M . or.
Eve. 1131541 or &lt;105) 37* 1144.
G E T T H O S E L U X U R Y IT E M S
FOR A F R A C T IO N O F T H E IR
COST F R O M T O D A Y 'S W A N T
ADS I

Carpet Clashing
Shampoo A Deep Steam. Llv ,
Oin. Rm ., H all. 111. 1)0 ea.
additional rm . 13) 0417.

M E IN T Z E R T I L E
Naw or repair, leaky* how are our
specialty, 35 VTS. Ekp. *47 1543

Goncrate Work

LMMhcapfng

I M « N . Q U A L I T Y O P E R A 1 ION
9 yrs. exp Patios, Driveways,
etc. Wayne Beal I l f )J 1 L

L A R G E T R E E IN S T A L L E R
Landscaping. Old Lawns Re­
placed. 34S S501.

Driveways, Patloa, Walks, etc.
Quality work. No job too small.
Low prices. Free Est. Eves,
aft. t Tom 223-5371.

LawnAGardtn
Service

Cypress M itch
Top Quality Mulch delivered to
home or business. 3-5 Yds. 455540. Call Dan 113 7714.

Furniture Reflnishing
B ill
A
J i m ’s
F u rn itu re
Retlnishlng A Restoration. Wa
buy A sail. Call I3 I1 3 II attar
hrs. 131-5735.

Hsndymsn

LA W N A O A R O E M C A R E
Free estimates. 10 yrs. ex­
perience. Insured A bonded.
____________ 3734174____________
Lawn Service
Residential A C o m m e rcia l
373 7J54or 331 0344 Aft. 3 p.m.
Right-W ay Tre e Sarvlca
F or a Professional and reliable
Tree Service, call Right-Way
-today. Free Est. 322 4145
T R I-A N O R L L A W N S E R V IC E
S E R V IC E W IT H C A R E
P H O N E 313-7444

Carson Lawn Sorvico
Complete lawn care. 133-1773

Handyman. Retired. Will fix
almost anything In tha home.

1112011.

Homs Improvement
DO S H O M E IM P E O V B M B N T S
Carpentry, etc. 17 Y rs. Exp.
Free ettim atet^»2 -4113
Remodeling A Repair, D ry M k
Hanging, Taxtured Catlings. S.
G. Ballnt, 3114411, 3114445.
Jim 's Hama Im prevem eM t
HausapaiMlaf, plumb fag, pat la
w a rt, carpentry. M Y rs . Ex*.
____________ **3-7774.___________
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A H O M E
IM P R O V E M E N T S
Painting, Roofing, Carpentry
Lie. Bonded A Guarantaad
Free Estimates tin e * *

Crocketl’4 Lawn
Beautification and
Maintenance Service
The personal touchl
3110777
A I Lawn Care
All Phases, Top Quality
Low prices. Roy 134 7453
F IE L D M O W IN G A C L E A N U P
REASONABLE
A F T E R S:30D.m.311-1tST

Masonry
All types of Mason Work.
No lob too largo or too small
313 1541 or 133 4774

Mird-U-Lock
N E W Concrata Buildings, all
Silas 130 A up. A t 1-4 A SR 44. I4 Industrial Park 3I1-GM1.

Home Repairs
Nursing Contor
Q U A L IT Y A T A F A IR P R IC E l
Gen. Repairs A Improv. 17 yrs.
locally. San lor Disc. 333 3105.
Rem odeling
$
C a rp e n try
R e p a ir, screen room s A
repair. Phone 3310114, 133
IM S attar 4 p.m .
C A R R IE R
C O N S T R U C T IO N .
A ll types of c a rp a n try,
plumbing, atac.. rooting, Inte xte rior
p a inting,
w a ll­
papering, tile work, cement
work, chimney cleaning. Lie.
insured A Bonded. Free Est.
Call Paul 111 4017. Repair
work our specialty.

O U R R A T E S A R E LO W E R
La ka vie w N ursing ce n te r
717 E. Second St., Sanlord
___________ 373-4707___________

Pointing*
Pressure Ctesning
In te rio r, e x te rio r, re p a irs,
painting or staining, spray or
brush, w a llp a p e r, w e llte iIng and lentured callin gs.
Residential or commercial,
local references. Na Job too
big or small, we handle them
all. Call, 331-M71 c r 333-7271.

feinting
G W A L T N tT JE W E L E R
104 S. Park Ave.
331*107

Mori ethoemg.Trimming
Dave Smith
Mornings 331 l l l i

Commsrdsl

Insulation
Models P ro fe iilo n e l
studio
ts ta b llih ln g file . P re stige
portfolio A com posite at
reasonable rates. 317-3311.

S A V E E N E R G Y A D O LL A R S I
Bat! A Blown. P R O N T O IN
S U L A T IO N CO. H 3 4113or &gt;341311 Frau Estimates.

Hallman Painting A Repairs.
Quality work. Free Est. Oise,
lo Seniors. 114 4470. R tftr.

fe in tin g *
feptrhanging
W allpaper hanging service.
References, Lie. Free Est. M l1441. Alter hrs. 149 4001.
NO L O N G E R U S E D C A M P IN G
G E A R IS IN D E M A N D . S E L L
IT
NOW
W IT H
A
C L A S S IF IE D AD.

Plumbing
F O N S E C A P L U M B IN G . Con
struction, Repairs, Emergen
cy. Lie., Bonded, Ins. Paul 321
Freddie Robinson Plumbing 4000
Hwy E . 44. Repair leaking
taucal
A
w a te r
closet,
Sprinklwr systems. Service 14
hrs. Bus. 1714510. Res. 321
0704.
Looking for gerden equipment?
Reed today's classified ads for
good buys.

pressureCtesning'
Mobil# Homes. Houses, Roots.
Trucks, Tra ile r, Etc. Portable
Unit. Harold Rankin 173 1755.

Rsmodsling
Com plete Hom e R epairs A
Remodeling, Painting, room
additions, drywall, etc. 70 yrs.
exp. Call 331 5097 eves.

Rsmodsling Specialist
We handle tha
Whole Ballot Wax

B . E . Link Const.
$22-7029
Financing Available

Sandblasting
S A N D B L A S T IN O
D A V IS W E L D IN G
333-4377, SAN F O E D

ScreanfSomT*
I6.fi mdnn » § P * —--■»■1—«
W in d o w R S p ilf S

Custom
Screen
Rms.
Rescreenlng. Low Prices. New
W indow screen, glass A
window repair. 1774741.

T a x * Accounting
Services
For Businesses and Individuals.
Elliabeth A . Grindla C.P.A,
S IM M S

TopSeil
T O P S O IL for yards,
Polling Soil
Call attar 7 p.m . 177 4107

•House Painter -1st Class WorV.
reasonable prices IS years
exp Kenneth Holt 137 535*
anytime aller S.

|B |B |T r e a S tr v jc ^ ^ ^

Professional
P a ln t iH g -P x .
tartar Interior. . Remodeling
Lie. Ins. Free * 1 1 1 . 441 * 1;

H A R P E R 'S T R E E S E R V IC E
Trim m ing , removing A Land
scaping Free Est. 373 0101.

T rl-C a u a ty
Tro t
Service.
Trim m ing , rem oval, clearing,
hauling. F re t Est. i l l MIO.

�21—Situations Wanted

33—Houses Furnished

14 Hr Babbitting in my Home
Day or
Night
Summer
discount} 322 f i t o

Moderhirinq your Home? Sell no
lonqer needed but useful items
with ^ Classified Ad

37—Business Property

24-Business
Opportunities

Corner Slore Lake Mary New
Carpet. New Drapes, 1750 Mo.
373 8960 869 4044__________

SPACE INVADER
GAME ROUTES

41— Houses

Investment Irom S747S Latest
color models Call toll tree. I
8W 432 4587, M r Bennett
Golden
ented
vans,
ships

Opportunity' Sen p,,,
Gas Saver tor cars
trucks, etc Distributor
Avail 322 4079

29—Rooms
S A N F O R D — Reas wkly S.
monthly rales Util inc Kit 500
Oak Adults 641 7863
Room tor Rent
Private Entrance
322 3853

Park Ave *ownhousc, 2 I1j, kit
"Quip
C HA 134.500 F IR M
Owner 322 0903 all 5 30 p m
nr anytime wkend
Thinking about that summer
vacation? Got a better car
through the classified ads in
today's paper
Lake Mary area Corner Lot,
Shaded by larqe oaks Fishing
and Swimming near by Call
322 4193
D O N A L D G J A C K S O N ,I N C
Realtor 322 5295
By Owner 'j Bdrm, I bath,
Completely refurbished 18.000
down 132.000 Owner linan
cinq Owner Associate
323 1283

30-A partm ents
Unfurnished
1 BDR M, Washer. Dryer &amp; Pool.
1725 2 Bdrm S300 Adults. No
pets 277 1697 Orlando
F R O M S175 A UP
Efficiencies, I 6 2 Bdrms Apts
Shown by appt Call 323 1340

Completely redecorated 2 Bdrm,
I balh, large dining rm A
screened porch New kitchen A
balh with new Central HA A A
ww carpel Brick lireplace,
large shaded lot on quiet
street Mid 30's Call 322 0211
alter 1 p m

N I C E Large 3 Bdrm, upstairs
Apt, WOO includes all utilities
Inquire downstairs
1219
French Aye Vince or Gene
before 5 p m Alter 5 p m 323
IIOO

Sanlord Ravenna Park. Lovely j
Bdrm. 7 Balh Large tented
yard, CHA. tamlly rm
*
playroom, pool with privacy
fence . many extras 157.000
323 8790 Alt Noon

Enioy country living? 2 Bdrm
Apis. O ly m p ic si.
Pool.
Shenandoah Village. Open 15.
323 2920

Wonder what to do with Two?
Sell One
The quick, easy
Want Ad way
The magic
number is 327 2611 or 83 1 9993

LAKEFR O N T APARTMENTS
t. I11 A 2 Bdrm on Lake Jennie
In Sanford. Pool, rec. room,
outdoor BBQ, tennis courts &amp;
disposals Walk lo schools &amp;
shopping centers 323 0742
LUXURY
APARTM ENTS.
F a m i ly A Adults section
Poolside 2 Bdrms Master's
Cove Apts 323 7900 Open on
weekends
Mariner's Village on Lake Add
12 Bedroom Apts. Irom 1720.
Located 17 92 lust South ol
Airport Blvd. in Sanlord All
Adults 323 6170.
Spacious Modern 2 Bdrm , t bath
apt Carpeted, kit equipped,
CH&amp;A Near hospital A lake
Adults No pets 321 9253

2 Bdrm, Block Home
In Sanlord, by owner
Call lor Aoot 574 2711
3 Bdrm, 7 Balh, Pool, Cen H A,
I7i78 screen
patio.
Lot
170x130 159.000 3731113

I

REALTORS
1612 W. 1st St.

7 Bdrm Apartment'' 1'' ^
lurniihcd Utilities Included.
322 4573

R E A L T O R , MLS
2201 S. French Suite 4
Sanford

24 HOUR Q 322-9283
In
the
good
ole
sum
mertime it’s a great time to
sell
something
with
a
Classified Ad Just dial 327
"21W •at
&lt;31 9993-., lor
a
quirk results ad
____

HAL COLBERT REALTY m.
M U L T IP L E LISTIN G R EA L TO R

31A —Duplexes

323-7832

Avail 5 I. New 7 BR. 7 bath, kit.
appl., carpeted, drapes No
pets 133 5 00 7535 Ridgewood
Day 295 0072 Eve 798 1773
S A N F O R D Lake Mary area 2
Bdrm. a i r . n o pets I child 1240
mo Call 834 1735

For Rent 2 Bdrm, t Balh New
Duplex, Sanford area All
appliances, inside utility,
washer dryer hookup Availa
ble April 6 Call Orlando 151
4144 or 295 1768 Evenings

Eves 327 0613
707 E . 25th SI.
Ouick Sale or Lease. Sanlord
Area, by owner. 1 Bdrm. 1
Bath, Kitchen equip., WasherDryer, Nice quiet neighbor­
hood, 143,900.339.5519
Deltona Lake Front. 70 Acres on
paved
Rd , 185,000 Wm
Malinowski Realtor. 321 7983.

32- Houses Unfurnished

3 Bdrm. I ' i bath Nice yard 1310
+ sec dep. 1413 W Valencia
Cl 373 1570.
Lemon Blutl 7 Bdrm, 1 Bath,
Fenced yard, Dock. 1390 mo
301141 7710

A‘jk4TC.lAtJ -

r.&lt;

HI Ai tO ie ,

Office (305) 373 6960
Alter Hours (305) 371 4713
Nice 3 Bdrm , ? Balh Cenl H A
Many extras on 3 loll 141.500
Spotless 3 Bdrm, I ' i balh with
14x32 It Family room Stone
r ireplace Owner will assist
with linancing 149.900
Building Lots 13.000.

33— Houses Furnished
Lovely Furnished house con
venient D e n a ry location
Reasonable rent
Retired
Adults preferred 118 5773
Deltona
Attr acti ve homes
Neat, dean No pets 1 Bdrm,
1700 7 Bdrm, 1725 Mo tst, last,
security

THE U L T I M A T E C H A R M E R .
Huge Family Home in Counlry
on over 1 Acre Close lo town
but in another world Gracious
large rooms and style to please
all You II (all in love with this
one Has 7 Bdrm Guesl house
187,900 with owner terms

574 1040

Cal I Bart
real

estate

\

N NlULY TIL 9 U0
SAT

The Time Tested F ,rm
Req Real Estate Broker
108 W&gt;Commercial SI.

03

322 1123

AND SUNDAY Ml b P M

T E L E V I S I O N 25" RCA
Solid stale color console in
Walnut Cabinet, W a rra n ty
Pav 1159 or 115 monthly
Financing, no down payment
BAKS1104N Mills ( 17 971
Orlando 891 3810

323 4102. J49 54W, J J J 1959

Multiple Listing Service

Harold Hall Realty
R E A LTO R S , M LS
323-5774

50—Miscellaneous for Sate

41— Houses

D a y o rN iq h t

P L E N T Y OF ROOM in this 4
Bdrm, 2 Bath. Separate Dining
Rm, Family Rm, Screened
porch, split plan, Fenced yard.
Plnecrest area 144,900.
F H A A VA B U Y E R S . H A V E
Y O U S E E N T H IS H O M E ?
Low, low down on this ) Bdrm
home In Pinecresl. Backs up to
beautilul wooded Oaks. Only
137,500,
E X C E L L E N T CASH T O M O R T ­
G A G E on this 3 Bdrm home.
Gigantic fenced yard, whole
house tike brand new. Terrific
country setting. 139,500.
Y O U R OWN H O M E A T L A S T . 7
story. 2 Bdrm Plus nursery. 2
Balh, Eat-in kitchen, Paneled
Living Rm. Established area
Only 134-500 135.000
B E S T M O B I L E H O M E B U Y IN
N O RTH S E M IN O LE . 1 3
Bdrm, 3 Bath 13 Bdrm, 3 Bath.
Kitchens equipped. 3 Green
Houses, stocked llsh pond.
Fenced, security lights and
more on 5 Acres Plus or minus.
195,000.

Osleen ’ • ot an Acre
114.000

Terms

5 Acres. Wooded Terms 122,500
Owner linancing 4 2 with Pool
114,900
Close in 2 1 with cottage 139,900
10 Acres Terms 151.000
4 I with extra lot 144.500
Blk Duplex, 7 BR

Ea

139,900

BA TEM A N R E A LTY
Lie Real Estate Broker
7140 Sanlord Ave

32I-Q75.9

Air Conditioner
10.000 B T U
Fedders Used 3 Mos., 1125.,
Lincoln Arc Welder. 225 Amps,
good cond, 175, B A E Cash
register new, 1195 ?. Hp
Compressor and coil, SU5
831 8253
Brown rock, sand.cement
Grease traps, dry wells
Window sills, lintells blocks
Precast steps, patio stone
MiracleConcrotoCo
309 Elm Ave
322 5751

A L L FLO R ID A R E A L T Y
OF SANFORD R E A LTO R
7544$, French Ave
MS;

Walerbed Sheets
King and Queen sire, 129
831 8104

T?j07Jt

3J7 0779

Hospital Bed

323 7113 32? 5353

I22S
Sanford Vintage 6 Bdrm, 3 Oath
on Lge. Lot, 155,000 Wm
Mallciowski R E A L T O R 377
7913. Eves. 377 3387
O S T E E N Small 2 Bdrm home
Newly remodeled, new appll
ances Fenced, Lot 72x159 5
116.500 373 0417

C A L L 323-5774

V A C U U M RAINBO W
Repossessed
with
all
at
tachmenls A power head Like
new warranty Pay 5248 or 118
monthly. Financing, no down
payment
BAKS 1104 N
Mills 07 921
Orlando 869 3810

349 5791

Layaway Balance

T V s FO k R E N T
Color A Black A white Free
delivery A pickup Ji m my's
TV Rental Phone Anytime
373-4770
TELEVISION
RCA. 19" television XLIOOSolid
Stale
Color
Portable
Warranty. Pay 1149 or 114
Monthly Financing No Down
Payment
BAKS 1104 N Mills Ave. (17-92)
Orlando 1-491-3840
Good Used T V ’s, 175 A up
M ILLER S
21190rlando Dr
Ph. 322 0352
TV repo 19" Zenith Sold orib
549) 75 Bal $183 11 or J17 mo
Agenl 339 6J81

STENSTROM

tREALTY

-

REALTORS'

S anford's Sales Leader
w e l is t a n d s e l l

M O R E H O M ES T H A N
A N Y O N E IN T H E
SANFORD AREA
J U S T L I S T E D 4 Bdrm, 2 bath, 7 ^
story home in Dreamwold) —
Great room with F P, FI rm A
dining rm , overlook living rm
from balcony! Lots of extras!
Lovely landscaping! S49.900.
J U S T F OR Y O U ! 3 Bdrm, 1 balh
home with CHA, large paneled
FI. rm with F P , split bdrm
plan, spacious master bdrm,
patio A morel 151.000.
F A M I L Y 'S D E L I G H T 3 Bdrm, t
bath, 3 story home in
D re am w o ld ! Upstairs u n­
finished but plumbing in lor
bath! C HA , ww carpet, eat in
kitchen A lust 3 yrs. oldl
549.9001

M AYFA IR V IL L A !! 7 A 3
Bdrm., 3 Balh Condo Villas,
next to Maytair Country Club,
Select your lot, tloor plan A
Interior decori Quality con­
structed by Ihoemaker lor
47,300 A up! Open Saturday
10:30-5:00 A Sun. Noon-5!
ASSOF T E S N E E D E D ! New
or experienced
Call Herb
Slenstrom today A discover
success)

C A LL A N Y T IM E

» 322-2420
C A L L A N Y T IM E

Reg. Real Eslal* Broker \ ~ Z
lis.axta .
Fvel|).jt|a
N E W LIS T ING
W E K I V A R IV E R a c c e s s
T his 7 ildrm, I ' i hath mobile
home sits on an acre Lots ot
trees A screened porch, too!
575.000 P S You may be able
to .assume a 10*. interest rate
mortgag e with a slreablc
balance

'•rc^^Mobile Homes
See our beautilul new B R O A D
M O R E , Ironl A rear BR's
G R E G O R Y M O B I L E H O M ES
1803 Orlando Or
323 5200,
VA A F H A Financing

small Appliances like new
Household items, clothing,
purses, shoes, Suitcases, cralt
material, mist Priced to sell
Friday and Saturday 9 5 110
Meadowlark Dr (Robin Hill),
Altamonte Springs
Yard Sale Friday and Salur
day 7800 S Park Ave Airless
paint
spraye r,
clothes,
cosmetics, furniture. Etc,
Garage Sale Furniture, clothes,
tra cto r
la w n m o w e rs ,
Household Items, Plants
Saturday Orly, 9 5 741? S.
Orange Ave off E 25th 51 Is!
let* after railroad track

Investor
Buying
Income
Property Principals only No
brokers Algrean, Box 4943
Winter Park, FI 32793
We buy equity in Houses,
apartments, vacant land and
Acrcaqe. ,
LUCKY
IN
V E S T M E N T S , P O Box 2500,
Sanlord, Fla 32771. 323 4741.

47-A—M ortgages Bought
_ _ _ _ &amp; Sold________
We pay cash for 1st A 2nd
mortgages. Ray Legg, Lie.
M orl gage Broker, 1104 E
Robinson, 78? 1279.

55—Boats &amp; Accessories
35 Hp Motor, Mercury
Good Condition
Call All 6 339 1720

Gel lull exposure
take that
" F o r Sale" sign down A run a
classified ad Call 372 7611 or
8)1 9993.

SO—Miscellaneous fo r Sale
D R A G L I N E FOR S A L E - Made
by American Will handle 1&gt; or
*4 yard bucket New GM
Oiesel engine A new cables.
1305] 322 8313 Ask lor Tony

Come and visit Sanlord s newest
Clothing Consignment slore
Serving the entire family
Quality clothing wanted! Open
Monday Ihru Saturday 9 a m
1pm.

R EA LTO R S
Multiple Listing Service

3104 S Sanlord Ave
Corner ol Airport Blvd. and
Sanlord Ave You're always
llrst al Second Image.

17 93
Lk. Mary
Blvd.

s ec o n d im a g e

PIANO Upright antique piano
Asking 1500 Call 323 4552,
Excellent cond
Conn Minuet Organ
Good Condition
Call 339 9)17

C O C K E R S P A N I E L . Bull. 1 yr
old Good lor Adults Pay lor
ad 323 7943

79-Trucks &amp; Trailers

AKC German short hair porn
ters 1 wks 3 male, 1100 ea
Days 323 1413, Eves 323 1108

79 Plymouth Arrow Pickup 4
C y l , 1J500 or 17000 down A
lake over payments ol 1177
mo M8 4014

BABY C O C K A TlEL S
Pleds &amp; Grays
Call 172 0044

It *ou don t tell people how are
they going to know? Tell them
with a classified ad, by calling
322 7111 or 831 9993

66—Horses

80—Autos for Sale

7 Mares
Reasonable
322 7972

67—

Livestock Poultry

B E E F C A L V E S Weaned heilers,
bulls steers 1120 up Cows &amp;
slaughter beet Delivery avail
19041 749 4755

68—

Gold, Sliver, Coins, Jewelry, non
ferrous metals, KoKoMo Tool
Co 918 W. lsl SI 32) 1100
O P E N S AT. 9 A M TO I P M .

71 C H E V Y IM P A L A 4 Dr Exc
Cond , 51900 or best otter 372
0537 between 5 A 1 p m

Antiques-Orlental Rugs
Music Boxcs-S lot Machines
Bridges Antiques
373 7801

1980 Merc. Cougar XR 7, fully
loaded, Aulo, AC AM FM,
moon root, like new 17800
373 3147

Clean Furniture wanted to buy
or consign Auction every
Monday night Sanford Auc
lion. 1715 S French 373 7340

Looking For a New Home?
Check Ihe Want Ads lor houses
ol every sue and price

72—Auction

M A V E R I C K ' 73, 7 Dr , l Cyl ,
aulo, radio, yellow A black
Looks A runs like new 11.595
or otter 831 3239

O R L A N D O 'S O N L Y M O N T H L Y

Free Admission A Parking
SAT , APR 16 9a m lo9p m
SUN , APR 19, 10a m to 1p.m.
NATIO N AL G U A R D ARMORY
7809 S Ferncreek Ave , Orlando
I Blk S ol Michigan St
O V E R 40 D E A L E R S For Into
Call 898 2016
J A M P R O M O TIONS

Saturday. April 18. 10 AM
Partial Listing
30 Farm tractors, 7 handcock 792
elevated scrapers, 9 12 yards,
471 GMC engines Wabco 111
qradcr 1977 Ford F 700 LWH
Chassis Cabnew engine Lcrol
105 C F M compressor Allas
Copco 170 C F M deisel com
pressor Case450track loading
shovel Massey 135 Traclor
lilted lorklilt. Lancer side
loader lorklilt 3 1970 Ford
School Buses I9FJ Rio Gar
bagelrucks 1959 Brockway 10
ton dump Bush hogs Hail
mower
Scraper
box,
cultivator, etc, etc Also Misc
Hems

51-A— Furniture
New Singer Bedroom Set
Dresser,
M ir r o r ,
Chest,
Headboard 1399 Dining Room
Table, 4 chairs A hutch. 1799
United Furniture Sale 331 7288
W ILSON M A IER F U R N IT U R E
372 5127
Beautiful
Chairs,
months
8)1 8753

Consignment Accepted Dally
Hwy 92 Daytona Beach,
904 255 831 1

Year old Code A Phone 1500
answering
device
with
remote control. 1140 322 7540

W ANTEO
used 4 wheel
drive loader Leave
mcssaqeat 859 8510

BROWSE A N D SAVE
It'S
easy and tun
The Want Ad
W a y ______________ ___________

61— Building M aterials

M A P L E Loveseal A chair, large
sota. doublewide chair A
rocker Best oiler 372 3167

For Estate C om m erc ial A
Residential Auctions A Ap
prusals Call Dell's Auction
" ” 5 1 2 0 _________________

Kenmore parts, service, used
washers M O O N E Y A P P L I
ANC E S 3?) 0197
ONE P H O N E C A L L S T A R T S A
C L A S S I F I E D A D ON ITS
R ESULTFUL
END
THE
N U M B E R IS 322 711 1

1919 Datsun S W, A C. new tires,
and engine reworked, 1550
373 7788 alter 2 p m
It you don't believe that want ads
bring results, try one, aid
listen to your phone ring Dial
372 7111 or 831 9993

GARAGE
SALE

75—Recreational Vehicles

*4195

1977 R O C K W O O D motor home
22', sleeps 4, sell contained,
awning A root air 20,318 miles
Call 372 1775 alter 3 p m

1978 Cordoba

' "• *3495

76—Aulo Parts

1974 Chev. Malibu

*1495

moo
and Up Call Richard at 339
9100 or 834 4105

r e b u il t

b a tte r ie s

1980 Concord 4 dr.

TIRES
2 700x15 4 ply nylon,
like new Mounted on rims w
tubes. 150 831 1774

*5995

NEW

77—Junk Cars Removed

SA N FO RD
M OTO R CO

Top Dollar Paid lor Junk A Used
cars, trucks A heavy equip
ment 322 5990

AMC/JEEP

B U Y J U N K CAR S A T R U C K S
Fro mttO totSOor more
Call 322 1174,322 4410

508 S F r e n c h Ave
322 4387

FRONT DISC BRAKE JOB

*41

New Pads
Machine Rotors
New Grease Seals
Pack Inner A Outer Bearing)

62—Lawn Garden

JIM LASH'S

DAY

1978 Jeep Pickup

197? Prowler Travel Trailer, 24
It Inquire al Lot 21 11700
Lk Monroe Pk., OeBary Ft

95

Relill Brake Fluid
Check Calipers A
Master Cylinder

BLUE BOOK SERVICE CENTER

F it L D IR T &amp; TO P SOIL
Y E L L O W SAflO
Call Clark &amp; Hirf 37? 7580

4M4 Hwy. 17-91 Between Santord A Longwood, Phone 121 0741
Hours 8:00 a m .
lo 1:30p.m.

C LA S S IFIE D
AD S
MOVE
M O U N T A IN S ot merchandise
every day.

R E F . R E P O . t i c o . tt, troll free,
i Orig 1529, now 1705 or 119 mo
,
Agent 339 1381.

72 Opal Hally Good Condition.
11100 or bcsl oiler See al 203
Hays Dr 322 7907 all 1 p m

Little want ads bring big. big
results Just try one 327 7111
or 831 999)

IS b a r g a i n
d a y i n t h e W A N T a d s 372
7111 or 8)1 9993

EVERY

74 C H E V Y V E G A Hatchback
Aulo. Air, PS, good sticker,
good tires, no rust 1995 831
1724

72—Auction

STEEL
B U ILD IN G
SALE
30x48' 13.987. 40x77 11.748.
48x91 19.931. 80x 150 129.780
Call today 331 4147

52—Appliances

1919 M E R C U R Y 4 Dr Sedan I
owner, new inside A out. V 8,
aulo, PS, PH, good sticker,
told air, 5795 831 1774

For Sale 71 Plymouth window
van. auto, cruise, A C, cur
tains, bunk, 13,200 322 9178

Equipm ent Auction

1978 Singer Futura Fully auto,
repossessed, used very short
time Original 1593, abl 1181 or
171 mi). Agent 339 8381

74 O LDS C U T L A S S Pushbutton
window, Air, PS, A T A other
extras, 175 Mo. No mooey
down Applications by phone
339 9100 or 834 4605

75-A— Vans

62A -F arm E quipm ent

51—Household Goods

Ford l Biro. 1979 ? Door Auto .
Air. etc 9500 mi Like new
14495 831 8753

D A Y T O N A A U T O AUCTION
Hwy 92, t mile west ot Speed
way, Daytona Beach, will hole
a public A U T O A U C T I O N
every Wednesday al 8 p m It'!
the only one in Florida You sek
the reserved price Call 904
755 8311 for further de ta ils..

W anted to Buy

DON'T S T O R E IT, S E L L IT with
a low cost Classilied Ad

Closed Office, must sell IBM
typewriters, Model C, Irom 199
up 862 117?

68 P O N I T A C F I R E B I R D
114 00 mo No money down
323 78)4

69 VW Exc Cond Custom in
terior Many new,terns Great
Mileage 11500 322 3411

it's tike pennies Irom heaven
when you sell "Don't Needs"
with a want ad

60-A— Business
Equipment

Auto A Industrial. 100
Syn
thellc. I0W 40 Motor Oil
Case lot 130 305 339 1051

Dmette set. 4 chairs
oval qlass table
plexiglass Used 3
Cost 1750. Sell 1350

H O N D A 1976 360
Huns Good llSO
177 4&gt; 13 Call alter 5 00

59__Musical Merchandise

Don't Despair Or Pull Your Hair
Use A Want Ad 322 2111 or
831 99V3________________________
v myi nainsuns &gt;4 w each
A R M Y N A V Y S U R PLU S
llOSflnlord Ave
322 5791

'73 Lincoln Mark IV Clean Best
oiler
Lowery Organ. Best
otter Load ol Flea Market
Merchandise. Make oiler 331
4457 All 10 a m

323-2222
323-6363

1515
French

73' T R O J A N Cabin cr uiserNew lloal on tandem trailer
Surqe brakes. 13500 Alter 1
322 1311

G E TV color, 18x40 cabinet
working, 175
T y p e w rite r.
Royal BOO, Excellent. 140 Desk
A Chair 48x27, Glass lop.
excellent. 1140 High pressure,
hardy spray pump, 1250 1771
Chrysler New Yorker, 44,000
m t„ Loaded, 11295 Several
other misc Items 485 Allison
St., Long wood

3U U S E F IR S T ST

4 Month old Mate Beagle. Trl
Color Beautilul Iralures Call
305 668 8710 Alt 5 p m

A N T I Q U E SHOW

ol 13150 on Ziq Zaq sewing
machine or 7 payments ol 11
Call Credit Manager 372 941)
Sanford Plaja

47—Real Estate Wanted

65—Pefs-Supplies

1980 Honda CB 7S0K wind
jammer equipped 13500 or
11700 and lake over payments
ot 193 mo M l 4014

A N T I Q U E &amp; Modern dolls.
Kewple dolls &amp; figurines,
Alexander dolls. 118 1131

5-1—Garage Sales

Rabbits tor Sale
Young and Healthy, 14 each
339 1502

JUNI
P0RZIG REALTY

1976 Honda Express
Moped 117$
Call 32) 4071

L A W N M O W E R S AL E 3 SMr
Special Availa ble nowhere
but Western Aulo, Sanlord

Washer repo GE deluxe model
Sold crig 1409 35. used short
t i n ? Bal 1189 14 or 119 35 mo
\Oent 339 8331

53—TV RodiaSfereo

5 AC R E P A R C E L S Geneva and
Osteen Call lor information
STEM PER AGENCY
R E A L T O R 122 4991
E vi s

Brand New. push button control
has probe Originally lit* ,
balance 13»8 119 monthly
.338 8386

The sooner you place your
classified &gt;sd. the sooner you
will get results

C O U N T Y L I V I N G 3 Bdrm ?
Balh home, over 7,000 sq t|
surrounded by 7 acres ot
oranqe groves 1175,000

78-A—Mopeds

4?— Law*- Gorier

M IC R O W A V E

Rental Cars
Availa bit

Lincoln - Mercury

S P O TL IG H T
SAVIN GS
'-------ON

l&lt;)8?
lN7___

iVE
ALSO SAVE

.

Sale Ends,
^

T
‘V

-•

4 21 81

’A ; '

• i-

''/*&gt;

USED CAR SPECIALS

1971ORANO MMQUII

______

STH #1157A .'
ABSOLUTELY LIKE NEW

STK a l » 4
SHOWROOMC0KAT ION- LOADttP

• 1 7 7 5 *
“ 6* —

19 71CORDOOA

1*77 T O W N COOP*
STK. a t 163
MOO N* OOF-MUCH MORE

H
l i ”
• • • •

TO INTROD UCE THE
NEW HIGH I E C H N O I.O G Y
L N / W E WIL L O F F E R
THE LA R G E ST D I S C O U N T S
IN C F N T H A L F L O R I D A

UN ENTIRF INVLNI 0RY
^ LARGEST DISCOUNTS IN HISIUIW "

OHNSUNDAY

197* W H Y *

im m a c u la te c o n d itio n

hey . i "w a s

CLOSE TO i 4 j bdrm, 2 Bath,
Furnished Mobile home, with
guest cottage, and large lot
145.000

12 M O S . / 1 2 , 0 0 0 M IL E W A R R A N T Y A V A I L A B L E

STK 441132A

1 (

nice

Wednesday, April IS, 1811— SB

52—Appliances

t t 1 Volume Lincoln Mercury Dealer
Central Florida'* #1

BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE
UN PREMISES BELOW PRIME^ATE

v

'nc

R E A L T O R . 372 7498

L
\
\

II If

R ID G E W O O D AC R E S ! Duplex
loti Zoned. all utilities, paved
roads
Near
1H1I
Will
subordinate for builders. Buy
now I Build now or laterl
Just It lelll Fro m 114,175!

Jaruge so lull there's r,o room
lor the car? Clean it out with a
Want Ad in the Herald PH
377 7611 or 831 9993

3 Bdrm, 7 B Quiet street nr
Maytair Country Club 1350
mo 1st A last * Sec Dcp 377
7315._________________________

SI M RJu
c.o in p a n tj

Evening Herjld, Sanlord, FI.

with Major Hoople

AS'Pffl T'3 3TSW\ i f P0&amp;6\E ■ \ CtfMlN'
W/TF MY XEWSCW! St J iS m r jK ) FuK Y0U AT THE
CITY
CHEFS 9JY &gt;-Sn
'
A KENNEL AFTEF
ANYTHIXJ /F VU TELL f V
/ (
I HAP MY
EM ITS A \f w
M s W
V l i t t l e l .a u s h .'
?;$£&lt;2\‘EFY B E!\' y**
FCUSHT B&gt; THE
J-EsTABUSMMBNT! J /

ROBBIE’!!
REALTY

31_A partm cnts Furnished

1 Bedroom, porch, near town,
large yard. 1200 mo, 175
deposit. 311 5889
-

ww our the poor } , (

322 7972

C O U N TR Y LIV ING
10 min
Irom Sanlord. 4 Bdrm, 3 balh,
fireplace, 4 car gar , cen. H A.
I acre wooded lot 183.500 5
Adjoining acres avail By
owner Eves A Wknds 322 71 It

Spacious I BDR M A P T . 1175
m r Mature Persons June
Porng Realty, R E A L T O R 322
6178

Furnished apartmrtits lor Senior
Cilltens 318 Palmetlo A v e , J.
Cowan No phone calls.

f il t y

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

41-Houses

STK. •PUB*
MINT CONOITIOffLOADED

ia 5 H »

8TK. RTI40A
HURRY FOR THIS
IS O M
MI

S T K .R P M M
SUPER. SUPER CAR

IV O O M A tC M N f
*51511"
■ ■■■

19*0 TO W N

197V TO W N C A t

r -M

-M

I/I9 S F

1979 COOOAK X*-7
BTK.RP1173
TWI8 WEEK’S SPECIAL

VEEKENO SPECIAL

1991

IMS"

STK. a p t

its

■ »* •

IC IT C *

DEALER LOANER CAR

3555 HIGHWAY 17-92, LONGW OOD, FLORIDA • 6 3 1 -0 0 9 0 • 322-48H4

»

&gt;

t

�IB— Evinlng Herald, Senford, Ft.

Wednesday, April 15, 1911

[C O U PO N

Chance Meeting With Shaw Led To Play
11 was only a chance meeting wilh George Bernard Shaw,
hut it changed the course of Jerome Kilty's life.
Kilty, whose play about Shaw, "Dear U ar," starring Jane
Alexander and Edward Herrmann airs on PBS tonight, tells it
this way.
' "During the war, I was a navigator in the U.S. Air Force
stationed north of tendon near Shaw's cottage. Shaw was then
near 90 and on a whim one day, a buddy of mine and I bicycled
over to his house and knocked on the door. Wo were told he
liked Yanks."
An ancient gentleman with a walking stick and a long white
beard, wearing plus-fours and a Norfolk jacket, appeared.
“ He took us around back to show off his studio," Kilty
remembers. "It was a portable shed on wneels that could be
rotated to face the sun os it moved across the sky. It reminded
me of a gypsy caravan."
Kilty described the interior as an austere, little cell with a
high window. Shaw told the visitors he preferred a window
without a view because he hated to be distracted.
Kilty admits he knew little about the famous playwright and
critic at the time — "he was someone from another planet" —
but he made an impression on the 19-year-old serviceman.

Their meeting was the first in a series of events that led Kilty
to write his best known play, "Dear IJar," the story of the
correspondence between Shaw and Mrs. Patrick Campbell, the
woman he loved and the actress for whom he wrote
"Pymalion," later popularized as "My Fair Lady."
"During the war I met the woman who had smuggled the
correspondence between Shaw and Mrs. Pat out of France in a
hatbox just days before the German occupation. 1 thought the
letters were very dram atic."
The letters were eventually returned to Mrs. Patrick
Campbell’s heirs, but in the early ‘50s, they were published and
Kilty got the idea of writing his play.
It took a lengthy court battle, but Kilty was finally given the
rights to produce "Dear Liar."
Kilty and his wife performed readings of the work in
progress at first. loiter he mounted a bigger production of the
play at the Studcbaker Theater in Chicago.
But when Katharine Cornell read the script, she called Kilty
and said, “ I've read your play and I'm going to do it." Cornell
and Brian Aheme toured in it for one year including a three
month run in New York.
Since then "Dear Liar" has played all over die world, in­
cluding 40 different productions In Russia where it's still in the
repertory of the Moscow Art theater.
"In Russia, they say the play illustrates the tragic situations
In which we let our artists deteriorate in Capitalistic coun­
tries," Kilty quips.

SPRING SALE
ge

W I T H T H I S CO U P O N

MONTHLY TREATMENT
ROACHES-ANTS-MICE
Regular Charge *42.00 Initial And
*14.00 Each M onth For 1 Year

DURING APRIL &amp; MAY ONLY
*37.00 INITIAL CHARGE AND *12.00
EACH M ONTH ON A N N U A L A G R E E M E N T
ASK A B O U T O U R D IS C O U N T TO
C H U R C H E S A N D O T H E R N O N -P R O FIT
o r g a n iz a t io n s .

T A K E A D V A N T A G E OF F R E E
T E R M I T E IN S P E C T IO N
C A L L A B O U T O UR N E W LAWN
CONTRO L PROGRAM

ART BROWN PEST CONTROL

This special production of "Dear Liar," made possible by a
grant from Hallmark Cards Inc., was produced by David
Susskind in conjunction wilh WGBH-Boston.

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�Evening Hereto, Sanford, El,

Easter Is A Time O f Worship, Feasting

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Easter is a movable feast and ranks in the Christian world
with the celebration of Christmas.
Centuries ago, conflicting calendars (lunar and solar) led to
our current problem of when this most holy of times will be
observed.
The pagan tradition dictated a festival of spring at the vernal
equinox, March 20. The Passover or Jewish Pasch is also
celebrated during this season of the year.
And it was during the feast of Passover that Jesus, a Jew,
was crucified and rose from the dead.
The Christian calendar does not follow the Jewish calendar.
There were ancient disputes over ecclesiastical authority, and
we learn that the Christians wanted a Holy Week beginning
with Palm Sunday, proceeding to Good Friday and ending on
Easter Sunday commemorating the resurrection. Thus,
Easter may fall anywhere between March 22 and April 25.
However Christian the worship services may be in churches
throughout the world at Eastertime, pagan elements linger.
These are a bow to spring and rebirth following the winter
months. The bunny rabbit comes to the forefront as a nonreligious symbol at Easter representing, from ancient times,
fecundity, and eggs "colored like rays of the returning sun"
abound.
In many families, the baking of the "hot cross bun" repeats
the Christian symbol, the "boon distributed among the faith­
ful," and it would not be Easter without such a bread.
Easter is a time for looking forward. A time of feasting... and
one that calls for a gathering of family and friends for a
traditional Easter feast, following worship services heralding
"Christ is Risen."
MARINATED BEAN SALAD
1 package (10 ounces) frozen cut green beans, thawed
1 cup canned chick peas, drained
4 cup thinly sliced sweet red pepper
1 small red onion, thinly sliced
4 cup olive oil
U cup cider vinegar
1 tablespoon prepared mustard
4 teaspoon flavor enhancer
4 teaspoon sugar
*4 teaspoon salt
'4 teaspoon crushed dried mint leaves
4 teaspoon pepper
In a medium bowl, combine green beans, chick peas, red
pepper and onion. In a small bowl or cup, combine oil, vinegar,
mustard, flavor enhancer, sugar, salt, mint and pepper; mix
well. Pour over vegetables and toss lightly. Cover. Chill 1 hour
before serving. This kitchen-tested recipe makes 6 servings.
NO-COOK APPLE RELISH
1 tablespoon Dijon-type mustard or seeded mustard
3 tablespoons olive oil
&gt;4 teaspoon paprike
‘ a teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon sugar, or more to taste
Juice of 1 medium (3 ounces) lemon
1*2 teaspoons cider vinegar
3 to 4 tart apples, peeled and grated
Place mustard in a 3-cup mixing bowl. Gradually beat in
olive oil with fork or wire whisk. Stir in remaining ingredients.
Taste and adjust seasoning.
Refrigerate in a tightly covered container if relish will not be
served at one, but bring to room temperature before serving. It
will keep at least 2 months in the refrigerator, but the flavor is
best when used within 1 month. This kitchen-tested recipe
makes about 2 cups, depending on size of apples used.

Parmesan Crumb Topping
In small amount of boiling water, separately cook and drain
artichoke hearts, carrots, mushrooms and onions. In 14-quart
casserole, toss together cooked vegetables and zucchini. Pour
Herb and Lemon Sauce over vegetables. Sprinkle with Par­
mesan Crumb Topping. Bake, uncovered, in 350-drgrce oven 30
minutes or until zucchini is tender. This kitchen-tested recipe
makes 4 servings.

Wednesday, April IS, Ifll— 1C

jQ O o t

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EASTER MENU

HERB AND LEMON SAUCE: In small saucepan, gradually
stir 1 cup milk into 1 tablespoon corn starch until smooth. Add 2
tablespoons margarine, 4 teaspoon salt, 4 teaspoon pepper.
Stirring constantly, bring to boil over medium heat and boil 1
minute. Remove from heat. Stir in 2 tablespoons lemon juice, 1
teaspoon dried dill and 1 tablespoon chopped parsley. This
kitchen-tested recipe makes 1 l-3rd cups sauce.
PARMESAN CRUMB TOPPING: In small bowl, stir
together 4 cup soft bread crumbs, 2 tablespoons chopped fresh
parsley. 2 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese and 1
tablespoon melted margarine. This kitchen-tested recipe
makes about 2-3rd cup.
(Note: Recipes may be doubled.)

GLAZED HAM
ASPARAGUS VINAIGRETTE
MARINATED BEAN SALAD
NO-COOK APPLE RELISH
PUFFED POTATO PUDDING
HERB VEGETABLE BAKE

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HERBED OIL AND
VINEGAR DRESSING
1 cup corn oil
&gt;4 cup cider vinegar
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon dry mustard
1 teaspoon paprika
l2 teaspoon dried tarragon leaves
Dash pepper
In small Jar with tight fitting lid, place corn oil, vinegar, salt,
mustard, paprika, tarragon and pepper. Cover: shake.well.
Refrigerate.
Shake thoroughly before serving. Serve on assorted salad
greens. This kitchen-tested recipe makes 1*4 cups.
ASPARAGUS
VINAIGRETTE
Follow recipe for Hcrbed Oil and Vinegar Dressing. Place
14 pounds fresh asparagus (about 36 stalks), cleaned, cooked
in shallow dish. Pour dressing over asparagus. Cover;
refrigerate 2 to 3 hours. Remove from dressing and serve on
lettuce-lined plates. Tills kitchen-tested recipe makes 6 ser­
vings.
(Note: Recipes may be doubled.)
GLAZED HAM
4 cup dark corn syrup
&gt;2 cup firmly packed brown sugar
1 smoked whole ham (12 to 15 pounds) fully cooked, with
bone in
In small bowl, stir together corn syrup and brown sugar.
Line large roasting pan with foil. Score ham about 4-inch
deep. Place ham on rack in prepared pan. Insert meat ther­
mometer in thickest part of ham making sure thermometer
does not touch bone. Roast in 325-dcgreo oven 4 to 4 4 hours or
until internal temperatures reaches 16(kiegrees. About 30
minutes before ham is done, brush frequently with corn syrup
mixture. Serve warm or cold. This kitchen-tested recipe
makes about 26 to 34 servings.
(Note: 1 smoked whole cook-before-eating ham (12 to 14
pounds) may be substituted for fully cooked ham. Prepare as
above, but roast about 3 4 to 4 hours or until internal tem­
perature reaches 140-degrees.
PUFFED POTATO
PUDDING
3 medium Idaho potatoes
1 teaspoon salt
4 cup margarine
4 cup minced onion
4 cup chicken broth
3 eggs well beaten
4 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon pepper
3 tablespoons chopped parsley
Wash potatoes and cut into squares. (Cut into uniform-size
pieces if potatoes vary in size.) Place potatoes in large
saucepan with 1-inch cold water. Add salt. Bring to a boil,
cover, reduce heat, simmer 20 to 25 minutes until potatoes are
tender. Drain; peel potatoes. Meanwhile, in small skillet, melt
margarine; saute onion until soft. In large bowl of electric
mixer, beat potatoes until they are smooth and free of all
lumps. Add chicken broth, eggs, oinion, parsley, salt and
pepper; mix well. Pour mixture into greased 14-quart
casserole. Bake in 350-degree oven 35 to 40 minutes until top is
puffed and lightly browned. This kitchen-tested recipe makes 6
portions.
HERB VEGETABLE BAKE
1 package (10 ounces) frozen artichoke hearts
1 cup thinly sliced carrots
1 cup small whole mushrooms
1 cup very small white onions
1 cup thinly sliced zucchini
Herb and Lemon Sauce

SMOKED
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P ARME R GRA Y U S D A G R A D E A

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COUNTERS H OREVOLUTION!
P EARLY
ALL STORES CLOSED EASTER SUNDAY

�l C-Ev»nlng Htnld, Sanford, FI.

Wtdnwday, April is, m i

1 Low Sodium
Dish High In
Taste Appeal

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Roasted cashew s add their own
distinctive flavor to make Chicken
Cashew, left, anything but bland,
Braised ducfcf/ng, Grectan style, right,
lightly touched with fragrant cumin,

Table salt, chemically sodium chloride, is about 40 percent
sodium. While it plays an active role In many important
physiological functions, many health professionals believe
Americans consume far too much sodium.
In the past year, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Issued joint
dietary guidelines advising Americans to “ avoid too much
sodium." The Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and
Human Needs proposed a dietary goal of 5 grams of salt per
day, the equivalent of 2 grams of sodium. Americans currently
consume 6 to IB grams of salt per day, much greater than the
physiological need.
Cutting down on our sodium consumption does not mean that
our diet will become bland and lifeless. Judicious use of spices,
herbs and other low-sodium ingredients means that we can
keep the sparkle In our meals.
The Cashew Chicken recipe suggested here is a good
example of a low-sodium dish that is high in taste appeal. Dry
roasted unsalted cashews add their own distinctive flavor to
make Cashew Chicken anything but bland.
CASHEW CHICKEN
M akesliervtngs
2 eggs
V« cup unsifted flour
1 tablespoon sugar
1 tablespoon water
2 teaspoons dry sherry
2 whole chicken breasts, skinned, boned and divided
1 cup finely chopped dry roasted unsalted cashews
1 cup peanut oil
Beat eggs slightly. Add flour, sugar, water and dry sherry;
beat until smooth.
Dip chicken pieces in egg mixture and then coat with
chopped dry roasted unsalted cashews. Place on wax paper.
Chicken may be covered and refrigerated until Just before *
serving.
Heat peanut oil In a large skillet over high heat to 375 degrees
F. Brown chicken in hot oil for 2 to 3 minutes, or until lightly
browned. Drain on paper towels. Transfer to shallow baking
pan and bake at 325 degrees F. for 20 to 25 minutes, or until
done.
DUCKLING GRECIAN STYLE
3 tbs. fresh lemon juice
4 tsp. ground cumin seed
4 tsp. salt
4 tsp. ground black pepper
1 Wisconsin duckling A to 5 lbs.
3 tbs. olive oil
12 oz, dry red wine
13 oz. long grain rice, uncooked
4 tsp. coriander
I pkg. frozen peas
Blend lemon juice, cumin, salt and pepper. Brush duckling
with mixture. Cover with foil. Leave at room temperature 3
hours, or refrigerate tor six. Heat oil. Brown duck rapidly over
high heat In Dutch oven. Add wine. Simmer for one hour or
until tender. Remove duck and strain stock. Return 14 pints of
liquid to pan and bring to boil. Stir in rice. Return to boil.
Reduce heal. Cover. Simmer 20 minutes. Stir In coriander,
peas and additional salt and pepper, if desired. Arrange
duckling on top of rice. Cover. Return to heat for 10 minutes (to
warm duckling through). Serve with green salad and fresh
fruit. Serves 4.

Is a one-dish meal with
coriander rice and peas.

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There are many ways to prepare chicken and It makes an
excellent base for a one-skillet dish.
A different lemony chicken is made with Bose pears added in
the last few minutes of cooking. In this way the pears remain
crisp-tender and Juicy and add a tang to a simple chicken
entree.
Make a sauce from the drippings to spoon over the chicken
and fruit. Serve with rice or noodles and a green salad. The
russet-toned Boses are an excellent choice for this dish and for
baking since they hold their shape well.
LEMON-PEA RED CHICKEN SUPREME
1 (1 4 to 3 pound chicken fryer, cut up
4 lemon
Sail, as needed
4 cup butter or margarine
4 teaspoon grated lemon peel
4 cup sherry (or chicken stock or water)
1 Western Bose pear, cored and sliced
1 or 2 teaspoons flour
4 to one-third cup water
Paprika, if desired
Rub chicken with lemon, squeezing juice onto chicken;
sprinkle with salt to taste. Let stand 15 minutes. In skillet,
brown chicken well in butter or margarine. Drain excess fat;
pour sherry over chicktn. Simmer, covered. 30to 40minutes or
until chicken is tender; turn once during simmering. Add pear,
simmer, covered, 5 to 10 minutes or until pear is conked but
firm. Remove chicken and pear to warm serving platter.
Blend flour into drippings; cook until thickened. Add water to
desired consistency. Spoon sauce over chicken and pear;
sprinkle with paprika, If desired. This kitchen-tested recipe
nukes 3 or t servings.

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WtTH THIS COUPON OOOO
THRU WED . KPBIL 22. 1SSI.

WITH THIS COUPON OOOO
THRU WED.. APRIL 22. I N I .

WITH T H It COUPON OOOO
THRU WED.. APRIL 22. I N I .

REYNOLD8

SANFORD 2944 ORLANDO ROAD. ZAVRE PLAZA A TTH E CORNER OF 17-92 6 ORLANDO ROAD

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�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, April IS, H it— JC

Set The Passover Table Proudly
Dietary Rules Limit Foods But Not Imagination
The eight-day Passover holidays, which this year begin with
sundow n April 18 and end April 26, challenge the most creative
in Jewish cookery.

ANTIPASTO VERDE
2 Granny Smith Apples, unpared, cored, sliced into wedges
1 zucchini, unpared, cut into 3-inch strips
1 cucumber, sliced
2 cups raw broccoli flowerets
1 large green pepper, seeded, cut into strips
1 small bunch scallions, cut into 3-inch lengths
3 ribs celery, cut into 3-inch sticks
Fresh-parsley sprigs
Arrange apple wedges and vegetables on large serving
platter. Garnish with fresh parsley. Serve chilled. This kit­
chen-tested recipe makes 6 to 8 servings
SAVORYAPPLECHEESE
■ DIP i Dairy)
1 package 18 ounces) cream cheese, softened at room
temperature
*2 cup sour cream
3 tablespoons minced scallions
2 tablespoons minced parsley

1 onion, cut in half
1 teaspoon salt
3 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice
teaspoon sugar
2 eggs, lightly beaten
1 cup sour cream (optional dairy)

This Jewish celebration, commemorating die liberation of
the Hebrews from Egyptian slavery more than 3,000 years ago,
is unique in its emphasis on the table.

Suggested Garnishes:
boiled potato, diced hard-cooked egg, diced cucumber,
sliced scallion, chopped radish
Wash and trim spinach; chop coarsely. In large saucepot or
kettle, combine spinach, water, onion and salt, Bring to a boil;
simmer 10 minutes. Add lemon juice and sugar; simmer 15
minutes longer. Remove from heat. Remove onion. Add small
amount of hot soup to eggs, stirring constantly; return mixture
to kettle; mix well. Serve immediately or chill and serve cold.
Garnish with sour cream, if a dairy meal, and any or all of the
suggested garnishes. This kitchen-tested recipe makes G to 8
servings.

Even with strict dietary rules, some of the most beautiful of
Jewish religious ceremonies lake place around the dinner
meal. This makes limes preceding the holidays busy for those
planning and preparing the Seder and accompanying meals.
Despite these dietary observances, each Passover table is
set proudly with an array of tempting dishes. Many will in­
clude the traditional gefilte fish (ground fish), tzimines and
potato kugel or pudding during the lovely Passover gatherings.
SPINACH BORSCHT OK SCHAV
1 pound fresh spinach
6 cups water

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G O O D TH R U T U E S D A Y . APRH 21. 1981.

2 tablespoons lime Juice
1 Granny Smith apple, pared and shredded
Heat cream cheese until fluffy; beat in sour cream,
scallions, parsley, lime Juice and salt. Fold in shredded apple.
Cover. Chill 1 hour before serving. This kitchen-tested recipe
makes about l 'i cups dip.
BEET RELISH
4 medium-size fresh beets
1 cup apple cider vinegar
*2 cup sugar
14 cup chopped onions
2 teaspoons prepared horseradish
'i teaspoon salt
Wash beets; cut off tops. Cook beets in boiling, salted water
35 to 40 minutes or until tender. Rinse beets in cold water; peel
off skin. Shred beets on conrse grater. You should have nbout
l*a cups. Iii a medium saucepan, heat vinegar; add sugar and
stir until dissolved. Add onions, shredded beets, horseradish
and salt. Boil 10 minutes. Chill thoroughly before serving. This
kitchen-tested recipe makes l l2 cups relish.
STUFFEDSEDER
CHICKEN BREASTS
2 cups small pieces broken matzoh
*2 cup orange juice
' 4 cup pareve margarine divided
'2 cup chopped onion
&gt;2 cup chopped celery
2 eggs, beaten
14 cup finely chopped fresh parsley
&gt;4 teaspoon salt
4 large whole chicken breasts, boned, split
Orange Sauce
Place broken matzoh in large bowl; add orange Juice; set
aside. In a large skillet, over medium-high heat, melt 2
tablespoons margarine. Saule onion and celery until lender;
add to matzoh mixture.
Add eggs, parsley, and salt, mix well. Place chicken breasts,
skin-si de-down, between two sheets of waxed paper. Pound
until14-inch thick. Place nbout14cup matzoh stuffing in center
of each breast. Fold sides over and fasten with food picks. Melt
remaining 2 tablespoons margarine in same skillet, saute
chicken breasts until lightly brown. Place in shallow baking
pan. Cover with aluminum foil. Bake In a 35(ktegree oven 40 to
45 minutes or until tender, Remove food picks. Serve with
Orange Sauce. This kitchen-tested recipe makes 8 servings.
ORANGESAUCE
2 tablespoons pareve margarine
l-3rd cup chopped onion
‘2 cup orange Juice
2 tablespoons potato sturch
1 can ( 1334 ounces) chicken broth
■2 teaspoon salt
'4 teaspoon paprika
3 oranges, sectioned
In medium saucepan, melt margarine; saute onion until
tender. Combine orange juice and potato starch, stir into onion
mixture. Add chicken broth, salt and paprika. Bring to a boil
over medium heat, stirring constantly. Boil 1 minute. Add
orange sections. Serve immediately. This kitchen-tested
recipe makes about 3 cups.
CARROTSOUFFLE
2 cups lightly packed grated raw carrots
2 tablespoons matzoh meal
■2 cup sugar
8 eggs, separated
'2 cup potato starch
Grated rind of 1 orange
34 cup orange Juice
In a large bowl, mix carrots, matzoh meal, sugar, egg yolks,
potato starch, orange rind and Juice. In a small bowl, beat egg
whites until peaks form that are stiff but not dry. Fold egg
whites into orange-carrot mixture. Turn into a well-greased 3quart casserole and bake, uncovered, in 350-degree oven for 40
minutes, until a knife inserted in center comes out clean. S en e
hot or cold. This kitchen-tested recipe makes 6 to 8 servings.
GOLDEN T7.IMMES
2 cups sliced carrots
1 cup pared, cubed white potatoes
I cup peeled, cubed winter squash (butternut, acorn or
Hubbard)
I'v cups peeled, cubed sweet potatoes
;
I-3rd cup frozen concentrated orange juice, thawed, un­
diluted
•4 cup honey
14 cup water
14 cup pareve margarine, melted
&gt;2 teaspoon ground nutmeg
Dash ground cinnamon
In large saucepan, steam carrots and white potatoes 10
minutes in 2-inches boiling salted water. Add squash and sweet
potatoes; steam 10 minutes longer. (Add more water if
needed,) Drain vegetables; arrange in u 2-quarl casserole. In
a small bowl, combine concentrated orange juice, honey,
water, margarine, salt, nutmeg and cinnamon; pour oter
vegetables; mix well. Bake in a 350-degree oven 50 minutes.
Baste often with orange mixture during baking. This kitchentested recipe makes G servings.
SWEET POTATO AND PRUNE TZIMMES
(Makes 8 servings)
1 package (12 oz.) pitted dried prunes
2 cups boiling water
3 tablespoons peanut oil
2 pounds lean beef cubes
*4 cup chopped onion
3 4 cups water
P i teaspoons salt
■i&gt; teaspoon ground black pepper
l li pounds medium sweet potatoes, peeled and quartered
li cup honey
2 whole cloves
' « teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 tablespoon potato starch
Place prunes in a small bowl. Cover witli boiling water; set
aside. Heat 2 tablespoons peanut oil in a Dutch oven over
medium high heat. Brown beef cubes, In several batches,
removing from pot when done. Add remaining oil to pot and
saute onion until tender. Return meat with water, salt andpepper to Dutch oven. Bring mixture to a boil; cover, 1*2 hours
mure, or until m eat is tender. Remove 1 cup broth from stew
and combine with potato starch until smooth. Return mixture
to pot; rook and stir until stew is thickened.

�&lt;C— Evtnlng Ht r M, Sinford, FI.

Wedneidey, April 15, I f I

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�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wedneiday, AprilIS, 19&gt;1— SC

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�*C— Evtnlng Herald, Sanford. FI.

Wadntsday, April IS, 1W1

M ake Main
Dish Salad
Day Ahead

Thl§ time-saving
salad Is a
colorful collage
of hard-cooked
eggs, chicken,
a variety of crisp

If you're looking for an entree that requires no last-minute
preparation, try Make-Ahead Dinner Salad. You can make this
satisfying main dish salad early in the day or a day ahead.
Then when supper lime arrives, It will be ready and waiting in
the refrigerator.
This time-saving salad is a great way to Include plenty of
protein and vitamins in a meal. It’s a colorful collage of hardcooked eggs, chicken and a variety of crisp vegetables.
Mandarin orange slices and a zesty curry dressing top it off
tastefully.
For family or guests serve Make-Ahead Dinner Salad with
your favorite bread and beverage to complete an appetizing
meal.
This frcsh-as-sprlng salad won’t wilt your budget, either.
That's because the main ingredient — eggs — are always an
economical protein buy.
If you want to save both time and money, prepare MakeAhead Dinner Salad tonight... and en|oy it tomorrow!

vegetables,
Mandarin orange
slices and zesty
curry dressing.

MAK E- AHEAD DINNER SALAD
1 can (11 oz.) mandarin orange segments
m cups mayonnaise
2 teaspoons curry powder
»■« teaspoon ground coriander
4 oz. fresh spinach, washed and dreained (about 4 cups)
8 hard-cooked eggs, sliced
1 medium cucumber, peeled, halved lengthwise and sliced
tfc cup chopped red onion
1 can (8 oz.) sliced water chestnuts, drained
m cups chopped cooked chicken OR 2 cans (S os. each)
boned chicken, undralned
1 package (10 oz.) frozen peas (separated by rapping on
counter)
Drain oranges, reserving 2 tablespoons of syrup. Set aside.
Blend together mayonnaise, curry powder, coriander and
reserved syrup. Set aside. Tear spinach into bite-sized piece
and place in 13 x 9 x 2-inch casserole or serving dish. Reserve 1
center egg slice for garnish. Layer remaining ingredients over
spinach, ending with egg layer. Spread re so ro d mayonnaise
mixture evenly over salad and garnish with reserved orange
segments and egg slice. Cover and refrigerate several hours or
overnight. For each serving, serve a portion of all layers.
To hard-cook, put eggs in single layer in saucepan. Add
enough tap water to come at jeast 1 inch above eggs. Cover and
quickly bring just to boiling. Turn off heat. If necessary,
remove pan from burner to prevent further boiling. Let eggs
stand covered in the hot water IS to 17 minutes for Large eggs.
(Adjust time up or down by about 3 minutes for each size
larger or smaller.) Immediately run cold water over eggs or
put them In ice water until completely cooled. To remove shell,
crackle it by tapping gently all over. Roll egg between hands to
loosen shell, then peel, starting at large end. Hold egg under
running cold water or dip in bowl of water to help ease off shell.
YIELD: 8 servings.

16-02. PKG., NO SUGAR
‘

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Sliced Bacon
• •

MUSHROOM CAPER CAUSE
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FOR FISH STEAKS
1 pound fresh mushrooms
6 individual fish steaks (cod, halibut, etc.)
4 tablespoons butter or margarine, divided
14 teaspoons sail, divided
4 teaspoon ground white pepper
About 1 cup milk
3 tablespoons flour
1 tablespoons capers, drained
Preheat oven to 35(klegrees. Rinse, pat dry and slice
mushrooms (makes about Mi cups); set aside. Place fish in a
greased 12-by-8-by-2-inch baking pan. Dot with 1 tsbleapoon of
the butter; sprinkle with 1 teaspoon of the salt and the whits
pepper. Cover and bake until fish flakes easily when tasted
with a fork, about 30 minutes. Pour fish stock from baking pan
into a 2-cup measuring cup. Add enough milk to the Osh stock
to make 2 cups liquid. Cover fish and keep warm.
In a large saucepan, melt remaining 3 tablespoons butter.
Add sliced mushrooms; saute for 3 minutes. Add dour; cook
and stir fo-1 minute. Biend in fish stock mixture, capers and
remaining 4 teaspoon salt. Bring to the boiling point Cook and
stir until sauce is thickened, about 1 minute. Pour over fish
steaks; serve with lemon wedges, if desired. This kitchentested recipe makes 8 portions.

()n*&gt; l\tf)P»a Si.imp I’m •* S#4*s*i Hr

16-OZ. C A N
DIAMOND SH ELLED

•ee

.....

Walnuts
With One Put&gt;■&lt;• S ljm p l’ n&lt; r

Booklet

(effective April to *72. 19Q i)

2 5-S Q . F T . ROLL, 18-INCH
WIDE PUBLIX H EA V Y D U TY

LARGE ROLL DESIGNER,
A S S T ., W H ITE S D E C O R A TE D

1 Aluminum Foil

Bounty Towels
0

With

Slrimp Prit e

Wtlh One P u b ln S t j m p P u r e S t . * ' Hnoklel

Bm tklH

Fill your basket w ith
delicious Easter values
from Publix*
Publlx

Mushroom Sauce
Tops Fish Dishes
"Fish dinners will make a man spring Uke a flea," went the
line of a 17th-century song once dear to Sir Henry Morgan's
buccaneers.
The buccaneers were on the right track, because fish protein
can make a diner feel energetic. Savoring such homemade
delicacies as fish turbans with mushroom celery sauce or fish
steaks with mushroom caper sauce may not have you boun­
ding up the Matterhorn Immediately, but fish is an important
ingredient in a healthful diet.
These are practical dishes since both the fish and the sauces
cook quickly. Use fresh or canned mushrooms; in either case
they're cooked in a couple of minutes, ready for completing the
sauce. If you like, you may add other vegetables such as peas,
diced zucchini or diced eggplant. If capers are not readily
available in your area, substitute a finely diced sour pickle for
that extra tang.
FISH TURBANS WITH
MUSHROOM CELERY
SAUCE
1 pound fresh mushrooms
6 tablespoons butter or margarine, divided
V4 cup chopped onion
1 cup diced celery
1 can (8 ounces) tomato sauce
1 4 teaspoons salt, divided
4 teaspoon ground black pepper, divided
1 pound fish fillets
Rinse, pat dry and slice mushrooms (makes about 5 4 cups).
In a large skillet, melt 4 tablespoons of the butter. Add onion
and celery; saute until tender, about 3 minutes. Add
mushrooms; saute until golden about 5 minutes. Add tomato
sauce, 4 teaspoon of the salt and 4 teaspoon of the black
pepper. Bring to boiling point; reduce heat and simmer, un­
covered, for 5 minutes.
Preheat oven to 350-degrees. Sprinkle fish with remaining 1
teaspoon salt and 4 teaspoon black pepper; dot with
remaining 2 tablespoons butter. Roll up; secure with tooth­
picks if necessary. Spoon half of the tomato-mushroom sauce
In bottom of a greased 10-by-6-by-2-lnch baking pan. Place fish
rolls on top; pour remaining sauce over fish. Cover and bake
until fish flakes easily when tested with a fork, about 20
minutes. (If a thicker sauce is desired, bake uncovered for last
10 minutes.) Serve with rice and bread sticks. This kitchentested recipe makes 6 portions.

(EHtcll*# April 16-22. 1061)

(Hitch** April 16 * 22, 1681)

From eggs and candies to hams and roasts.
Publtx has everything your family
needs for their happy Easter traditions

color print Him from
Publix with all
_ Iprocessed color
M
print rolls.
m

S lB *

per lb.

TJSSSSU

Pubtix Self-Basting (Broth Basted), Broad
Breasted, Government-Inspected, Shipped
Quick-Frozen, Evisc., U.S.D .A. Grade A
(10 to 14-lb. Average)
SAVE 7«. GALA

THIS AD ■FPSCTIVKi
THURSDAY, APR. 16
THRU WSDNBSDAY
APR. 22ND 1681. . .
CLOSED SUNDAY . . .

Swift Premium Fully Cooked
(Either End or Whole)

per lb.
Seafood Treat, Frozen
Trout Fillets. lb.
Seafood Treat,
King Pith
lb.
S te a k ............

$138

$26$

E X C E L L E N T C O O K E D W ITH
T O M A T O E S AN D BACON,
FLORIDA FR ESH CRISP

S A V E $1.00, INGLENO O K
CHABLIS, BURGUNDY, R O SE

i

Wine

THE PLACE FOR
DELI DELIGHTS
Fully Cooked Glazed and
Garnished With Cherries
and Pineapple
Cooked Ham .. 7 ®1«®
Delicious Vegetables - Ready
Prepared - Just Heat &amp; Serve
Yams &amp; Apples
in Syrup........... 7 » 1 »
Com Souffle’ .. 7 » 1 «
Fresh-Baked
Apple-Pip.
. ! ! £ j !.« •
Delicious
Dinner R o lls... d*f" 79*
Tasly German Bologna or
Old Fashion
Loaf.................. T *1°»
Flavorful
Boiled Ham ..... S' *2’»
Zeaty-Flavored
Baked Beans.. 7. 69*

1.5-lit.
bot.

$3

99

Beef fo r
1( 89
S te w ......
THE PLACE FOR
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

lb.

lb.

39

New Zealand Frozen
Leg-O -Lam b... 7 *188
-D o n at* * * - -------- Swilt Preniiilm Beef'' Dinner, "
C h u ck
Regular or Bun Size
$179
R o a st............. 7
Franks.............*1*®
U.S.D.A. Choice Beef
Swift Premium Brown ‘N
Boneless
Serve (All Varieties)
Shoulder
Sausage......... S?,* *119
$ 1$$ Buddig (All Varieties)
PeSPaBWS
f t S E t **•I ••••••• t **
■
Hi.
U.S.D.A. Choice Beef
Chipped
Boneless (Whole in the Bag)
M eats.............. Vkt1 49*
Rib B y e ......... 7 »3 7® Oscar Mayer Meat or Beef
Freeh-Made
B o lo g n a ......... 99*
THE PLACE FOR
Cuban
Oscar Mayer Meat or Beef
Q UALITY MEATS
Sandw ich....... 1i" »1 * Hormei Cure 81 Fully Cooked
B o lo g n a ......... '&amp;* M 35
Readytotake-out Southern
Ham .................. 7 *27® SAVE $1.19, 8-oz. Pkg., Rath
Fried Chicken. W *3'“
Breakfast Link
Swift Premium Deep-Basted,
Hot From the Ddil
Sausage.... get! FREE!
Government-inspected, Shipped
Veal
Lykes Sliced
Quick-Frozen, Evisc., U.S.D.A.
Grade
A
(6
to
8-lb.
Average)
Parmesan........ «
*2"
Cooked H a m .. *1: *28®
Sm oked Turkey
Jimmy Dean Mild, Hot or Sage
B re a st............. 7. *2” Bag Sausage.. *1: *18®
U.S.D.A. Choice Beef

per

Sweet Potatoes
per

59

Have Pun Will Travail
4/5 Buthtl ot Fresh Florida Frut
....Ready to Go....
Florida Saadltas
4 *

THE PLACE FOR
PRODUCE
Medium Size
T o m a t o e s ....
"Virginia" Rome
A p p l e s ....... 3
Fresh Crisp

» ‘r- 4-

Pole Beans

EXCELLENT
BAK ED OR CANDIED,
N O R TH CARO LINA

Boneleas

a

WhHa Grapefruit

Baa

Florida Valencia

4/»

Juice Oranges..

7

69*

•7 *

•7T

Florida Saadlaaa

4/»

Rad Grapefruit.

be1

&lt;JR

WNte GrapafnJt .4
Juice Oranges.. 8
Rad QrapefruH. 3
C u c u m b e rs ..4
*1
THE PLACE FOR
Florida Green
PLANTS AND FLOWERS
C a b b a g e ...... 7
12 * Beautiful, Colorful
Tender Florida Squash
O rcM d
•sc*
Z u c c h i n i ....... 7
39*
C orsa ge s
for
•1 «
hi

89*

"Sun World" (2 bunch pkg.)
G re e n

Traditional (1 Stem)
_______________

Bastar U H a s . *£l" *4

O n i o n s .......
”,
4 9 * Beautiful (Single Bloom)
For Dips or Salads, Flavorful H y d r a n g e a s . *£!" *5
A v o c a d o s ......... 3
•1 In Bud A Bloom, Potted
"Country Stand" Fresh
M um s
$4
M u s n r o o m s .. pt,
Blue Cheese

* 1”

Maria a

Praising

Spring Bouquet, Fresh Cut
F l o w e r s .......... s S U » 2
Alao Available: Tulips, Hyacinths,

$1*9

chanlmant UUss, Ralgar Begonias,
Flowers, Assorted Foil— pints.

�I
Evanlng Harald, Sanford, FI.

Create An
Edible Wagon
For Easter

Lemon Glaze
Tops Banana
Cheesecake

We all enjoy spring with its special symbols. Daffodils,
crocuses and azaleas burst into bloom; Easter bunnies appear
everywhere along with new spring wardrobes.
Children especially relish a chance to enjoy sweet treats.
Here's an edible Easter wagon sculptured from popcorn.
We've used the easy pop-in-the-pan kind, then filled it with
popcorn, raisins and colored coconut. , .everything is edible
and delicious.
EASTER WAGON
1 pan (5 oz.) popcorn
1 cup sugar
4 cup corn syrup
4 cup water
1 to 2 tablespoons butter or margarine
1 cup dry raisins
1 cup dry roasted peanuts
1 can (3 4 oz.) flaked coconut
green vegetable dye
Prepare popcorn according to package directions. Save out
two popped cups; pour remainder into large bowl or pan. Heat
sugar, corn syrup and water in saucepan to 245-degrees - 250degrees F. or until a drop of syrup forms a hard ball in cold
water. Save some syrup for attaching decorations; pour
remaining syrup over popcorn and mix thoroughly with two
large spoons.

The coated popcorn is now ready to form into a wagon.
Grease the insides of a 5"x9" Liking pan. Grease hands also.
Pack the popcorn around the insides of baking pan to form a 1”
thick shell. Form a handle by rolling popcorn into a rope,
curving slightly. Allow popcorn to sit for )5 to 20 minutes.
Meantime, follow directions on can for coloring coconut. Allow
coconut to dry. Remove wagon from baking dish. Attach jelly
rings for wheels. Place dyed coconut in bottom to resemble
grass. Mix remaining popcorn, raisins and peanuts. Pour over
coconut.

m b

n i n i i m n i i i i m i n n
J

lEffPCilvt April IB - 22. 1981)

(Etf«ctl»» April IB ■it, w a n

16-OZ. PKG. GOLDEN LIGHT
BROWN, OLD FASHIONED DARK
BROWN, 4X OR 10X POWDERED
CONFECTIONERS SUGAR

5-LB. BAG, PURE C A N E
DIXIE C R Y S TA L S

Sugar

Dixie Crystals

&gt; I U M liB M M m M B M —

Wi th C)n«* Pufrin S t a m p P ri ce

PHILADELPHIA BRAND

Cream Cheese

Clorox Bleach

Ice C re a m or
S h e rb e t.......... X
w

0

HA LF G ALLO N
(4c O FF LA B EL) LIQUID

Dairi-Fresh Assorted Flavors

(I

HnflfciH

(triecitvi April 16*22, 1081)

(Effective April 16 •22, 1981)

# e

With One Publn Stamp Price Saver Rootlet

»1 «

Pepperldge Farm 7-oz. Cube
or 8-oz. Herb or Cornbread

„
Stuffing.

__
65e

Publix Special Recipe

H o n e y W heat
B r e a d .............2

16 o r

•1

lo a tet

Breakfast Club

B ro w n ’N S e rv e
R o lls............... 2 :

*1

Sunshine Regular or
. Unsalted

K rls p y
C ra c k e rs ......w

79c

Sun Maid Golden Seedless
or Seedless

R a isin s......... ’£*
T H E P LA C E FOR
D A IR Y F R E S H N E S S

Breakfast Club Regular
Quarters of

Margarine......3

79*

Pillsbury Slice 'N Bake
Chocolate Chip, Oatmeal
Raisin. Peanut Butter or
Sugar {15 to 17-oz.)

r Orange, Lake, Seminole,'1
6 O w o to Countlw Only!

M ustard........ 6 9 e

G h e rk in s ......

RC or Diet Rite
16-oz. bots. $ 4 4 9

A .1 . Sauce... b7

Dairi-Fresh

Sour Cream

In Natural Juice or Syrup,
Dole Sliced, Crushed or Chunk

Dairi-Fresh

79e

Smuckers

S tra w b e rry
J a m ................’ST M «
In Oil or Water, Chicken of
the Sea Light

Natural Light

C h unk T u n a .*««

$2®9

12-oi. can*
6-pk. ctn
BREAKFAST CLUB FLA. GRADE A

Large Eggs
par

dot.
16-0*.
cup

Enhances the Flavor ol Meats

ANHEUSER-BUSCH BEER

$-|19

C o o k ie s ..........

G rape J u ic e . “ &lt;7 *2”
69c

Vlasic Sweet Pickles

Pillsbury Dinner

No Sugar Added, Welch’s

P in e a p p le ....

French’s Pure Prepared

1-lb.
ttn».

Crescent
Rolls................ « «

With One Publn Stamp Price Saver Rootlet

8-pk. ctn.
■
{Plut Tax A Dapotlt)

Pillsbury Plus Assorted

C ake M ixes..

A\

Purex
Detergent...

Pillsbury Assorted Frosting
Supreme Ready-to-Spread

A n g e l Food
Cake Mix.

®bo“f‘ $2 39

(27C Off Label) Dish
Detergent

Cheesecake, for some reason, is thought of as an Italian
delicacy. Actually, It stems from a traditional dish of 17th and
18th century Britain and Ireland. Open tarts were made with
pastry filled with a blend of cream, egg yolks, lemon or orange
juice or pureed fruit, and were all referred to as
“ cheesecakes." The homemade version soon gave way to
pastry shop versions in later eras. Sound familiar?
Homemade cheesecakes today are made quickly with a shell
or crust that is not baked. This version has bananas folded into
the body of the cake and bananas used as a topping. The
cheesecake is topped with a special lemon glaze.
BANANA CHEESECAKE SUPREME
1 cup graham cracker crumbs, divided
2-3 cup sugar, divided
3 tablespoons butter or margarine, melted
2 envelopes unvlavored gelntin
2 eggs, separated
4 cup milk
2 teaspoons lemon Juice
1 teaspoon grated lemon rind
3 cups (21 ounces) cottage cheese
5 medium bananas, divided
1 cup heavy cream, whipped
Combine 34 cup cracker crumbs and 2 tablespoons sugar;
blend in butter. Press mixture evenly on the bottom of a 9-inch
springform pan. Chill.
Mix gelatin and remaining sugar in medium saucepan. Beat
together egg yolks and milk; stir into gelatin mixture. Stir
over low heat, until gelatin is completely dissolved, about 5
minutes. Remove from heat, stir in lemon Juice and rind. Bent
cottage cheese on high speed of electric mixer until smooth, 4
to 5 minutes; gradually beat in gelatin mixture. Chill, stirring
occnsinally, until mixture mounds slightly when dropped from
a spoon. Beat egg whites until stiff, but not dry; fold into
gelatin mixture. Peel 2 bananas and dice; fold into gelatin
mixture. Fold in whipped cream. Pour into prepared pan. Chill
until firm, about 3 hours. Remove sides of pan. Press
remaining 4 cup crumbs around sides of cake.
Peel 3 bananas and cut into slices; dip in l^m on Glaze.
Arrange slices in rings on top of cheesecake starting at outside
rim of cake and working toward the center. Chill 30 minutes
before serving. This kitchen-tested recipe makes 12 servings,
turnon Glaze
1-3 cup lemon juice
4 cup sugar
1 teaspoon cornstarch
4 cup water
Combine lemon juice and sugar in medium saucepan, cook
over low heat until sugar is dissolved. Mix cornstarch with
water; stir into saucepan. Cook, stirring constantly until
mixture boils and thickens.

Joy Liquid ...... 'LV. *1«9
(2 5 c Off Label) Electric

7 9 c Dishwasher Detergent
Cascade......... Wa* *259
69* Fabric Softener Sheets

(15c off Label) Duncan Hines
Deluxe

79*

99*

Heavy Duty Liquid Laundry

F ro s tin g ....... 'V7‘ *11B

77*

W fd n e n Uy, A p r i l » , 17I1-7C

&gt;4$$

for Dryers "

Toss ’n Soft...

T,

s159

24-ct. Small, 12-ct. Large
or 18-ct. Medium

Luv's
D iapers.......... eTC *279

Upton

Whipping
C re a m ........

Te a Bags.

59*

100-ct

pks

*4S9

Dole Delicious
I

Pineapple
J u i c e .............

SAVE 26$, FAP WHOLE KERNEL
OR CREAM STYLE GOLDEN

M «

Cairo Beauties Sweet Mixed

SAVE 50$, MAXWELL HOUSE
REG., ELEC-PERK, ADC

P ic k le s ......... *£*

SAVE 38$, (20$ OFF LABEL)
VEGETABLE SHORTENING

Coffee
SAVE 30$, HELLMANN’S

,$ A 99

Mayonnaise
32-ez.
|ar

16tt-oz.
cant

$419

(Unit t Ptaaaa, WWi Olhar Ptirchaaaa al
$5 ar Mara, Ixeludlng aU Tahaaao Hama)

3-lb.
can
-

(UmH 1 Ftaaaa, WNh Other Purchase* af
SS ar Mara, licludinf all Tetaeoe Itama)

ruaux
RESERVES
THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES
SOLD

(U n it 1 1_____

•9 or Mara, Rxelwdlng all Tabacco Hama)

Dole (Mix in a Mold with
Dessert Gelatin)

Fruit
C o c k ta il....... '7

69*

Aunt Nellies Pickled Beets
A Onions or Sweet &amp; Sour
Harvard

B e e ts ............. V
FAP Sweet

T H E P L A C E FO R
FR O ZEN FO O DS

59*

Quelle Spinach Quiche or

M ozzarella.....Wa* *249

Quiche
Lorraine......... $3 29

Cream
C h e e s e ...........£■;

99*

Cheddar..........'iH: »1 ~

Cracked Ice ... pdrbeg 69*

i O n io n s.......... V&gt;‘

Wisconsin Cheese Bar

59*

1 Publix Stuffed, Placed in Jar,
j Manzaniila

O liv a s ............' 7

*1M

Lindsay Pitted Extra Large

O H v c a ............T

8*«

Sliced Swiss... S T * 2 "
Dairi-Fresh Small Curd, Large
Curd, Schmierkase or Low-Fat

Cottage
C h e e s e ...........a*&amp;

*179

Any Candy
it ii teen

^5v/GreenStamps
*1 39

T H E P L A C E FO R
H E A L T H &amp; B E A U T Y A ID S

Bridgford (M akes 3 Loaves)
Be Prepared for Company W ith
C lark’s Breaded Veal Steaks
or Chopped

Beef Steaks

S 1.00 or Moreol

24-01. Can.

Baby Powdor ]

2 Kltectif* *p.n i t -11. l t d l

Morton Jelly

Bread Dough.. *V 79*

Ricotta
C h e e s e ........... 1»p M 39

E x TWA

JJWGreenStamps

Johnson's

Wisconsin Cheese Bar Mild
or Medium
Breakstone’s

17*01.

Rock Cornish
20-01.
hen
Hen..............

D o n u ts............59*

c*«» • 1
' Aunt Nellies Boiled Whole

iP e a s ............... 3

Young N Tender Frozen

K raft’s Casino Brand Cheese
Philadelphia Brand W ith
Chives, Onion or Plain, Whipped

B ananas m ake cheesecake su p rem e.

200,. $2 4 9

SAVE 46c. (2 5 c Off Label)

Colgate
Toothpaste....

*119

SAVE 6 0 c, Johnson's

Baby
S h a m p o o ...

&lt;JwGreenStamps
« »»►# e

2-lb. S lia .
Golden Light Brown or 10X
Poly-Beg Conlecllonert Powdered

Dixio Crystals Sugar
,...3 .(llf«l»e A e «H I t - I t . l t d ) .

11M. $1„
Phg., Mild Cheddar Longhorn,
County Cured, f
Fullmoon Longhorn

THIS AD
IFPICTIVN
THURSDAY
APR.1STH
THRU
WBDNISDAV

County Lina i
. . . 4 {tn .c tix «p,e i

APR. UNO,
1 9 6 1 ...

I 6 - 0 1 . Bottle.

CLO U D

Uma Away Tlla i
S if fleelive Aert [

SAVE 40$, SWIFT’S
BROOKFIELD QUARTERS

Mb.
flat ctn.

\

SAVE 306, CELESTE FROZEN
DELUXE. PEPPEROM* SAUSAGE

7%

to
9-oz. size

t

Publix
SANFORD PLAZA, SANFORD
LONGWOOD VILLAGE CTR.,
LONGWOOD
THIS AO EFFECTIVE IN THE FOLLOWWG COUNTIES:
Biavard. Chertolt*. Citrus, Cotter, Hornenrto. Highland*.
HMtboro. Lab*, Lao, Manatae, Orange, OeceoU, Peeco,
PtneHee. Po*. Sarasota 4 Sendnote; unteee otherwtaa

Sard Flush Solid
ToUot Bowl Ctaaner

noted.

7 (iHetUveA*e i t -

7-oi. Phg., (In Tank)

This Cornbread
Needs Kneading
There is no mystery involved in turning out loaves of crusty,
fragrant bread, just a little time and practice. Once your
kitchen takes on the aroma of homemade yeast breads, and
after you've sampled that first tender bile, you may never go
back to store-bought again.
Basically, yeast breads contain six simple ingredients;
yeast makes the dough rise; flour provides the structure;
liquids give moistness and a warm environment for dissolving
the yeasts; sugar provides food for the yeast to grow; salt
slows down the action of the yeast and adds flavor; fats give
bread its tenderness, taste and moist texture.
From those basic six ingredients, a whole host of breads can
be prepared by simply changing the proportions and type of
flour used. Add extra Ingredients Buch as herbs, spices,
cheese, nuts, seeds, dried fruit or ripe olives, and the
variations are endless.
HEARTY OLIVE CORNBREAD
14 cups very hot water
4 cup butter or margarine
3 tablespoons sugar
14 teaspoon salt
1 package active dry yeast
. ------- .------- -------14 cups pitted ripe olives, drained
1 4-ounce can chopped green chilies
4 cup yellow cornmeal
4 4 to 5 cups all purpose flour
In large mixing bowl, add hot water to butter, sugar and salt.
Stir until butler melts. Let mixture cool to about 110 degrees,
then stir In yeast; cover and let rise in warm place until
bubbly, about 15 minutes.
Chop olives coarsely. Stir In olives, chilies, yellow cornmeal
and enough flour to make a thick dough (about 3 cups). Turn
dough onto heavily floured board and knead until dough is
smooth and elastic and has lost most of its stickiness (10 to 20
minutes), adding more flour as needed. Shape dough Into a
ball, place In greased bowl, cover and let ru e until double,
about 1 4 hours.
Punch dough down; knead several times. Shape Into two
loaves and place each In a greased 9xMnch pan. cover, let rise
in a warm place until almost doubled, about 45 minutes,
Bake In 375 degree oven for 30-35 minutes or until loaves are
browned and sound hollow when tapped. Cool on racks before
serving or storing. Makes 2 loaves.
Variation: Add 1 cup shredded cheddar cheese to yeast
mixture ^InnP with olives nnd rhilics

�Evtnlng Htrakl, Sanford, Ft. _ Wtdntsday. April 15,1»|t

B L O N D IE

W E MAO A
SPELLING TE S T
IN SCHOOL

HUMDREO
-AMO i WAS
PERFECT.'

YOU GOT THEM ALL
R IG H T?

r

TO OW

by Chic Young
M O -lG O T
THEM ALL
WROWG

7 N -

&lt;

46 Olympic

Answer to Previous Punle
board (abbr)
□ I I ID L I
1 Bond
48 Time division □ □ □
e nl
S Athletic
40 Baby frog
ClTl
buildings
53 Oyster eggs
Alvl
9 Scimp
57 Flowerless
12 Start oK
plant
saanD G Q
m an n a
13 Vatt period of 58 Volunteer
time
state (abbr |
14 Railroad
qq Protagonist
□ □ □ □ □
vehicle
g , Corral
as^ ra o n
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
15 Aleutian
gj Fibril
daughter
is 16 years old. She
island
m m nanw m
Indian tribe
has
never
had sex or been
16,Station (F r)
p
n
Compass
involved
with
pills. She has
f
i
n
o
n
L
i
n
17 Scrutinlia
point.
16 Throwing disk
had her period since she was
Goddess of
35 Potato
10 Indian of
IPI)
65 fate
14, but all of a sudden it
Yucatan
36 Cut off
20 Rumor
Negatives
66
1
1
Quarry
stopped.
She hasn’t had it for
40
Springs
22 Curly letter
19 Phrase of un­ 43 Comfort
three months. We took her to a
24 Snow runner
derstanding |2 45 Short dash
DOWN
25 Balls of fringe
gynecologist and she was
wds)
47 Exempt
29 Rains frost
examined for cysts or tumors
Joyous
21
Toil
33 Year of
49 Topplat
Abominable
or pregnancy. AU results were
23 Wasta matter 50 Bird cleat
science febbr)
snowman
negative. Now he wants her
25
Scrabble
34 Food
5 1 Force unit
Pools
piece
36 Mountain
back in a month If her period
52
City
in
Elicits
26 Advanced in
pass in India
Oklahoma
does
not come.
Murile
years
37 Burning glass
54 Air (prefix)
Slangy
27
"Auld
Lang
39 Swtndles (si.)
55 Legal
My daughter refuses to
affirmative
41 Biblical
document
Conventions 26 Eye infection
have any more examinations.
character
Creeps
30 Buckeye State 56 Negative!
42 Paradises
Will her periods begin again
59 Oepreiiion ini­
Applies
31 Alan
44 Pleasing
anyw ay? What kind of
tial*
32 Remain
frosting
sound
across

Irregular Period

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Common In Teens

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B E E T L E B A IL E Y

by M ort W alker

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JEALOUS OF MISS BUXLEY
BUT I'M N O T

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by Art Sansom
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by Bob Montana
___ KNOW, IT WOULDN'T
HURT VOU TO INVEST IN
SOME SHARP THREADS,^
EITHER/^-

VOW, i£T-s SSf.HWAT
CAN I ACQUIRE TO APO.
SOME SPICE TO MV,

K na W /I DON'T
NEED TO ADD SPICE,
JO MY WARE
REGGIUI

YEAH
1 GUESS
YOU’RE
RIGHT |

C.

YOU'VE G O \M t/ST*ftO O \
YOUR SHIRT, S«rONYOUR
PANTS AND KtrCHUPCK
TVOURSNEAKERS/ ~

I

HOROSCOPE
By BEKN1CE BEDE OSOL

For Thursday, April 16, 1981
EEK * M EEK

by Howie Schneider

Hemasoneof those
writerswhowasdeeply
aftectelbyevergtMrjg

His responses ran the ^
gam ut fro m 'A ’ to...

he w rote.

Iv/r
P R IS C IL L A 'S POP

by Ed Sullivan

CARLYLE. I TO LD
*N
YCXJ-'-HO 0ROWNIE5
BEFORE DINNER/

YOU DON'T WANT M E
TO BE HAPPY / YOU
DON’T KNOW ABOUT
THAT O LD M EDICAL
S A Y IN G /

WHAT
MEDICAL
SAYING?

TWO
BROWNIES
A DAY
KEEP THE
FROWN! ES
AWAY/

I'M SURE r SAW THAT
IN A MEDICAL JOURNAL
JUST R E C E N TLY /

v /

♦ *

BUG S B U N N Y

by Stoffel &amp; Heimdahl

Xm

g o in g t d g /v e u p
S E L L I N G B R U S H ES
-TO W A B B I T S .

A1AVI

task
ca

i H i h a m l n "• ‘4*

DEAR READER - Utere
are many reasons for a young
woman to stop having
m en stru al periods. It Is
common for a girl to be
irregular at the beginning of
sexual maturity. Starting and
then stopping is not unusual.

April 16,1981
You’re the type who strives
to be Independent and doesn't
like to rely upon others.
Fortunately, however, this
coming year you will have the
right people to lean on when
you need them.
ARIES March 21-Aprtl 19)
Your understanding
of
propositions brought to you
today may not initially be
accurate. Pause to gather all
the facts, then your Judgment
will be wise. Romance travel,
luck, resources, possible
pitfalls and career for the
coming m onths are all
discussed in your AstroGraph which begins with your
birthday. Mail $1 for each to
Astro-Graph, Box 489, Radio
City Station, N.Y. 10019. Be
sure to specify birth date.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Take time to think your steps
through before tackling
complicated projects today.
You’re a good worker once
you get everything organized.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
You may have some an­
noyances to contend with
early In the day, but things
should smooth out by af­
ternoon. Hang loose for fun
times ahead.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Ways can be found today to
resolve a situation which has
been disturbing you. Luck
may have a hand in bringing
about a happy ending.
LEO (Jul y 23-Aug. 22)
Something unexpected may
develop (oday which could
spell personal gains. It has
more potential than Is obvious

at first glance, so study it
carefully.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-SepL 22)
You're likely to be cleverer
and more fortunate than usual
today In turning unproductive
situations
around
Into
som ething m ore to your
likelng.
LIBRA (SepL 23-OcL 23)
Conditions are taking a turn
for the better. Unmana gable
situations will be back in your
control once again. Assert
yourself.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Everything comes to him who
waits and this principle works
In your favor today. Others
will be busy shifting things
around for your ultim ate
benefit.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Business and
pleasure tend to blend well for
you today. If you’re trying to
swing a big deal, discuss it In
other than a com m ercial
atmosphere.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You may not be able to
achieve all you hoped to today
on your first effort, but don't
let this disappoint you.
Marshall your forces. Charge
a second Ume for victory.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 29-Feb.
19) This should be a suc­
cessful day because of your
ability to treat disturbing
situations philosophically.
Your attitude is a winner.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March20)
You could be in for a pleasant
surprise today when someone
usually not supportive of you
rallies to your banner. You’ve
gained a valuable ally.

Lamb

cents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for it
to me, in care of this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New York,
NY 10019.
Crash diets and unwise fad
diets are a frequent problem
in young girls these days. I
hope you have encouraged
your daughter to learn to eat
properly and not to have a
misconception about the need
to be thin. It may be stylish to
be thin, but too thin is
unhealthy and It can affect a
girl’s normal functions.
DEAR DR. L A M B - I have
dark circles under my eyes. I
understand this results from
being thin skinned. Is there
any way besides makeup to
eliminate litis problem? I am
about 10 pounds underweight.
I wish I could get rid of this
problem for good.

45
■

•4-ta

treatment would the doctor
give her? I don't want her to
get Involved with pills as I
understand most pills are
cancerous. I have raised her
to keep away from all kinds of
pills and drugs.

Dr.

You were correct In having
an examination. Sometimes a
horm one Im balance will
cause this. Depending upon
the nature of the imbalance,
the doctor m ay want to
prescribe some hormones. If
he did prescribe medicines
you could be fairly certain
they would be some form of
hormones to stimulate the
onset of menstruation or to
help to regulate her. These
are not cancerous In the
am ounts needed for such
purposes.

DEAR READER - I get
this question rather often. It
always makes me wonder.
Many women use eyeshadow
for makeup, but others are
upset If nature gave them a
little n atu ral eyeshadow.
Dark circles can be covered
with makeup, which is fine if a
woman wishes to use It, but I
also get this complaint from
some men.

The condition con be caused
from a thin skin that permits
the large amount of bluish
venous blood tn this area to
affect the color. Or it can, and
often is, from the skin
producing an increased
amount of pigment in that
area. Neither situation is a
health problem. I suggest you
Please review The Health look in the mirror and say
Letter number 17-2, Female every morning, "Aren’t you
Reproductive Function, that I lucky to have dark alluring
am sending you. Others who eyes that make you look a bit
want this issue can send 75 different?"

I can’t say If she needs
them. She may not. Many
young girls stop menstruating
or delay the onset because
they are too thin. We see that
In women athletes and in
ballet dancers who have very
scant fat deposits.

W IN A T BRIDGE
rect tactics to work on the
side suit before touching
trumps

41VII
NORTH
♦ A4 2
V A8 4
♦ 864 3
♦ 1062
EAST'

WEST

♦ J 873
VQJ B7
♦ KQJ 7
♦J

If hearts and clubs were
going to break 3-2. it wouldn't
matter which suit South start­
ed on But to guard against
bad breaks it was essential lor
success that South work on
clubs and leave trumps alone

♦ Q 1085

♦ 2
♦ 10 8 5 2
♦ Q983

South did just that. At tricks
two and three he played his
ace and king of clubs.
West ruffed the king and
could do nothing better than
to play a second diamond
which South ruffed. South led
a third club which East won
East led another diamond and
South ruffed again
Now South was in full
control. He led a heart lo
dummy’s ace and returned lo
his hand with the king West
held the high trump and
declarer and dummy each
held a small one.
South led a fourth club.
West knew that East held the
diamond 10, so West chucked
his last diamond. South ruffed
in dummy, led dummy's last
diamond and ruffed it. West
overruled, but that was the
defenders' third and last trick.

SOUTH
♦ K6

VK 106 53
♦A
♦ AK7 54

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
Wait

North

Eait

Pais
Pass

2?
Pass

Pass
Pass

&amp;
P
4'

Opening lead:+K

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sonlag

South made the last three
tricks with the aec-klng of
spades and his fifth club.

When playing a trump con­
tract with a five-card side suit
to develop, it ts usually cor­

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN) '

A N N IE
FR AN K AND E R N E S T

by Bob Thaves

x Like ypRiNa
OfcAY, EXCEPT Pol*
th e

m a m m o th

? H E D D iN 6 .

&amp;J-HA/LOOK, WHO'S
CALLING YOU STUPID/
ME/ THE CREATOR OF
THE WHOLE IPIOTlC
%RAY AVENGER" (PEA/

by Laonard Starr

-BUT IT WAS
A 6 000
IDEA, PR.
LIXIR/

WAS IT ? I’D HOPED THAT THOSE I
EN6A6EP IN MEPICARE FRAUP
WOULP SHAPE UP ONCE THEY
KNEW SOMEONE WAS AFTER
TH EM /-BUT HAVE

H eanwhile- HEY, BUDDY/1 I think 60*
ARE THE WARBUCKS

w ay ?

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ALTEP LEVELS/

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by T . K . Ryan

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�73rd Year, No. 203— Thursday, April 16,19B1—Sanford, Florida 32771

Evening Herald—(USPS 481-280)— Price 20 Cents

Airman's Medal For Heroism Given Former Sanford Man
By SYBIL MITCHELL GANDY
Herald Staff Writer
A form er Sanford resident has
become the latest hero in Washington
after his daring attempt to save a man
whose truck had just plunged 50 feet
from a bridge into the Potomac River.
And last Tuesday's award ceremony
to present Staff Sergeant Peter J.
Stankiewicz with the U.S. Air Force
Airman’s Medal For Heroism was Just
one in a constant stream of honors and
distinctions he's received since the
March 17 rescue.
Residents in the nation’s capital will
long remember how Stankiewicz en­
dangered his own life in an attempt to

save Arthur B. Wright, a 56-year-old
truck driver.
Stankiewicz was driving to work that
morning when a tractor-trailer sud­
denly jack-knifed through the safety
rail of the Cabin John Rridge, sending
the cab of the truck and its driver
plunging some 50 feet into the Potomac
River.
Stankiewicz was near the Great
Falls, Va., side of the bridge, going in
the opposite direction when he stopped
his car and scrambled down the river's
embankment, initiating a four-man
rescue attempt to save Wright's life.
The truck driver was trapped and

unconscious in the partially submerged
cab. With winds of 28 to 46 miles per
hour, Stankiewicz was the first rescuer
into the 35-degree water, officials said.
Three unidentified motorists who had
also stopped on the bridge, followed
Stankiewicz down the embankment,
and the four worked Wright free of the
wreckage in minutes.
But the driver, who was submerged
at the time rescuers got to him. never
regained consciousness, despite efforts
by Stankiewicz and the others to revive
him with mouth-to-mouth and car­
diopulmonary resuscitation methods.
Stankiewicz continued efforts to

Peter attended AH Souls Catholic
School in Sanford before his father was
transferred to Japan in 1967. Bom in
Portsmouth, Va., Stankiewicz and his
wife Kathleen make their home In
Gaithersburg, Va.

revive Jackson after the others had
given up. He was later admitted to the
emergency room of a local hospital to
be treated for exposure and exhaustion.
Mr. and Mrs. John Stankiewicz Jr., of
119 Oakland Avenue, Sanford, Peter
Stankiew icz's paren ts, returned
Tuesday from the Air Force ceremony
in Washington. John Stankiewicz, a
retired master chief petty officer of
intelligence in the U.S. Navy, was
stationed here in Sanford when his son
Peter was two years old. As an active
member of the Boy Scouts, the Air
Force hero learned safety procedures
and swimming while still a young boy.

Calls are still coming in from all over
the nation from truck drivers and their
families who want to send money to the
couple, Stankiewicz’s mother said. He
is accepting gifts of money for the
Wright family, she said. Wright was the
father of nine children.
Stankiewicz does photography and
photo-processing for Air Force
Defense Intelligence.

PETER J. STANKIEWICZ

15 Trapped By Explosion

Rescuers Trying
To Reach Miners

Herald Photot by Tom V ln c w l

EGGS OUT
COMPETITION

K atherine W illiam s, G, of Sanford, proudly displays her first prize for finding
m ore eggs, 0 2 of ’em ) th an anyone else In h e r age group d u rin g an E a s te r
egg hunt held for fam ilies of Sem inole M em orial H ospital em ployees. Sixty
dozen eggs w ere hidden for the hunt stag ed for children 1 to 10-years-old.
P rizes w ere given those who found th e m ost eggs o r a silver egg and each
child received a candy-filled plastic egg. M ore p ictu res on P ag e 5A.

State Can Block Land Development
Without Buying Property, Court Says
a mangrove-wetlands area near Fort
Myers or purchase the property.
The Justices did order the Cabinet to
take another look at the case and tell the
developer, E stu ary P roperties Inc.,
exactly what it could to do minimize
environmental damage and proceed with
construction.
Attorney General Jim Smith, during
oral arguments before the high court a

year ago, culled the case one of the most
critical ever in its possible impact on
eflorts by Florida government to protect
the environment.

Heathrow On Lake Mary Agenda

Opponents of the condominium project
compiled substantial and convincing
evidence that the development and
destruction of about 1,800 acres of black
mangroves would pollute Uio waters of
Estero and San Carlos Bays, the court
said.

TALI.AHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) - The
Floridn Supreme Court said today the
stale can block the development of
private land to protect valuable wetlands
and prevent water pollution without
hnving to condemn and buy the property.
The court overruled the 1st District
Court of Appeal, which ordered the
Cabinet to approve the construction of a
multibillion-dollar condominium city on

It's on the agenda, but there’s no
guarantee an ordinance to annex the
1,600-acre Heathrow planned unit
development will come up for discussion
at the Uike Mary City Council meeting
tonight.
The matter was set for a vote at the
council’s March 12 and 26 meetings, but
was tabled when City Attorney Gary
Massey asked for a delay, but would not
publicly reveal his reasons for so doing.
The city lost its initial effort to annex
the property when a circuit court ruled
the move would create enclaves —
pockets of county land surrounded by
city property — which are prohibited bystate law. That cuse is under appeal.

The Jeno Paulucci family, principal
Heathrow landowners, is also fighting
annexation and have threatened suit if
the city gives final approval to the an­
nexation ordinance.
Also tonight, the council is scheduled to
rearrange the city’s water rate struc­
ture, a move which could result in
slightly higher water bills for some
users.
And Seminole County Administrator
Roger Neiswender will outline plans for
the widening of several roads in and
around Lake Mary.
The council will meet at 7:30 p.m. in
city hail, 185 E. Crystal I.ake Avenue.

Regulations prohibiting m assive
dredge and filling operations and other
protection m easures would become
useless if the state had to purchase the
land each time they were used, Smith
argued.

"Once there is sufficient evidence of an
adverse impact, it is neither un­
constitutional nor unreasonable lo
require the developer to prove that the
proposed curative measures will be
adequate," the court said in an opinion
w ritten by Justice P ark e r Lee
McDonald.
"Protection of environmentally sen­
sitive areas and pollution prevention are
legitimate concerns within the police
power (ol the state)."

REDSTONE, Colo. (UPI) - Rescue
teams fighting to reach 15 miners
trapped more than a mile underground
by a violent mountain coal mine ex­
plosion were reported making slow
progress and were still at least 1,400 feetaway from the accident site shortly after
dawn today.
The blast, believed caused by methane
gas at the MidContlncnt Resource Inc.
Dutch Creek No. 1 Mine, occurred shortly
before the end of the day shift late
Wednesday afternoon.
Seven other miners walked out or were
rescued.
"There really isn't much new to report
at this time," said mine accountant Jeff
I.yle at 9 a.iu. (EST). "The situation Is
progressing. The last we heard, the
rescue teams still were about 1,400 feet
away."
Mine officials said the work of the
rescue teams had been extremely slow
because of the need to restore ventilation
as they moved down the tunnel. There
have been no signs of life from the

TODAY
Action......................... ..............2A
Around The Clock....... ..............4A
Classified Ads ............
6B-7B
C om ics........................
Dear Abby................... ..............IB
Deaths......................... ..............2A
Editorial...................... ........... 4A
F lo rid a........................ ..............3A
Nation.......................... ..............3A
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Sports .................................. 6A-8A
Television ................... ..............3B
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missing miners since the explosion, and
authorities have refused to speculate on
the men’s chances.
"They’re rotating crews and working
their way slowly to the place where the
accident o cc u rre d ," said company
spokesman and attorney Bob Delaney.
"Tbey're restoring ventilation as they go
and that's what Is taking so long."
The miners who were able to escape
were all closer to the surface when the
blast occurred. Three were taken to
Valley View H ospital at Glenwood
Springs, about 30 miles to the north,
where one was In serious condition.
Delaney said there was no apparent
cave-in caused by the explosion, but said
the main-worry (or the missing miners —
U they survived the blast — was the
possibility of asphyxiation by deadly
methane or carbon monoxide gas. He
said methane is common in mines In the
area.
"Those are very gassy m ines,"
Delaney said, explaining the company
uses large fans outside the mine to suck

gases from the tunnels.
The explosion occurred near the end of
the day shift at the mine, which slopes at
a 15-degree angle Into a low mountain In
the scenic Crystal River Valley of
western Colorado.
"T he most probable cause was
methane, but that Is something that will
have to be ascertained," Delaney said.
David Chiarello, a miner working 4,100
feet Inside the tunnel — about 2,000 feet
from where the miners were trapped —
said the force of the explosion from deep
inside the mountain felt like "a little
hurricane."
He escaped serious Injury and was able
to walk out of the mine as well as help
bring the drat three Injured miners to the
surface.
“ It knocked off my hat, but it didn't
knock me over," he said of the explosion.
"The first thing I did was try to find out if
somebody needed help."
The three men he aided were semi­
conscious and "real disoriented" when
he found them, he said,

Officials Pampering Panda Pair
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ling-Ling,
the National Zoo’s female panda, was too
tired Wednesday night to meet her
London lover, Chia-Chla, so m at­
chmaking zoo officials said they would
try to bring the two together today.

Wednesday to even leave her den, which
disappointed zoo officials who hoped the
pandas "would pick up where they left off
(Tuesday) and maybe get a little far­
ther."

The two growled and cuffed at each
Ling-Ling Is ready for mating and zoo other In their first encounter Tuesday.
spokesman Michael Morgan said she
Chia-Chia was brought over from the
may stay In heat for only another 24
hours or so. He said it would be necessary tondon Zoo this spring, because LingLing and her American partner, Hsing"to make hay while the sun shines."
Hsing, had failed to produce a cub after
Morgan said Ling-Ling was too tired six years of trying.

County Will Make Park Improvements
Construction is to begin immediately
on a water plant and two sports fields at
Sylvan l-uke Park south of W. State Road
46 off l.ake Markham Road in the Paola
area.
County C om m issioners agreed to
spend 640,000 In budgeted county funds to
build the water plant and the ball fields
with the hope that a federal grant will
reimburse the county for half the cost.
County
A dm inistrator
Roger
Neiswender said today the work has to
begin immediately if the fields arc to be

in operation by fall. “For the fields to be
useable, grass has to be planted and for
the grass to grow we had to have
available w a te r," Neiswender said,
explaining the need for Uie water plant.
The county administrator said a grant
to pay a good portion of the costs of this
work and for development of about 90
acres of the 120 acre site as a nature park
has been approved by the state already.
"The grant is approveable by the
federal authorities, but is currently hung

up In the freeze on federal funding In
Atlanta," he said.
"Our problem Is not knowing whether
the freeze will be lifted or when. The
county commission had to make a
decision whether it wanted to wait and
not provide active recreation at Sylvan
Lake Park. It decided to move forward,"
Neiswender said.
"If the federal government won't
reimburse for the expenditure, so be It,"
Neiswender said. — DONNA ESTES

Judiciary Needs Entire Courthouse, Judges Say
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
The entire Seminole County courtlwuse at Sanford, including •
he old Jail, parking areas and grounds, will be needed exlusively for county and circuit court functions and the offices
f the courts’ clerk, the state attorney and public defender by
Ictober, 1985.
Seven of Uie county’s eight resident county and circuit
udges sent to the county commission a resolution citing this
eed.
In Uie interim four years Uie Judges are asking Uie com­
missioners lo hire an architect or planning group to determine
,hether the space which is available is suitable and adequate
Lit conversion of:
- Existing county commission chambers to a jury trial
ourtroom with jury room, conference room and two witness

ooms.
_ Remaining spare to a two and possibly three judge suite
,-ith chambers, hearing rooms, secretarial rooms, a shared
mailing room and uffices for court administrative personnel.
The entire east side for Uie orderly move of Uie clerk's
resent personnel and uses from this area to Uie same or ad­

ditional areas on Uie first floor of the north wing. Judicial
needs here would be either the low library or domestic
relations commissioner’s office, the trial clerk's office and
official court reporter.
— The area now occupied by Uie law library, Judge Joe
Davis’ chambers and the trial clerks' office to an additional
jury trial courtroom and judge’s suite with chambers, hearing
room, secretarial room, waiting room and provisions for
receptionist, access, passageways and toilet. Law library to
spare in Uie old Jail.
—The area in Uie old Jail which was occupied by the kitchen
to a grand jury room, offices for court personnel, juvenile
coordinator, Juvenile secretary, criminal division secretary,
juvenile arbitration coordinator, guardian ad litem coor­
dinator.
in Uie resolution Uie judges declared the conversion uf Uie
entire courthouse to judicial functions and renovaUons in Uie
interim are “determined to be necessary for the operaUon of
the circuit and county courts of this county."
The judges submitted their recommendaUons as part of Uie
on-going hearings Uie county commissioners have been having
with various county departments where each department was

asked what it believes is a first priority in their area.
The commissioners have taken all the recommendations
under advisement, and are to make decisions on whether Uie
items can be budgeted in Uie 1962 fiscal year.
When construcUon of Uie new county courthouse was
planned in Uie mid and late 1960s, an architect said Uie
structure should be adequate for 10 y ean.
However, construction was delayed while the project was
Uie subject of a lawsuit.
The lawsuit questioned whether Sanford was the legal
county seat. In 1971 Uie lawsuit was resolved with a Florida
Supreme Court ruling that Sanford is the county seat and the
courthouse had to be built in Sanford.
In December, 1972, county and court offices were moved into
Uie courthouse.
Clerk of Uie Court Arthur H. Beckwith Jr. pointed out today
that two events after the new courthouse opened had
devastating results as far as space In Uie facility was con­
cerned.
First article V of Uie Florida ConsUtution went into effect
consolidaUng the court systems into two Uers — circuit and
county — placing all responsibility for providing sppee for Uie

restructured system on county government. Secondly, he said,
Seminole’s population grew by 115 percent between 1970 and
1980.
Signing the resolution were Circuit Judges Kenneth M.
Leffler, chief judge; S. Joseph Davis Jr., Vernon Mize Jr. and
Dominick J. Salfi and County Judges Alan Dickey, Wallace
Hall and Harold F. Johnson, all resident judges in Seminole.
Only Circuit Judge Robert B. McGregor did not sign the
resoluUon.
Leffler said today the need for additional space for court
functions has been there for sometime. He pointed out that
currenUy new Judge Vernon Mize Jr. has only a hearing room
and does not have a chambers.
"When Judge Davis and 1 determined not to participate In
sentence negotiations with criminal defendants, the resu lt,
was that we were compelled lo try more cases. The c u e load
has been building," Judge Leffler said.
"We would like to switch some other judges to trying
criminal cases, but we do not have Uie courtrooms to do this,"
Leffler said.
Commissioners have discussed moving umnly ad­
ministrative operations to Uie Five Points area.

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                    <text>73rd Year, No. 722—F rid ay . M ay 1 . 19*1—Sanford, F lorida 37771

E v e n in g H e ra ld (U .S .P .S . 411 7 6 0 1 -2 0 Cents

Local Lenders Find Few Can Qualify For Mortgages
By JANE CASSELBERRY
llrr*Id Stall Writer
High Interest rates have forced severs!
sooth Florida savings snd losn
associations to withdraw from the home
loan mortgage market temporarily and
local savings and loan associations are
having trouble qualifying applicants for
mortgages.
Gilbert Edmonds, president of First
Federal Savings and l&gt;oan of Seminole,
which raises Its interest rate to 14.75
percent this week, said for aD practical
purposes mortgage loans have been shut

off as not many people can qualify at
these rales
A survey Thursday found a growing
number of lending institutions retren­
ching in the face of rising Interest rates.
Rates on home loans in south Florida ha­
ve hit 11.5 percent at many institutions.
“ People w ere having trouble
qualifying a t IS.S p ercen t," said
Edmonds, who expects Interest rates
generally to be high the balance of this
year.
"About the only home sales now are
with mortgage assumptions, “ Edmonds

said. "Nobody can purchase a home with
an Interest rate of 16.5 percent or more
but 1don't think It is going to stay up. It's
going to bring everything to a halt until
rates are more reasonable.”
Another problem, loan officers say, is
that many people a r t withdrawing their
savings to Invest in more lucrative paper
certificates, such as money market
funds. “ We're in the same boat,” said
Edmonds, “we had a savings outflow last
month, but right now we are having a
positive savings flow."
Dot Brenner, branch manager for First

people would be better off to hold off.”
"It seems like In the last few weeks
people have given up, we’ve had a big
influx of applications. But they look at
the high interest payments and back
off," she added.
To Illustrate the difficulty some
homeowners have in paying mmthly
mortgage costs, here's how some of them
break down at II S percent:
If the mortgage amount borrowed la
m,000 for 30 years, the monthly principalinterest payment is 1311.01; (30,000 is
(421.(1; (40.000 la (50.11 and (50,000 Is

Federal of Mid-Florida in Sanford, said
people are having a hard time qualifying
at their Interest rate of 115 and she eipeels the rates will go higher yet
Edmonds said the negotiable mortgage
which has a lower rate of Interest, will be
replaced by a new mortgage on which
they are now working out the details. It
will be an adjustable rate mortgage, for
which the Interest rate will likely be lees
because it wL' .ontain an option to adjust
rates periodically, Edmonds explained.
"By the third quarter, I am hoping for
rates to level off," said Brenner, "and

(702.79. Those figures do not include
taxes or insurance.
Ilolly Miller, loan officer at the
Altamonte Springs branch of The First,
said the current rate for 10 percent home
mortgages is at H.25 percent with a IS.}
percent rate for negotiable (variable)
mortages in which the rates can go up or
down a maximum of 1.5 points every
three years, according to market con­
ditions, up to a total of 5 points.
"For those who are on the borderline
for qualifying, 1 point can make a big
difference." said Miller.

Unemployment Steady

Energy Price
R ise Slow ed

ERGENCY

SHE'S SHERIFF TODAY
I’int-viird lawman Cathy Walton. 9. shows Seminole County Sheriff
John folk how It's done Friday a« she talks with deputies in the field
(left), advising them that she has taken over as sheriff. To prove her
point, Cathy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas E. Walton Sr. of 126
West l.aurrn Court in Fern Park, assumes Polk's favorite position
(right) as (he sheriff wonders what the kid Is doing in his chair. It
was all In fun as part of Career Day In which area school students
take over local gov ernment. It didn't lake Cathy long to get the hang
of the Job. After walking around greeting employees with, "III. I'm
vour boss. Now gel to work," the said she planned to "take a nap, get
some lunch, and rc*t for Ihr balance of Ihf afternoon." Sounds like
Cathv may have figured out Polk’s daily routine.
M.raW Pkotoi S» T » *

To Justice Department

Lake Mary School Zone Plan Explained
_

.

.

.

. . . ___ ...

Seminole County school officials were
In Washington Thursday to explain their
toning plan to (til the new la k e Mary
high school with students. They had to go
there because the U S Justice Depart­
ment attorneys reviewing the toning plan
indicated this week the 1».7 percent black
student population expected at the school
to be low.
And, while school officials said a
"positive atm o sp h ere " prevailed In
Washington when they answered Justice

department attorneys' questions about
the toning plan, they indicated they could

.not
. . say
__ i ______
. - i - it
for certain
If the plan _ni
will be

..u .n ia j.r t
Kinfnrd
community
advantaged
Sanford
community
(Crooms-Seminole) from th« more
approved.
School Supl. Robert Hughes, who w u a fluent north SeminoU area," the toning
Joined in the trip to Washington by school plan was approved by the school board in
attorney Ned Julian Jr., Board members February.
County officials set the Thursday af­
Roland Williams, Bill Kroll. and Asst.
Supl. of Instruction Theodore Dagg. said ternoon meeting after receiving a letter
federal atto rn ey s were still "non­ from V S Attorney Burtls Dougherty
committal," even after the group ex­ who expressed concern over the fact that
plained “ as fully as possible’' the lake Mary toning would produce a.
procedures used In mapping out the "virtually all-white" student body.
Further, the letter sUted that "the
xoning area
Denounced by a group of Sanford effect of this proposal is to further Isolate
the Croocna-Semlnole High School tone
parents u "further Isolating the

from the remainder o(
of the county.
Dougherty explained today that the
meeting was a chance for the two side to
“get together and spell out their pasiUons
and answer questions.”
"We'D sit down with the old In­
formation and the new Information we
now have,” be said.
Seminole school officials refrained
from further comment on the meeting,
calling the issue "very sensitive at this
point" Dougherty said some decision
would be released in the next two weeks.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Energy costs
rose at a slower pace In April to cool
Inflation and hold wholeule price in­
creases to 0.1 percent, nearly half the
March rate, the government said today.
The 0.1 percent rise in seasonally
adjusted producer prices of finished
goods compares with the 1.5 percent level
posted In March, the Labor Department
reported.
if the April rate continued for 12
months, the compounded annual rsle of
inflation would be 10 percent, well below
the 111 percent annual rate registered in
March.
Meanwhile, the departm ent also
reported that unemployment remained
at 7.3 percent In April, the same level
measured in both February and March,
even though 5*0,000 more people were
employed.
Most statistical unemployment
categories were unchanged or showed
only slight adjustments. Including (he
jobless rata for black and other minority
lacn-agers aged 11-11, which dropped
from March's 37J percent to 30.1 percent
In April.
The department said the moderate
April price Increase reflected " conaideraly slower increase in finished
energy prices." Gasoline p ricu rose 1J
percent in April, well below the 7 J
percent increase ported In March.
Consumer food prices, which showed
no change In April, alio helped to hold
down the overall Inflation rate. Large
increase In eggs, pork, fruit and bakery
prices were offset by declines In poultry,
vegetables, sugar, and coffee p rim .
However, p r im for finished goods
other than food and energy moved up 1.0
percent, twice as much as In March, the
department said. A major influence In
this category w u car prices, which rose
1.4 percent In April following a 0 J per­
cent hike in March
Over the p u t 13 months, the govern­
ment u id , energy p r im at the wholeule
level rose 21 percent. Consumer food
p r im , moderated by several months of
price declines at (he farm and food
production levels, rose only ( J percent
over the year, the government said.
Wholeule p r i m for consumer goods
other than food and energy rose 1.4
percent over the year.
Analysts with Evans Economics, a
private forecasting firm, and the Georgia
Slats University forecasting project
attributed their lower Inflation predic­
tions for April to a slowdown in energy
price hikes.

Lake Mary
Wants Water
Conservation

h« i

SPLISH, SPLASH
JUST A TEASE

«

W P H . hr T ea VIKHI

Maple Avenue between Third and Fourth Street* In Sanford flooded
Thursday afternoon during a downpour. The Sanford fewer treat..tent plant recorded one-half Inch of rain during a brief period in the
afternoon, but the shower* turned out to be Just a tease. Central
Florida remains drought-stricken amidst appeals for water con­
servation.

Lake Mary City Council members like
green grass snd niew ahlny cars as much
as the next guy. But with near-drought
conditions plaguing much of the date,
they're asking city residents to conserve
water by cutting back on their lawn
watering «»d car washing.
At (be council's Thursday nlgbt
meeting, rouncilmen gave CUy Manager
Phil Kulbes the authority to implement a
voluntary conservation program aimed
at easing demand on the alreadyovertaxed aquifer - a natural un­
derground reservoir — from which most
of central Florida draws its water.
"We don't have a real problem right
now," Kulbes said, "bat unleu people
start doing something right away, we’re
going to have one toon, particularly if we
don't get same rain."
Lake Mary joins Longwood and
CaaselberTy which have begun similar
conservation efforts
An indication of the severity of the
See LAKE MANY. Page IA

They u id the strong Msrch fuel cost
increases at the dealer's level that
reflected President R eagan's early
decontrol of domestic crude p r im faded
in April. Food prices, meanwhile, In­
creased only slightly last month.
The Georgia project found that for the
first lime, neither food nor fuel w u the
major upward Influence on prices In
April. Instead it w u price escalations for
office
machinery,
computers,
typewriters and copiers.
D irector Donald Ratajcxak said
another problem area w u auto p rim ,
which began going up when rebate
promotions ended. He also u id natural
g u and electricity p rim were swinging
upward, but "for the first month, the
problem area la not energy.”
Michael Evans, ol Evans Economics,
u id , "The main trend Is that Inflation is
going to come down far the next few
months."
But why Interest rates continue to go
up while inflation goes down “la the
*44,000 question." he said. "It's mainly
psychological."
He predicted interest rates will go
down "sharply around June." In the
Interim, Evans said higher Interest rates
have forced a sell-off in the commodity
futures markets, exerting a downward
pressure on wholeule food p rim .
Wholeule food price trends usually
shows up at the retail level within a
matter of weeks.
Other employment categories were
unchanged over the month — with the
unemployment rate for adult women
remaining at (.( percent, for teen-agers,
11.1 percent, and for white workers, (.5
percent.
Adult men experienced a slight 0.1
percentage point drop to 5 1 percent The
rate (or black and other minorities
declined 0.5 percentage points to 13.2
percent, and the rate for Hlspanics had
the largest decline, 1.1 percentage points,
to (.1 percent.
Although overall employment In­
creased by 560,000 during April, a bureau
survey of establishments showed non­
farm payroll employment down 220,000,
mainly due to the strike by 160,000 soft
cowl miners.
Workers on strike are considered
employed In the main household survey
that provides most of the government
data on Jobs, but are not included in the
payroll figures.
Construction Jobs in the payroll figures
declined by 10,000, but were still 100.000
abovs last July's recession low.

TODAY
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Dr. L a m b .............................. .. HA

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Florida
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6A-7A
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World .......

Boss Runs Afow l Of The Law
RICHMOND. Vs. (UPI) - A North before discontlnulag In 1176 its
Carolina aerospace manufacturer ran Christmas bonus given to each worker
afoul of federal labor laws by ending of a 14-11 pound turkey.
its practx* of giving Christmas
But A ironca attorney Jam es
turkeys to its employees, a National
Labor R elations Board attorney La wrens contended the Christmas
turkeys were a gratuity given to the
charges.
Judith Dowd told the (Ci U.S. Cir­ firm 's 1,100 employees at plants in
cuit Court of Appeals Aerooca, Inc. Plnevills, N.C., l-anadale, Ps., snd
should have bargained with the Middletown, Ohio. The company had
International
Association
of every right to discontinue the practice
Machinists and Aerospace Workers If It wanted to, Lawrence said.

Sanford's Tim Haines streaks to Inside-tlie-park-homerun
Montreal victory. See Page 7A.

"H

�At
7A— Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

-

Friday, May 4,1941

Street Melee Tale Rejected;
Jury Acquits Woman In Battery

two man-eating Uons In the remote Dande tribal area on the
rvxthen border with Mozambique, the first maiweaters to be
encountered for severe! years

Irish Guard Public Figures

IN BRIEF
Begin Vows Not To Give Up
An Inch Of Occupied Land
ARIKI*, Israeli-Occupied West Bank (UPI) — Prim*
Mlnlatcr Menschem Begin vowed not to return any more
occupied Arab bind u long as be rules Israel, and 100,000
Israelis demanded the government halt IU withdrawal
from the occupied Sinai desert.
Begin, campaigning vigorously for another term In the
upcoming June 30 elections, spoke as nationwide
celebrations of Israel's 33rd birthday drew to a close under
the shadow of a possible war with Syria over the positioning
of Syrian SAM-6 missiles In Lebanon.
“ I, Menachem Begin, son of Ze’ev and llassla, do pledge
we will never give up any portion of land In Judea, Samaria,
G aia and the Golan Heights, as long as I am head of
government," the Israeli leader told a rally at the West
Bank settlement of Ariel, one of i i the Begin government
established In the occupied tone.
About 10A,000 Israelis, supporters of the right-wing
TehJya, or Renaissance, gathered In the Yamlt sector of
northeastern Sinai to oppose the completion of the Israeli
troops withdrawal from the per Insula, scheduled for next
April under the Egyptlan-lsraeli peace treaty.
Begtn'a remarks drew a tumultuous ovation from about
13,000 picnickers packing a makeshift amphitheater tel In a
valley below Ariel, 6 miles southeast of Nablus, the biggest
town on the West Bank. Uriel captured the Weal Bank for
Jordan In the IM7 Middle Bast war.

China ’Annihilates' Vlets
PEAKING (UPI) — China today accused Vietnam of
provoking the Urgest-acalc border clash this year but said
the 100-man Vietnamese force was snnlhllsled.
China's official Xlnhau news agency said 100 Vietnamese
soldiers Intruded into Msllpo county of Yunnan Province
early Thursday, "setting fires, laying mines and looting
property."
Despite the sire of the Invading group, Xinhua said
Chinese frontier guards counterattacked, "annihilating the
Intruders and capturing a Urge amount of weaponry and
ammunition, Including mortars, machine guns, rocket
launchers and a transceiver."
Vietnam had not yet responded to the Chinese claims, but
earlier In the week It also accused Peking of violating ita air
and naval ^&gt;act and attacking Ita border villages.

Man-Bating Lion Killed
SAIJSBUnY, Zimbabwe (U P I)- A lioness that ate a
mother and her three children and terror lied villages In
northen Zimbabwe has been killed, a national parks warden
said.
National Parks Warden Olive Coltman said Thursday the
marauding beast hsd been badly mauled by other members
of Its pride and was covered with festering sores.
It died after eating poiaoned bait at one of the ambush
points set up by game wardens, he said.
In the pest week Coltman and h it tram have also killed

By BRITT SMITH
Herald SUJI Writer
It wasn't your average, rurvof-the-mill arrest. Before It was
all over, the original suspect had escaped and a » -year-old
Sanford woman was jailed for Interfering with police officers,
but not before the had claimed to hava been hit by a patrol car
and paralyzed from the waist down.
It was apparent!' all too much for a six-member Seminole
Circuit Court Jury Thursday so they act Gloria Bennett free,
acquitting her of charges of battery on a law enforcement
officer, reeisting arrest, and aiding an escape.
The strange tale began about 7:39 p m Jan. 30 when Sanford
Police D el Tony Brooka spotted lo rry Johnson, a man wanted
on robbery and grand theft charges, driving 1 late-model
Volkswagen near the Intersection of Summer! n and Mon­
tezuma avenues.
Brooka dutifully pulled the car over and placed Johnson
under a r m t. Simph enough. But things quickly turned sour.
In the car with J ohnson were Bennett, of 31 Lake Monroe
Terrace, and another roan, Kenneth Lee Thomas. According to
testimony given at trial, before Brooks could handcuff his
prisoner, Bennett and Thomas began cursing and vowing they
would not let Johneon be taken to jail. Thomas then wedged
himself between Brooka and Johnson, allowing Bennett to grab
Johnson by the arm and flee.
After radioing for assistance, B ranb said he gave chase, but
lost the fugitive* In the darkness. Patrolman Darryl
Prtssley, however, spotted them running across ■ vacant lot
and pursued In hit vehicle.

BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) - Police eipecting
an IRA assassination campaign ino-eased protection for
prominent figures today as three more Imprisoned IRA
members edged towards death on the hunger strike that
killed Bobby Sands.
More than 70 other IRA members jailed in Northern
Ireland threatened to join the hunger strike, but Britain
vowed never to give in to their demand for recognition as
political priaoners.
"There are many Bobby Sands In these blocks and w* will
continue to die on hunger strike tf need be in order to
safeguard those principles," a statement by the prisoners'
support committee said Thursday after Sands went to an
Irish martyr** grave.
The police said they were Increasing protection for
judges, polltlcans, and military and prison officer* because
of "the known Intentions" of the Provision*! Irish
Republican Army and the Irish National Liberation Army
— a radical group virtually outside IRA control.

Arrests In Nun Murders?
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (UPII - Former
American Ambassador Robert White says six Salvadoran
National Guardsmen are under a n e st for the rape-murders
of four American churchwomen, but El Salvador's
president denied any knowledge of the arrests.
A government spokesman Thursday said President Jose
Napoleon Duarte was Investigating the statements in
Rorheiter,N.Y., by White, who also accused American
offidali of participating In a “cover-up" of the killings of
the three Maryknoll nuns and a Catholic lay worker Dec. 1
White told ■ news conference In Rochester American
officials have "known for weeks, If not months, not only that
the security forces were responsible but also who in the
security force* were responsible."
“Su National Guardsmen are now under arrest," be said
adding the official Investigation Into the murders was a
•'charade."
White, who was ambassador to LI Salvador at the time of
the murders, was fired by the Reagan administration for
opposing US. military aid to the country's ruling civtllanmthtary junta.

As he passed Bennett, she fell to the ground and Pressley
stopped to sae If she w u Injured. Johnson, in the meantime,
jumped a fence and w u gone. He remains at larse
Back on the ground, Bennett w u yelling, "My leg*, my
le p ," and later claimed that Preaaley'a car had hit her.
When paramedics arrived on the scene, however, they
reported no outward signs of Injury. And all doctors at
Seminole Memorial Hospital could find were minor scrape* on
Bennett's left hip. In addition, a Florida Hlgbway Patrol
examination revealed no damage to Preaaley’a patrol car.

In other court action Thursday, Sanford couple John Henry
and April Monies Smith were sentenced by Judge Kenneth
Leffier on a charge of arson In connection with an O ct H fire
which badly damaged a house at 1310 W. 13th S t where the
couple lived.
John Henry, a, and April. M. were convicted Feb. II of
trying to bum down their rented home in order to collect on the
insurance covering the contents.
Leffier sentenced Mrs. Smith to five years In prison and 10
y ean probation, while John Henry w u ordered to serve three
y ean in jail, U y ean on probation, and pay legal cotta of
11,063. The couple could have beat jailed for up to 30 yean
Also sentenced Thursday w u Jimmy Lee Scott.29, of 130 E.
Bay 5L, Winter Garden, convicted of aggravated battery. He
received eight y ean probation and mutt make restitution of

Action Reports
★

F in i

* Court»
★

P o lice

$3,36281 Scott w u accused of running down Reginald James
Haskell on Slate Road 40 In Goldenrod. HsikeD spent two
weeks in the hospital u a result of the asu u lt with a broken
ankle end multiple Ucerations.
GIRL SLEEPS THROUGH BURGLARY
Mlcheel Smith's 14-year-old daughter Cathy Is apparently a
very sound sleeper. Thursday night, she slept through a
burglary In which 11,090 worth of goods w u stolen from her
parents' borne.
According to a Seminole County sheriff's report, the Incident
occurred about 1:30 pm . at the Smith's 604 Blue Lake Drive
home In Longwood. Cathy w u the only one home at the time
but did not hear thieves u they took a college class ring, a
women's wedding bant, a watch, .34-caliber revolver, and 30
bookjjtf S&amp;M green stamps.

Little Preparation For Libyan Ouster?
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The decision
to expel Libyan diploma lx from the
United Stales appeared to be an Im­
promptu action taken with little prepara­
tion, soma American businessmen u y .
The buxlnesamen were among the
representatives of about 30 U.S com­
panies who attended a doaed briefing
Thursday at the Stale Department,
where they were urged to pull their
employee# out of Libya u toon u
positbit.
"They offered no ■eel help In getting
our people out," u ld an oil company
official who declined to be Identified. “I
don't think anybody here is going to
follow their advice."
Another businessman u ld , "We had
the impression they just put It (the ex­
pulsion order) together without any real
preparation or thought.''
The Slate Dcpaitment Wednesday

Syria Ignores Peace Effort
BEIRUT, Ivebtnon (UPI) — Syria, dteregarding Israeli
warnings, sent 7,000 fresh troops Into Lebanon and In­
creased Ita SAM-mtsaU* force in the fractured nation — two
new complication for UJ . presidential envoy Philip Habib's
efforts to avert a Middle East war.
Habib, drafted from retirement by President Reagan,
arrived by car on Thursday from Damascus for Today's
talks with I*b*nete leaders. As the veteran diplomat
started hi* peace mission, a Soviet Emissary waa In
Damascus discussing the possible IsraelLSyrisn conflict
with Syrian leaders.
But as the super powers tried to prevent war over Israel's
demand that Syria removt missiles from Lebanon, military
source* reported Syria had moved new missiles and
another 7,000 troop* into the strategic Bekaa Valley nor­
theast of Beirut, raising tots] force* to 17,000.

ordered the closing of the Libyan
diplomatic mission In Washington and
the expulsion of all Libyan diplomats by
next Wednesday. It accused the Libyan
government of supporting International
terrorism end harassing antigovernment
Libyans In the United Statu.
A third budneatman at the briefing
laid, "Nothing h u really changed In the
situation except that Secretary of State
( Alexander) Haig got back In the country
and ilgrted the order. R sounded very Im­
promptu, with nor much preparation and
that's what most of the questions In the
meeting were about."
About 70 Libyan diplomats and their
families will have to leave the United
S tatu , but tome 4,000 Libyan students
will be allowed to remain "ao long u they
pursue their academic courses," a Slate
Department official said
The United Stale* pulled all of tta

diplomats out of Libya In December 1979
after the U-S. Embassy In Tripoli w u
Invaded and burned in a demonstration
that appeared to have the backing of the
Libyan government
All Houderl, the head of Libya's
diplomatic million, said Thursday he
w u shocked at the eviction order
Houderl was reported to have been given
10 minutes notice before the State
Department announced the action.
In interviews with American reporters,
Houderl denied Libya backed or em­
ployed violence or planned any
retaliation.
But a newspaper published In Abu
Dhabi quoted Houderl u saying, "Libya
will reply to the American decision."
"A cutoff of oil is only one of the
various weapons that can be used lo
confront the United State* or Um other
" Houderl said in a ‘
!.) t

h o s p it a l

NOTES

Id n tM k Mamavtel M«v»itel
Ma » »

ADMISSION!

Senior0:
JuOton Oriflwi

Belly Ann Murphy
Haul I Ventti
Cuvid A He yet. Dellena
VreO A Laakure. Oeltm*
Florence E Pallinot'l, Dalione
Frtfim Tomeymo Deltona
Wilton McBurney. EMafpriia
Oor«e A Fatal* OrlArtdo

...

Legal Notice

Lake Mary

If'dHtintuxl
front Pnge
Pa*a 1IA)
AI
I Continued from
Raymond * Dertene forty a water shortage la the (act that
pul. Osteen
Mary — that is, the lake tn Lake Mary —
la 3J feet lower now than It w u this time
DISCHAROES
a year ago. And Crystal Lake, which
tenter*
Andrew C Marietta
under normal conditions h u one Island,
Nichole N Hart, Denary
h u fallen lo the point that two island* a n
Albert G Hanclrey. Deltona
Robert G Smedtry. Deltona
now visible.
Georoe A I Melt. Orlando
Kulbes u ld he h u no definite
Vickie Clark 1 baby girl,
proposals for cutting back water usage,
DeLand
I IB T IIt

■
but suggested citizens might water their
lawns only "one* a week and wash their
c a n one* a month."
In other action Thursday, the council
rejected million* tr* Jeno Paulucd's
offer lo buy beck 10 acres of property on
Rhineha ri Road for the same price the
city paid for It two y e a n ago.
The unanlmoua vote came despite dty

Attorney Gary Massey's opinion that the
city may be unable to build anything on
Jm tract eicept a d ty government
complex.
The dty purchased the land from
Paulucd far $30,300 tn April 1971 and by
insolation committed Itself to using It u
the site for construction of a dty haU.

Women Appointed To Local Boards
WEATHER

Women will become the majority on two local boards — the
Seminole County Housing Authority and th* Seminole Com­
munity College (SCC t Board of Trust tea —with appointments
announced today by Gov. Bob Graham.
Graham has appointed Mrs. Martha Yancey to th* touting
authority and Mrs. Dora le e Russell to the college board of
trustees. Both live in Sanford.
Mrs. Yancey G reater Sanford Chamber of Commerce
Goodwill Ambassador, will join Mrs. Carleno Sapp of Oviedo;
Mrs. Mary Smith of Sanford; Clarence Sapp of Oviedo and
Glenn McCall of Sanford on the county housing authority. She
replaces her hushand, Sanford City Commissioner Nrd

NATIONAL REPORT: A thunderstorm doused sunbaked
southern Florida with 4 Inches of rain and triggered a small
tornado, but failed to break die worst drought tn nearly a
decade or duuoe a rash of wildfires burning In the Everglades.
More thunderstorms scattered across (he Southern Plaint
states today, heading into the mid-Mluisatppl Valley Heavy
rains fell in K an su and northern Oklahoma today, prompting
a severe thunderstorm warning for the region. Temperatures
in Illinois and Indiana ranged between SO and 60 degree*
Thursday and tittle variation w u expected in today’* tem­
peratures. Up to 4 Indies of rain fell Thursday on southern
Florida but did not stop wildfires that have burned more than
4,000 acres of Umber and brass land In the Southweal, a twister
touched down 3 miles northwest of Tucumcari, S M., and at
least three tornadoes touched down tn West Texas, damaging
two bams but apparently causing no Injuries. State officials
MRS. SYLVIA COOPER
u ld about seven tornadoes were reported in the region. In
Mrs. Sylvia Cooper, 43, of
Mobile, Ala., 7-foot floodwaters receded after freeing hundreds
of resident* to flee their hemes. No one was hurt but cfflctab lit! locust Are., Sanford,
died Monday In Orlando
rsUmnted damages would run Into the millions.
EREA READINGS (» *.m.|t temperature: 09; overnight Regional Medical C enter,
low: 67; Thursday's high: 01; barometric pressure: 29 00 and Bom In Waynesboro, Ga , she
rising; relative humidity; 71 percent; winds: North at 13 mph. w u a Baptist.
Survivors Include her
SATURDAY'S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 1:0)
a m ., 1:42 p.m.; lows, 7:23 a.in., 7:31 p.m.; PORT mother, Mrs. Ruth Lee
CANAVERAL: highs, 1:01 a m., 1:34 p m .; lows, 7:14 am ., Hunter, Sanford, seven
7:22 p m.; BAYPOKT: highs, 0:00a.m., 3:17 p.m.; Iowa, 11:39 daughters, Jaunona Cooper,
Janet
Cooper,
Sharon
am .
BOATING FORECAST: SL Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out Franklin, Carolyn Franklin,
Tina Franklin, Jacqulllna
30 Miles;
Winds variable mostly westerly around 10 knots tonight Franklin and April Franklin,
becoming north to northeast to to 13 knots during today all of Sanford; two sens,
Sherman F ran k lin , Ft.
through Saturday. Seat 2 lo 4 feet.
AREA FORECAST; Becoming portly cloudy this afternoon Gordon, Ga. and Michael
through Saturday. Highs mostly In the tnld to upper 80s. Lows Franklin, Sanford; slater,
tonight in the 80s. Wind mostly northwest to north 10 lo 13 mph Mrs. Mary L, McCloud,
Sanford; numerous nieces
today and northeast 10 mph tonight
EXTENDED FORECAST: Variable cloudiness with a and nephews.
B ro w n s'
P a ra d is e
dtafce ol showers and thundershowers over most of the state
Sunday through Tuesday. Mild nighta and warm days with Memorial Citepci, Sanford, ta
lows tn the 8&lt;h except low to mid 70s southeast coast and keys. In charge of arrangements.
JOSEPH a MARTIN
Highs In the mid Ohs to near 90.
Joseph Briggs Martin, it, of
304 Prairie la k e Drive. Fern
uim
Park, died Monday. Bain In
New Bedford, M a u ., he
Friday. May *. 1911-Vol, 72. No. M2
moved to Fern Pork from
FvSIikko* OtH, aw* Suiteay *•«#• tetarosy »y Tky tenter*
H«r«W. IM ^W N Fr*»4k»*t. latter*. Fla 1X771.

m

Yancey on that board. Mrs Yancey's term expire* Srpl. 7,
Yancey w u appointed to the office but could not serve after
his election to the dty commission lost December.

Mrs. Russell, la a copartner In a seafood brokerage firm and
a member of the Seminole County Histories! Commission Her
term of the SCC board will expire May If, 1913.
Mrs. Russell will replace Dr. W. Vincent Roberta on the
college board of trustees. She Is to Join Mrs. Beverly P. Lee,
Mrs. Carolyn Sterntrom, J, Wendell Agee and John Daniels on
the board of trustees Jim* 1. — DONNA ESTES

Legal Notice

AREA DEATHS

Eu'tliitK llt'fitld »

Min*)

children;
24
g reat­
grandchildren and H i t s
great-great-grandchildren;
numerous nieces, nephews
Catholic. He w u a member of
and cousins.
the Disabled American
W lls o n -E ic h ilb s rg s r
Veterans Seminole Chapter
Mortuary la tn ebargn of
30, Sanford, th* Metro
arrangements.
REACT Crime Prevention
Unit, and the National Order
of Trench Rati Dugout 431, Fu f f fdl No tic01
Orlando.
He la survived by a sister,
C S O M I. M M
IV L V I*
Mary M. Medeiros, South
Funeral i n i t a ter M n lrtela
Dartmouth, Masa.; a brother- Cooper. 41. ol n i l Larval A w ,
in-law, J.C. Dyer, Concord, tenter*, waa dita Monday In
Calif, and several nieces and OrUndo, all) l i il I p m ,
tetvroar. at N ta Balnal
nepbewt,
MNatenery n rtr.il Chunk atm
Baldwln-FalrchUd Funeral ma la v a start Dacfar at
Home, Altamonte Chapel, is tktetln,', Burial in Uniterm
Carnal*)». Brawni' Ptradtea
In charge of arrangements. M »m orirl chapat M etiar**

Richmond, Vi. tn 1487. He
w u a retired m u te r sergeant
in the US Arms and a

MRS. BIRDA VICKERS
Mrs. Bird* Vickers, C . ol
1412 Bell A n ., Sanford, died
Monday
at
Seminole
Memorial Hospital.
She la survived by her
daughter, Mri. Cora Lee
Culver, Sanlcrd; daughter-inlaw Mrs. Annie Ruth Vickers,
Rochester, N.Y.; 11 grand­

v ic i c c a i ,

V enice

.

s i* d a —

Furwrei la rv k e t ter M n tiro*

vickarv it. or tu t nm a m .
tent»nl. aha dlad Monday anil
bt ai t p.m, tetvroar. al
Matrdonia p rim itiw Baptist
Chiacn. ItU W llth I I . tenlord
with lha * r». Oatenth Harrli
ortlctetMf Our tel M Restlewn
Cemetery, laniard Wfltean
ElcttelBtrgtr Mortuary in
charge

f ];,n g Mat I f a i 't H Paid It tenter* Fletide H i l l

Hama D-lutay Wsak, It Ml Maul*, MIS j * Msatki. 11*44;
sil te Sr Mel wtak »l IS. Maw*. 41 It. • »*»•"&gt;•
IMN; Va»» W 4#
______________________ _

m m

can ati

s i c v m o u i NAM I
Noi.rr lo horaby gluon that I am
*ngag«d m butMass at as Wilford
A w , Long wood, teminow County,
Florida undtr I no tictittaua noma
at OMNI GOAPHIC SUPPLY, and
that I M m # to ragnter stM name
with tha C ter* or ma Clrtu.t Cowl,
laminate County, Florida In sc
cordanca with tha prevtiiene of tha
■ wtitMut Name vatu ttt Tow n
teatten ZalW Florida itetutta

140

(*a C W Pretetr
FublUTt May 4. II. ZZ. If. Itfl.
0(1X0
FICTITIO US NAMI
Hoik a it htraby (iron teat I am
ongagad m butmart al M4 Dublin
Dr Laks Mary. SamlnaM County,
Florida vndsr tha IKIitloua nama
al MOBILE HOMS OF FLA , and
that I inland tg register Udnam a
mm tha Clark at tna Circuit Court,
laminate County, Florida bi sc
cordanca *HA lha arautelarw ar lha
Fkliiteua Nama Itatutat to w n
Suction I d lH Florida lla tvln

IVI7
Vs T r r a ii Cat
Publish April 17. Si. and May l, 4.
mi
[X h ll
_____________

PICVITIOKINAMB
Noiica la hsrabr gtwn Inal I am
•neaped In buemett al i n A S
Wympre E d . AlUmonli Springe.
Fid. TItOI, laminate County,
Florida undtr tha Iklltaui nama
ol SUPER SCOOP, and that I
.raw'd ta ragtitar u ld rams with
tha Clark al tha Circuit Court.
Sam mote County. Florida in sc
cordancawlthths proutturn ar too
FUHttOuS Nama Stetwfn. Taw .!
teciton 141N Florida Itatutat
HS7
i-g E m T . E Luck alt

PuMith May i. is. n . », m i
OEl te

.suL

REPORT OF CONDITION
Consolidating domaitlc kobildiarlai ol tha Atlantic National
Gank of Stm.nola In tha etata of Florida, i t ttte cl**# of
buiinoes on March 11, IN I, pubIIshod In rdepones So call mads
by Comptroller *1 tha Currency, undtr title 12, United Stelae
Cod*. Section tel.
Charier N*. tltSX
Nnttenal Bank Region No.«
Statement of Resource* end Lteblllltes
Thoviandiaf do Iter t
ASSET!
Cash nnd due from depository Inxtltutlons...................
S.VOa
U. S Treasury securities............................................. 10.ISO
Obilg*tIons of other U. S. Government
agendas and corpora Hone ....................................
7tf
Obligations of Statax and politic*!
subdivision! In th# United StntH . . .....................
7,022
AJ1 other xecuritte*.......................
if
Federal fundi sold and securities
purchased under dgreementi
to resell..................................................................
5.400
Loans. Total (a*cludlng unearned
Income) ................
14.402
L n t : Allowance for pcMltte
loan tones...............................................
742
Loans, Net ............................................................. 14441
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures,
end other aitets representing
bank premise* .................................................
1,517
Reel estate, owned other Nun
bank premlxei............................................
54
All other assete........... ................................................
551
TOTAL ASSETS ......................................................... 50,252
LIABILITIES
Demand dtpoiits of Individuals, partner.
steps, and corporations ........................................ 17, Ja*
Time and savings deposits of Individuals.
partnership*, and corporation*........ ..................... 19,974
Deposits of United Stele* Govamment........................
tit
Deposits of Stales and political
subdivisions In the United Sides...... ..................... 2.290
Certified and officers' checks.......................................
ss
Tolel Deposits
*5,111
Total demand depot It* ............................. 14.J97
Total time and savings deposits ................. 11 , 4*1
All olher liabilities......... ..........................................
*19
TO TA L LIABILITIES (excluding
s-ibordlneted notes and debentures) ..................... 44.727
EQ U ITY CAPITAL
Common Stock
No. there* authorized 72.500
No shares outstanding 72.100 . . .......... (per vsluw)
715
Surplus ......................................
1,5*5
Undivided profits end reserve for
contingencies and other cpaltel
reserve*................................................................. 1,714
TOTAL EQ U ITY CAPITAL ...............................
4414
TO TA L LIA BILITIES AND
EQ U ITY CAPITAL ............................................... 50.252
MEMORANDA
Amounts outstanding at of rtport date:
Time certificate of deposit In
denominations of 4100,000 arm or*........................
U57
Average fur 20 calendar days toe
calender month) ending with
report dele:
Total deposits..........................
*4,942
We, the undersigned directors ettesf the correctness of this
statement of resources and liabilities. We declara that It hss
twan exgmlnad by us and to th* best of our knowledge and
belief Is true and correct.
Paul P. Macomber
Howard H. Hodges
Directors
Harry Lee, Jr.
L JurfY Kilter. Assistant Vic* President of the above
named bank do haraby declare that this Report of Condltlwt Is
tru# and correct fo tha best of my knowledge end belief.
Judy Keller
4-2941
Publish May 4, ivti
DE t-34

A.

�Eremny Hen Id, Wnterd, FI.________ Friday, May (. i m — lA

Board Lists Most Costly

NATION
INBRIEF
House Votes To Strip
Major Social Programs
WASHINGTON (UP1) - House leaders tar* been
issued marching orders by a majority of their mem­
bers - give President Reagan the budget cuts he
wants to restructure the government and strip down
soda! programs.
Over the emotional pleas of Democratic leaders to
save programs "that made America great," the House
voted, 233-ITt, Thursday to endorse Reagan's (M il
billion spending plan for fiscal 1982.
Reagan, in a statement Issued by the White House,
called it "a resounding victory." He said Americans
have been telling the government for years to put its
house in order, and, "Today, the people have been
heard.”

4 Dead In Shooting Spree
SAI£M,Ore. (UPI) — Four people were killed and
10 othen wounded Thursday night by a young man who
fired several rounds from a pistol Inside a crowded
tavern, police said.
Taken into custody and charged with first-degree
murder was Lawrence William Moore, 13, a resident of
Lyons, Ore,, a town of BM In the Cascade Mountains 23
miles southeast of Salem
Three fataDy wounded people died at the scene. A
fourth died at the hospital.
Police u td Moore entered the tavern near the
Willamette River at 10:14 p.m. and "began firing shots
into a crowd of patrons from an automatic pistol. The
gunman find multiple rounds, reloading clips of
ammunition several times. No motive has been
established.

Going To Hospital ? Check It Out
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) - A
preliminary list of the most costly
hospitals In the state will enable
penny-pinching patients to shop
around before checking into the
institutions.
The Hospital Cost Containment
Board Thursday released the list of
the most expensive hospitals, which
could mean a closer examination of
the hospital's budgets and possible
public hearings.
The state's general acute-care
hospitals were outlined by using 200
computerized
charts
called
"primary screens." Each primary
screen'compared a single hospital's
1979 patient-care revenues and

operating expenses with the
averages of sim ilar sized in­
stitutions.
The board said hospitals In the top
fifth In “ total cost per adjusted
admissions," one of 19 ways the
p rtm sry
screen
determ ines
averages and individual hospital
figures, are subject to further
examination.
A1 Fletcher, director of the
board's financial analysis staff, said
the Identification of target hospitals
through the screens "Is only the first
step toward a completed analysts."
' Such a display does tell the board
and the public which institutions we
will be reviewing in depth as

prospective budgets are submitted
by each hospital this year," Fletcher
said.

The hospital will be reviewed in
detail If its budgeted expense per
admission exceeded (he Notional
Hospital Input Price Index oxer the
applicable time period, said Sam
Draper, acting chairman of the
board's financial analysis com ­
mittee.

"(The screens) do not take into
consideration possible legitimate
reasons why a hospital might fall
into the upper 20 percent," n e ith e r
said. "We expect to determine which
hospitals in the upper 20 percent
have solid JusUflcalitxi for high costs
and which do not."

In
a
list described
as
"preliminary" the hospitals were
Identified as:

Each of Florida's 234 hospitals
were placed In one of 20 groups — 10
general or community hospital
groups offering short-term general
care, and 10 groups of specialized
institutions.

jKlMW
Mtftpft*!.
foyf*
M IM I
MUmli MtfCf H atpiiai.
Miamif PtorMa Haa**la&lt;. Orl#*«t, Ca*an •*
Lata*** Haaffti Cart tmfm, Miami s A mafic#*
h&lt;
m fatal mi Miami. i*&lt; . Miami Kt«i.mm*#«
M am anai Ma»#«tai. ■i»»i«m aai 0 — 4
tam arfta* H#a#s*ai Tampa j »*t C a n Cara!
HM PW . C tP t Carat
Ottwe Mapitaft m lM M M tm rii

'Converted' Preacher Wants Church For Gays
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (UPI) - A Southern
Baptist minister who underwent a sex change
operation faces being stripped of her license to
preach, but ts determined to open a church lor
gays and transsesuals.
Priscilla Ann Rene, formerly Andre M.
DeBeJare, had a sex change operation in
January in Colorado and has been living as a
woman since. A court hearing In Bartow, Fla,,
Thursday acknowledged her female status and
changed her last name to Rene.
A native of Los Angeles, DcBetare moved to

the quiet central Florida community of Winter
Haven in 1971A graduate of California Baptist
College in Riverside with a degree in religion,
he received his minister's license from the
First Baptist Church of Fontana, Calif.
It is that church that is now threatening to
revoke the license.
"No wsy we would transfer the license into
the woman's name," the Rev. George Horton,
pastor of the Fontana church, told the Winter
Haven News Chief In a copyright story. "We
do not beliete in this kind of thing, it gees

agstnst the Bible."
Horton said he will ask his congregation to
revoke the license at Its June business

meeting.
But she remains determined to preach.
“Just because I had a sex change doesn't
mean I'm not a Christian. I was called into the
ministry to preach the gospel 1 feel 1 have the
right to continue preaching the gospel,” she
told the newspaper.
"I would like to open a church for people who
are shunnned because of their appearance —

tur transsexuals, homosexuals and blacks.
Who Is going to minister to these people? They
have a right to know God's word.
"I do not regard what I have done as Im­
moral. I have no gull!. I feel clean, religious
and close to God. I don't smoke, drink, do
drugs or use vulgar language. That's how I
have always lived my life and how I always
will.
"I want people to understand. I want them to
have some feeling (or me. t am not who I was
In the past," she said.

Sickle-Cell Discovery
CHICAGO (UP!) — Gariy treatment of sickle-cell
anemia—a blood defect primarily affecting blacks—
can save (he lives of small children suffering from the
inherited disease, a California study shows.
Dr. Darlren Powers of the Sickle Cel] Center of Ixw
Angeles County described a dramatic turnaround in
the treatment of youngsters under the age of 6.
Pneumonia infection has been the single greatest
cause of death for children with sickle-cell anemia in
the first five years of life. The infection progresses to
meningitis and death unless treated promptly and
effectively,

Missing Youth Found
ATLANTA (UPI) — A 14-year-old youth police
(eared was abducted by the killers of 26 young blacks
turned up safe Thursday nighl It marked the longest
lull of the year In Atlanta's grim procession of deaths.
Eric Thompson was found in suburban Cobb County
and was being questioned by Juvenile officers.

Coal Talks Continue
WAAHINGTON &lt;UPJll - The United Mine Workers
and the soft-coal Industry are remaining silent on
renewed contract talks aimed at ending a sta-week
nationwide strike by 1( 0,000 miners, marred by
scattered violence.

Union and industry representatives ended a threeweek stalemate Thursday by reluming to the
bargaining table for a live-hour session. They were to
meet again today.

Reagan, Suzuki Hit It O ff
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Ronald Reagan
and Japanese Prime Minister Zenko Suzuki seem to
have hit it off Just fine personally, but there remains a
nagging problem on defense matters.
An administration official said their first SO-mlnute
meeting at the White House Thursday, followed by
longer talks with Cabinet members, “established a
very close working relationship” and w u devoted
more to "netting acquainted than settling grand
issues."
At s glittering White House dinner ThuraUsy night,
Suzuki underlined the new rapport. He sold he snd
Reagan already were like “old friends" who had
“known each Other for many, many years.”

FLORIDA
INBRIEF
Hurricane Arlene
Begins To Lose Steam
MIAMI (UPI)— Off-season tropical storm Arlene
fling 40 mile an hour winds and heavy rains Into
mountainous eastern Cuba today on a course aimed it
the Bahama Islands
At midnight EDI, the storm w u centered on the
southeast coast of Cuba, about (0 miles south of the city
of Camaguey, near latitude 20.4 north, longitude 711
w est It w u moving toward the northeast about 12
mph.
As Arlene bit east Cuba's mountains, its top winds
dropped from M mph to 40 mph and satellite pictures
indicated a alight lessening of rainfall.

Childers Maneuvering
TALLAHASSEE, (U PI)—Senate President W. D.
Childers has offered the chamber’s 13 Republicans an
unpredecented volet In the upcoming reappointment
debate, a move to item a growing revolt that might
keep him from
ving a second term.
Childers said T ^w day night he will appoint two
reapportionment committees and name two chairmen
to bead each panel-one Democrat and one
Republican. Republicans also will hold about a third of
the teats on each committee, comparable to their
representation in the full, 40-member Senate.

Diagnostic Test Developed
GAINESVILLE (UPI)— A University of Florida
professor has developed a diagnostic test that enables
women to know for sure if they are carriers of a rare
hereditary disease called Menkes’ Kinky Hair Syn­
drome.

----- *

JL re e s c a n b e d a n g e r o u s
to y o u r h e a lth .
Before you pick your fruit or prune your tree,
please look up to see if any power lines are near.
This simple precaution could save you from
a serious accident.
You see, if a branch or your pole should
com e in contact with a power line, you could
receive a serious shock. And under certain
conditions, such as wet weather, you could get

a shock just from touching the tnink.
Were doing our best to keep trees clear o f
power lines, but if you see one where M other
Nature got the better o f us, call Florida Power
&amp; Light.
To us, safety is an important part o f serving
the public. A n d serving the public is what
were all about.

F= P

FLORIDA POWER &amp; LIGHT COMPANY

E le c t r ic i ty is a p o w e r f u l s e r v a n t . R e s p e c t it.

�Evening Herald
•uses
5

mi

300 N, FRENCH AVE, SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code305-322 2S1l o r 83)-9943
F rid ay , M ay 8, 19*1—4A
Wayne 0. Doyle, Publisher
Thomei Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lowin bury. Advert Itlng and Circulation Director

llome Delivery: Week, tl.OO; Month, $4-23; 8 Month*, 834.00;
Year, 143.00. Hy Mill: Wert, 81.23; Month, 8323; 3 Month*,
83000. Year. 857.00.

Celebration
O f Disaster
■ May Day is when communist countries
Celebrate the presumed glories of socialist
revolution. May Day is also a distress call, a
signal of impending disaster. Both meanings fit
the situation in Poland on the recent first of May.
- Communist stewardship has made a wreck of
the country's economy. If workers and farmers
had anything to celebrate, it is not what socialism
has brought them but what they have achieved so
(ar in a bold rebellion against the system.
They can at least hope to be creating a Polish
brand of socialism that is more democratic than
the totalitarian brand imported from Moscow a
generation ago.
* The distress signal comes from the signs that
Poland is experiencing only a lull in the con­
frontation with the Soviet Union that reached the
threat of nrmed Intervention a month ago.
Ironically, it is the momentum behind the
democratic movement in Poland — the one cause
for celebration on May Day — that could propel
^he country into the disaster it has so far avoided.
The Warsaw Pact maneuvers" on Polish
borders are over, and Leonid Brezhnev has said
he is confident the Polish Cbmmunist Party can
work out its problems on its own. The meaning of
his words became clear only recently, when the
Soviet news agency Tass for the first time
declared that the party in Poland was being
threatened by revisionists" —a term that places
reformers outside the pale of the world com­
munist movement which Moscow claims as its
own. It is the label attached to Czech communist
leaders who were toppled by armed Soviet in­
tervention in 1968.
The fateful chapter now beginning for Poland
centers on the election of delegates for a Party
Congress in mid-July. About one-third of the
members of the Polish Communist Party are also
members of Solidarity, the labor movement
which had demanded and gained extraordinary
recognition us a popular force outside the party
structure.
Under pressure from Solidarity, the party’s
Central Committee has agreed to permit open
domination and a secret ballot to elect delegates
to the July congress. This is a clear threat to
hardline, pro-Soviet leaders in the party who
heretofore have kept official party positions from
going to anyone but dutiful followers of the or­
thodox party line.
How much of this democracy can the Russians
jdlow? Like other countries under the Soviet wing,
I'olund is called a People's Republic.' Rut it is
ot in the Kremlin's book for that term to mean
vhnt it says.
Upon convening a meeting of the Central
Committee in Warsaw, Polish communist leader
Stanislaw Kanin put the best possible face on what
is eating at the foundations of party power. He
described the reform movement as an in­
vigorating and creative exercise in socialist
renewal."
At the same time, however, he warned that the
party could not tolerate "political adventurists"
who would carry reform to the point of aban­
doning Marxist-Leninist principles.
Kania is like an orchestra conductor who has
mounted the podium, flipped open the score and
raised his baton. In the old days he knew exactly
what notes the musicians were going to play. This
time he doesn't, but he can be sure the Russians
are listening.

Well, it's finsDy finished! And Longwood
Elementary student* and faculty are Just tickled
pink over their new greenhouse, the only hor­
ticultural project on the county’s elementary
level.
And limply everyone is turning out for the
official dedication ceremonies on Friday, May 13
at 1:30 a m Erection of the building took 4
months.
Longwood principal Arietta Coberly says if the
turn-out is anything tike what support in the
Longwood community has been to erect the
greenhouse there may not be enough room to
accommodate everyone.
"We're to excited end the children are excited
about the dedication ceremonies for their
greenhouse," said Mrs. Coberly.
B f SYBIL MITCHELL GANDY
“ Parents and Lusinesaea in (he community a rt
responsible for the houae being finished now. The

A round

The Clock

ROBERT

82,300 Environmental Education Mint-grant from
the State of Florida Department of Education
was only to cover the gloss and aluminum for the
building," she explained.
“Longwood area businesses and parents
provided thousan-J^pkiU r* worthof tabor and
materials for landscaping, the foundation, and
the plumbing,” Mrs. Coberly added.
Betty Palmer, Seminole County Science
Coordinator, who aecured the grant from the
state department of education Is responsible for
piloting plant life education on the primary level
in county schools.
SupL of Schools Robert Hughes will be on hand
to issue special commendations to (he principle
figures who made the greenhouse possible.
And the "Class Under Glass," a committee of
Longwood teachers, wrote the curriculum lor
kindergarten to 3th grade. Computing this

distinguished group w e n Mr. James B y H ,' &gt;.
Joyce BeU, Mrs. Constance Moon, Mrs. Morris
Switzer, a n t Mrs. Diane Copeland, * d Mrs.
Pam Schrefiler.
Longwood youngsters win le a n what makes
plants grow, how to take c a n of flowers, wbat to
do about plant bugs. h«* to grow a vegetable
garden, and everything in between.
They’ll even leant a little bit about consumer
economics when they plant, harvest and package
their greenhouse products for sale Money will
be used to buy m e n aex da and other product! for
futon- projects.
And from now on, . Longwood tnothen can
expect colorful bouquets of floral beauty at
Mother’s Day and fathers, well, they can expect
Just about anything from the new Longwood
Elementary greenhouse...

WILLIAM STEIF

W AGMA

Teamsters

Human

And Those
Grand Juries

Problem
Solving

CHICAGO (NEA) - On June 1, the
Teamsters Union will hold Its quadrennial
membership meeting In U a Vegas to chooae
its president few the nest four years.
Normally the entire slate of new officers
would have been selected by this time. The
meeting would be ■ mere formality, an tsc u m lor onion leaden to gather for a little fun
and (ambling.
But that does not appear to be the case this
year The reason, u y source* rkwa to th*
work of several federal grand Juries, may
Involve a king series of Indictments that the
aecret panels are about to hand down. The
indictments could prove embarrassing to
high Teamster officials. Including the front­
runner for the union presidency.
Teamster President Frank FlUatmmons is
dead and tllnea* almost forced him to resign
hta position twice during his current four-year
term. Thus, it had long been assumed that he
would not seek re-election.
It had also been assumed that his succenor
would be one of two long-time International
vice presidents of the union: Jackie Preaoer,
head of tfw Cleveland Teamsters, or Roy
Williams, head of the Teamsters in Kansas
City. Many observers Inside and outside the
union have exsidered Williams the favorite,
in pari because his reputation has been
cleaner than Preaser’s. Recently Preaoer was
quoted a* saying that ha was not a candidate
to eucceed Ftlxslmmona and that he would
support Williams.
This is where the grand Juries coma In.
For more than two yean, prosecutor* from
Uw Justice Department’s Organised Crime
Strike Forte has been presenting evidence to
several grand Juries regarding mobconnected activities In La* Vegas. Sources
close to the Investigation u y that a number of
multi-count indictments can be expected
within the next 80 days against the leaders of
organised crime in K ansu City. They u y
that Williams will figure prominently In thou
indictments although he may not be named In
any of them.
The main targe la of this portion of the in­
vestigation have been Nick ClvcUa, the
reputed head of th* K ansu City mob, hi*
brother Carl ClveUa and others connected
with their K ansu City organization, which is
commonly known u ’Th* Outfit." Th* In­
dictments will allege that Nick ClveUa and
others systematically skimmed money from
L u V tg u casino* in which they held a secret
interest. One allegation will be that the group
kkimntcd more titan II million (rum the
Tropicana Hotel in an 18month period ending
to 1978.
Much of the Information about the skim­
ming operation came from court-approved
FBI wiretap* in K ansu City, L u Vegu,
Chicago and SI Louis. Williams’ name ap­
parently figured prominently in th o u
recorded conversation*.
Sources cloe* to the Organised Crime Strike
Force u y that many of the recorded corn
venations took place in Sicilian Italian and
detailed a "w arm friendship" between
Williams and Nick Clvtlla. On* eerie* of
convenetiont concern*'* a mob plan to
replace Fltuimmonx with Williams.
Th* original focus of the probe w u the
T u m s le n 1 Central States Pension Fund,
although th* forthcoming Indictments will
relate only to the ClveUa organization'* ac­
tivities.

My colleague Paul Hope has spent most of
hi* spare lime in th* last all month* adding a
new living room to hit house This has
necessitated building a corridor, converting
his present living room into ■ dining room and
making his present dining room pert of an
enlarged kitchen.
He's nearly finished and estimates the Job
cost him about 88,000, a third of what it would
have cost U he'd hired a builder.
Paul is pari of a trend. Since 1177 the value
of do-it-yourself homing remodeling has
exceeded the value of work done by
professional, reversing a generation-old
American trend.
This is a small sample of what Bruce Stokes
talks about In his new book, "Helping Our­
selves." The subtitle puts it more explicitly:
"Local Solutions to Global Problem s."
Stokes’ point it that “people have lost control
over many of the lames that affect their dally
lives." Gas prices are set by foreign govern­
ments, small towin' futures are decided in
distant board-rooms, power Is centralised,
with Individuals and communities dependent
on governm ents, huge companies end
professional elites "to do many of the things
they once did for themselves... We have
forgotten that human problems require
solutions on a human scale." And that’s
probably truer In the United States than in
Chad.

SCIENCE WORLD

World Around Saturn
By AL nOSSTTEK J R

UPI Science Editor
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Imagine a place
where rivers of methane cut through glaciers
of methane under a nitrogen sky, The totest
results from the Voyager 1 spacecraft suggest
that's a possible scene on the moon Titan.
11tan is (he largest of at to u t 13 moons
circling the giant ringed planet Saturn.
Voyager 1 explored th* Saturnian system
last year, looming within 78,000 miles of
Saturn’s cloud tops on Nov, 11 The project's
scientists reported their findings tn a doxen
reports published in the April 10 issue of th*
Journal Science.
The spacecraft's instrumem* returned
more information about Saturn and its
ulcilitas In a few days than wa* obtained in
the entire previous history of human studies
of the planet
“Thli has enabled the greatest leap for­
ward since the 17th century in knowledge
■bout the Saturn syatem," said astronomer
Bradford Smith of the University of Arinina
and head of th* probe’* photographic studies.
Since first seen by GeUtoo in 1110, Saturn's
most distinguishing characteristic h u been
Its rings of debris. Voyeger 1 found that the
ring* ar* far more complex than bctonttita
thought on the basts of telescopic ob­
servations from Earth.
Thrw tittle utollitos were discovered by
Voyager among the rings. The Innermost,
sUU-nameless moon is about II miles in
diameter. The other two satellites a r t larger,
about 117 and 134 miles In diameter and seem
to shepard the Inner and outer edges of one of
Saturn's distict rings.
Voyager t observed all of Saturn's known
satellite* except Phoebe. The probe's ob­
servations showed that Mimas, Encetodus,
Tethys, Dion* and Rhea ar* all more of le u
spherical tn shape and made up mostly — if

not entirely — of water Ice
These fire satellites arc of a size class.
Severn! hundred miles thick, not previously
explored by satellites.
Titan stands out among Saturn's satellites.
Voyager 1 round that It has ■ diameter of 3,144
miles, making It ascend only to Jupiter's
Ganymede u 'he largest known moon* In the
to Ur system.
Because It has a nitrogezvrich atmosphere,
the National Aeronautics and Spar* Ad­
ministration said Titan may turn out to be the
moat Important and interesting body In th*
solar system.
"For almost two decades, space scientists
have searched for dues to the primeval
Earth,” NASA said. "At Titan, they found an
atmosphere similar to the one that would
have evolved on Earth, had Earth formed at
Titan'* distance from the sun."
Voyager !’■ twin telescopic television
cameras could not see Titan’s surface
because the moon ts cloaked by a dins* has*.
But scientists were able to determine from
the spacecraft's Instruments that the satellite
h u a solid surface with an atmospheric
pressure (0 percent greater than E arth's
Although the bulk of Titan's atmosphere is
nitrogen. Voyager 1 found that up to 10 per­
cent of the gases at the surface consist of
methane.
Project adentilt Edward Stone of the
California Institute of Technology said the
surface temperature is about 294 degrees
Fahrenheit below aero. That, he said, la near
the temperature and pressure where methane
can exist as a solid, liquid and vapor at the
same time.
That mean* Tltan’l surface could be
covered with methane ice and have liquid
methane running uk« water. There even
cculd be methane rain falling.

Stoke* sees more and more dissatisfaction
with "the shortcomings and alien, deper­
sonalized values ot overgrown, expensive
institutions that now monopolise problem­
solving in modern ,*oci*ty," Conservatives,
he notes, u y Oil* require* limiting big
government's role, while liberal* want to
curtail big business. But he thinks these
“remedies" do nothing mors than reshuffle
power between the stale and corporations. Ha
writes: "If individuals and communities are
to p i n greater control over their Uvea, then
they must do eo by empowering them­
selves." Locally, using their own tnitiaUves
and brains.
Stokes says the trend's already begun and
rites hundreds of examples. Among them:
— “Quality Control Circles,” small, em­
ployee-run, decision-making U am s ar*
growing like crazy In the United States
(thanks to the Japanese model). Firms like
Hewlett-Packard, American Airlines, Harley
Davidson, General Electric and Metropolitan
Life suddenly have found QC circles are good
business in an era of lowered productivity and
absenteeism.
- Davis, Calif., consciously trying to save
energy cut its electricity demand a fifth and
Ua natural gas use a third between 1973 end
1874. Of DavU' 38.000 resident*. 38,000 own
bikes, which constitute up to 40 percent of
traffic on aoma main streets.
— The Chicago Housing authority's com­
munity garden provides s vital supplement to
diets of 8,000 families; Los Angtk* neigh­
borhood gardens produce mar* than 81
million worth of vegetables yearly.
— Community workshop* convinced the
rural poor in southern Colorado’s San Luts
Valley of solar energy's merits. Thais people,
whose main fuel always had been wood,
learned to build simple solar water and spec*
heaters — and by 1880 had installed at least
400 solar systems, probably making hte
valley the nation's aoUr capital.

BERRY'S WORLD
JACK ANDERSON

Security Boosted After Office Invasion

"C*L my' Let's hope Prince Charles hasn't fall­
en oil another horse."

WASHINGTON — A few weeks ago, fire
activists opposed to the administration's
policy in El Salvador managed to moke their
way onto th* seventh floor of the State
Department, where the top brass have their
offices.
While two of ih* Intruders diverted the
guard cn Stify, th* other three entered
Secretary of Silt* Alexander Haig’s suite,
ahoutod slogans and dumped blood and ashes
on the pkish furnishings.
Haig was in hia suite at the time, but
security officers subdued the protesters
without much trouble. The incident, however,
h u quickened the department's moves to
lighten security at home end abroad in the
wok* of the attacks on US embassies tn
recent years and the assassination attempt on
President Reagan tn March.
Haig's high profile and hardline policies
make him a prime target far terrorists,
security officials fear. They not* that ha

narrowly escaped an assassination attempt in
Belgium on June 23,1174, four days before be
left his post u NATO commander.
Special measures ore being taken to make
Haig's bane in nearby Bethesda, M d, safe
from unexpected visitors. Officials did not
want to set a dollar figure on th* cost of these
security arrangements for fear of tipping oH
potential Intruders to the exact nature of the
safety devices. Dut sources told my associate
Lucette Ugnodo that only about 112,600
worth of equipment will be permanently
attached to the house, the rest can be
removed and used again when Haig leaves
office.
Poesibly to reassure Haig's neighbors tn th*
pash suburb, officials did disclose that attack
dogs are not part of the security system.
Instead, «3phf»ticaled “motion detector"
devices will spot anyone approaching the
large house and its tree-shaded yard.

Haig's limousine is also being fitted out
with security equipment, including c special
tracking device that will enable authorities to
locate the vehicle in case it is stolen.
Internal security measures are also bring
lightened up at Foggy Bottom — particularly
concerning access to the seventh floor. "It's a
tricky business," one State Department of­
ficial explained. "There are all aorta of
visitors — busloads of tourists, schoolklds. It
makes it very difficult."
Overseas, plans are proceeding both to
make our embassies more secure end to
prevent sensitive documents from falling Into
the wrong hands to case an embassy Is
overrun Th* Iranian militant* were able to
frit* our Tehran embassy bet ore security
officers could destroy some highly sensitive
papers.
Eventually, Die Slat* Department bopeu to
aohe this perennial problem by simply

elim inating the presence of sensitive
documents in our embassies. The plan would
involve on electronic storage and retrieval
system in Washington. Overseas personnel
wsild plug into (he computer to store sen­
sitive Information and call it ug&gt; later os
needed. All tranamiarioni would be In cork.
Just as messages sent by cable ar* now.
Officials estimate that th* data bank will
take about five years to install In 230 U A
missions worldwide. Meanwhile, top priority
fc being given to embaalea in countries on D&gt;e
State Department'! aecret list of 'severe"
security problems. These countries repor­
tedly Include El Salvador, Lebanon, Pakistan
and Afghanistan.
Meanwhile, un ■ personal level, foreign
service employees are being given Instruction
on the best way to behave — and survive - in
the event of a terrorist attack an th e j
overseas past

�^ 9

•.«*

* *

OURSELVES
E owning Herald, Sanford, FL

Tom

Friday. May I, 1685-8*

Celebrities Come To Aid Of Humane Society

Davis
U rtaa
B U S

Gardening

New Indoor
Plants Need
Acclimatized
ll seems incredible but the environment Inside your
home could be fatal to a new house plant, even though you
know from experience that the light, temperature and
humidity are just right (or older plants of the very same
species.
You could bring a new plant into your home and give 11
the same care your other plants thrive on only to watch it
slowly die.
Many plants, Including some of the moat popular house
plants, produce specialized leaves suited to the light
conditions they grow in. These are sun leaves and shade
leaves.
As a rule, sun leaves are smaller and thicker. They help
plants avoid light Injury but they don’t necessarily make
the moat efficient use of low Ught in food production.
Shade leaves are usually larger and thinner. They help
plants make as much food as possible under low Ught
conditions.
But they're easily damaged by loo much direct sunlight
For low or medium light areas in your home you need
ptontrf with shade leaves. But some nursery plants grown
outdoors In full sun have sun leaves. So, unless the house
plants you buy are properly arc lima tiled for indoor
growing conditions, you can expect trouble.
The main reason tun leaves can cause problems for
plants moved indoors Is their high respiration rate. In
simple terms — they use up a lot of food. That'a fine for
plants growing In direct sunlight
Usually the rate of photosynthesis is greater than the
rate of respiration. Again, In simple terms, the planla get
so much light that they can make food faster than they use
it
But tf a plant with aun leaves is moved to a shaded,
indoor location, the high respiration rale will continue for
many weeks. Unfortunately, aa 1 said, sun leaves are
designed primarily to prevent light Injury, not to make the
most efficient use of low Ught in food production.
So, in low light sun Iraves produce less food than plants
need. To make,up the (UUerence, plants have to consume
i stored food, they feed on themselves. Unless the
respiration rate
photosynthesis rale a rt brought
ite and tha photosyn
into balance, lh« plant may die.
On the other hand, if a plant with ahade leaves is moved
into full tun for rvtn a short period. It will b t a rm ly in­
jured because of cell death caused by high temperatures.
In cither rase plants must be acclimatized or gradually
prepared for their new locations. Today more and more
plants sold at reputable garden centers are already ac­
climatized to the tight conditions for which they are
recommended.
However, It's often desirable to move plants from one
location to another In the home, and this can cause new
acclimatization problems.
So 1'U offer some examples of changes that will work
and changes that won't. You can move a plant from a
fluorescent light to an east window where It doesn't get
direct sun, but you can't move a plant from a sunny
terrace to a location under fluorescent lights.
You can move a plant from a south window to a terrace
spot where It only gets early morning sun or partial shade
all day, but you can't move a plant from a north window to
the same location
You can move a plant from a shady terrace to an indoor
spot near an east or south window, but you can't move a
plant from an east window to a sunny terrace or patio.
If you need additional information about acclimatizing
your indoor plants please contact the Agri-Center In
Sanford at XO-2UO, eat. ITS.
All extension programs are open to anyone regardless
of race, color, sex or national origin.

C A LEN D A R
FRIDAY, MAYS
Sanford-Seminole Jayceca and Jayreetles awards
and installation banquet, Je rry ’i Restaurant, Sanford
Airport. Get-acquainted hour, I p.m„ dinner 7 p m.
SATURDAY, MAY t
Flab fry to benefit the Crossroads Alcoholic
Treatment O nter In Sanford, 5-8:30 p jn .,a llh e center
on Lake Minnie Drive off Highway 17-81 one mile south
of lak e Mary Boulevard. Tickets available at B L
perklns and Gifts By Han in downtown Sanford.
Srtmoolr Community College Showcase open house
in celebration of SCCs 15th anniversary. Continuous
program of exhibits, demonstrations and musical
presentations.
StaiK Cithern trip to Once Upon a Stage to see
•1776." Leave Sanford Civic Center, 11 a.ip., pick up at
Leeds, Casselberry 11:56 a m. Return 5 pin. Call TO9Hi for reservations.
F m Day Bazaar, 10 a m to 4 p m . Salvation Army
O n ter, 7W W. 14th SL, to benefit Sanford Gymnastics
Association. Games and entertainment.
Lupus Foundation of Florida, Inc., 3 p m 1115 E.
Nebraska SL (Boy Scout building) Orlando. Speaker •
Nancy Landry, supervisor of HRS Aging and Adult
Service Program. Open to public.
Seminole Caimty League of Women Voters annual
rnd-of-the-year luncheon, noon, lead Chum ley's Pub,
AkamccV- Springs. Social hour, 11:18 a.m. Speaker •
School Superintenden* Bob Hughes. Call 868-5181 for
reservations.

Jus mile Diabetes Luncheon and Fashion Show,
noon. Maitland Civic Center.

Phyllis Dale Fashion Show Moderator
By TOI FITZPATRICK
Special ta The Herald
A group of Central Florida celebrities is coming to the aid of
the Humane Society of Seminole County In an effort to raise
funds foe a new shelter. They sre volunteering their services to
help hold the society together.
A musical, auction, fashion show and luncheon will be held
May IS, beginning at 11:50 a m., in the Buccaneer Lounge of
the Cavalier Motel, U. S. Route 17-8Z
The fashion show will be moderated by Phyllis Dale, who la
caUed "Miss Beautv-full" by many. Sharing the limelight with
Phyllis wiU be Art Grtndle, Clay Daniels, Oliver Hardy, Red
Hot Mamina SherU Davis and other mystery guests.
A fuU buffet will be served f« a donation of |8 with proceeds
directed to the new humane shelter.
Call Eunice Shomo, 862-4561 or 3238685. the Humane Society
Shelter, for tickers and information.
Phyllis Dale Is living proof that "targe can be sexy and at­
tractive, as well as good-natured and fun to be with," as she
puts It.
A self-taught musician, Phyllis was born in Bedford, Ohio,
and at the age of 11, appeared on television, she organized a
girls trio at 15, and has been involved in some type of thaw
business ever since.
In 1874, after traveling for many years in the different
aspects of her vocation, PhyDiz received a long distance call
from her agent in Chicago whoaald. "You are wanted in Prm
Park, Florida at Freddie'! Restaurant."
At that time, Phyllis said, she had no idea where Fern Park
vras, but she immediately fell In love with the Central Florida
area. "I always wanteJ a home and this to it — t will never
leave here," the added. She la still entertaining at Freddie's.
Phyllis comes from a family of large people. They have
always been happy, outgoing and active people, she said. Her
grandmother, who to now (0, sits more than she used to, but as
Phyllis said, "At 60, even thin people are a little more
sedentary. My family has never let their weight ‘weigh’ them
down!"
She continued, "A few years ago, due to medication and
physical problems, I gtned quilt a bit of weight very’ rapidly. It
was then that I got to know the Urge person syndrome first
hand . . . the problems of finding a proper fitting long white
slip or storks that tit without straining, colorful clothea rut to
(low not cling and the real emodonal problems about being fat.
There are over one-third of the people In this country who are
classified as "large-sized", but so many hide In their homes,
leaving only when absolutrly necessary. They are self con­
scious and often ashamed of their appearance, Phyllis said
They do not know how to dress comfortably and attractively
nor where to start looking for clothea. the added.

PHYLLIS DALK
... 'M iss lir a tit,Y-Iull*

"There were to few places equipped to help the large person,
I decided to start an agency that would cater to the needs of the
large sized people. "Beauty-full,” (ashinn modeling fur the
full-figured was born,*’ she said.
I’hy Ilia moderates the fashion shows and models along with
her other models, Including the "Red Hot Mama" from Rosie
O'Grady't, a magazine editor, a realtor, a medical recep­
tionist, a nail sculptresa ami several housewives—all different
sued, but, Full-Figured.
Phyllis and her models have been busy with modeling .
assignments all over the state. Harry D. Cupp interviewed I
Phyllis on Channel 55 brfore lie left, and she it still receiving
rails and mail from people commending her on this venture.
Her agency was also recognised In the recent issur of BHW. a
national magazine for large women.

of self and personal habits, and frequently help with Identity
problems.
Many of the weight control places are not structured for the
needs of the large person. When a person Is trying to loot* fdb
or more pounds, and is placed with people complaining about
trying to lose 15 or 20, and is unable to keep up with the group
exercises or programs, he feels out of place, sclf-cmsdoui.
and discouraged, she says.
There Is also tremendous trauma to the body of one who Is
try Ing to lose so much. No one can diet effectively unless he Is
emotionally stable, realizes his own worth and purpose in life,
Phyllis added.
"After 30 years In show business, which I love and will never
wtnnlngly leave. I um pleased with the opportunities 1 no-.*
have through the modeling agency to meet people and oHer
help to them with some of the problems they may be facing. I
am available to anyone who to going through problems with
weight depression and diet. 1 have others who are willing to
help w ith these problems, if needed. There is no charge, and no
lectures about diet, control, will power, e tc .. . Justifriendly
support. I can be reached al 859-5015.1 love people and want to
help everyone to have a full and happy life," said Phyllis Dale,
a truly “beauty-fall” person!

MOTHER’S DAY
SPECIAL.

Phyllis it diversified. She invited a group to her home one
Sunday. They soon formed a club called the "Sunday Kunmakeri." The group has grown to over 300 members. There
are no dues, but the hat to passed to defray party eipenses.
Phy llis Isa director of the Sunday Funmakrrs group and helps
plan the parties.
.

She also has plans for a club "Plus and Plenty" which will
give the really large people a chance to meet and talk with
others who have insight into their mutual problems and
solutions, diets and attitudes.

i

According to Phyllis, the large person frequently needs help
to slay in the mainstream of life —a few lips on dressing, care

FAMOUS RECIPE'S FAMILY BUCKET

NEW HOME
DEDICATED

I't i»4v r* n f ffniJni fm tu-ii A ilin o u i K i n / » fY lc tl C h u k n i

I poil inusfi.if polofiir* muf I /mil gntly
i pints erromg i i-tr thru- m ot I'i f i n k foil hisrutU
O P E N 11 ) M m . U p m .C ic t e l f - i . a u i C fetin' 111 W orn .

T h e lle v . J.C . S h a n ­
non, from le ft. ltc v .
a n d Mr*. J .P . D a v is
a n d d a u g h te r , I t r n e u .
a n d M rs. J.C . S h a n n o n
c e le b ra te
the
d e d ic a tio n
of
th e
D a v is* new
hom e.
W est Holly A v en u e, a l
a house w a n n in g fo r
fr ie n d s and f a m ily .
S h an n o n d e liv e re d th e
m e s s a g e of d e d ic a tio n .

iW tlr m k Z n .
(Mwr O N I

si N. M«iv u *1
CsiMlberry

SMfOrd
ttffr* #•*«#JIMArt't I**# IM*____________

THEWAYWEMAKEIT
ISMAKINGUSFAMOUS.

M*riH Ftoto by M #r *a H iw btnt

Date Is A Date,
Not Property'
DEAR ABBY: Hert s the
picture: 1 took a date to a
lovely dinner dance. Mary Jo
sal at my left and to her left
sat a gentleman named Bill
who asked her to dance.
Without any fu rth er ado,
Mary Jo turned to me and
said, "I'm going to dance with
BUI"
On the way home, Mary Jo
and I had a few words about
what happened. 1 say either
Bill should have asked me if
he could dance with Mary Jo,
or the stiould have asked my
permission to dance with Bill
I figure that she Is my girl
for the evening, and I don’t
like giving her free to en­
tertain single men who are
there. It just so happens that
BUI's wife would not ultend
with him because she thought
the modest amount fur the
evening w ai too much.
IlnddentaUy, this couple to
very well-heeled. I
But even tf the evening cost
me only a dollar, t still think
my dale should have shown
more loyalty to her escort
What Is your opinion, O Wise
One?
RICHARD IN LANSDALE,
PA.
DEAR RICHARD: Yaa’rc
right. Mary Jo should have
aiked you if you minded if the
danced with Bill. And-nr Bill
should have aiked you if be
could dance with your date.
However, Mary Jo to not your
"property": she U oojy your
date, and as such she la not
yours la ‘‘give fre e " ar
withhold.

Dear
Abby

S o m e M o th e r iy A d v ic e
f r o m S o u th e r n B e ll.

DEAR ABBY: A former
associate of my husband (a
married woman) baa been in
love with him for some tim e.!
found some letters she had
written to him. He admitted
receiving them but said he
never loved her — only liked
her — and he was not
reiponiibte for what she
wrote. He said he never
responded to those letters, but
It's hard to believe that she
would write such passionate
letters w ithout some en­
couragement.
The problem to that
although she Is no longer
associated with him . she
visits him regularly at work. I
have asked him to tell her
there to no future In It for her
and that she should quit
visiting him. He says to tell
her this would be making
more of the relationship than
exists. 1 think she to trying to
wear him down. What do you
think?
UPTIGHT IN ENCINO

"W itch out, dcar.This
Sunday is M other s
Day and phone lines
w ill be very busy. W hy
not avoid the delay
by calling on Saturdiy. O r if you do
o ill on Sunday, the
best tim e is between
1P.M . and 5 P.M .
A nd don’t fornet.
D ial direct and save
your m oney”
(£ l) Southern Bell

DEAR UPTIGHT: I think
by nal discouraging tkc
woman, your husband to
encouraging
her.
And
regardless of what b t tells
you, bo is getting something
he cujays out of her visits.

*

�SPO R TS
«A — Evtfllnf HeraM, linford, F L

Friday, May I, Itll

'Not Ready For Prime Time' Rockets Attract Boston Believers
BOSTON (U P t) - They may cat]
S'themselves •’The Nol Ready For Prime
v^Tim t P la y e r* ," but the Routlon
Rockets really think they belong In the
NBA championship (tnali — even l(
v b th e rs don’t.
V Hut, add the Boston Celtics to their
X rapidly growtng list of believers.
,« l&gt; The Rockets evened the beiUif-seven
M erles Thursday night with a W-90
victory. Houston snapped a lf-game
losing streak to the Celtics, dating back
v to Dec. 12, 1973, and also set an NBA
s* record of eight road wins in the
ivplayoffs.
* • “We believe in ourselves and before
this series ta over, people in the Eastern
Conference will believe In us too," said
• • Houston’s Billy Faults.

Thz Rockets got a 31-point, lbrebound performance from a fullthrottle Moses Malone, but also got
some key honps and rebounds from
uneipected sources tn Bill Willoughby,
Allen leaveII and Mike Dunleavy. They
are the first team in 30 tries this season
to beat the Celtics by scoring less than
100 points.
"We were so sloppy; we played like
grade-schoolers," said Boston guard
Chris Ford.
The Celtics again were plagued by
turnovers (23) and mediocre (40 per­
cent) shooting. SUll, they were able to
lead for most of the game and appeared
headed for a win until Houston laun­
ched a 94 spurt in the final four
minutes. The Rockets kept the pace

slow, which is the way they like It.
The Celtics led. 3943, when Malone
was fouled by lo rry Bird on a layup
attempt, and the bid turned Into a threepoint play when the Celtics’ star was
called for a technical foul —his second
in three games. The game was tied and

a Malone free throw with 2:49 left gave
Houston an 17-88 lead.
Boston came bark for its only field
goal in the last 4:20, a driving layup by
Cedric Maiwell, but Houston scored the
nest four points on a comer jumper by
Willoughby, who despite being ill had 14

points, and a gutsy fallaway by Leave!)
from the lane with 23 seconds left.
•We had good pressure on him
(Lea veil I,” said Bird, who Jed the
Celtics with 19 points and had 21
rebounds for the second straight game.
The Celtics cut tie deficit to 91-90 on
two Nate Archibald free throws, but
P ur lea vy converted one of two foul
shots with II seconds left. A wideopen
Archibald then missed a 12-footer a t the
buner.
"This game didn't affect me, but tt
looks tike it affected some of my
players," said Boston Coach BUI Fitch.
"When sre were ahead, we didn't play
w ell... There'S nothing wrong with our
team except fundamentals."
A key to the Houston win was the

dismal effort of Boston center Robeit
Parish, who fouled out, had two
rebounds (Archibald had threw) and
played Just 14 minutes. Malone con­
tinually worked Parish over on the
boards and the Celtics were forced to go
to a bangedup Rick Robey longer than
expected.
"Robey did a good job. considering he
couldn’t even lift Ms arm to his ear,"
Fitch raid.
The Celtics eipected Malone to play
as he did. They didn’t eipect to be as
shoddy as they were. But maybe
Houston had something to do with i t
"Give Houston credit; they played a
helluva game and controlled the
tempo," said Kevin Mcllale.

Williams Throws Today

Burch Leading Lady
For Tribe Track Hopes
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
While Tony Hardy and Brenda Davis
continue lo Ump along, senior Rejvenla
Burch has taken over the leadership role
of the Seminole girls (rack team which
shoots for 1U highest finish ever in the
Stole Track Meet Saturday at Showalter
Field in Winter Park.
"Reuvenla'a oeen carrying the load,**
said Cnarh Emory Blgke about his prize
hurdler. "She's come a long way and
■he's the only one that's getting better
each time out."

AWAY

Ncminolr County Women’s Howling Association Chairman Kathy Shaw (leftI
and Sanford Chamber of Commerce Executive Jack Horner roll out the first ball
In Ihe Stale Women's Howling Tournament. The event, which Is the largest In
history, continues this weekend at Fair Lanes and Altamor..e lane*.

Werthie Pop Proves Ptomaine
1'-:. ■‘ * V&gt;
or Poppa Jays; Shell Wins 18-8
Merthie stepped to the plate
sy night as the leadoff batter for
Iniland Corporation in the bottom of
[third. Hla team was being pounded 11Poppa Jay ’s.
jkrthle looked for hla pitched, found It,
i parked It about 23 feet beyond the
field fence. It signaled the beginning
i end (or Poppa Jay's.
fore the third Inning w u over,
inland had scored 11 runs to take a 13ad and then ended the game under
10-run slaughter rule with nine runs
the bottom of the fourth.
Final score: Sunnlland Corporation 22,
’oppa Jay’s 11
First Federal dumped Sanford D.A.V.
M In an earlier gamr, and look a game
nd a half lead in the Sanford little
(atlonal League when Poppa Jay's lo ti
in Thursday's other game, Clem
-sonant Shell whipped Cardinal
ndustrles 18-8.
Todd Revels was the winning pitcher
r Sunnlland. coming in to pi ten after

starter Travis Brown loaded the bases in
the top of the third. Revels got the first
out when he rnticed Ronald Blake Into
hitting into a run-ecorlng fielder's choice
end then struck out the nest two betters.
Bevels gave up one run and one hit In the
fourth.
Revels and Mrrthie each blasted a
home run and single for the winners.
Ronald Blake and Joey Sheehan had
homers for Poppa Jay ’s.
D.A.V. and First Federal were locked
tn a tight game until winning pitcher
Shane Lee blanked D.A.V. in the third
and his team scored five runs in the
bottom of the Inning.
Andy Griffin paced First Federil with
two hits, both doubles. Roberto Fonseca
and Timmy O’Neil rapped doublet (or the
losers.
The first Inning was the difference
between Clem l-ronard Shell and Car­
dinal Industries, Gem 1-eonard Shell
scored 10 runs and Cardinal industries
ended up with nothing. The two teams
played evenly the rest of the game.

Cardinal Industries out-hit Its opponent
five to four, led by Dwayne Willis with a
pair of singles.
Kevin Wynn had a double for the
winners.
***** J a r «
V I 1— 1». a l
Sutinilan* Carp
K i l l ) 1-&gt;1 * 1
W P - T o m Rtvrtt (1 1) I P J H II I h i I I I I
*&lt;&gt;"«* p»pp* J a r 's - Win i* sue loud is ,
L**r*«K* Aytrs 1 1. Ronald BUS* I J horn*
run. Kgvin Campoail I ) Sunnilane Corp —
’ add k n i l l 11 hom* run, Otcar Martin* 11
horn* run. Rad Wad lot k I I. 0 ».»M Bnnaon I
S
Sinlard 0 A V,
JJB II— » I I
First Fadrtal
ID H it * |
WP- Shan* Irk C H I L P - Owlghl 1 •trail (»
II Hirtara Santard O A V. — Tlnuny O'Nalll
11 doubts. Hobart Fanaaca I S doubt*. Brian
O-Vum l l, lywlan SMIar I I. Ow&gt;«hl Cattail
IS: First Fadaral- Andy Crlum I I Iwa
doubt**. Barnard Burk* 11. KalvM Davi* I J.
Eric PaddKard 1 1. liana La* I SWUM* wan an
11. Rick* Criap 11. Craig Dtten I a
Cardinal l aSkitrial
0*1 I— a I |
Clam L Shall
iM IU a -IS a |
WP- William Warran ( I t ) LP— Chwlta
Hayn (111 H inarv Cardinal Induwri**Onayna Willlt 1 1. Rebar1 M a 'rr-t U , Bonn.a
Allan I J, ixaraiton Mart 11. Clam Laonard
Snail — kiain Wym 11 doubly. Jim trtwttar I
I. Win.a Grayson 11. Tony Smilk I S

Burch will run the 113-yard low hurdles
and the 310-yard intermediate hurdles
Saturday. She wilt also compete on the
mile relay team.
The long Jump and the discus will open
the ceremonies Saturday at Showalter
under Ihe direction of Winter Park’s
respected track coach Bob Mosher. The
shot put follows at 4:30 p.m. The high
jump and the pX» vaw begin the night's
activity at 3. The running tins is are at 7
p.m.
Davis and Hardy, meanwhile, continue
to Improve from nagging muscle pulls.
‘Tony's improved a whole lot," said
Blake. "She'i about» percent and Davis
la SO."
Hardy will compete In Ihe long Jump
which she won at the Lake Worth
Regional with a leap of 197 h . Her best
Jump this year it 1911. Hardy will also
run legs on the mile and 440-yard relays.
Along with Hardy on the 440 relay la
Arlene Jones, Davis and Crystal Cald­

While the Tribe women are concerned
well. Sophomore Jackie Fort is an
about where they will finish in the
alternate to any Injured performers.
Crystal Caldwell will also team with standings, boys' coach Hank Da vitro
Hardy, Davia and Burch on the mile would be satisfied with a place from on*
relay. Two of Blake's flashy freshmen— of hla two crack relay teams.
‘ I’ve been trying to track down some
T rad Brown and Sharon Jenkins—team
with Revonda Caldwell and senior times," said Daviero Thursday night.
Sharon Newell on the mile medley realy. "But I haven't had much luck. I think our
Blake and Assistant Coach Nate mile medley learn has Ihe best shot.
Perkins are confident the Seminole* will Their times have been coming down
do well, with ot without great per­ every time."
The medley is composed of L any
formances by Hardy and Davis.
"Oak Ridge Is real tough. They'll Eason (230-23.0), David Humphrey (220probably win. Bui our kids should finish 217), Jim VoltoUne (44049.3) and Mike
in the top four," said Blake. Perkins felt Wooten (330-2:00). Eaaon turned an ankle
Jacksonville Rlbault and Ft. Lauderdale this week and if he can't go, Lenny Sutton
McArthur and F t laud enisle Dillard will replace him.
Other Seminole entries include the
would give Sanford Its toughest com­
mile relay team of Vince Edwards,
petition for a third or fourth spot.
While the Seminole girls have been Ralph ByTd, VoltoUne and Wooten.
much bally-booed for their young, fast Edwards ran third In the region to
team, down the road a piece at Lyman qualify in the 440-)ard relay. Hla best
Coach Larry Baker probably has the Unve la 30.1.
Lyman's boys contingent, on iha other
moct startling frtshie in Schowanda
hand, will be made op of Just one per­
Williams.
form er-pale vsoiter Steve AJekeqvitch,
"Schowanda to a very hard worker," who will have to go tome better than fit*
attests the personable Baker about his
best vault of 134 for a place.
39.3 qu.irler-r.vile champion in last
The Greyhounds felt they had another
week’i rrg,. r ti, "Her attitude la super.
one when sophomore Vince Presley
She’s really done a great job far a fresh­
blazed a pair of 9.1‘a in the 100-yard dash
man."
at the regional. The offldaU, though,
Lyman also nullified senior Brenda ruled (he speedy soph fifth. He needed ■
Haggtns In the 330-yard intermediate fourth to qualify.
hurdles. She was third in the regional.
Today in 3A, Oviedo’s Ray Williams
Williams and Higgins combine with goes after a slate shot put championship.
veteran Rhonda Holtenbaugh and The 8-foot-l, 280-pounder has yet to be
sophomore An Jeanette Cleveland for the beaten—3A or 4A—and he hope* the
Irtdy Greyhound)' mile relay entry.
trend will continue at Showalter Field.

SCC Down
7-0, Rallies
For Victory
Wednesday alter a 104 setback to
Florida College, Seminole Community
College Coach Jack P ante lias w u saying
how six runs w u too much for hla
Raiders to make up.
Wrong again Jack, Thursday, the
Raiders surged back from a 79 defid t to
remain alive In the Junior College Stole
Baseball Tournament by whipping Gulf

Spoiling Goods 6-Run Third Rips Rinker Materials
Seminole Sporting Goods rallied for
11 nuts in the third inning and upset
tinker Maleriabt M Thursday in the
lanford Pee Wee League.
Defending champ Adcock Roofing
lumped Bulch'a Chevron 19-3 for its
irst win of the season in Thursday's
'(her gamr.
Clem (reward Shell and Ken Kern’s
arage battle for sole poaarsaion of
Irst [dice tn the Sanford Pee Wee
eague In a 3 p m. tilt today at Fort
vtellon Park. Both are 1-0.
After SemlnoM Sporting Goods
■cured one run In the lop of the first,
Itinker Materials chalked up five in the
Mttom of the first But Seminole
Spurting Goods scored another single
run in the top of the second and then
look 11* lead with ala runs in the top cf
the third.

1

&lt;OC Can
Clinch
With Win
*Uabg*t*n~Kn]ghlJ of Columbus goes
for the first half championship in the
Sanford Junior League today when It
bailies second place Kiw aniiat 3 p.m. at
Chase Park.

Timmy Hampton, who came on to
pitch for Seminole Sporting Goods after
the first Inning, retired the aide In order
in the second, allowed one run in the
third and then blanked Rinker in the
fourth despite loading the bases with
two outs.
Seminole Sporting Goods hid two
hits, triples by Eddie Phillips and Steve
Willis. Edgar lem on had a triple for the
loaen.
Adcock Roofing pounded seven hits
and capitalised on s it error* to best
Butch’s Chevron. Adcock scored sii
runs in the first and Increased the lead
to 9-0 before Butch’s Chevron came up
with its three runs in the bottom of the
second.
Jessie Nightingale was the winning
pitcher, with relief from Sean
Knights of Columbus, 99, has already
clinched at least ■ tie for the first half
time. A win today would clinch the title.
A loss would force Knights of Columbus
lo play a makeup game with Moose.
KI wants, defending champion in the
league, Is 7-2 and It the only team that it
not mathematically eliminated from the
first half race.
Elks, In third place with a M record,
haj finished play in the first half and is
idle today.
fn today's 7 p m. game. Rotary plays
Masters Cove Apartments.
The second half of the JO-gait*
schedule begins Monday.

r^ A k i

ia

i

Washington. They combined to pitch a
one-hitter.

with the way we
’antelias. "I w u

John Bryant and Anton Reid each
blasted a pair of triples far Adcock
Roofing. Ray Adcock also tripled for
the winners.
Nightingale had the only hit for the
losers.
Ai»&lt;kR**l&gt;n«

••'(h i C in t w

The Seminole victory eliminated Gulf
Coast and pits ihe Raiders against
Chi pels today at S p.m.
ChlpoU lost a narrow 99 verdict to
Manatee, who along with Dade South are
the two teams wttboil losses.
Dade South whipped Florida College S3.
Valencia, meanwhile, sent lop-eeeded
Indian River home without a victory 134
u Just d i teams are left tn contention.
Today's Pairings:
1:30 Valencia vs. Florida College
3:00 Seminole vs. Chipola
8:30 Manatee vs. Dade South
Seminole victory, Steve B e ­
came on for starter Eddie
and buried seven scoreless
pick up the Raiderr
Birchmeier, 99 and the top SCC
reliever all year, yielded Just seven hits.
“ H e's been phenom enal,” raved
P antellu about his right-handed Junior.
If SCC wins today, they play the lower
of the M ini tee-Dade South showdown at
1:30 p.m. Saturday.

o t — it i e

«* — 1 I S

IMP John in * n t LP J«it* M-pMmgalt
Hlrttft Aden* Sorting John Iryanl &gt; S
I m triglot Anton Role : ) two triglot.
SoOorl Bvrko 1-1. R «v Adtpfk 11 Irlgio. T ,
Kokt I J. Bvlch't Chovton
Jtttlo
NigMmgtio t I.

lam Shotting a MO*

IMS- I I 0

Wlokor Malir ion
W1 S— t 1 I
IMP
Timmy Hampton LP
Alport
WUlIgmt.HItloft fonwrto iportmg O jo n V n o W'lllt I I triple, IM w Phillip* I I
IripM. Rtutor Motor 1*1* Edgar Itm cn I |
tripM. Varnon Millor I ]

Alouettes Court
Collinsworth
ORLANDO, FU. lUPI) - The Mon­
treal Alouettes are courting Florida wide
receiver Cria Collinsworth and he plans
to visit the Canadian Football League
"I'm going to go up there and see what
they have to aay," Colliniworth told the
new spaper
by
telephone
from
Gainesville.
*At this time In my life, I have to look
at football from a financial point of v ier H

ValaaK'a
IMtkk Rlvar

UP ZSI 10W— IJ \1
DO) DOB I0O- 4 II

Dwtrlck. Fit* (41 and Rut.nail. Knapp.
M artld P k ala by T».n V m eant

' j* V / M

l 'A. Vilr.'r --

*r

v J^v

Lyman's Hrrnda llagglns steps over a hurdle during a meet earlier
this year. Saturday llagglns competes In the 330-yard intermediate
hr .k iln in the 4A Slate Track Meet a t Showalter Field.

Winstar (I) and N*M*ca H tm M rgtr (I), w
-

Fit*. L -

Oult Caail
tswuist*

Knapp
4 M 0 M S 0 O - t 141

eu sci ooi-w *i

Klrtar and Ungar. Augustin*. Suttim*,*,
(JlandMaa W — Birchmtl*, L. — K ibtar

�Evening Herald, lantorAFL________Friday, May I IN I— PA

R a in e s ,V a le n zu e la

AL Roundup
■W

Angels Nip Yanks,

N o t O n ly R o o k ie

Fregosi On Ropes?

S ta rs Says T a n n e r
By Halted Press lateraatlsu l
Fernando Valenzuela and Tim Raines
have been getting a lot of attention, but
th en 's a rookie In Pittsburgh who's also
been Iropraaing the bona.
“He can throw, he can catch and he can
hit the ball," said Pirate*' Manager
Chuck Tanner o&lt; Ms rookie catcher, Tony
Pena, who got the game-winning RBI in
Pittsburgh's J-l victory In the opener o&lt;
Thursday night’s double-header with.the
Cincinnati Reds. The Pirates also copped
the nightcap, 7-1.
Pena, 23, is being rased into (he
regular lineup by Tanner, who Ira n he
may be hurt If pushed too quickly.
“W t're bringing Pena along slowly,"
Tanner said. “For a rookie, he calls a
game very well. We’re looking far great
things from him.”
In the first game, Pena’s RBI single to
center broke a 1-1 tie in the seventh in­
ning. John Milner's sacrifice fly gave the
Pirates an Insurance run and made Rick
Rhoden, 44, a winner.
in the nightcap. Dale Berrs drove tn
lour runs to help the Pirates sweep.
Eddie Solomon, H , making Ms first start
of the season, went eight Innings and
Grant Jackson pitched the ninth.
In other games, Atlanta topped St.
Louis, 44, Houston shut out Chicago, 44,

Los Angeles got past Philadelphia, 1-1,
Montreal beat San Diego, 4-1, and New
York stopped San Francisco, J-L
tn the American League, It was:
Oakland 9, Detroit J; Toronto 6,
Cleveland 1; Texas f, Chicago 4;
California 1, New York 1; and Seattle 4,
Milwaukee 1.
Braves 4, Cardinals 1
ST. LOUIS (U P I B r u c e Sutter knew
when he threw the ball that the SI. Louis
Cardinals were in trouble.
Sutter, the relief specialist the Car­
dinals acquired from the Chicago Cubs
over the winter, w u facing pinch-hitter
Brian Asselstine with the bases loaded
and two outs In the eighth inning of
Thursday's game against the Atlanta
Braves.
He had worked the count to three balls
and two strikes when be let go with his
*dinline w ed fastball.
"It was ■ ball," Sutter admitted latw.
“ 1 had good stuff today. I Just walked
him. What can you say?”
The walk forced In pinchrunnw Jerry
Royster and gave the Braves i 44 vic­
tory — handing the Cardinals their first
back-to-back lasses this season.
Sutter had relieved starter Silvio
Martinez, who was charged with the loes,
with one out in the eighth and runners on

Astrot
BOB KNEPPEH

TIM RAINES

. . . t h r e e sh u to u ts

. . . sp eed y h o m e ru n

first and second. On his first pitch,
however, Royster and Dale Murphy
worked a perfect double steal.
A stra I, Cubs •
Bob Knepper pitched a til-hitler for his
third shutout of the season and also
singled and scored in the second to lead
the Astros. Knepper, J4, struck out five
and walked two in lowwlng his ERA to
1.00.
Dodgers 1, Phillies 1
Steve Garvey broke a 1-1 tie with an
eighth-inning RBI single and Jerry
Reuss, J-l, scattered six hits and retired

14 straight batters between the fourth
and ninth innings to lead lo s Angeles.
Expos 2, Psdres I
EUls Valentine snapped a tie with tn
RBI double in the eighth inning, and
Raines hit an inslde-lhe-park homer to
carry the Expos. Raines also stole his
major league-leading 22nd base.
Mets 2, (Hants 2
Mike Jorgensen went J-for-J, including
a two-run homer in the sixth, and Doug
Flynn added a solo shot to help the Mels
to only their third victory in the last 13
games.

Boosters Need Donations
The Seminole Booster Club's Flea
Market Sale will take place Saturday,
May It at the Flea Market on French
Ave.
Any persons wishing to donate items

should call Seminole-Business Manager
Gay Ailing at 322-4332 extension 232.
The Items will be picked up Saturday,
Ma&gt; 9 and Ailing urges that the donaters
call as soon as passible.

By lolled Press International
The California Angels appear to be
asking Manager Jim Fregosi what he's
done for them lately. They may not even
wait for an answer.
"Jimmy’s not happy, I'm not happy
and Gene (dub owner) Autry's not
happy," v k l Buriy Bavasi. Angels
executive vice president, Thursday night
while watching the Angels defest the
New York Yankees, 2-1. "I haven't
discussed this matter with anyone as of
this moment. Who knows what's going to
happen tomorrow?”
la s t year, injuries left the Angels with
a s i t s record and sixth place in the
seven-team divition. This season the
team continues to flounder with a 13-13
record.
Fregosi explained living with
"rumors" is part of his Job.
"! heard them all winter but rumors
will be rumors,” he said. "1 Just think
rumors have an unsettling effect on our
ball dub. But I'll be at the ball park
tomorrow to see if my uniform is still
here
Don Baylor singled in Dan Ford from
third base tn the sixth Inning. Ken Forsch, 4-1, struck out five and walked three
In 7 34 innings. Don Aase finished and
earned his second save. Tommy John, 42. yielded six hits but wild-pitched home
the Angels’ first run.
Fred Lynn left (lie game in the sixth
inning with dirty spells.

In other gsmes, Seattle defeated
Milwaukee, 4-1, Texas bombed Chicago.
9-4. Oakland overpowered Detroit, 3-3,
and Toronto beat Cleveland, 4-1
In the National League, It w u : New
York 3, San Francjco 2; Atlanta 4, St.
fjouis 3; Houston 4, Chicago 0; Los
Angeles L Philadelphia 1; Montreal 1*
San Diego and Pittsburgh 3, Cincinnati:
1 and Pittsburgh 7, Cincinnati 1.
Mariners 4, Brewers 1
Rookie David Henderson hit a two-run !
bomtf and Tom Padorek lofted two'
sacrifice flies to lead Seattle to its second'
consecutive victory under new Manager
Rene tachemann.
Rangers 9, White Sax 4
Bump Wills drove In three runs, two1
with a single that keyed a seven-tun
eighth in the Rangers' fourth stralgtyL
victory. Ed Farmer, the fourth White SoeC
pitcher, fell to 4-L
A's 9, Tigers 3
Cliff Johnson, Mitchell Page, Tony;
Annas and Jeff Newman hit home ntnSr
in the A's' comeback victory. Matt;
Keough w u knocked out in the Hunt
inning, the earliest departure for an
Oakland starter this season.
Blue Jays 4, Indians 2
Dave Slieb, 34, fin d s five-hitter end
Otto Velez and John Mayberry hit solo
homers. Toronto went hiUess for 3 1-3
innings until Velez reached Rick Waits, 31, to spark a four-run fourth.

M AJOR LEAGUE LINESCORES AND LEADERS
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- FIVE POINTS

Ptumt.ng 1
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Daireit
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BASEBALL
Ma|*r League Standing*
laiarnatranal
Nalianal Laatm

By United P rtu

minor laagut consultant
Minnahota - Racalted pllchar
Darrall Jar h*on from Tetedo: Sold
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American L*a«ve -- Keougn.
Oaa )0 Swnnitfar. i n . Nomt.
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coach

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D O N 'T G A M B L I
with your Insursncol
—CALI —
TONY

R U ftS I

IN S U R A N C I

322*0285
B O A T IN S U R A N C E

DEALS

LEADERS

14

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"■

SCOREBOARD
DOCS

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Rapid Fun&gt; I Frail Proof Mo. A
IK s tls y 'l Oaasat
Kuk Rank Hated homa la win
BvrtAuCrtcy; t. SoAl Out; I. Ml
San Fran al Montreal
m» gam* In Ih* bottom pc 4th
Danny
LO* Angotea al New York
lrp-S IS M I SpacllkMten; 1 John Boston I MTS Jimmy Wilton
Houston m Ctectenall
tok* Company; 1 Sandy Lten. A ) hilt
San Dtego al Ph.i*. night
GEORGE EASLEY
RICK McMURRAY
Danmark* S Longwood I 1
High Hon*. J. RW Tstenhte To**.
Pittsbcri al SI Lout*, night
WINNER
MANAGER
A Travlte LaAdar. I. ChaacTvl Ran Car mar *r»v* m Joy Robey
Chicago
nt
Atlanta
night
wtlss gam* Winner
Lang- • Freud Johnny
I1M
Pot
Luk
Wlnngr
a
t
A
irport
Astro
Food Store
American league
d h -s u. n 1 Solid Hate. L
In Stnford w a s G torgs E s.lg y , 129 Y»Ip Avtnug.
fa il
Or lanarhAnd*. 1 Kf Darling; #
W L Pci. OB
Pot Luk is slto in pro g ress ta c h w tok al
Gunfhar Jana*. S Wheat V* 0**1; l are Howell Amec* I). Wester
Cleva
II * M l A Autumn Brett* f LiflteMbM. Sor mg* III •
CssssUsarry U Food Store, L sk t M iry M Food
I) W *M Larnica Whrlaker grand tlam New York
I HI Clipper
Store and CsUry 44 Food Store, Sanford.
Salt
II * S'l I
STh-H . D: I. GMG » F-ttlrtf*
tem* rjn
Mile
auk*
II 10 J*S I
I. Dir* Carter. 1 Billy Jon**; S
LAU Howell Air—o H A D

PO T LU K

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W H ITEW ALLS

3 0 ,0 0 0 MILE WARRANTY

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ALIGNMENT
1 INSTALL PADS ON SHOES k
6 month
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COMPUTER SPIT)
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* * * * * * * * * * * *

PERSONAL CHECKS ACCEPTED

7 B IG L O C A T IO N S
2650 S. ORLANDO OR. (17-92) SANFORD 323-4W
TSi to ORANGE AVI SIMM!
{ TIT
11X W. COLONIAL OR. I Ft Hal
Ills

i

4444 I- ORANOR AVI. U 14444
___________________________
DM
I. ORANOR H IM 1R. 4]SOD)
* SIS 1 SI MORAN RLVO TTSTTa*
__________ OPEN MONGAT THRU SATURDAY S A M. TIL 4 PM.

Hi
M IE MON AN SLVD U1-4TH

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»A — g v n l B |H d r B M ) h B « d rG .F I.

Legal Notice

F f ld &lt; y . M ay I . IM I

Legal Notice

Legal Notice
NOTICb OP P R O C E ED IN G S
FOR THE VA C ATIN O . ABAN.
DONINO.
D IS C O N TIN U IN G .
ANO CLOIINO OF RlGHTSOp.
WAV OR D R A IN A G E E A S E .
M IN T
TO WHOM I T M AY CONCERN
YOU W ILL PLEASE TAKE
n o t ic e that lh* Board H County
C a m m ittie n trs a l Sam inal*
Caunly. F ie n d * . *1 10 00 o'clock
a m on lh* ?nd day ol Jun*. A 0 .
IN I, In th * C ounty Cam
mil*•oner*' M eeting Roam *1 th*
Caunly C aurthout* m Sanford,
florid*, will hold * Public Hearing
la con*War a n d dow ntim e whether
or nol the Count y will eacala,
abandon, d ltc o d lin u a , cio ia.
ranaunc a and disclaim any ngftl of
in* Caunly and lh* public m and I#
i m tallow ing r i g n i t ol w ay a r
dram a** a a t a m a n l ru n n in g
through or a d la c tn l I* lh*
drier .bed p ra p a rty . la wit

Legal Hofice
n o t ic e o f a p u b l i c

heab-

* # * r*

CLASSIFIED ADS

Seminole
Orlando-Winter Park
ING TO CO N IIO IR T H E ADOP
IN THR C IR C UIT COURT OF
HON OP AN ORDINANCE BY
TwP F IG H TP P N TH JUDICIAL
THE CITY OP IANPORD, PLOB
CIRCUIT OP FLORIDA, IN ANO
IDA
FOR I I M I N O L l COUNTY.
Hone# IS htrrtrr &lt;i&gt;v*n that •
CASE NO. FB 7SB4 CA t t L
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
Public Hairing will br h*MJ at Ih*
MAROARET
POW ER
And
Cemmlsiieh Room m ih* City Nail
H E N R IE T T A ' EDW ARDS
M im a .....................JGCRlto*
m m» Lily al Sanlord. Florida. *1
HOURS
HARDY.
1 caRM Cwllva lim a * M e a Hod
l 00 rctaek P M an May 74. IMI.
plaintiffs,
I 0c A M — I M P M
7 conM C vtfvd tlrn** ........ m
lo
canGdtr
lh*
adoption
ol
an
■¥bMONDAY thru M IO A Y IfCBlMdCvThtdTIlIMt llcalH M
ord-nancf by lh* Cily or Sanlord.
TERRY J M A R TIN , *t Trvtiaa.
SATURDAY f • Noon
n .B« M inim um
Florida as loiWws
Dafmdani
ORDIRAHCI NO IMS
- lU iM * M inim um
NO TIC E OP SALE
ANORDINANCEOF THE CITY"
NOTICE IS H ER E B Y GIVEN
DEADLINES
OF SANFORD. FLORIDA. TO
lhaf on lh* 17th day H Jim*. IN I.
ANNEX
WITHIN THE COR
bafwaan II M a m and ) OB p m .
Noon The Day Before Publication
p o r a te a r e a o f t h e c it y
H lh* W ttf front door al lha
OF SANFORO. FLORIDA. UPON
Umlnola County Caurthouto, In
ADOPTION OF SAID ORDIN
Unford, Florid*. Arthur H Rack
Sunday - Noon Friday
ANCf. A PORTION OF THAT
with. Jr , Clark el fh* Circuit Court
CERTAIN
p
b
o
p
c
b
t
y
l
y
i
n
g
In and lar Saminalt Caunly,
w est O '
AND A B U T T IN G
Florid*, will oitar lor u t t ta lh*
PARK AVENUE ANO B ETW EEN
hlgfietl and bast b'ddrr lor cith *1
d
e
s
c
r
i
p
t
i
o
n
WEST 1ITH S T R E E T ANO
Public outcry, lha fallowing
Brg.n al lh* NW corner el L#l 1 LAUREL DRIVE: SAID PRO
drier.bad r t *1 praparty al TER RY
elBicihMot
TH
E
TOW
NSITEOF
PERTY BEING S ITU A TE O IN
J M AR TIN, A l Trutla*. locattd m
NOB H C H U LU O TA a* racardtd SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA.
DM SO
Saminalt County, Florid*, mort
WHY BE LONELY ( w rit# O rt
m Plat Book 7 an Pages U thru SI IN ACCORDANCE W ITH THE
particularly described at tottowt,
A AMt*” Datuif S*ry«#
WON
our*
vetv—
I -M ot Sit H
*1
lh*
Public
Racordt
*1
Stm.noW
VOLUNTAR Y
A N N E X A TIO N
to nil
egos. P O Bo* *471. Cl**r
plus t t SB TPRM ONtrlbutad
PROVISIONS OP S E C TIO N
LOI 71. Florid* Land and Caunly. Florida, run thane*
w*t*r. FI 777H____________
by
NU Ram
w*
snip
Soulhaaalarlr lo lh* NW corner el III Off. FLORIDA S TA TU TE S !
CotanlialiOft Company L imifad. w.
Lei 4 el tew Buxk 1C run Ihence PROVIDING
an,W here OBSI1 0 Old
FOR
SEVER
i WILL NOT BE RESPON
Brat dan t Map ol It Josephs
Narlhgattarly
to
lh*
met!
A B IL ITY . C O N F LIC TS ANO
SIBLE FOB ANY O EBTI
accord.ng lo lh* Plat ihrrrol at
Spring F#v»* Sal*
Watlarly NW cornar *&lt; Lot I ol EFFECTIVE DATE
INCURRED BY ANYONE
rrear dad In Plat Book 1. Pago It*
Watkins Products
U&lt;d
Block
U
.
run
thane*
Nor
WHEREAS.
Ifwrahas
bam
Mad
o
t h e r THAN m y s e l f a s
a* th* Public Racordt *1 Sam molt
107*71
thaatlrrly to lh* matt Northerly wiln lh* Cily Clark of in* City af
OF t i l l
County, P lor Id*.
corner el said Lof 7, run Itwnc* Sanlord. FWrtda. a prtlttan can
T. Eu**n*c*w #rt
4MAKLEEHIBBTABLETS
LESS
NcrtftrfUtriy
lo
lh*
NW
comar
al
ta:fung th* n*mrs af th* praparty
from th* Narlhnatl cornar at
WEOELIVRR
Lai t el (aid BWck Sc. run mane* owners m th# arya dtscnbtd
COMPAT A OATE
Lai 71 Fiarlda Lond and
0 JTt*l
Northteilef
ly
lo
in#
NW
corner
pc
Jarnnrfltr
rtgutiimg
annaiaiwn
Take
I
ftutkitd
t*
IMMH
I*
Calonifalion Company Ltd, W
Lai 1 ac law BWck sc rvn lhantt la lh* carm 'H r art* al Ih* city el
recorded ntrtM * * -1 » 7 V I
baardairt Map ol SI Joseph's,
T—Good Things lo E it
NarmtatWrly I* th* SB corner al Sanlord. Florida, and (equalling
MU MJ1 or wrtld Compdl A
according to lh* plot tharaat at
Lot I tl BWck Si *1 laid PWl. run le b* included Ifwrtm. *nd
Oat* PO Bo&lt; &gt;0 ) S°m
racardtd In Plot Boat I. Pag* III
ihence Nartnwailarty I* lh* NW
WHk A t AS. Ih* Property Ap
mervill*. SC Jffdl
H lh* Public Racordt ol Sam-nw*
CORN
cornar al l t d Let 7. run thane* p ra iir r *1 Sam inal* C aunly,
County. Florida, run Fttttrly 1JT'
Narthwatfarly
lo
lh#
N
W
corner
ol
FtOfld*. having c a r lllla d th a l
CORN
along lh* North boundary lln* at
LardTy’t 'w r llT^ "»rin*!hg people
Lai
I
al
taW
BWck
SJ.
run
iftenc*
that# a rt two propgrty ew nars in
ta.dlot 7A fhonrun Southarty ITP
tooathae Dalm* S w v k a l" AII
CORN
Narfhwatltrty to lh* NW cornar th* a rt* I* a* anntvvd. and that
along a im* poraliH lg th* Watt
ages A Senior CHi»«"i P O
boundary lln* al u ld Lot IS. than ol Lai Sal laid BWck U. run thane* Mid pmparty owners hfv* tig n rd
Tears tor II 00
M il. W'ntor Havan, FI*. “
Normaetieriy le in* NW cornar el th* p*iKim for m n rx flie n . and
run Watlarly I1T along a tin*
lib s S I00
Tom* t a n
Lai f *1 told BWck SJ. run lh*n&lt;t
WHEREAS, it has bam daftr
paraUal I* in* North boundary lln*
Lon*ty Chr Itl wn Sing las
Ih d s 1100
LWtwct
Northwesterly
to
lh*
canter
pomi
mined
Thai
Ih*
property
dasenbad
ol laid Lai 71 la a pom on lha Wail
lb He
Meet OKIttian sm glrt Ml your
Gr ran Beans
boundary im* at told Lei 7L man on lh* South im* al Lot f of Black htrrmanar is ffrsonabiy compart
a rt* , w rit* Southern C hrltdan
a ibs si oo
Sum nar Squash
4 tl l i t
Plat, run thane* and conlifuout fa m* cprpnrat*
rvn Northar'r TTR along th* Wall
Cantaloupes
&gt;
to
r |IM
Singles Club. P 0 Ron &lt;07
Wttlarlr W m* SW earner al laid
mi
arra af Iht CHy of Sanford,
boundary lln* al laid Lai 711* lh*
Summeryillt, SC IfaU or call
SIM He
Potatoes
O f H |U
I
H
t.
run
lhanca
Sauiftrriy
la
th*
Florida,
and
II
has
lurthar
bam
paml *1 baginning.
1 *51 0 1 MM 74 hrs
Id Ibs 1171
'J£i
inarylln* al Moririhoe Lake, run dtftrmuwd lhal th* annaiaf Wn of
Th* above Sal* n modt pursuant
10 for It 00
Ball Peppers
N O T IC E OP P 0 OC R R Ol HO t
manta Sauthaaiftrly. Soul her I,
»*W £bn*gM#«f ■rill m l r»«utt in IK*
ta ft'mai Juoymani ef F*r*c*eeu«*
Sanlord Grant, swart
Sauthwttlarly, Watlarly and
POP TH E VACATINO. ARAN
creation el an me lava: and
V—L o s t &amp; F o u n d
and Sal* anitrad in th* abav*
Onions
iga.
bunch
| t 00
Narthwatlarly
along
lt d
D O N IN O .
O tlC O N T! NUINO. m l IIIad h u m . bring civil Action
WHERCAI, lh* City of Ssnfard.
Bananas
lib s 1100
ShortIIn# la a po.nl North el lha Fiarlda, is In a pot man to provvJ*
AND CL01IN0 OP RIGHTSOP
No M t i l l C A or l . now pending
C atwagt
Jig has »1 00
NW camay M lo l 1 pi taid Black municipal strvkas lo Ih* praparly
tW A Y
OR
DRAINAOR
in in* Circuit Court In and lor
Found young M att C a rm a n
JUIT IN TIME FOR
(A IR M E N T
Sf, fun lhanca South to tn# n w
drierib«d fwrtm, and lb* City
Umlnola County, Fiend a
Shepherd
m
iied
Tender
over
comet of ia 4 Lot S and lh# Pamf
■•TQ WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
Commiiilonol tn* Cily at Sanford,
M O T H E R 'S D A Y
IN W IT N R It WHEREOF, I
ta ry* VIC. Waklv* Pk Dr
: y o u w il l p l i a i e ta k e
W Bat’nnmg
Florid*, drams n Ml th# bait m
hart haraunla itf my hand and
01 ina
• N e t ICR IftH I ft* R otrd H County
WAXBEGONIAl White, Pink S
PERSONS IN TE R E S TE D MAY
lafttf af th* Cily I* accept m U
orticwl
taal
put
Jtfti
day
at
April,
' C i m m i i u t n r l ol Jtm iftol*
Rod. I'* pots. i*rga plants
APPEAR ANO BF HEARD AT
ptiman and ta onnrt la d
IN I
J(Cn^nly, florldo. H U M o c Kk *
THE TIME AND PLACE ABOVE
6— C h i id C a r e
prapart*
(U A L )
O n ly t ? c ’
* m on Mo Jnd day ol luna. A 0 ,
SPECIFIED
NOW. TH ER EFO RE. BE IT
Arthur H BECKWITH. JR.
1**1, In It* County Com
IS tA ll
E N A C TIO BY TH E PEO P LE OF
N o w l 2 L o c a t io n s 17-92,
Cltrb al tnt Circuit Court
S
h
r
i
l
l
Summer
Pra^fem
for
4
mttalonan' MaHin* N am at it*
Board
at
County
Commli
CHE CITY OF SANFORO. FLOR
Sym.noIt caunly. Florid*
next
to
V illa g e
1] f f old*
County Caurthowto In laniard.
l-oneri ol Semmole Caunly,
IOA
By Cynthia Proctor
staling A movWt J ila a l*
7 lor Id*, arm hold « Public M#»rin*
FWrld*
S m o rg a b o rd
SECTION I Thai Ih* f*Howing
Oapuly Clark
A cnlld't World
t*contld«r and dHarmina arhntar
Br Arthur H Backwiln, Jr
drieribad propartr
tiluatad in
Al b e r t n p i t t s , e s q
or nol ItN County mil vacate,
Clrrk
SaminoWCounty. Florid*, b* and
Attorney al Law
Spur at th* moment
W e T a k e F o o d S ta m p s
abandon, ditcanllnut. data, 110 North Park
Lit Blackburn
lha Mm* i| hereby annt atd fo end
baby lining
renounce andditcNIm any rtght ol
la n d O eetw pm ant D&lt;r-t&lt;on
mad* a pari af fh* CHr ol Sanwrd.
L e R o y F a r m s , S R 44 &amp;
Unterd, Florida 77771
0
JP
344
nHN County an* ita public In and I*
f.rtl Floor
Florida, puriuanl to Ih* vohmlory
Publith May I, |, IN I
U p s a la
R d . , S a n f o rd
|JI»» loiian.n* rights ai way or
Semmal# Caunly Sorvxts
annavaiion prevnion* of Sad-on
; dr*.nap* tatam tnl runnln* M m __________________
Child Car* by tv p tr la n c a d
Bw-ldmy
III Baa, FWtmM Slalufas
C
ity
OF
C
A
IS
R
L
d
l
REV
TOMATOES. M tb t» &lt; S 7 so
mother Spec ovi yard, hat
I hr gupft or adlactnl I* It*
Sanlord Florida 17771
Lai* 17. II. tf EVANS SUB
•OARDOF ADJUSTM ENT
Baggs Product
linen A real raira 0 le M I
drier ibed prapdrTy. towit
Pubi'Wi May «. IN I
DIVISION, according le lh* pm
n o t i c e is h e r e b y g i v e n
3 « 1 sanlord A rt 0 1 JMI
1 I t * Rati 17* I trt H in* w rit I II
DPI 17
Ihsracf. Plat Book I. Papa 17, lit** H you i t in Hi* butm*M at
lhaf
lh*
City
el
CattyIbarry
Beard
lari o u t* N o n n llir r ir l mate t*
baginning at lh* NE cornar al lo l
ol Adiuttmant will hold * Public
build ng your but n asi 1fS*
M l * ' . Sad Ion Jt Tewnthlp II
N O TICB OP
I I — Instructions
17, run Watt along Iht North tin* el
Hearing Mr Lao Loughran, Jr.,
ih* ClauKWd Ads ell an
! BChjrn. Rang* ]p Rail, Sam.run
S H lR IP P ’S SALE
UK
17,
a
distant*
of
111
I
laal
lo
Applicant, of Traditional Can
[County AND a l i o Ita C ail Itl
NOTICE IS H ER E B Y GIVEN
Ih* SW corrwr at Lai 11. Itl Ad
mart ol Ita Watt MO Ita* H in* iractan Company, an brftalt at the! by virtue *1 lhaf cert am Writ
Toruils instruction U 1 P T.A
winn I* Park VWw. Plat Book j. Eicatleni Child C a rt by m atura
1 BournUIanollftaNB ’voltnajw Mr and Mrt jamot J Wrarer. tl EircutWn 'ktuod out of end Pag* i l thmc* run South IS laal
lady Mi my home
Car Hied Group or Prlval*
Ownart. it requesting a vananca
!* ol told Stction It.
wider lha taal t l lh* County Court
U
JU
S
f
lessons Children a ip*r|*lty
•hmeg
run
East
ISa
S
laal.
lhanca
trom Srclion 71 40 Ary* and Width al Sammat* Caunly, florid*, upon
*• P f t t O N t iN f d P E lT E O MAY
run North IB laal lo Ih* Poled el
M*iin*wski n j ' . j *
H Lett ol lh* Cliy *1 Catwibrrry
APPEAR AND BE h EABO AT
a I mat ludgemenl render rd in th*
B**Uwilng
I
Cod* *1 Ordinance*, which
ONH PHONk CALL STAN Ik A
n ( t im e a n d p la c e above
Ware*** court on lh* Jnd dey at
Th*
abav*
**Ml
Cvil
praearty
it
rabuuat
a
mmmum
*f
nH
irtt
p a tip ia n
CL A l t i r IRD AO ON ITS
April. * O IN I, In Inal certain
WHY SAVE IT . . . BRIL IT
further Oaunwad a* a portion ol
■nan eighty.live
lis t itaf
RESULTPUL END
THE
cat* ml Iliad. Gmarai f inane*
QUICKLY with a F*Sl Acting
lhal cartah praparly lying Wttla*.
maotured al lha building im* &gt;0
NUMRER IS 0 7 7*11
board ol Caunty Commit
CarpwtllaeL Pit,mill, vt Waiter
Low Cost Ciaautwd Ad
and abutting Park Avanu* and
rontlrurt a duplar an * lot 71 7 Itaf
1' tlonort *• Um.noIt Caunly,
i . Tylar. Oafandant. which
btiwtcn Wr«i Jtih Sir##* and
mdt AddUWnaily, Sarttoft I I t* *ror tie d wrtl oI EeacutWn wot
Plor Ido
Laurel Orir*. u .d propartr being
raouirrt
a By Arfftur H Bodmin. Jr.
dtiivrrrd la m# at Sharitt al
Htualgd in ttmlnelg Caunly,
"Whrr# a lef or parcrl al land lam mol* Caunly, Florida, and I
£
By: Joann Hart
Florida
net
an
are*
or
width
loti
than
fh*
■C City Clark
hare levied upon lh* (allowing
SECTION 7 Thai upon Ihli
rabuirammit of thit uctlon and
IN THR CIRCUIT COURT.
PhJomn Mar I. IN I
datcribad praparty awntd By
ordinance becoming aHacllv# Ih* IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OP ■ IO H T E B N T H JU D IC IA L
wai
a
lot
ol
record
tt
th*
lima
of
Waller J. Tyler, ta d properly
VEVS
THR
IITH
JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT
cragael*
awnart
and
any
rriKJml
N O TIC E OP PROCRROINOI adaption oI nut chaptyr, such lof bain* lacaltd in Saminalt County,
CIRCU IT.
IN
AND
PO*
m lh* praparly datcribad haraln IN ANO FOR IE M IN O L E
may br used lor a im glr iym.ly
PON THR VACATINO, ABAN
IlM IN O L E COUNTY, FLORIOA
Flafidl,
mar*
particularly
than b* tnhlitd le all lh* right* COUNTY. FLORIDA
dw tllm gi prgyldtd. ihtl Ihr Prtcnbtd at fellows
c a s e n o ii-ig si ca j t ■
D O N IN O ,
DISCONTINUING.
and prtvilrgri and immunillat as NO il- td ll CA dd-P
mmlmum yard requirement* ol
IN R E: THE MARRIAGE OP
AND
C LO tlH O
U T IL IT Y
On* itHAkanack Baal and Only
art tram lima I* time granted in CO UNTRYW IDE F U N D IN G SUE ANN LEE.
Iht* art lew art complied wRR,"
R AtRM RNT
I n I*r. green Ift color Decal No
rnidm tt and proptrly awnart al CORPORATION. ■ New York
Th* parcrl it Wgaily deter .bed
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
Prtllwrwr Wilt.
f L sweep, vm No an iradgr
in* City el laniard, Florid*, and as carper alien.
YOU WILL PLEA1R IA a E at
4*710. Ilarad #1 Parker* Wrecker
PlaMMiH,
art further provided m Chapter
Tha t a i l On* Third of La* A Serv er, Sanford
NOTICE Ita* ItN Ba*ttf ol County
RICHARD PATRICK L i t .
vs
III, Florida Statutes, and snail
BWck O. f e r n P ark E tla ln . a t and lha undarsignad at Vhanfl of
Committlonart al lamlnglt
Respondent HufOond
JUAN RAMIREI end JUANA
lurthar
b*
tublacl
lo
lh*
rnpon
racard td In Plat Kook s. pages It.
. Covn'r. PWrlda. H U O O attack
Seminal# Caunly. Florid*, will al
twillllf* el frtidme* or ewnarihip OLAOYS R AMIR EZ. his w ile, and
. a pi on ina Ind day ol Jun*. A D . It. II and If ol Public Racordt al II 00 A. M on Ifl* lath Oar of May
NOTICE OP ACTION
at may tram lima le lima b* DAVID RAMIREZ.
1*11. in m i County cam
UmlnoW Caunly. Plarida
TO: RICHARD PATRICK
A D IN I. altar far sal* and tall lo
&gt;•
be
dead
or
a
i,.*
gnd.
,1
dead,
daltrmlnrd by Ih t eovarnlng
mlktionarf Mrvting Room al Iftg
Th* p a rc e l it la c a ltd on th* highest bidder, tor cam.
L I E . whole i*ll known rePdenct
authority al th* Cily Of Sanlord. th* unknown ipouk*. not known was Sk i * or Anton*
Churl y Courthouse In Unlard.
OWandar Way. north el Melody wbietl le any and all aiming
d a v n ao s,
gran t* * * ,
Floflda, and Ik* arsvitlont t l Mid hairs.
Ptortd*. m il now a Public Htartn*
Lana, t a n al L a ta Hawaii Road llant. of in* From (Wait) Door of
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
asilgnao*. lltn a r t. c re d ito rs ,
Chapter III. Florida Slaluits
Idcontldar and dHarmin* edwthef and w a tt ol C y p r tts Way, lha Srmmow County Courmoult Ml
NOTIFIED Ihel tn action tor
irvitees.
ar
other
claim
ants
by,
SECTION J: II any Mellon or
CauH boryy. Florida
or nol in* County mil rocata.
dissolution *1 m arriage has been
laniard. Fiarlda. lh* abav*
Ihrgvgn. under a r H a noi JUAN
portion *4 a taction of m il Or
PuN'C Maaring will b* hald on oner'bed personal praparty
abandon. dluanllnwa, (lata,
Hied e fs m tl rou m th* Circuit
tinjnct c ra v tt ta be Invalid, RAMIREZ and JUANA CLAOYS Court of Sam male Caunly, Florida,
rfnountr and d.tclaim iny right rt
Thuttdav. May I t. IN I. *1 l:JE
That la d tala is barn* mad* ta
and
DAVID
unlawful ar uncanslihiftonal. If RAMIREZ.
tpq County and in* public m and to P.M in lha C a tu lb a rry City Hall, satisfy th# lar ms of said Will at
and you a r t required t* sere* a
than net b* haw le mi**im mi* ar RAMIREZ, and til parties having copy of yavr written detente*. It
ibt iHtamn* utility tatamam N
L ae*
T f lp lti
D rlva, latest an
or
claiming
I*hay*
any
right,
llll*
Impair
lh*
validity,
(arc*
or
enact
running through or adjacent Id in*
Caite.'berry, Florida, or a t soon
any. tg it an JACK BRIDGE],
John E Polk. Shan't
if any taction or ptrl of thit or or I n li r ts t in Ina p ra p a rly
•ascribed preparty, la ml
ih e ta an a r a t poatibW
E IO U IR I. ot CLEVELAND A
Sem.noW County. Fiord*
described ft *f,
Dated Ih lt sift day al May. IN I
dlntnc*
•North 7 1 latr *1 L0I f and South
BRIDGE!. Post Office Drtw ar 1.
Publish May I, I, is. lj. „ ,m in*
Oelandants
SECTION a That *11 Ordinance*
7* laH al Lot 1 al Biwingtid*. at
Mary W Hawthorn*.
Sanford. FWrld*. 1071, on or
lt d an Mar 7*. IN I
NOTICE OP SUIT
ar part* *1 Ordinancat In conflict
racer dr 1 in Plot BaaA tl. Pag* )•
City CWrk
b*Wr# Jun* M. A 0 , (Ml. an* my
OEl 7
TO JUAN RAMIREZ an d
herewith br and lh* Mm* ar*
h i n Public Racordt al ItmMew
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC II a
th* original with Ih* C&gt;»tk al this
JUANA GLADYS RAMIREZ, h it C «ifl either before service on
hereby rapatWd
county. Florid*
per ton dec Wet ta appaal a etc Hum IN TH E C IR C U IT C O UR T,
w
ilt,
end
DAVID
RAMIREZ
SECTION S That this Or
mad* with rrtpact to any mailer R I O N T B E N T H
. PERSON! INTERESTED MAY
P t t i t l e n t r 's A ttorney, ar Im
JU D IC IA L
duwnct mail become en act Iv* Wilt, and DAVID RAMIRZ net
APPEAR AND BE H lA B O AT
cant war ad al lh# abort mart in* or C IR C U IT,
m ediottlr trw raoner. otherwise, a
IN
AND
FOR
imm*d #t*ly upon IM patM g* and Annum 'a be seed ar ally* and. It default and ultlmal* |udgm*nl will
t n E TIM E AND PLACE ABOVE
hearing, ft# will need a verbatim IIM IN OLR CO UN TY. FLORIDA
dr*d th# unknown w ouia hairs,
SPECIPlEO
record ol all proceeding*- in
be a n itra d #»•&gt;"•• you tor ih t
CASE NO. I I *JSCA*4-H
A capy snail be aetilaka* a t Ih* honors c re d ito rs. I r u s la ts a r rtfw f dtm andrd in the PrtiHcm
H Eal i
eluding lh# la«llmony and IN BE: ThaAAarrlagaef MARION
oThar
claimants
by.
through,
under
Oflica
at
Ih*
CHy
d
a
r
k
tee
an
avldanc*. which record I* ner ANNE GREGORY.
BOARD
OF
COUNTY
WITNESS my hand and Iht tael
persons desiring I* tu r n i n g lha or H * m tl JUAN RAMIREZ and of Hut Court an th i Hh day ol
COMMIS
grandad By lh* City el
Pgfltiona* W ilt
JUANA OLAOYS RAMIREZ, and AA*y. A O . IMI
Mm*
SION E H ! OF i e m i n o l e
Caitalbarry (Chapter N IM . and
An p d riie t In m f e r n l ana BAViO RAKURCZ.WM *!( pa rtie s
law* ol Florida. INd)
COUNTY, FLORIDA
ARTHUR H BECKWITH. JR
ROONEY D EAN GREGORY,
cKItana shall hae* an opportunity having *r claiming t* havg *ny
BY Arinin H Rotkmin Jr.
Publith May A IN I
Rrspondtnl Husband
Cl*rk of Ih* CvcuH
right, till*, or m ttr rtt m th*
to b* heeid *t M U naarMig
O i l 71
C li R K
Court
NOTICE OF ACTION
By order al Hit City CommiuW n praparty described in the Cbm
BY Joann Haro
BY I v t Crablrt*
TO Aednty Dean Grtgoyy. 1S17
pUkd. R n id a n ct unknown.
el Ih* CKy *1 Sanwrd, FW rtdt.
D E P U TY CLERK
Orputy Clark
kallviyw
D rly*.
Btnialam,
YOUR
ARE
H
E
R
E
B
Y
H
N
Tamm,
j
t
Publish Mar A in i
Publish May g. It. n . 71, IMI
N O TIC E OP PROCEEDINGS Pennsylvania INTO
NOTIFIED that * Complaint has
CMv l Jerk
OKI JT
D ei «
FOR TH E VACATING. ARAN
YOU ARE N O TIF IE D mat an
boon Iliad against r*u by Ih t
Pubtiift May I. I, IS, JJ. m t
DONINO.
D IS CON TIN UING . aetttn tar dittolulwn at m*rrl*g*
PtauMitt In the ic e v t styled Court
D ll 11
IN [H R CIRCUIT COURT. IN
AND CLOSING OP RIGHTSOP* ] has barn HWd against you and ygu
and c e v lf Mr Ih* purpovy t l
WAY
HCTITIOUI NAME
—a*
"OR
■
DRAINAOR art rtguirtd to sary* a copy of
AND FOR IIM IN O LR COUNTY.
lore&lt; krlmg lh» mortgega on Ih*
NolKy It hereby given lhal w*
EASEM ENT
your w nllan d a l m a r l if any, W
PLORIDA.
Igilaw ing d tscrlb d d p ro p e rty
IN
TH
I
CIRCUIT
COURT
OP
a
r
t
engagtd
in butlrwst al 111]
TO
WHOM
IT
MAY
CONCERN
nil an ABBOTT M HERRING.
C IV IL ACTION NO. I I * I H A H
South F ren c h A y*, Saniora.
THI E i GHTI CNTH JUDICIAL siiueie and b an g In S*mm*ee
YOU WILL PLEASE TAAC P aliilan tr't a llo m a y . a l Ml w n t
• .
County.
Fiend*
Semmoi* County, Florida under
CIRCUIT. IN
AND
POR
IN HE THE MARRIAGE OF
NOTICE that th* Board at County F lr tl S tra ff, S an lo rd . F lorida
LOT
14.
BLOCK
II,
ie m in o l e c o u n t y , F l o r id a
Hi* IldlTlous nam* ol UK NU
C o m m ittlo n a rt pi Svm.noiy 77(71. an or baior* lh* 77th o a r cl
R R T TY H JA M tA
W
E
A
T
H
E
B
S
F
IE
L
O
P
I
R
I
T
VARIETY
STORE, and lhal «*
CIVIL ACTION NO SI M l CAB4County. Florid*, at ig CD o clock M at, IN I. and nw ih t original
WHb PHIIIonar.
ADO!TON, according la tn* P u t
E
udend I* register 1*4 n#n e with
a m on th* jn d d t t al June. A D . with ih# Clark a t ih li Court ttftw r
*0d
thereof
e
t
recorded
In
Plel
Book
lh* Clark cl In* Circuit Court.
i t t l . In lh # County Cam baior* taryle* on PwinlM t't at
IN RE THI M ARRIAOI OF
n e w t r i s i l ja m Ei ,
II. P*g*s M end 0 of th* Public
S*mm*W Caunly, Florid* m *c
m ittia n a rf M artlng Roam t l lh* lor nay ar Im m adlaltly th a ra a lla rf
Hvtband Respondent
JiM M y q BETTIS.
R
rc
erd
s
a
t
Itm
in
*
!*
C
aunly.
cordanca m ih th# prm iltqn at th*
County Caurthout* in Sanlord. tTharw i# a d rla u tl will b* anitrad
NOTICE OF ACTION
R ttponom l Husband,
Flaridt
FNIilwua Nam* Slalufas. T*Wd
S TA TE OF FLORIDA
and
Florid*, will held a Public H tanng •O tm tt you la r l i t r i l i i l
including specHlealiy but net by
Section 14! H FWrld* Italuir*
•a cam d a r and dafarmm* whafhrr dtm andrd in Ih* PalllWn.
TO NEWTRESS L JAMES,
Mic h e l e m g r i l a n o b e t t i s .
th*
way
fd
limllMton.
Hit
tallowing
1*0
or nol in* County win vacait,
whet* latt r iu d n ia and mailing
Oalag ih lt land day e l April.
P tlilionar w ilt li Mures and yquipmerri. to wit
S4 William S&lt;hr order
adornt N unAndrm. and w*wst
abandon, d itc a n tin u t, cWt*. IMI
NOTICE OF ACTION
R tfrtgerstor
Ring*
Gen* Weaver
ranounc • and dlK laim any t ight al ISEAU
prtbanl oddrata It unknown
TO! JIMMY R BETTIS
Publish
Afar 1. 1, U. 71. INI
You
a
t*
i
squired
ta
larva
t
copy
th* Caunty and lha public In and W
YOU
AR B
H ER EBY
ARTHUR H BECKWITH. JR
107 PW* Drive
OEl 17
Ih t ta llo w in g r lg h lt of way or I
N O TIF IE D Hut a procaadmg tor
Clark al lh* Clrcuii Court
College P m . Georg:* JOJay af your *nsw*r ar Bleed-ng on
ettaoh/lton ol marilag* hit brm
d ra in a g e t a t a m t n l running
By Susan E Tabar
Plaintiff'S a Herne vs. TAYLOR.
YOU
ARE
h ER EH V
th ro u g h or a d la c tn l la in* I
•Had against you an* Inal
At Deputy Clark
NOTIFIED lhal an aclian Igr B RION.RUKCRkGREENE, T4S!
NOTICE UNDER
d rier.b ad property. I* wit
Ebtctionar. B E TT Y H JAMES. It
Publith April Sf. and May I, I. IS. dUMMIen ol m orriag* h as bean B rtciril Avenue. Miami. Florid*
FICTITIOUS NAME STATUTE
0171.
T
rlrp
ta
n
t
No,
ITT
TMDf
th a t portion of lu ftirt Drive IMI
tofAln* i n d l *t*mtl you
hWd a g a tn l you and you a r t
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
W ctird a d la c tn l t* Lais I through DEH III
AND. rauararagvlridloappaar
regwrvd tg tarv* a copy al your STENSTROM. DAVIS G MclN
Nonce is hereby t v t n that lh*
TOSH. JU W 1st Street. F O h »
and Ilia your Answer or eihtr
V YANAEE LAKE TERRACE,
•e &gt;tifn a tla m e v H any. J* H an a
u n d arsig n ad , p u rsu a n t la Ih*
according tg th* plat Iha rta l a t
a*Tanka *r piaad.n* with th* Clrrk
FIC TITIO U S NAME
A n o n lw SPEEN. AiNxnay tw' lu g . Sanford, Fldrtdt 1 0 ft. I t l
"F ic lilio u s
Nam*
S la lu ta "
0# th* CVcvi* Carr I in and Nr n e a r gad m t i l l Book |j , p*ga ;j.
NOTICE IS H ER E B Y GIVEN Pft'iwnay, whose a ddress Is III No i n 1171 and til* th* a n g tn a l
C hapin M IH . FWrtda U a'utr.
answ tr ar ptaadmg In th* O ttic* ol
lam inala County, p H i Ida, and tar
Public d a c e r d i a* Sgmmal* Biff I am angtgad in butmatt al Wrtl Commercial Strew. Sanlord.
will ra g x ia r w dh lha Clerk at Ih*
Caunly. P larida.
a copy mar oof on Patilionor*
IfOWtsl Mwy fJA Long wood. FI, Florid* 0711. an ar baior* Jun* A th* CWrk at said Court an kr beJar*
C trtu t Court, In and I n lamlnol*
attorney. ROGER L. IIR R V . P
PERSONS INTERCSTCDMAV J2IJB. Sammow County. Fwrlda IMI, and til* lha ang.n*i wrtn in* thaF lhdayaf Jun*. IMI. II you Mil
Caunly, Florid*, upon ry&lt;aip* tl
M 0* M. * OttauH m il be entered
O Orawar 0 , Samara, alarm
APPEAR AND BE HEARD AT “hdtr iht llclilla u t nam* ol Clark *1 this Court aitlw r briar*
proof pi lh* publicallwi al In s
agam tt y*u Mr the railed souohl In
0771. an or hater# lha STIR day *f
THE TIME AND PLACE ABOVE AWABDS U N L IM ITE D , and m tl I service on Petitioner•» a tto rn ty a r
nonet, th* HclKWuS name, w w il:
th* Complaint
May. Ifti. dr otharwli* * default
SPECIPlEO
Wtnd fa r a g tltr laid nam* with im m ediately Ih y r a a lte r. «thay
SPECTATORS UNUMITEO IM
WITNESS my hand and MAI ot
m m b* onlarad agunii you.
ISEA U
lh# Cwrk aI lh* Court, Sanjinuw wise a default will be enter ad
PORT A DISTRIBUTION undir
Mid Court at Samltwl* Caunly,
W ITNESS my hand ana *ltlci*l
BOARD
OF
COUNTY Caunly. H a n o i In accardanc* tg a in it , g M tor th * rqtiqf
v -ic h I am m g*dad In builnM l ai
Florid*. Hus Stn day al Mdy IMI
M lh* (lark a* lh* Circuit
COMMtS
with Ih* prgvttton* af th* .Ffc
demanded n lh* PtfKton
100 Sul M l Rftad in the CHy a*
(SEAL)
an'h * 7Itl day o* April, m i
SI ONERS OF SEMINOLE
lilwut N tm t Slalutn, W will'
W! I N E Il m r fwnd and lh* laal
W r e n Park. Fioride
ARTHUR IS. BECKWITH. JR .
COUNTY. FLORIDA
Mown iAlO* Florida Stifutat rK IM Court on April I t , IN I
LI
Thai lha parly w iyrtsiad rt u d
as
Cwrk
ot
se-d
Circuit
t*U
GY
Arlftur
«
Btckwim
jr
Artthir H BacLwPh, J t
ARTHUR H BtCAWlTH. iS
b u i m t e re n p risa 1 as MIWws.
Court
C
u
rb
Awfritt
Unlimited.
Inc
Ai
Clark
bt
lh*
Caurl
Chmiocmrr Caasatla
7 'C la rn *» m* Circuit Court
BY Cjnfhi* Praetor
By. Joann tsars
I f : Willlard G Barman.
By Carrw E llvrllrw r
By Sutan ■ Tabor
Deled at Ortand*. Oranga
Deputy Clerk
Pratidmf
Dtpufy Cwrk
AS LNpiTy iW rk
April Jt. A ANr I, I. 11
County, Fiarlda. May V IM)
Publish May A IS. 71, &gt;*, IMI
Publith May L 1*41
Publ th May I. I, IS. JJ. m i
| Publish May I, ». 11. « , m i
Publish AAay I, IS 0,11, IN I
DEI 41
DEI 71
Of I I
•M IN
IM I!
DEI 0
IN T N I C IR C U IT COURT IN AND
re *
iim in o l r
co u n ty,
FLO R ID A
Hr . ri m i c a i a p
IN RB: Th# Petition W
•CR TH A L i t KNIGHT and
OOSMIA MAE M ITCHELL
NO TICE OK ACTION
•TO: AIM* Lou Harris, IN I
N w H m Dr., Bothltnom. P#
• NOII. TlnnI* Rulh Stallworth.
T O Aon 1*7. Ovlerta. FI 77741,
*»IHI for*. 701 Women A r t .
Philadelphia.Pi If in . M i r J u r
Hamilton. 7 0 M&lt; M l Oviedo,
f l. 777*1. I f l John Alim KAIfM,
AT., II* f Bridget loop. Mac Dill
AAR
Temp*. Florid* 17*71:
»**rl*r MArif Knight. n t floor.
m i Puia m i a **.. pti.iMripAi*
P l N I* I i Charles Eugene Kngw,
m i Iran* IH)T D rlrt. Bath litem,
P i. I N t li Laenwattor Knight, *14
p R iHNH Loop. Mac On I A f t .
T*m*«, f N r * * 71*71
YO U
ARC
H ER E B Y
N O TIFIE D mol * PH it an Tor
iuGIclal drtarmlnatlgn ol lh*
bmoflcior ift 0* IKO Ell H r of Lwl*
M. Knight under ootti net bean
•NR I" Wn *0**o ityto* cowit, am
row aro (wrgby required lo torv* *
copy ol four written defenses. II
m y . to N on M in A. Baldwin. Esq .
Prtittondrv oHorntf. *****
* * « N M l Highway 11*7, Pom
P # n , flora* 11771. Oft or br&lt;ort
RN 77lh dor *1 M*r, INI. *1 I N
P M , and III* III* or I*in*I with Ift*
Ctorh ol UN Court ntftor b**ort
M rrk * on pal II toners' attorney or
Immodlololf (hare atier; olftrr
wtsg * dor*uIt tolll be miorod
I f l l n t l you lor Hit r ol i*l
tNmondod in IN* petition
Witness My ft»rN *IH| OffIt 1*1
t**i *t ITN Cirrt or t*td Court It It
Tim day of April, IMI
(M a l i
ARTHUR H BECKWITH.
Clark oI Itw ClrctM Court
By: Luton E Tatar
Or pul r Clark
Publish April]*, and May I. A I L

322-2611

f

Legal Notice

l O V euw .

rt G -« v |cb . * i

e w iw b

_

RN. Full lim a t a sn.fl lanMrd
N u ll in* and CanvalMC***
C arter CorKaci Meg. Brewn

O p p B rtu n W M
Evening HW*M E fp er kfkto*
seal t i l d e wSc. Lew Udn l i l
hrs a MT nrthrary Tim* CHI
70 *3*4
___ ,__________

07 ISOS
L O N V fc N ltN lR
S tO R fe
CLERK - Good tpmpany
DanHiis Apply Handy Way
food litr e s Sanwrd a ria
interstellar Photography needs
Models Ail types. Inc. t t t a r t
P res Portfolio 0 7 7711
K ick t h e s t o r a g e h a b it
Sail m o s t useful, na Wngar
needed Hams wiln a HnaM
O a st died Ad Call 7 0 1*11 *r
01 m j
C O N V E N IE N C E
STO RE
C A S H IE R S -W t altar I waak
pa-d varan** every * monini
Now Waking lar Mpdrtwvtad
people read# W *urk For
irdarvww phone Ih# managar

T o S I* rt
Airport, 414 B ui n d m a n to th a rt
lum .. 7 Bdrm. 1 B C om o with
tarn* E i l r a t NantmaAar.
S in Mo ♦ ly elec Deg Refer
7T7 AB4B

29— R o o m *
Roam for Rent Full ut* r t
house utilities paid Small
III 101410
SANFORO — R m . w ily A
monthly rates Ulll me. Kll IPO
Oak Actons 1 4 1 7 1 0 _________

WA-Room A Board

mAirport Blvd 0 7 4 0 1
C JtM ibarry 0 1 IMS
Celery A n 7 0 401
Lake Mary 7 0 17a]

I

74 Hrs Supervision (ar Senior
CKlfwvt F fm ll# anvlronmort
with TLC 7 0 SIS)

pvT pv H

llm# 7 M P M. SMtT-

A tp ly

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30 - A p a r t n w i t s

Nurslftd

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1917 FRENCH AVL
CALL 323-5176
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la g lllm a la
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Na
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7 0 1SPA________
_____
Would you like samaon* to
canlact your aldarty rilaliy*
**&lt;n day lull •• make sura
they ar* salaT For further
inform atw n Call 0 7 TIM
t y p e r im e e d Carpenter. St M
per hour I* atari work in
Plym outh sra* *44 411*.

LU X U R Y A P A R T M E N T * .
F a m ily A A dults sacilon
Poofs kM I E d fm t AAat(pr (
C a n Apts 7 0 7MB Optn on
Moriner s vm o*# on Lok* kc»
I ) Bodroam Apts from SIM.
L o cated 17 * t I US' Baum r t

Airport Blvd. m Sanford All
AduftS 074*70
La k E f r o n I APARTMENTS
I, ivj A 1 B rtm on Loko Jannio
In Sontord Pool. roc. room,
outdoor BBQ. Iannis caurti A
disposals Walk to (rttodto A
shopping c m !e e l 0107*7
I BORM. W esnrr. Dryer B Pool.
S7 0 1 Bdrm I M Adults. No
(tots. I.'? 1717 C rtands
lan iard lovely I Bdrm Air,
carpeted, ceram ic bain Fum
a v a il. DIB Adults Ml TIE)
Specious Modern 7 Bdrm , I bam
•pi C arpeted, kll. equipped.
CHAA. Near netp'lM A Isk*
Adults. No pais 0 1 0 1 ) •
e ROM UTS. l a r pe 1.1 A ) Bdrm
apis Pool, tennis court
12j Oejg
PR O M SI7IA U P
Etflc tone tot. I A 1 B drm t Apts
Shewn by app* Call 0 SIH A
En|ay cawntry IlylagF &gt; Bdrm
A pis. O lym pic s i . P a rt.
Shaaandeak V iiny* Open S I
0 S 11M
J ) — A p a r tm e n ts Fu rn is h e d

m in ic o m p u t e r

Operator needed lo Install
invinlory control and A R
p a c k a g e throughout slat*
Sam* travel required, car
porfie headquarters Wealed In
S anford E e c a llan t benefit
pack*;* A opportunity far
grow th fle e c e la n d can
• idem I* I resum e I* Cedisc*.
Inc..
A llen! ten
t
A.
C a v e n a r* . y e n e itg h iiln *
A r t . Santord. FI 10(1 or t i l l
E A C ar award JOS n j l k x

Furm tiled apertm w its h r Srtitor
C m iens 111 P alm etto Ay*., J
Cowan Na phena calls
If you donT tetiov* (n il wan! ads
Ming rttu llk . try out, and
Hsian to your phone ring. Dial
011*11 ar 0 1 H I!_________

COOK
PAST POOD PREPARATION
No ta p e r lone a nr e n t e r , will
tram , good salary, haspllilija

N EW - I4 1 MELLONVILLE
7 BR. I Bam, Kll A p p l.A C . No
pats. STM * Depot il E v* 0 1

tkn. oth»r benttttt
Call 0 ] JA4J
LAYOUT PLASHFITTERS tor
Heal tab# Nation work Co
beholds
Tap pay tor top
paeptt Apple in parson af
Florida Iren Works. ladW adt
SI., Winter Springs.
Casa Mi* ot Santoro
W aitre ss w anted Apply In
parson Monday thru Friday
II II p m 0 7 TOO*
CLERK (E ip wttn 4 k r ,
calculate# a m u s t) Typina
helpful IS Men thru Frl
Comael Linda. KWh Plan ol
Ftortd*. 1 0 7*47. Sanford
New Parsanal Detense nt ms
need dealers now. port A lull
llm* S*e T ill Fir* tn d how I*
make m an*, *1 th e Gatdrn
Charm. 7M1 w 1(1 St . San
tor*. FI I B p m Frl. I A lt.
071 0*
Burger King N* I n Sanford
n w accepting applWatwrq tor
Days and Nights Apply toe
person I S p m . Equal. Op­
portunely EmpWyyr
RN s to SI » . LPN’s I* MIS.
P a rt l l m i s r r u l l tim i.
Medical Cone epic IflO U l
FLOOR
WAAER—Permanent
Pull lim a fab In lanterg
Call D t tseo
P ane*
a ss e m b le rs
Jaw
Operators. Oarcarai Laborers
Day SINIS ar nlghl shin Apply
twiween hours M l a m. tn d |
* p m . A m trlc a n Wood
P io d u c is M ill O flica. igg
M arvin Avr , Long woo*
FLOOR W AXIC - A jfraah
m alaly M Nr a par wk. W Alt*,
mania Sags 171 Meg
WANTED— L lu tto cemponwn
totidtrtyw W aw L*gh* caaArtg
A housekeeping, m wk 0 ]
470
TY P IST —(4(1 and a tlid a n l.
Wrong phone voice Magical,
pension, pact if sharing plans
United Solvents 0 7 teas
lm n.ed.ele opining tor Super
ewer and Janitors Fun llm*.
Night Shin US f l a l
*

*

*

*

*

*

*

S**J__________GET THOSE LUK'PRV ITEM!
FOR A PRACTIONOP THEIR
COST FROM TOOAY'SWANT
AUSI______________________
Sanlord Lk M ary ar** New
Ouptoe. 7 Bdrm. U s Bom.
Cart H A Ho pais, all ap
pl,*rv rs IJO 7f*1 AH ( p m
DUPLEX 7 Bdrm. Bath. Kit
chan. LR. OR. UMHyrm W w
c a r p a l.CHA N opals. 0 0 Mo
0107*0

U-H oum s U nfurnhhpd
7 Bdrm. 7 Bam. Gar eg*
In Deltona
BA MM
17) Andersen ClrcN 7 Bdrm, TV*
Bain, c a i n t r lol F tn c a d .
carport. Cm l . AC. carpeting.
Limit 1 child, no p a's. 1 )0 A**
* 1100 Deposit O l 4711
7 Bdrm. I Bath with guittoe
entrance U K Ma Last and
SK Dap 177 Aft I
1 Bdrm P lutn carpel, a-r. ap
valences. Aida, , „ pels SaJv
Mo 141. tost * depos l Cell
Ml II ■ m 0 1 0 4 7 ,
7 Bdrm. J Rein. Fam ily R m .
CHA c t r p e l i d , la k slro n l,
Ravenna P a rk at**, c lo u I*
NCR and Stram karg. ! « o *
Security l i t N i l
Mobile ttom e o n 7 acres MiY*lf
•and L a s t Afar#. Slog mo *
M curlty 771 0 1 1 .

U — H ouses F u rn is h e d
7 Bdrm. IBeth. Living. OKung
r m . Kitchen Adults. S1S0 Me
7 0 *1*1
H ere sam e campevg equipment
you no tong*- m i l Sell II oil
w in O ClastHwd Ad to The
Harold Coll 7 0 )4 1 1 or O l
M il an* o trtondly od vNor
will hai# you.
90— C o n d o m in iu m s
Im m a c u l f l r C ondom inium . )
Rprm. 1 bain, f i * Rm. * h
• ppiiancas m o m e. e t a i t n
s A ltar 4 S*J I tt l

W A N TED
SU B C O N TR AC TO R S
Large Midwest developer needs
Sun C art recto rs in all trades
in c lu d in g
le a rn in g ,
m echanical m e . tic tor M
G arden Apartments m l* n
toed. PtarM* Canlact Tam
M cBride c a Th* Law Can
struct ton Company, inc . p q
Bee t i l l . WWh.lt. c e n ta l
*7701 or C*ii liA tiSBJSf tor
btoding m tor m il ton EOE M P

l j

31A — O u p tp ip s
Avail SS. New I BB, 7 bam. kit
ep*l . tar paled. Or t o r t N#
pets S0 SM 1U ! Ridgewood
Day lb ! * 0
Eva IM 170

Legal Notice

f

m ip

AVON
REPEBIENTATIVEI
Sa*Mrd TtrrlSarws avadibaa.
**♦&gt;*71 cenact M U C K

831-9993

ti

v* i . »Vl---A -J

it

UAL COLKRT REALTY ,rt
MULTIPLE LISTING R1ALT0R
323 7832

E ie s 7 0 M l)
7*7 E 0(1.11
Santoro I B drm . I n p . Carport,

Spacious lanced bk y l'd
Prim* toeMion SJBJM 01

•if d*

^ ^-jlAkY.*

k

�• I *

-A t
f l^ H lU S e S

O U R B O A R D IN G H O U S E

f t-H o u m

w ith M a jo r H o o p la

c o u n t r y l i v i n g c l o s e in

J Barm n , bath on , , MrF
W e «B many fruit
'W
ttl.SM

S i . M

„ , &amp;

TELEVISION I f RCA
Solid Hit* color contoio ,n
Walnut cm.not Warranty
Ply SIS* or SIS morOMv
Financing, ng down pdymont
BAK1IW4N Mi IN 111 Oil
Or lando 10* 1140

J , ,

L - o m f h i n t j me
m 2 bm

L T o v f *-0 T *
*' *, ®° O " *•«. Low oo.,,
paymart and tf f f ftrmi.

R ENTAL I EkJ'm » A*?*, jv^tnu
Hemt Its Mo Ducount laatt
#m#&lt;I#d**
STfM P ER AGENCY

The T.mo teitedF.rm
fTl
,*»q Reel Ella** Broker I H
Nos IN Co m i w m i St
ITT S ill

TELEVISION
R CA,I*' teifvitton XL 100Solid
Slate
Color
Poriibi*
Warrant, p*y live or SU
Monrhiy Financing No Oown
Fiym frt
•AH! Ilf* H Mills Avt. ( IF til
Ortandrt 1 M l lie a

Harold Hall Realty
R E A L TO R S , M LS

• f * i rn » « i m i
lo o t M i M u n i w , m i n i
Mollipic I »F,ng Service

K js ir
\\\ \ i .

i Ls t v t f

. I!
331-0041
'

M LS

**'m 1
Remodeled
Kite ben. New Cool Hoot IIM
* » lit.too

1 U r n , I | i ' o Honor anneal
t lt u H iW W t Mh o Otter
1 M m . I lolli. Spill Plan.
Family I n
Wood Dott
I1LS44
) M m . | lain Meb.ia Homo
Pottage M urom oh Property
DUN.
poo l wort to BUY Root E.refe
RUY Root liloto ono woillll
LAW 4N AKIIH
REALS JR

333 5774

D e y o rN Iq h f

r e t ir e m e n t

dream

0«eJ Mod T V t . t i l 4 ue
MILLERS
3*1* OrlAnoo Df
Ph 1)10)1)

HOM E
jo lt luted in
mocuioio | Edm in choict
DoEory oroo. E tl in tilchM.
Lotoly tern*nod torch Prolt
troot ond more Good I or mi
SIS.ltd

TV rop* IS" Imith Sold ortg
1**1 &gt;1 B*l S1U 14 or 11) mo
*oonl l ’* « ll»

Auum ption
Low
lolorott
morlgogo
Low monthly
pdymont C tn crtlt l i t S
Sdrm. 1 Eilh. Coot Cool
Evcoiionl Condition 1)4,144

T V ’iFO R RENT
Color 4 Bloch 4 wh.t* Froo
dtlIvory 4 pickup ).m m ya
TV Rental Phono Anytime
•* OT 1)1#
, .

i n ,wo
lor lovoly ) BRrm homo rttlrt
m itylo, or (tori right w .incut
ronl Piymvnti Coll now

w o u ld t o u b e l ie v e

41— Houses

COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE I
M in o lii Iro n downtown
Sonlord I Bdrm. Mi Eilh.
Living R m . Pomiiy R m .
Lorgo ,trd. IM H I

Cnorm.ng Oldor ] hgrm
C am pltto iy r tiw rb lirird
Ul.SPO
Mvhwoy o Barm Block. Cor pot.
Cont hoot. Lo* ImeoR lol
s u m m ono

EHA A VA BUYERS HAVE
YOU SEEN THIS HOME f
Low. low down on tint I Bdrm
homo in Pinecreif hoc 11 op to
Roao I iM wotdtd Ooht Only
111.H I

oirodo i# tun m oroi no room
tor thocorl CHon it out with o
IN«nt AR tn Iho HfVAIR PH
m m i or i)t m i
SontorR Vlrdogo t BRrm, ) Eilh
on igo lot. 1st.PM « n
Moiictowihl REALTOR n i
t m . Evoi M i lid )

331-0041
OW NIRO )4 .U . 1 D im | K^h
*» l#,* mlorctl
Down
payment end toko Dior
Pdymentl Coil on 1 )0 D )
MW

SAVE S U M on Nut Woody hr ond
now ) Bdrm. I hotti in
P in o irn t Pncod to toll
Mt.IPE Mvrryi

I P L T Y

w m irr
' R tf Rtol Eliott Rrootr I.
m i s iii
iv o n n m _
NEW LISTING IN o r LAN
FORD f hit 0 Yf. Old ho OOP,
» 1 1 cuitom M ill Large
Roonv ipi.t pi on oiwmoolo
VAmortg Lott morg lootvm
* country living on I • Ac it
HUN
REOUCEOISCOO
Sonlord
No
qualifying
BoobiiliH (tonic orM ) BRrm.
H i bath. Family r m . Cent M
A. 0 ,v rtu v a lot tontod
A tty mo t It.MM morlgogo it
I'M Mo H i t with S2S.ODO
Down Owner will cofnder )na
loo poll ot down poyiv.oni
Print'poll only
Ownor DP iro
h a n d y m a n s p e c ia l

Downtown J Heutot lonoR tor S
un.l Aporlmonlt 1)10)1*
Boouiilvl v» Aero Lot on Cono&gt;
looping io st John. tW.SM
Toho or or payment) ono ownor
will how ird n d or wrop
orounR on mil Triple. PrKtd
of only H IR d A l t

A L L F L O R ID A R E A L T Y
O F SAN FO R D R EA LTO R
IM4$ Fr#n&lt;tiAy#
Uf two

r ea lto b s

101) VY III SI.

1)1)1?)

&gt;-f ■*. I. if

omet i w t iiin H O
Altor Hoiwl IMS) 1U I ’M
I l)R Vlh i Partially I .mined
Pomlly rm , A*A&gt;ng SIT.SM
1 Lori t i l . tod
B ATEM AN

R EA LTY

L k hoot Elloto BrcAor
IMPSontord Avt
m i

#7*9

Qeqeva gardens
FAMILY-ADULT!
A P A R T M F .N T S
§ »»«*•# - L I I If »YN1
9 **d 1 l» T t M a m d VntmAs|AaA
A C N M l«M
|
§i 0*3*9 I |»*r?
1505 W .IS t h $ T .
SANFORD
8M 0V0

■E A l e s t a t e
R EA l t OR. I l l 14fi

REALTY

H O P AND THINK A MINUTE
•I C lM titu d AR| RIRn't
**"•
tn*»g wouldn’t bo Any

REAL TOR. MLS
Mil I trowel.
Svilo «
Sonlord

4 IB -C o n d o m in iu m s

24 HOUR IB 322-9283

F o r S a le
Looking lor A loot Tho ClitliHod
Aoiwiiihoip you lino mot lob
SonRoi wSod Vlllot 1 ER. &gt; E.
*!N. CHA. DMT. N 40 . Pool.

!&amp;

Kr

STEiM STRO M
REALTY -

OftRRM
M Acr» term
Willi pAilwrt, lir A ' 3 M m . 1
Raffia fvmHhtd mafetla h« m•
#t&gt;o»t | rM M
A m*f*l
Country IfvfA* Iff I I 25.OH

S*d our b04Hrtlfvi now BROAD
MORE. Iror# A roor E R i
OREOORY MOBILE HOMES
SMSOrtAnRo Or
111 1100
V A E FHAPInoncmg
_____ ___
- _____ ~a.
u n c lu tter

I BEAUTIPUL wo Mod W l on
Plumoio
Or
AlUintM'
Ddrwtlkl 4 City wMtr 11.MM
MChor both lor SU.OCR Ownrr
T il I MO
_________ ___

I I Acfft n*of Lh

Hornoy
liv id Mobil*. 1 BRrm. I ' l l 1
rm *RR . t*«c* Tormi
14* Sdll

Tomorrow mor M Iho Roy you
Mil thil roll o woy bvd you v*
mywhortloroiltwoy. . ityar
piocy A O iiD IW d AR lodiy
4 * A -In d u s trie ! P ro p e rtv

C A L L A N Y T IM E
ms
Errncti

3 2 3 - 2222

„ ;a , 3 2 3 -6 3 6 3
R EA LTO R S
M u l t i p l e L i s t i n g S e r v ic e

47-A— M o rtg a g e s Bought
A Sold
W* poy i n n lor lit 1 TnR
morigogti Roy Lrgg Lit.
Morlgogo Erohit, 1104 C
RoP.mkn, M l IH*
E v e r y d a y is b a r g a i n d a y
in t h e w a n t a d s i n M U or
m m i
SO— M iscellaneo us lo r Sale
4. now. grotn Dying room
ovmiurird choirs. SU* ooch
1 milch,ng ollomon Jll 1411
Sot* hido a Pro, dork boift.
•oodcond |)S. rolrig SIS 40S
B Holly Av* , S*nl 141 1104
Th.nA.ng oboul Ihjl tgmmor
ytcolionT Gol a bottor cor
Ihrougn ih* clatl.f.td odi m
lo d iyi popor
Org.njl Oil Ptlnlingi Mult
liquiRotn Dock, holt pricn
C«v*li»rMotorlnn.Hy p 01 S
VACUUM RAINBOW
Ropoiiottod with AM *1
lothmonti 4 powor hood Liko
hVWWOIf.ru, Poy ST4I or t i l
monthly Flnoncing. ng down
POymonl
RAKI 1104 N Mill! 1)1*11
Orlindo H* )*M
LOohihg For o Now Homo? —
Chock tho Wont Adi tor homot
0* orory m o ond prico.
Pomp, molar ond ID Gallon
wotor link. 1*1, Gould pump. &gt;
Hp Briggi ond S lrilian
mg .no. including 10 tt Hoi*.
I II ). Orongo picking bogy
lie . Horboildfr hoi* ond
NollH. UMR I month, coil
in s . m u t « ) n i m i

4 INDUSTRIAL LOTS
1 Houtot 4 Larg* Shop
CAIIU0SS41

47— R e e l E state W a n ted

Wl buy tq uily In Houltt.
np*rlmonri. yoconl Itnd ond
Acroogt. , LU C K Y
in
VESTM ENTS P O Boo MM.
SontorR. Flo 1OTI. OT 4141
Eichongo ) Bfdrjom. iggp E ln
City, North Cirpino Homo I
■iroplocoi. etc in troot, o
b**uty m t* lM 4 4
li v t your rqui'y ond ertd.t Irwn
lortcioiur* (olio proporty
W.th low oguiir ond ouwmobio
mortgogoi dvt ivd I P rk t irw
lyymt rwgotlAhlo Coll OT 4441
tor :ontk)*ni;tl
im rtio r
Buying
Incom*
Proporty Print ipilt only. No
proAtft Algrton, Bor 4*4)
Nndar Pom FI »T*1

SS— Boats &amp; A ccessorie s
68— W a n te d to B o y

B*,lm*r )4 1SH IMMp
Goodcbnd.tin.S4.SM
all Ell I or 111 W l
Art you a M l limt a u n t w In a
pan lima car* Our ciaml'Odi
are loadod w.th good buy to-

S6—Camping

E q u ip m e n t

Hunting Camp lor Sale Farmion
art* Otlren M il Trailer with
bunk houte. Tull power ffli
well with pump Call 11) 1400
Evenmgi only
S f— M u s ic a l M e rc h a n d is e
ORGAN — W urMier. J key
ward, kynthetlltr. rhythm 4
caitette recorder ItOC Call
1111*04 or OT lsir
Complete Mu lie Sytlem, e
Speakeri. fouai rer Catietie
deck lAm piiiien si eei m
m i
63— L a w n G a rd e n

RUMMAGE s a l e , alio baked
goody ond pi only SoI uf day.
May Oth 0 a m United
Preibytenan Church, 11* W
Wilbur. Loko Mary
STOP ANDTHINK A M IN U TE
II Claiklllod Adi didn't
' wor*
there wouldn I bo Any.
Yard Sa*g: n i l Part Aog
Antiguoi, c lorhoi. Mother y
Day cake* 4 homemade
broad. Pri 4 Sat * 1
Fr.day. Saturday. Sunday )40*
S Cedar Avo I) Johnion
Outboard
motor,
Mi*c.
flvan.no Haul*
Garage tale Vanity. Irguialion
pa nt, lumber, their*, book
toio. lan. Etc Saturday 0 4
use El Capitan Dr
CarpoU Sara Sal 4 Sun II )
Loti ol nice oaky and
chiMron'i clolhot No junk.
1«0I Airport Bird
May * Yard Sal# MO Par* Ay*
Furmlur*, odd* and end*,
lorndhing tor every one
I

Family G«rag# Saif Ap
ptiam«%&gt; childrens cloth#*,
toys 901 Icotl Av* Saturday
and tanday

FILL DIRT 4 TOP SOIL
YELLOW SAND
Call Clark 4 H irlll* )SH
LAWNMOWER SALE ) Star
Special Avallabta nowhere
bul Wetiern Auto. Sonlord

■MChgvrolel Monte C i M ^
U 4 M c No money P*nn„,
U17U4
— --------------------------- ------------ — ga­
l l pmio. 4 spew 1^1
NkeCar tees
U l 11)4
.ggt

■‘ "-■I ■ "

U Mercury Moniegt Ait.*fv5
A M F M . Full Power ) , i S
Tlftlp 1450 or Bftl o «tf
rhlOf
Dunebuggy Hail Name l i j i
rebuilt VW engine nr •
lory, broket 1)11*4)
i'*^
STORING IT MAKES WASTE:
h
S ELLIN G IT MAKESs
PLACE A CLASSIFIED AO
NOW Call 11) J*H or
c U T ***)
I.
-------- f r y
74 Bulc* 1 Dr
Harplfd
6.*mil#d r #lf«i Like i h
1500 c#vh or ff*d*, *nd P4f jh r
P*ymmtV I lf 9100 or I I I 4M5
ro v
■ h

78—Motorcycles
67—Livestock Poulfry
Harley Davunon
E irdra Glide. Fulidreti
0.100 tal U N An apm

GET BEnER MILEAGE

68 - Wanted to Buy
FURN

'IN

14)0 Plymouth Fury, ‘Uopu
much I, imaii V &lt; tlSOuMPD
. Crier y Ave OT 1)40 woiW.fi

77— Ju n k C a rs R em oved

Caivei lor Sale s w i m a i i o )
Cowv BranmA Bull, none
trailer, pninie colli will
Irpde M l TOM

AUCTiOh

'l l 4 Wheel Dr. J 4 OM v*n&gt;
PHk up Steel ben Vn wtyeei
ContiPer trade let 'Olio's/
STOP DOLLAR)
MW
lo r your car or truck, (eB6r
then ol cond Prater rupP’R)
Free towing U l 141$ Lpf*'

* A U C T IO N S A L E *
F r l . N lt e 7 P .M . S h a r p
Living rm lert. hying rm
choir*, deutr. chtll. T v v
M o ilre titt w tpringt. *11
kind* ol tmoil Hemt pivi Isoli.
He Oil'C# chotri. b.cyiin
large leal bo*, and an kmdi ol
M iit iiemi loo numtroui lo
mention
DOOR P R IIE l

Top DoflAf Paid lor Junk 4 Utad
cart, truck! 4 htgvy equip
men! OT Seep

-u T u

10)1 topn V 4 Rebuilt m g i&lt;
and brake* New pa n! Hikin'
imp s u m inasae i

K n &amp; f c r N pretty good.' Du.
Ih# Imdin' ik klnde poorly 'III
yo' g t lo tho WANTAD)

For Sale P gl. STOandUp
Peacock. I Male. 1 Female, t i l l
Great Pane. male, tree lo
good home M l DSHD aih lor
Goto

puuih

every Wedneiday el •pgv, Jji i
Ihe only one In Florida TlPsA' 1
the reirrved price ( 41^,401
US O i l Idr Furlher delt(IAa

For Etlol* Commercial 4
Rrvcient.it Avcliont 4 Ap
ora.iaiy Can Deni Auclkr

BUY JUNK CARS 4 TRUCKS
From lliloUO orm of*
Can m lan. H144M

Computer EnQln* Analysis On T h «
EU TU R C S C O P C
SSOO
Pinpoints
P rn b la m i T h a i Cavsa Poor Oas
Mllaapa.

OUNS ANTIOUIS

S H IG H D O L L A R *
I \NFORD AUCTION
11)1)44

tin*

SPECIAL,,,

car

JIM LASH'S

BLUE BOOK SERVICE CENTER

Don 1O ld e r Or Pull Your Hair
- Uie A h a il Ad M l 1411 or
O l 000)

-

tff#W
4114 Hwy 11 *1 attween Sanlerd 4 Lengweod. Phene 111 llip .'u i
,&lt;aM
Hewn i M • m
Rental Car*
M liM a m
W
A
Available

A N IiU u E 4 Modern aom.
Kewpir dolii 4 ligurinet.
Aievonder dollt Mtaal)

C O N S U L T

A V lD

L E T

O U R

A N

E X P E R T

D O

T H E

J O B

™ *
n'l
••1
IH

To List Your Business...

BOOT SALES
Cr.lirt Selection Chock our
price* on TIM
HAY a
NUTRENA PBEOS.
Wilco Solo -Hw y 44 W. 4 Ml W
ot I 4. Sonlord 1)1 MID
Pivon ond Choir
eicollant condition. SIM
__________ OT ItSO___________
S I— H o u s e iu k t Goods
111* linger Futuro Fully outo.
rtpMMkted. utod very khori
t'mo Orig n*i ssoi. obi t i l l or
U l mo Agont 1 P « » *

A i r Condition

iVinciow Gu#rdi Dock Guardi,

Chen will lervice AC*, reirig
Neeien. water cooitn. muc
can n i an ;

I MAN Q U ALlfY 01*1 NATION
9 yrt rap **4*'OI. OfivfWlyl,
HC 4 8 y w fle.lt J?7 IJ||

A lu m in u m Siding &amp;
Screen Room s

The Evening Herald Cletiltiod
Adi oiler no fancy claim
t
jutl Rflultll

Aluminum App.lcalnm Serve*
Aiumn. 8 vinyl tiding, Mftd«
W H f l rooms, windows* doort,
OutfiTI 339 1754 r m

OT t i l l

S3— A p p lia n c e s
Kfnmoro port*, lory.to. ukod
wAkhon MOONEY APPLI
ANCES 10 0**1
R lF . REPO lie u l» IrwU No*
Of *g SSI*, now lies or 11* mo
Agent U l |Ml
M IC R O W A V E
(rin d Now. putn button control
not probo Or.g.nolle 1410.
balance lit* lie monthly
» * « e*
Wont Adi Got ProB&lt;0 Together
— Thoto Euyng And !h«*o
S*ti.ng )U 1411 or U l m i
Wothor and Dryor. U K
O T Sat)
EicM m l Cond.
Wothor ropo . 1 * doiuao model
Sold trig I4M )L u m r inon
time Rot S ilt la or 110 11 mo
Aoom u o i i u

m i le s to P a lm e t t o A c r e s .
P R E V I E W : M a y 2 - 3 4 - 7 - 6 • 1 2 :0 0 to 6 :0 0 p .m .

SOWER'S 4EAU1Y SALON
FORMERLY Harrwll i Beeuly
Nook SI* E III S I. 1)11)4!
B o a rd in g &amp; G ro o m in g
Ajilmel Haven Bearding 4
Grooming rennet) Therm
Controlled Heal Oil Fleer
Sleeping Beret we cater t*
vbvr pell 111 S1S1

B rush C utting
CUSTOM WORK
RvPlenable
R eltt
Free
Bailmale Ceil Early A M *r
C .f O T ila ie r IXDi }*• H it

Call Ability Ironweek|
Mr Window 4 Deer Guardi
Free Eit 1)11400

CleiHlied Aoi ere the imeilett
big newt .lemi you will lint

Shampoo 4 Drop S&gt;*am. Lie.
Dm Rm . Hall. U l ISO **
additional im OTOalf
C e ra m ic T ile
m e in t /c r t il e
Newer rope r leaky thowertovr
)peciaiiy. IS m Eap M* ESa)

C LAS S IFIED a d s
AIOVEMOUNTAINS *4 mrrchand.ia
every day
C lo ck R e p a ir

Ih e la n d , b id a n d t a k e a d v a n t a g e o f th is o n c e -ln -a -llf e t lm e o lfe r .

CW ALINEY jbW ELG R
»4 S Park A,e
OT 4SOI

y e a rs • C a s h D is c o u n t 1 0 %
C o n cre te W o rk
Anything Connote
Slab*.
Orivewayt. Cancrwe coloring.
Etc Quality work at la/
pekei R o n ))) 4(15 All J p m
»m m your A lik, garage
Sell id'e iiem i with a
Ciav.ii.ed Ad Call a friendly
nd laker at OT )ai I or u i eeei

■ JkL
mo

P a in tin g

TE R R Y ’S IN TE R ID R IIO E
Wallpapering, painting .tow
price* Guar work J I ll'M f
Cullom Decorating P e m L ^
interior oalorior, pieii«ri'U,
wallpapering Quality wtrlT
Root. Free E ll 1J) loll ' ,
P lu m b in g

L a n d C le a rin g

FONSECA

PLUMRING

Cob

llrwOWn. Repair). Emergen

Ccncrele Work, loolfvl. floor* 4
pool* Londiceplng 4 tod
work Fro* oil 1)1)101

l a n d c l e a r in o .
PILL DIRT 4 TOPSOIL
111)411

cy L k . Bonded. Ini U S a lll
Freddie Robinipn Plum pinr
R ip a iri, Fauctfi. w " 'T *
Sprinkler! I D 4)10. in ; - V

L a n d s ca p in g
P re s s u re C le a n in g

Top Quality Mulch delivered lo
home or b uim m 1 S Ydi US

ME Call Pan OT DM

LARGE TR EE IN IIA LLE R
lamncaptfto. Old lawn* «#
placad 345 5)01

IT’S like Penn.*i Irom heaven
when you tell "Don ! Needi'

Mobile Home*, Houtei. Roetr.
Truck). Trailer. Etc Pur table
Unit Herotd Rankm lDTh*)'

L a w n # G a rd e n

R e m o d e lin g

S e rv ice
F u r n itu r e

R etinishing

AIM'
I* Jim ’ i
Furrwturt
Mtfiftifthirsg 1 HnfOf#tico fY*
Ury t
C#Ji |31 J2II .tier
hfi t)11735
H andym an
Handymon Retired Will i k
almoil an,thing m m* home
ns m m
H a u lin g #
Y a r d W o rk
Hauling 4 Yard Werk I IS e ll
w m Ad an 11)1 nd am )))
lie) Larry. Joyce aryere

C a rp e l C lean in g

w h a t y o u w a n t , t h e n t h i s a u c t io n h a s s o m e t h in g f o r y o u . B r i n g th e f a m ily , In s p e c t

T E R M S : S I 5 0 0 .0 0 d o w n • B a la n c e o l 2 5 % d o w n e t c l o s i n g • F i n a n c i n g 1 2 % f o r 5

dtipiar, toot • jvn ngM nara
»n Sanfordl

Remodeling 4 Repair. Dry n e v
Hanging. lectured Celling*. I .
G Bpltrd. O T a U l,, U)14*l
Garage vain are m traion lei*
the people about &gt;* with a
Clan died Ad m Ihe Herald
O T ia n , u ire e i
CEN TRAL FLORIOA HOME
im p r o v c m E n is
Peinimg, Hooting. Cirpeniry
Lk Bond*d 4 Guarontood
Pro* Eihmalet DSlbiT

H o m e Repa Ire
o u a l i t y a t a p a ir p r i c i i

Gen Repair* 4 Improv l) yr*
locally Veruor Due OT1XS.
Carpen*ry4 Re
Ha laotoa imaii
m MM or Alter 4 M
Insula tion
SAVE EN ERG Y 4 DOLLARS)
Balt 4 Blown. PRONTO IN
SULATlONCQ m i l D o r U l

ID* Free Etilmatei

&lt;;*'■&gt;

Frank* Lawn Sorvke
4 Landlcoping Q uil.IrFirtl
C0IMI04) )**41»«CeltKl

Complata Horn# R#palr| i
Mrmodtling. Paining,
addditA*. dr#w«Ha ate
#«p Call U l 5097 f i n J -

C a r s o n L a w n S a r v lc e
Compleie town core OT ITT!

R e m o d e l i n g S p e c ia lis t
W* hondl* in*
«
Whom Ball ei wav

"jj. 1,1
CrocketM Lawn
:V
Beeulilkelionend
■T M l
MomlenenctServIce
V 'l l f .
The pertanal touch!
^g p r'
o t a n)

B . E . L i n k C o n s t.

S a n d b la s tin g

Yard 4 Aerate Cleanup
Shrub 4 irulR Removal
\ __ f0 Lew* Mewmg
J X y H T. LACKEY
--------S T W H
OTi**i

S e r v ic e Station

M a s o n ry

M ln i-U -L o c k
NEW Control* BuiWngt. oil
ti|etl)0 4up Al 1 4 4 SR 44 1
4 Induttrial Pork 1)10041

, W

SANDBLASTING
DAVIS WELDING
111 4)te. SANFORD HVC!

,
\

a i m , pet ol Maton Work
No too 100 large or loo tmall
OT 1)41 or O T 4)14

*

332-7039
V inoncirta AvoHablC

At Lawn Caro
All Photo*. Top Qualify
Lowprket Ro v U4»4S1

B u rg la r B a rs

P e r s o n n e l w ill b e o n s ite .

I 1 10 a c i e ( x ) m i n i - f a r m s I d e a l fo r h o m e s l t e s , c o u n t r y liv in g , o r a g o o d I n v e s t m e n t is

Sliding Giati Door #fKloiur*tv
Patie and Poal railingi,
F*Kk #«. Gattt, Pi#t EtcjptL
Stiral Stair*. Ornamtntal Iran
f'urnifurt. Etc Com# iaa our

C yp ress M u lc h

WILSON MAIER FU R N ITU R E

n

Iro n w o rk s

C o o c n tfW b rk

B eauty Ga re

S I -A — F u r n it u r e

*1

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

H U N TIN G CAMP Complolv
w.lh tiN trlc vicm .iy ol
Farmion AAAnogtmmi arv*
Coll aiirr * p m No collocl
coin I0»4111) kit)

L O C A T I O N : T a k e 1-4 t o D o L a n d E x li (S t a t e R o a d 4 4 ) a n d g o E a s t o n S .R . 44 lo r 3

• Rain or Shlr.p • Auction Under Tent • On Property •

•

73— A u ctio n

6S— Pels Supplies

ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
■ Lovi k ond wrangle* loom
lie sonlord Av*.
m in i

Saturday, May 9 th — 11:00 A.M.

Glenn A. Blackmore — Auctioneer
Tomorrow Realty &amp; Auction Co., Inc, Droker
445 Forestwood Lane • Maitland, FL 32751

OoW. ; :i r .r I'omi &gt;i
torroul my*oil, kovoMo Tool
Co *1* W III SI O T H M
OPEN SAT S A M TO I P M

OAYTO NA AUTO A U C ll ^ i
Mwy 0). 1 mile well W ^e^T-1
wav. Daytona Beach, w iih'cc

ot un

PALMETTO ACRES

(305) 339*4333

'

----------------------------------- 7 * r “

w m

Compactor Kilthon A d 1*0
Bundy Trumpot. SIM

A U C T IO N

W r it e o r C a l l T o d a y fo r y o u r F R E E C o l o r B r o c h u r e

^

Anitguo*
Diamonoi
Oil
Paint,ngi Oriental *ugi
Brfdgoi Antigun
OT1M I

D e l l 'i A u c tio n C e n te r
Mwy 44 Weil. Sanford
M l Said

H o m e Im p ro v e m e n t

—

80-A u to s
*W

M — G a ra g e Sales
Garage Sale Furniture, pump,
an conditioner. Baby iiemi.
dithot. etc F n ond Sol only
14T Burn* Avo , Country Club
Hoighti Ineer Lk Maryl

F f k liy .M irl,

1(0 Cub* Moch.no. 4SO Ibt
SIOMIOll llool. now COM I ) 4SC
Mil I l StS 1)1 IIS)

rllJIS E F IR S T S !

M AYFAIR V I L L A I I I A J Rdrin.
3 RaMl Condo Villoi. float lo
M iflair Country Club Sflttt
your lot, floor ploo A loforfor
drear» OifOlify contlrvclMi by
fnetmAhtr for 141,3*1 A op I1
Open Sotorpoy U 1 M N A
Ion Noon If

3 2 2 - 2420

closE i

41-Lot v Acreage

RIDGEWOOD ACRKSl Dw» i » i
loft Zanad. OM ofihfioiv pi*fd
rtOfto N o r
Stiff Will
tubordiftaU for builders Bwr
now I Bwi« now or loloft Jotf
II toftf From SUvIfSt

C A L L A N Y T IM E
IMS
WorP

your

Soli Ihoto Ihmgi inol oro lull
•Ming up IPOC* with o wont Ad
in th« Hrroid OT M il or H I

JUST LIST CO, I idem 1 tut*
M int, Itncfd Yrttn new raei
Ur ga pare* A frvif tr tn Good
C#nd GC 1 Itmnft I24.8M

H LAU TIFUL Now ) fldrm I
batfi coootry horn* wifb oil IM
•ifro il CHA iming rm, Flo
rm m &gt;&lt;k FF, tal M lnf.«lorft
courtyard A loft merit
Jwlf I I I ft#

i ll IMP

N to M H Sollor Ron!
OnlNyhivA Rlyir Bnrgiin
nil0 44orU 1 1104

S a n f o r d 's S a le s L e a d e r
W l LIST AND (E LL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN THE
U N O OROARCA

«»*

43 -M o b ile H o m e s

REALTORS

ASSOC IA T C I N C iD C O f Ntw
or •tpari# need Coil M«rb
Slonstrom or I f f Albrtppf to­
day A dsWlvff UfffMfl

A

CallBart

R O O D IE ’S

COUNTRY CHARM ) •drm. I
bam ham# on I l*v«ly Irttd
loft Immocoiofi! Otrwng rm.
•ofm ki*ch«n, firtfloco. or*
corpof &amp; mocR morot IlSH #

A V - « I4t|

PRIME LAKE MARY FRONT
AGE One* hi a wtuto you IlnR
itt All tho Chorm. Spoco.
Comtorl you a*(*r&gt;t Out
ilond.ng « BB E . « Homo
t i l Dunning vlowi ul Ln
M iry And mony «th»y inciting
Iviiurvi Mutt loo ot SIM.SM

C A L L 333 5774

JUKI
to m

S3— T V - R a d i o S tereo

Evonm g H tfE ld, Sinfgnl. FI.

NOW

OPEN

SANFORD

m ji

V i .M

G U LF

lit-

S E R V IC E

o iN M
IS tl I. FR ENCH AV «w «k
(FO R M E R LY O EKLE'S GU*»I
ROAD SERVICE G t .'
pappy, don
a
1 v ir tu e
ARE S TILL HERE
.nana
PM. 1)14*11
b*itl
T i x &amp; A c c o o n tin ^ ^ * *

N u rs in g Center

S ^ rv ic t)

,1 buiinritei and tndiyh^Wb!

OUR H A lC S A R E L O fP R
)-» * • &lt;•» NuM ingcJnler
* " t Secon) S I. Santoro
m in i
P a in tin g
Heilman Pointing 4 Repair*
(kindly i n n Free Bit O iu
__ 1* Sen■Ofl *14 saw Rtier
Homo Pal*lor »«a cut* WtrS
reavonaMe p rk rt IS yeeri
rrp Frrwalh Hod W )) ) ) )
Afliff J
Frotokilonol
P am lU J .m ;
tarier interior
Remodtlirg.
I k In* Fro* l i t |. 441 U l )

Eiiiobein A Grmoie C J I M
O T 1141
*, *
T r e e S e rv ice
T rlC a u n lv
T in
SerywR)
Trtriming. revnovoi. Clare ng*
hauling Pro* Eit ) » *cow.
H A R P IE S T R I E S i R v ] c f 'r
Trimming, r*m«v,ng 4 /att|
MMvng Pree E ll
W a ll p a p i r in g
Small Comm
»nd Rekv,,
Aaiipoparmg Frol f u ^ is
Y rt. E*p Call A l 'M ad
M (K inner 1114440 )a m )p m

*—

• ’*

* t1

*

* w

�••0 •

0 • •I

'Dowager's Hump'

ACROM
B L O N O IE

I Slup l

PCfl fVTTnJG rT RKXT
BACK IN
—'
AGAIN

y 7WAC1U
'kKXT,
*

MBS
6 U M S TE A O

42 fnghth poet
4) Hilt*

9 Hindi* of *
mh,p

41 (iKlnctl MXl
iO Autno'MI

9 Tun* ront
(Ibbt)

S2lK4t*fld

12 Cf****«t

Can Be Controlled

u T
i. i

wetefw*'#

13 Aar (prefu)

d e a r DR. LAMB - 1 have
osteoporosis with numerous
fractures of the vertebrae.
Recently In your column In in
answer to a woman'i question
about a hump In her back you
lold her she probably had
osteoporosis and that It could
Involve other bones In the
body. If bones tn the knee and
leg a ra
Involved
by
osteoporosis what are the
sym ptom s? Can It be
diagnosed as different from
arthritis? My orthopedist has
told me that only the spine is
involved in this disease, but it
does make sense to me that If
lack of calcium in bones
causes it, that it would cause
trouble in other bones.
DEAR READER - I*m
sure you misunderstood your
orthopedic surgeon. He
probably told you that only
your spine w as Involved.
Osteoporosis, the loss of bone
structure that leads to the
dowager hump, can and does
involve other bones. In fact,
one of the earliest signs of
Osteoporosis is the loss of
bone tissue around the roots of
the teeth. That leads to loose
teeth, which in turn can be one
cause of pyorrhea

5 1 0 i»o fw * tt

14 Inst

'*bt»)

19 0'"'nuti»«»uf 94 S«t Of
In

oim tnlt

I I Jlil (ln t|
17fn*nd
19 Greet v*
(eoHoq)
20 Angry
22 Tli agency
libtx)

SSfngl'lh
college
91 Ct»nr itntf
97 Carry on lf&gt;e
blc»
SI Oldd ti

1 Illl0fvl»"
2 Actress
ptiywnflM
Gordon

10 fsclamaton 29 Mon
of innovates
pronmltl
11 Fir (prefti)
39 lad*
19 Before Iexit'd j | p0»»rfgl
21 Acceterite*
, ipi0,««
motor
,aKNf I
21lnnch**0f " ‘f 1
l*irning
24 Onentll Chief 41T|lkfOOlil
2$ Assault
&lt;1 SongetreS
29 Singletons
S*&gt;th

3 Iniid* (or**I

27 W*lther

43 N.gMtlU

4
9
9
7
9

for*CII1
29 former
9pini»n
colony
29 Comnd*
30 Slick**
32 College g.rt
(comp wd)

frdt
««
45w*0l#
i» Nall flat!
i!5 M £
«
f
”
91Da*1

23 Aw h«re

DOW N

24 Danish co&gt;n

IT&amp; GOT A BAD CASE
OF'SNORKEL SAG*

W U A T£ WRONG

SAR&amp;E IS
PUTTING IN
POP A NEW
JEEP
.

WITH THAT
ONE l
&gt;

Sobfeng
(nctosurss
Stem
Spanish gotd
Insurmce
papers
9 Mimii
husbsnd

2

i

TH E

BORN

)

7

9

10 11

9

•

12

13

14

is

11

17

by A rt Sansom

LOSER

1

4

21
■
J
22
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■
1■
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1*

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UCCK,M&gt;W0U6!

70

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24

29

29

31

21

79

30

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34

"

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40

43

47

44

¥ v MOV- MAS A THING
ABOUT MAKING ME WEAR
WARM OOtHING EVUi If ITS

• JU S T

'

^ySp'W W TCM -

ThAVS NiC£ i DCAR '
be sure a*.-o ta«£ a
.WARM JACKET' ^

MOM. BETTY AND 1 ARE
GOH6 TO TAKE A TRIP ON

EXAGGWATlNG^Ill PRJNE

B

41

I■

46

90

91

93

94

99

99

37

31

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For Saturday, M a y 9, 1981
b y H o w l* S c h n e id e r

E E K &amp; M EEK

r
^

flkC CAN ME 3R A R 6
S O M E .6 3 M IA D ?

1
*
*

.

tfs

*

im z
5 L « R &gt; SM PU RRWES CAL/T SURVIVE- ]
OILTAIOKEJQ. LADOIC J THW KUJD OF OOMPETmOW J

-f

f '

V.

t

t

i
1

\

i J
P R IS C IL L A 'S P O P
I THINK I LL
TAKE THIG
KAYAK T R IP
DOWN THE
c a o K A P o e tv E t?

BUGS

7 V.HAXPOMOU

OKAV.
THAT'LL
BE 2 5
CENT’S.

MEAN BV
•GfAMJLATEP 5

b y S to ffg l A H e lm d a h l

BUNNY

-1-WNK5. D0C.I FEaSctTS?

&gt;OU NEED AN EAR
IM S AWFUL 0Y LOOWMS a d j u s t m e n t .

DOCTOR J H W E 7 i CA N TFil

f

ap a c h e

,

ALESAD*

\---------------

KM OO,

d r r js o

YOL'H BIRTHDAY
May*, 1991
This coming year your
prestige and influence over
your peers will be considerably enhanced. You
won't necessarily seek the
mantle of leadership, but
developments ar* likely to
thrust It upon you.
TAURUS | April 20-May 29|
There are things which you
can do around your place
today to beautify the
surroundings, and probably
save yourself some money in
the process. Co to It!
GEMINI (May 21-June 29|
You're very lucky today at
making
favorable
im­
pressions with persons who
can help you advance your
self-interests, even though
your intentions won't be to
make points.
CANCER (June 21-July 2Jt
Some days material things
come to us easier than they do
on other days. This could be
your day. In fact, you might
be fortunate tn several areas
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Focus your efforts and
energies today on things
which are enjoyable. Give
your worldly ambitions a rest,
Save your push for the work
week.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-SepLOl If
you're on the track to
something today which could
help you carterwise, operate
as unobtrusively as possible,
Skirt the spotlight, don't stand
in It.
l.tRRA | Sept. 2J-Oel.21l
Your Judgment is very good

41

4

( j o ’ o u r s io t

’SUIl,

47

92

49
A R C H IE

lOM.MXTRl W v o u think

Osteoporosis is more
complicated than Just not
getting enough calcium in
your diet, although lack of
calcium increases your
chances of having such
problems.

p a w

37

today. |
yourself
propositi
Mistake!
submit t
SCORI
Don't wa
someth!
hope lo
could sp
trying
thuslasn

Osteoporosis, Bone Softening.
Readers who want this issue
for more details can send 71
cents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for it
to me, in care of this
newipaper, P.O. Bo* 1131,
Radio City Station, New York.
NY 10019. Lack of hormones is
an im portant factor in
causing this problem after the
menopause
DEAR DR. LAMB - How
much milk or calcium rich
foods should an adult woman
consume to help avoid
"Dowager's hump?" I am 33
yean old, 1 feet 3 and weigh
111 to 120 pounds.
DEAR READER - You are
too young to worry about that
yet. The problem doesn't start
until after a woman has
passed
through
the
menopause. While the e*act
role of calcium in the diet as a
factor in causing osteoporosis
is not established, women on
calcium-deficient diets are
five times as likely to develop
osteoporosis as women get­
ting adequate calcium.

When osteoporosis involves
the other bones, including the
thigh bone or arm bones, they
are said to be brittle bones.
They fracture easily. These
brittle bones are the un­
derlying cause of many
fractures in older people
Otherwise, a decrease in the
amount of bone tissue doesn't
came any symptoms. The
bones may bow or you may
see loss of density on X-ray
films. The degeneration of the
spine causes symptoms by
pressure on nerve structures
emerging from the spine.
The Importance of diet and
what we know about
medicines to help control this
problem are discussed in The
H«aith Letter number *-10,

Fur women over 50, llie
Recommended Dally Dietary
Allowance for calcium is 900
mg. If a woman develops
osteoporosis, then from 1.1 to
10 gms a day is often included
in ihe treatment. So 1 like to
see a woman get at least one
gram of calcium a day after
10 and if there is any sign of
osteoporosis or H she is in the
small-framed group of women
susceptible to it, I would be
happier with 1.1 grams a day.
A quart of fortified skim milk
ronta ns about 1300 mg. Whole
milk contains le u calcium,
about 1000 mg, but more
calories. A good way to add
calcium to the diet is to enrich
foods with powdered nonfat
iklm milk.

WIN AT BRIDGE

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dummy's jack
West rose with his king and
led a diamond, but the Prof
was home free He was able to
dtsrar I dummy’s low dia­
monds on two good clubs and
wind up with Just three lasing
triclu.
"Your pity worked," Mid
the student. "But It would
have coat you the contract if
East h id held both the ace of
diamonds and king of clubs, or
could you have puoed some
other rabbit out of your hat?"
"There was no wav lor me
to lose the contract, replied
the Prol "West needed Ihe
king of cluht or are of dia­
monds for his opening bid
East needed one of those
cards for his raise Thus, they
were rotni to he split My
only real problem was
whether or not I should have
played (or an overtrick If
West held Ihe ace of diamonds
I could lead diamonds toward
Opening lead VK
dummy and finesse for the
king of dubs tn the East hand
and make five odd "
The same waa duplicate,
but the Frol had been wise not
to Uunk about the overtrick
By Oswald Jacoby
Only a few South players were
tad AlaaSooUg
in lour spades so that Ihe
declarer conslderaThe Professor ruffed the important
__ 1 .
V. ....A
•g.
second heart and cashed his
ace and king of trumps Then
he led a low club toward

by Leonard Starr
FR ANK

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HAYIN’ ANY
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LEISURE
C o m p U t* W eek's TV Listings
Sanford. Florida -

Friday 8. I H I

It's H o w
You T h ro w
The G a m e
By SAM COOK
llrra ld Sport* FUiltor
It's the first inning of any ball game anywherr in the
United States. The h atter, a 10-year-old U tile leag u e r,
dribbles a soft ground ball down the third base line which
rolls foul near the coaching box.
His 10-year-old opponent at third base leisurely jogs
over to pick up the ground ball, squeeies it tightly next to
lus palm and hurriedly whips It without any fluidity back
to the pitcher.
A simple occurrence you might say. Throwing u
baseball Maybe for you throwing started with rocks or
tennis balls or golf baits. Everybody knows how to throw
don't they?
Wes Itinker says no.
"They might throw, but they don't throw correctly."
And for a baseball or softball player — regardless of the
age — It could lead to arm problems and short-circuiting
of an enjoyable recreation.
"There were 2(0 kids on 11 teams from Delaind out here
the other day and none of them knew how to throw
correctly," said Itinker. "And they're of Senior U llle
leag u e age."
Itinker, a strapping 6-foot-7,220-pound left hander, grew
up playing baseball all day in (irand Itidge, III.
Upon high school graduation he signed with the New
York Giants. It inker credits the scout that signed hint,
former major leaguer Tom Sheehan and his first minor
league pitching coach, Frank Shellenback, with helping
him become a connoisseur of throwing a baseball.
"I could alw ays throw. I guess I learned by accident,
but Sheehan and Shellenback helped me a lot," Itinker
said "II was just in the last 10-12 years I've felt I have
perfected It."
After a brief tour of duty with the Giants in 1950, a bum
arm sidelined Itinker's Major le ag u e dreams.
lie turned to scouting.
In fjiSklle, 111. a Polish-dominated sports town in upper
central UUnois, Itinker w as holding u tryout cam p for
vane Major la-ague scouts.
lie got so frustrated seeing 18, 19 and 20 year olds who
coukln't throw a Iat sc ball right, he said, that he decided to
give throwing instructions.
Some say he has become the foremost esp rrt on
throwing In C entral Florida if not in the southern part of
the United Slates.
Working out of the Florida Baseball School, which he
runs from Sanford M emorial Stadium, Itinker has con­
ducted over 600 throwing clinics in the past H years, in­
cluding many in other parts of the United States aiul
Canada.
From January through March Itinker's baseball
complex Is over run with students from out-of-state
colleges and high schools.
Montreal E xpos' Scout Harry Moore, who was in-

Florida liaseliull School Operator Wes Itinker believes (hat throwing starts from the ground
(left) shows an aspiring m ajor leaguer the up as ra n he seen by the young m an's position,
p r o p e r form when throwing a huyeball. Kinku- .
:

U

.............. .........................................•

' ...........................................

See THROW, P ag e!

M ore Photos, Page 2
..........

.T

')

£ J

�' 1—Evenlna Herald, lanford. FI.

Friday.

I. If ll

Hie Florida llasrball School tackled other technique* beside* throwing,
Casselberry's Kddie Tauben'^ee is about to make contact with a delivery
from Wes Itinker’s pitching machine during a clinic held over Faster
Break.

...It's

H tra M Phatat by T a n VUKaal

Wes (tinker Instructs a young man on the
proper way to grip a baseball, (tinker paints
the ball between the wide seam s so hr can
determine the proper rotation.

Breakfast Special
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

PANCAKES

e

m

Sausage A Bacon

^

j

7:00 A.M. TO 11:00 A.M.

m q

"

CAVALIER M O TO R INN
17-TI S an fo rd a c ro s s fro m K -M art

MADAME KATHERINE
PAI.M •CARD •CRYSTAL BAIL HIADING
P a s t — P r e s e n t — F a la r a
H t i n v i AOVKl ON A ll A n AMS
• LIFE -L O V E • M A R R IA G E • B U M N IS I

LONewOOO

(305)
831-4405

BEEN IN B U 9 N E 9 S FOR 5 0 YEARS
IN PRIVACY O F MY HOME
HOURS 8 A M - 9 P M . C W d Sunday
S M O C K S M O T H o r D O C TRACK KD
tM mi,...» .. . I , . . j *1
t u o d io a n u u a i a m m a

im

iw • » ... »«— tw a

ll la b iM iid

Iw. t

(tinker observes the hitting technique of Tnuhensee from behind his
pitching machine at Sanford M emorial Stadium,

H ow You Throw

I Continued Iroro Page 11
strumenLal in signing Sanford's Tim Raines, is one of
R lnker’s biggest bonders.
" I ’ve seen a lot of them (clinics) in 24 y e a ri of
b a se b a ll,'' said Moore who scounted for Detroit for IS
y e a rs and M ontreal the last nine. "B ut Wes has the best
baseball instruction and technique I’ve ever seen.
" I ’ve been watching him for four y e a rs now and he
d id n 't even know 1 w ai watching the first y ear and a half.
T his facility is outstanding, it lias the best baseball in­
struction in the United S tile s," Moore said.
It did n 't sta rt out that way.
R inker took a dying and decaying M em orial Stadium
and built it into an outstanding complex which now houses
th e stadium Held and (our baseball diam onds — including
one nam ed for the late Zinn Beck — outside the stadium,
which he teases from the city of Sanford.
The m ovem ent started in 1975 and R inker has added
som ething new every year. He h a t batting cages, extra
pitching mounds, hitting tires, a video tape machine,
com plete with a viewing room underneath the stadium 's
first b ase grandstand.
It is a perfect baseball paradise for the person that
w ants to know the correct way of not only throwing a
base bell, but any of the gam e's finer points.
And the instruction knows no bounds. R lnker's pupils
ra n g e from Raines — one of the National le a g u e 's hottest
rookies this y e a r — and David Wiggins, who Is tearing up
th e league a t Phoenix (G iants' AAA) to little Eddie
Taubenaee who la doing the sam e a t his level for Smith
In su ran ce at Five Points.
Well, Just what Is so hard about throwing a baseball
co rrectlv , Professor Rinker?
"Y ou have to have a feel far the b a ll," he said.
"Now rem em ber, we're talking about an Intielder,
outfielder or catcher throwing the ball. A pitcher will hold
th e ball differently because he wants to m ove," Rinker
explained, taking out a special-baseball pointed green
betw een the wide seams and yellow betw een the narrow
seam s.
The two-tone baseball had two holes the site of a
screw driver drilled through the cen te r and from top to
bottom.
"T his hole shows the rotation of the ball. When I spin the
b a ll on the screwdriver with my fingers over the wide
seam s, w hat do you see?"
Green.
" T h a t's the correct rotation."
"W hen 1 turn the screw driver with th e seam s, what do
you se c ? " queried Rinker.
G reen and yellow.
"T h at is Incorrect rotation."
"Y ou have to hold a round baseball 'a q u a re',” Rinker
said. "Y ou hold the ball across the se a m s with the fingers
together. When the ball Is turned over, the thum b must

be directly betw een those two fingers. Y ounger players
may net yet have the finger sire to do this, but it will come
‘T h is Is a perfect grip. The ball will go straig h t, hard
and fast if held with this relaxed grip. Ih e least resistance
Is offered when a ball is thrown in this m a n n e r," said
lllnker.
Rinker backs up his theory with some solid facts.
"I w ent over to Embry-Rlddle Aeronautical University
(Daytona Beach) and took a student th a t had never
thrown a baseball before. I taught him to throw, then he
and 1 threw using both grips (arrow the seam and with the
seam ).
"The balls thrown across the seam got to the catcher 1211 percent quicker than the ball thrown w ith the seam ,"
said Rinker.
lllnker said he feels the biggest problem facing today's
ballplayers la their grip. "They grip it too h a rd and too far
back In their hand," he said.
"Throwing is done with the fingers and the w rist first.
The fingers and w rist must go In a straight line. The wrist
must face w here you are throwing.
“One of the big reasons players get a sore arm is
because they d o n 't throw with their fingers and w rist. If a
ball Is throw n with an arch, they you're throwing Just with
your a rm ."
Rinker Ukened the throwing of a baseball to that of
throwing a d a rt, where a quick, (licking motion is used.
"The fingers and wrist must do the work. Then the
forearm and a rm will follow along n atu rally ," he said.
The R inker method, is short, included these steps:
1) G et the (eel of the ball.
1) G rip the ball acm es the wide seam s.
1) Hold the round ball "square" with fingers and thumb.
4) Hold the upper arm horliontal.
5) Hold the lower arm perpendicular.
6) Cock your a rm and throw strikes.
"T hem a re som e kids an lJttle League All-Star team s
as pitchers (hat have not thrown a ball enough In their Ufe
to know w hat th ey 're doing," said Rinker. "T hey tell m e '1
can throw a curve ball. I can throw a knucklebaU. I can
throw a slider.’ "
"They can throw everything but what is m ost Im portant
— throwing a ball straighL Only a very sm all percentage
of these kids a re going to end up pitchers. They m ust learn
to throw the ball straight to play other positions," Rinker
said.
"But w h at's m issing moat is one word. P ractice. They
don't practice enough. They don't w arm up properly
before gam es and th at's why you have the lo re arm s.
If young persons are taught correctly, they find
throwing a baseball la fun and enjoyable and successful,
he said.
And If you don’t believe that i d Tim R aines or David
Wiggins som etime.

�Friday. May 1 ,1 H 1 -3

Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

1

TELEVISION

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31
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EVENING

7:30
CD O PINX AT FIRST SIOHT
Animated The Pm* Panther la
■mitten by in* melon of a torrefy lady

10:00
© (10 ) THE SEARCH FOR ALEX­
ANDER THE &lt;3W A T Th* Young
Hon" Jam** M uon ho*H Itut reCIHIK)n of Ih# eibeordewry Me of
the men hretoiian* h m caned the
world i grM lM l Wedet N&lt;chM*»
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SUNDAY

8:00
(Jj o PERRY COMO'S SPRING M
SAN FRANCISCO Cheryl Ladd.
Larry Oaten and the Oaten Brothart. and Oaatend Harder&gt; quarterback Jen Ptunkett rom Perry Como
lor a muetcal lour ot San Francweo

Hear The One About. V Georg*
Pkmplen learnt that bawg funny
can b* a very aenoua buatneta in
fea erptorelron ot the world ol com.
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2.00
© (10 ) RHAPSODY AMD BONO
J*4I leigar Swell Vaughan |owt
the New Jertey Symphony Ochaelie under rnyec deattor Thome*
Michalak In e tribute to Oaorgt
Gerehwm hotted by Robert Aide

O (X) a l l STAR SALUTE TO
M O TH ERS DAY Entertainer*
Including Ginger Roger*. Claud*
Aetna. Brook* Shwtde. Ricky
Schroder and Jamw La* Curtie pay
Mother t Day

EVENING

M ONDAY

7 :0 0
® O BCHJI TAXES A DIVE AT
UARMELANO The canto* ector
San* Irene** to Marinatand In FTortde lor a muticel ecwciaf
© (10) SONG BY SONO Howard
Own Nency Oueeeull. Dune l eng
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perform the tong* of lyricitt How­
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EVENING

8.00
(X) a LTNOA CANTER’S CEIE•RADON Lynda Carter w yoaned
by Ray Chart**, Jerry Read and
Chne Erart Lloyd at a muatcat-vartft*
(TO ) PL IMP TONI CM You

MORNING
M g
O GD I-COUNTRY FISHING
7:30
J J (1 7 ) THE BASEBALL BUNCH
Hot! Johnny Bench
AFTERNOON

1:00
© ( f ) WRESTLING

2:00
O 3 ) BASEBALL - AN INSIDE
LOOK
2 : IS
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R*d&gt; San Francweo Ownl* *1
Montreal Eepo*
3 :0 0
® O TOURNAMENT OF CHAM­
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champion John McEnroe ire
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menl (Itve bom the Heel Sd* Tenme Ckrb to I or eel that N Y |
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0 :3 0
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■MO” Tan* Trial* (tore bom Ih*
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Fatal* (bom Lohdont World Lurnbaryaca Champtonehip* (bom Hoyward. H«* I
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6'30
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BATTLEGROUND

8.00
© (10) ANSEL AOAMS PHOTO­
GRAPHER On* of th* qreeleal
photographer* ol me 70th century
tab* about hi* Id*, work and pa*,
apecbve on photography

10.00
© (10) TWE MACHINE

EVENING

THURSDAY

fcOO
a 3 ) d e a n m a r tin s c o m e d y
CLASSIC Orton WeUet. Frank
Stnttlk. Bob Nawhkrl. Oom
Del tee* and OoMto Hawn era
among irtoM faetured at pa* loo* at
tn* wend ol American comedy
Dean U k in hoatt
t il O THE BOUT HUMAN: THE
BIONIC
B R S A K TH R O U Q H
Rovotutionary braaklhrougha at
th# M d ol medaaw wo aaan at IN*
tpacur tocuemg on Ih* uao ol
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pert* mtNn Ih* human body lo deal
with condrtnn* prewouMy incur abW Alerender Scour by narrate*

EVENINQ

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EVENING
7:30
0 ( 1 7 ) BASEBALL Chicago Cuba
al Atlanta Brava*
11:30
&lt;U (35) WRESTLING
1:30
0 ( 1 7 ) BASEBALL Chicago Cube
at Aiiama Bia.**

SUNDAY
MORNING

11:00
© (10) VIC BRAOEN S TENNIS
FOR THE FUTURE Th* Over
head" Vic Bradan taupe viewer*
Chang* the* overhead arm bom a
humming handicap lo a poetleconng weapon tj
11:30
(7! □ SAL DANCE OUTDOORS
AFTERNOON

4 :3 0
© (10) VIC BRADENS TENNIS
FOR THE FUTURE Approach
Shot. Spto And Santee Return" Vie
Braden demonetratet th* baerca ol
baa rotation g
J J (17) THIS VJEEK IN BASEBALL

a 3 ) CHAMPIONSHIP FISHING
1 O NBA BASKETBALL Game*
ol Ih* NBA ChampKMtatHp Serw*

5:0 0
ffi a W10E WORLD Of SPORTS
ra il day ol quaktyaig todwnapea*

1:30
® O TOURNAMENT OF CHAM­
PIONS TENNIS r,Tgrp than 40 top

1.00

pro* including defandatg champton
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champion John McEtaoa era
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Sid* Tanru* Club to Foreal HUM.

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2:00
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3 '3 0
® O THE AMERICAN SPORTS­
MAN Harv* VUWchaU* gewt boneKarung oft th* ;o**l ol Abaco latand
to ih* Bahama* actrvea Stw**y
Hack par nopal** to Itw darling and
lagging of a Nepal tiger, French
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attempt* to watdaurl Ih* 1XHW *
fuurrwy b*tw**n th* Marqueaaa
4:3 0
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A M A National Champtonahip
Motor cycle Race (bom San Joe*
CaM t Man * Inal to th* World
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5:00
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7:30
I t (35) SPORTS AFIELD

MONDAY
EVENINQ
7:30

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43

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IfcOO
3 ) O LADIES ANO GENTLE­
MEN BOS NEWHART. PART I
Comedian Bob Nawhart « yowtad
by Dean Mattel Don FUckW* and
tkek Marin lo poa* tun al tome ol
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Me
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Sports O n The A ir
SATURDAY

II

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54
By D A N IE L M . M A R V IN

EVE NINO

TUESDAY

0:00

AFTERNOON

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WEDNESDAY

10:30
© (10) TO NORWAY: HOME OF
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SATURDAY

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May 8 thru 14
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4 Chevy — ■
• Archaic pro­
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41 — Raeiking
47 — Kay*
45 Newell day-

17 Ohto co**g*

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49 Dither
50 — Often*
54 Korten addwr
14 Fith aggt
55 Dick —
15 — Raewr
IS Actor Robert
Dyke
54 Ed —
57 Black bad
171
54 Dutch com­
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59 Retreat)
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27 Alow
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3 BaeahaX a
75 A l My —
29 Smal boflW
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34 Son ol Data
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36 Ye* volet
7 O ry.aim n*
37 Ja u man
6 Glacial rtdg*
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37 SwediMi
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34 Comae to
40 Setgar Bob

10 It amp
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IV June —
21 — and She- 42 — Brubeck
43 Coarea hber
73 Journey*
44 Not any
24 Actreaa —
46 Diagnoalc
Odette
tool
25 Weep
47 Top notch
46
Short comic
7S Garden tool
act
77 Irnfi gp
51 SwnpMtugar
21 Before
30 Govt agency 52 Doctor*
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tor ala* *1A rianta Brave*
1:30
J J (17) BASEBALL Pntfburgh
Pkate* al Atlanta Brave*

Pleasurable
Dining.

TUESDAY
EVENINQ
7.30
J J (17) BASEBALL Prttebufgh
Pirate* al Atlanta Brave*
1:35
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WEDNESDAY

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EVEN#*!
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© ( tO) SAILING, SAILING
7:30
J J (17) BASEBALL lYtleburgh
Paata* at Atlanta Brave*
1:50
J J (17) BASEBALL Pdltburgh
Paale* *1 Adam* Brave*

FRIDAY
may is im i

EVENING

8:00
© (10) VC BRADEN'S TENNIS
FOR THE FUTURE
7:30
J J ( 17) BASEBALL SI LouwCardawN at Atlanta Brave*
1:30
1 J ( 17) BASEBALL SI Lout* Car-

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FRIDAY

May 8

EVE NINO

Matana Mantt Ifa rl/ M ri
1 1 (1 7 ) BASEBALL Chrcapo Cuba
at Atlanta Brava*

000

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&gt; 4 )(i:0 (r )O H c w t
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f f l( 10) MARTY ROBBINS

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10:30
I t (35 ) IT'S YOUR BUSINESS

11:00
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MOANING
5:00
I MARCUS WELBY. M 0
8(171 MISSION IMPOSSIBLE

CD O

1:00
( D O new s
1:30
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2:30
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Moftt Johnny Bench

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lT: O THUNOARR THE RAPRARI.
AN
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l hi •
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tori her e darter no# to hte per« m V o ) MEETING OF MrNOS
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1:30
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Johnny Bmtol (C) (t9M ) Mertm
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3:30
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101 HOY EN LA LEGISLATURA
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4:30

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FOR

THE

FUTURE

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T O MOV*
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9:30
a&gt; (10 ) SUNSHINE MUSIC HALL
Dam And Sugar
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and lha Maar* Car hand rruar* mm
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May 9

a 0 BARBARA MANOR*11 ANO
THC MANORCLL BISTERS Guo*!
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0 O WKRP IN CtNONNATI A pt
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tD (10) MEETING OF MINOS
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non oi pop Ja to i control haa
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GRANOOUOPRY
(0 (10) THC SEARCH FOR ALEX­
ANDER THC QREAT
1X( 17) NEWS
10 30
I t (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
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11:00
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(35) BENNY MKL
( 101 THEGOOOIES
(t/ )tU 3 H Hot! DatTuth

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EVENiNQ

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CAROL BURNETT AND

�Evening Herald. Sanford, f I.

SUNDAY

May 10
•aw ol aniiaonvtiim m lha U S
GO( 10) FIORJOA FOCUS

MOANING

1:00

5:30
n ( 17) 8UNOAY MASS

0 I CHAMPIONSHIP FISHINO
1 O NBA BASKETBALL Gam# 4
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0 O DISCUSSION I I Legal
Aid
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6:50
O ( I I d a il y d e v o t i o n a l
7:00
1OPPORTUNITY LINE
) ROBERT SCHULLER
) PICTURE O f HEALTH
) CHANGED LIVES
) JAMES ROBISON

1:30
11 SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN
&gt; O TOURNAMENT O f CHAM­
PIONS TENNIS Mora than 40 lop
p«0« *ncK»dmg defending cfiampion
Vita* OoruUilM and U S Opon
chimp non John MtErtfO* aro
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net prmdant and aaibutmoat
anaiy»l lor Pipa Jaftary * Hopwood (R|

SCO
O ® VOICE OF VICTORY
t l ) O REX HUM BARD
® f i SHOW MY PEOPLE
T t (351 JON NY QUEST
tD MO SESAME STREET (R1Q
I I (17) THREE 8TOOOES ANO
FRIENDS
8:3 0

2 00

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fD 110) RHAPSOOY ANO SONG
Ji it urqtt Sarah Vaughan tomi
the New Jkwiay Symphony fVcho**
fra 'under mutie director ?hornet
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Garihwtn hotted by ftoPerl Aide
1* (17) BASEBALL Ctocago Cuba
at Atlanta B iaw i

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ORAL ROBERTS
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CATS

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(17) LOST IN SPACE

2:30
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(10 ) WORLD O f THE SEA

3 00
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Play Maty F a
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10:00
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3:30
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10-30
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the lost Dsy lCl
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I 71 O THE AMERICAN SPORTS­
MAN H a * Vihechtue got* bone
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In lha Oahamaa. Actieu Sfwfloy
Hact paincpain ntha darting and
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Wanda and Rawaa

O THE LAW ANO YOU
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Oaborah Kan Too b i n eboad
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4:00
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Gurnwea Robert Medicirt A OOr­
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11:00
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FOR THE FUTURE Tho Ova
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11:30
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' ( 1 BILL DANCE OUTDOORS
( J (35) MOVIE
Blond* B',ng»
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play* booty resulting m Dogwood a
arrest lor krdnjppen ‘
ID (10) EAST FORWARD

4:30
17 U WIDE WORLO OF SPORTS
A M A National Championttop
Motorcycle Race thorn San Ja w
CaM | Ment Final m the World
Tab* terms Champunahe* (hom
Non Sad Tugotaanal hw rapatt
on IF* Indwnapofit '100 lerw In­
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11 (17) LAST OF THE WILD

AFTERNOON

5:00

12:00
BLACK AWARE NESS
ISSUES ANO ANSWERS
0 ) WITH OSSiC AND RUBY
love la
Singer Odvlla p*n
Ota* Dana and Ruby Dm tor an
anlarlamng loot at low at cewbralad m poetry, prow and tong

I

P

12:30
) MEET THE PRESS
| M MINUTES
DIRECTIONS Amancan
Jewitn CommiliM Al 7S" Rabbi
Mare Tannabaum and Fair** I t a o ,
do&gt;e Hoaburgh d&lt;*cR*4&lt;flw tWfw'J

MandrelI Sisters Spark Q ueries
DEAR DICK: My qu rtlim it a rc about Iho lantatllr
“ B arbara Mandrrll and the Mandrrll Sisters" show.
Which of the three It nol m arried? How old are they? W'hu
are the Krofft puppet** tuppoted lo be? I know the drum
player Is John Denver, the has* guitarist ts Willie Nrlson,
the fiddler is Doug K rrth aw and the pianist i* Icon
Russell, but who it the Irad guitarist? My unrtr says he**
either Merle Haggard or Charlie Daniels, but I don't
agree. ROBB! BOYD, th ird ). Mo.
All three Mandrel Is a re m arried, and they are In their
late JOs or maybe early 30s Y ou're right about the pup­
pets, but your uncle Is right about the one you didn't know
— he's very Charlie D anielsiah.

I have giaie through William K. K versun'i bo»k, “The
Film s ol I jiurel and ilardy," from cover to cover. In II, he
gives the plot ol every I, &amp; II movie m ade. There is no plot
such as the one you outline. E ither E verson missed one or
your mem ory is playing dirty tricks on you.
DEAR DICK: Would you settle a tiny bet. In "Little
House on Ihr P rairie," which aired In February, (here
was a girl named Sylvia. At the end, did she die nr was shr
Just asleep? I hope she died (because then I will win my

Ask Dick
Kleiner

«

7:30
o 0 OOOO NEWS. FLORIDA
0 p TOOAT'S BLACK WOMAN
( f t m i O R E J DANIELS
( f l j l 7) IT tS WRITTEN

[H) (35) GRIttLY ADAMS
&amp; ( 10) FIRING LMC
IX (17) WRESTLING
EVENING

6:00

o iic v a m u N fw s

II 135) BIONIC WOMAN
B (10) INSIDE STORY nodding
Carltr. formal prett tpoheaman l a
It* S u it Department tooth al ho*

. ft PAHLO*TAO»...........

Friday, May I , H U — I

DEAR DICK: I saw a l-aurel and Hardy movie year*
ago, which I think i* n classic: I. A il quit thrtr Jobs and
leavr on horseback for ■ holiday. They gel robbed so they
decide to rob o thrr people, and try to rob an elderly
gentleman. Itut tie's deal and can't understand them. II
rad* with I. A H feeling sorry for him and giving him what
little they have. Then they join some real thieve* and In
the ra d are shot by the thieve*. What Is the name ol the
movie? LOUIS F. CAMPANA, M.D., Williamsport. Pa.
O I ) THE UUPPFTS
It O CBS NEWS
0 O ABC NEWS
B H O I AGRONSKY ANO COMPA­
NY
9X117) N C I PEOPLE Hot I Oand

7:00
O ( I ) DISNEY'3 WONDERFUL
WORLD Tr* Boolrutt A trnub*P«ont C o n i Guad ont/gn tmst *
•top on wtocn * Ino o* it o w i »*o
otcopmg Wtin tfww tool |Psrt l| IRI
( I l Q SO MINUTES
0 O BCNJI TAKES A DIVE AT
MARINELANO tr* cofw* te la
Ban* IravWt lo Mwvwftnd m FlatOa to* t muucw iptcaaf
AT (35) WUDKINGDOM
0 (1 O )S O N Q B V S O N Q Howwd
O oli Nancy DutstuFI D*t**ltnglon Da,id Kwnan and Lnda I tw*
p a la m IF* tonga of hnutl Ffowtrd D*K and tot cofabaalat
mcludmg Otago OatfMnn and
A/ttoj* ScbwaiU IRI
AX (17) TUSH Hotl B* lutn
Guotlt Kmgtlon trio Piano Rod

7:30
® O PINK AT FIRST SlONT
Ammtitd 1r* P i* PaniNaa *
•mattart for It** m*on ot &amp;Imnty Udy
9 X 0 5 ) SPORTS AFIELD

600
0
(£ CHIPS A ptytlwtogw
ttwgnod Id tr* Acodanl biattnotlion Ttarn e a r n wnti h a tr*
ttcrvl tnowfedge mat ito may
ha** batn itaponub* fa a tam ut
acadtnf
( t l O ARCHIE BUNKER S PLACE
Arch* con,meet Mia,ay to wm tot
•■anew bat t than iMv ov**t ho *
t* out t patna if Murray does

(Pain

(?) O PERRY COMO'S SPRING IN

SAN FRANCISCO Chary* I add
1 ary Gal tn and it* GalWt B*otn
a*, aid Oat land Raida*! quwIMback Jim Plunkolt (om Paty Como
to* t mwuear lour of San Francnco
I T (35) DAY Of DISCOVERY
B 1101 THE COUSTEAU OOVS6EY Tht Nda Jacquay old Ptokppt Couttrtu aaptort It* htluftl
b t t u ln and lha cidImat along tr*
bantt of lha Nda aallwy ba*of hum
It* mountain haadwalat lo Khatouni (P al l|{Rr
AX ( t7) MOVIE
U cH t* t Navy
Joint 11* Am F a c t I iWSl Tim
Conwty Jot Flynn An antfgn on t
South Pacific itiand n reread lo
impatonato a pdat and gait
mvolvod &lt;n1h tr* crow of a Soral
ma*chanl thip

( t l O ALICE Mol t molha* arnvat
m Phnom, 10 catkfdtta h a monthly
•adding aawvatay without nw
hutband and among tl* mwilal
btoot (HI
® O MOVIE
II* Mon Evonl
1 1*79) Barbra SI, Madrid Ryan
O Noai A bankrupt pwlunw com­
pany prutrdonl last back on ha
ona ramaming a tta l
a
prifotuhinr who t ttiwd lo kght
B H U ) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
FESTIVAL O f FAVORITES It*
Gordon Bowl ffatod on a naval by
Hanry Jtmot Amargo tondt a
lawgron wnh a concaafod waning
lo Chanato when ho hrsrs of
Varva • manage proposal lo lw*
(P al 7l(R iq

8:30
(1) a t h e JE f'f er SONS A tud
don tlorm lottat novKO taJort
tom and George into the *04 |Pal
IIIRI
a t |3S) JIMMY SWAGGART

1000
&lt;i) O TRAPPER JOHN. M D An
obnotrmit but ft deal mute gal and
an vnlaloyg laargn doctor who *
obaavmg procodurn cauta p*ob
*ma to* 1, ape** andGoruo
B (10) TO THE MANOR BORN
9X (17) NEWS

10:30
9 J (35) JIM BARKER
B (10) THE OOOO NEIGHBORS

11.00
11:15
&lt;71D NEWS

11:30
O (1) MOVIE
Encounter* Yrrtt,
D*«a&gt;la
(1*7*1 Documentary
Footage of uona ot If* moll Writ
b* calami*! of lh* cantury n
•Mown |RI
( | | Q SOHO GOLD
(1C (35) DON POWELL
IX 1 17) OPEN UP

11:45
(T j O MONTE c a r l o SHOW

12.30
3X 117) MOVIE U u « In If* JunQ* (1154) Dart* Andrew* Jeanne
Cram

12:45
0 ) 0 MOVIE twin V» IF* Fly
o*g Saucer • IB/W) (1*M| Hugh
Maiowe Joan T aytor

1:30
O

towtyV * .if^ '&gt; . r » K

BUDGET
OPTICAL
* Glasses Duplicated *
k Your Doctor's Prescription Filled ★
★ Eye Examination A rranged *
it Free Adjuitm ents and Repairs *

.ii d a il y d e v o t io n a l

2:15
( 7 ) 0 NEWS

6'30

2:35
91 117) MOVte
Pony Scddwr
H912i Tyrone Power Cameron
M.lcheK

O
ALL-STAR SALUTE TO
MOTHER S DAY Enlarlamart
incAjdmg Goigar Ragat. Claudt
Akins. B&lt;ooka Stoaldt Ricky
Sctooda and Jam* laa Curl* pay
i -fNbuta to mo* tnd
U olhatD ay

b e l w llh my Irirn d l. READDY CUMMINGS.
Bloomlngtim. Ind.
Good new»! She died' Actually, lots of people wrote In
about that story, which did end oddly. Rut Sylvia was
dead.
DEAR DICK: I have sprat two year* trying lo find the
nam e ol a movie. II itar* G reer Carson and Gregory P rrk
and (he place is Wale*. H r 1* the son ol ■ wealthy coal
mine owner. He’* m arrlrd. G reer come* lo work as a
m aid and they fall In love. There's a strik e In the mine. A
battle take* place on a bridge and the lather Is killed.
P ira te help me find the name ol (hi* picture. JU1JA M.
MIZDA, Trenton, N.J.
The only picture it coukl possibly be ts "Valley ol
Decision." However, the setting w asn't Wales; It was
Pennsylvania. And that's the only film Peck and C anon
m ade together.
DEAR DICK: R ecratly, I watched (he old movie "Good
New*." I would like lo know who the dark-Hal red girl Is
who sang and danced with Junr Ally ion? I thought she
excelled In both dimensions. It M ARMF.R, Hollywood,
Fla.
T hat w as Joan McCracken, who waa defiiulety a hidim ensional Whir — an ex-Broadway s ta r, she was a top
singer and dancer.
DEAH DICK; Please settle an argum ent by answering
this: who was the first person ts play the p art ol Darin
Stevens M ' Betwtlcbed”? M U R IK HAMILTON. Tursoo,
A ril.
Dick York. The story went (hat he quit the show because
of "the afterm ath of a movie accident."

O (TK 1 ) O n e w s
IX (17) LAST O f THE WIIO

J O ONE DAYAT A TIME Ann t
tar*** boyfntnd Da,to rvrurnt
•ha a l»a yva tbttnca and law
SchnaMa h* t nol Waving indata
Ann goat with tom
ID (35) JERRY FAL WELL

8 00

lly DICK KLEINER

SANFORD
2544 FRENCH AVE.

2:45
0 ) o MOVIE
A C o lo n $ma»
tC) 11*1*1 H/ntano Braut Joan
Fontana

4:20
91 (17) MISSION IMPOSSIBLE

Cl) O MOV*

4:35

TrMSItaat IB/Wl
ll*47| Randoott Stoll
f&gt;F*R-.'!».T.*jv,V • *• *■'

(A C R O S S F R O M S A M B O 'S )

323-8080
Mon. Thru Frl,
ta.nt. i p.m.

S a tu rd a y
t A .M .-1 P .M .

*

�Friday, May*, fMI

t — Evtnlng Hera W. Sanford, FI.

TV Producers Reflect Fashion Elegance Trend
trend toward elegance faster
than television producers,
who are not only springing
far stylish designs, but even
bringing real designers Into
the story-lines and onto the

E lisa b e th H aw es, an
American designer popular
several decades ago, wrote a
book c a lle d " F a s h io n In
S p in a c h ," In w hich ahe
preached that someone with
a true sense of style tra n ­
scend ed fad s. It w as
possible, she w arned, to
spend heavily to be "In
fashion" and still not be welldressed.
How right was she?
On the m ark, It would
seem, since a wide section of
the public craves quality,
and wants the gimmicky
IVatuM IV*

MilU

F or example: When the
lavish update of Jacqueline
S u sa n n 's "V a lle y of th e
Dolls" (for fall release a s a
CBS mini-series) finally gets
to the screen, you'll be
viewing a selection of g a r­
m ents costing up to tf.000
each. All a re being designed
t»&gt; S a ir -r U r fi C m m c and,
In addition to the duds worn
In the story by Catherine

i lli lM U p

confined to discos and roller
rinks. No one has sensed the

May 11

M ONDAY
CVEMNG

O
6:00
O d l i l i p rO M c w a
ft) ( f O r U N D tn S TA M D IM Q
HUMAN BEHAVIOR
16 (17) C A M * BURNETT ANO
r roc n o s
6:3 0

0 13} noc News

(T ip c s s N rw s

yhjpABCMrws
iff ( I s ) SANrono a n o s o n
to (1 0 ) U N O IR S TA N O IN O
HUMAN BtHAVWH
1J(l7)B O * N E W M A A T

0(1) News

iT k i f m

6.00

(3)

urns House on

th e

( I ) O ITNOA CAR Tin 'S CCLE■NATION lynda C o W 4 lomed
by Ray Chmtmt Parry M
and
CFina irarl Lloyd n a mutrcaf-varletyapacul
(D O
THAT'S INCRIOIBLC
Faarorad a paycNc dalactiva. a
porlataa paai control dadca. a
group of amputee •kttSvars. a now
tragical lacrvuQua
(35) TWS ROCKFOROFHES
(10) PUMPTCNI

8

MO

7:00

m a g a z in e

m o IxJOKER'S
x
WHO
) BARNEY U H U R
0) MACNCiL / LEMRER
RS PORT
16 (17) A U IN THE FAMILY

aw

7:30
O ® TIC TAC OOUOM
T i n tso.ooo PYRAMJO
1 Q FAMILY TEUO
it’ (35) RHOOA
0 ( 1 0 ) DICK CAVST7 OuMt M*
nBalafonte (P a l lo t J|
a
(17) SASCBAU P*tabu&gt;gh
PvatM &lt;1 Atlanta Biavae

0 GD MOV* The Star Makar
I Part 11 IPramaral Rock Hudaon.
Suianna PW wHe Tha ttory ( I a
Moeywood daactor aath a knack tor
tranalormng aiganuaa tnlo adarna­
tional alarlati and a pancham lor
marrym ho craatnna it tout
(|) O
M *A'S'H Tha kOTTIh
Iroupa anaarar a parcal ol lattara
•com a lourth-grada claaa ai Hank
eye a hometown |R)
( 7 ) 0 MOVte Tha Baal UIHa Oat
In Tha Wortd (Prawiarai Chartaa
Owning. Tea Mana Sami A taim
d t (35) STREXTB OP BAN FRANCtBCO

Every Wednesday

SPECIAL
3 P ie c e I n d i v i d u a l

Chicken Dinner
INCLUDES CHOICE OF ANY 2
• F re n c h F r is t
M a s h e d P o ta t o * !
• C o l* S la w • B * k * d B e a n s
A n d H o t R o ll

oldies, It still rates com­
pliments.
As another example of (he
trend to get re a l designers
Into storylines, both Geof­
frey Beene and Hals ton were
N ote th a t the Hawea among those drawn from
definition of fashion was America’s designers for the
limited to the discussion of recent tw ojtour ABC “ Love
fads, but the current crop of B o a t” O thers aboard that
prestige clothing designers special sailing of "The Love
seem to cquste the word with B o a t" : G lo ria V anderbilt
style that endures. Indeed, and Bob Mackle. Now known
fortunate owners of early n atio n w id e aa the jeans
creations of H sbton and queen b e c a u se of her
G eo ffrsy B eene, am ong telev isio n
c o m m ercials,
Hicks, Jeon Simmons, Lis*
H artm an, Veronica Hamel,
Carol Lawrence and Denise
Nicholas-HiU, there will be a
whole fashion show sequence
n arrated by Dorleac himself.

kflsi VcndrrtUt previously
dive into the backs of (heir
closets to don one of the
0 (10) MOVW "Monty Python
And Tho Holy (Wed" (Cl (1*14)
O/khAm Chapmen. John
A mg A/tNjr and Ink band o» kraghle
ancounior guntt. nddwt and •
toiociua rabbit m the* M arch tor
tho logandary cup

OT) O House CALLS Night duty
wreaat hontx wth Charleya aocial
a«a (R)

1000
d ) O LOU GRANT Boo tl g u n
an wmdo moo at pootc* and a
rough maimon horn tho proaa
vorpe ohan ano goao on tha road 10
Conor a poktuan |Ri

(IB (35) atoePENoeNT network
OI17INCWS

10:30
1 J (35) THE BAXTERS

6D (10) TO NORWAY HOME 0»

^ I
F R IE D C H IC K E N

2100 S. French Ave.
Hwy. 17-71-Sanford

AI Constantino-Owner

I P DONAHUE
Q MOVIE
) (3 5 ) OOMEH PYLE
) 10 SESAME STREET Q
)(1 7 ) HAZEL

11:30
t ® THE BEST OP CARSON (R)
lO U T I 'H
I O ABC NEWS NtGHT LINE
. (35) WANTED OCAOOR AUVE
I (17) MOVIE
My Couam
Hachar ( H i l l Otna da HanRand.
rwhard Burton Baaad on tho now!
by Oaptma du itaurtor thahoaloa
coruideiaMa lor tuna anampta to
hnd out it tho icman ha tonaa a
raaay a murdataaa

i

12.00
STARBKY a n o h u t c h
U&lt; a FANTASY MLANO Tattoo
Changes ptacaa mth Mr Roatke la
grant i m ahoagaM lhaa draam.
and a doctor Iraa to rarw monay
lor a raal nan haanh comptaa (Rl
IB (35) J im Ba r k e r
(I) p

12:30
O ( D TOMORROW Qiwelt tormar :araak Datanaa Mmatar Etar
Bauman Root and tha (rang play­
boy Playmaio ot Iha Yaar Tarn
Wabaa. they Graham

100

1:30
a
(17) BASEBALL Piltaburgh
Paaiaa at Atlanta Btavaa

2:00
0

( 0 GAILY DEVOTIONAL
2.50

5:20
0 ( 1 7 ) RAT PATROL (MON)
5:30
( I ) O SUMMER SEMESTER (R)
l i (17) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
(TUE)

5:50
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THU. FRQ
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fl:00
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TODAY M FIO W O A
T h e l AW ANO YOU (MON)
SPECTRUM (TUE)
BLACK AWARENESS (WEDI
SO MINUTES (THU)
HBALTH FVLD (FTO)

35) JIM (
17) HOLLYWOOD REPORT
6:30
(D P r o ALLEN

mi

(3 5 ) I LOVE LUCY
(10 ) BOORWRO (MOW)

_ (tenMATH PATROL (TUE. FTS)
•

8

(1 0 ) ALL ABOUT YOU (THU)
(17 ) MOVIE
10:15
( 10) COVER TO C O W M M O M
(1 0 ) LETTER PEOPLE (TUE-

S THU)

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0
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1030
(4) BLOCK BUSTERS
p ALICE (R)
(351 O CK VAN DYKE ^ ^ 0
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11:00
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11:30
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f t0 MATH PATROL (MON)
10 MBKX / OUT (TUE. FRQ
10 BOOKB1RO (WED)
10 STORY BOUND (THU)

6:5 5
7.-00

TOOAY
T O MORNING WITH CHARLES
RURAL!
T 1O OOOO MORNING AMERICA
(35) BUGS BUNNY
(10) TOOAY B4 THE LIOtSLATURE
96 ( 17) FUNT1ME

(10 ) MATHEMATICAL RELA-

TtON8M#B(

(D O OOOO MORNBKl FLOTOOA

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10*0

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A RKHARC SIMMONS

6:4 5
(10) A M WEATHER

0

11:45
(1 0 ) MATH PATROL (MON.

WtZB
ID (1 0 ) MATHEMATICAL RE LA
IPON8H«PS(TU*.THU)
0 ( 1 0 ) LETTER PEOPLE (FRO
AFTERNOON

(WED)

1:00

a

(4) OATS OF OUR LIVES
J) O
THE YOUNG ANO THE
RESTLESS

A U MY CHILDREN
5 J U (1 7 ) M O V*
(10 ) LITTE R PEOPLE (MON,
TU I)
|10) A U ABOUT YOU (WED)
10) MATH PATROL (THU)

S

(10) BOOK BIRO (FW)
1:15

IO) LETTER FfcOPLfi (MON)

S

10) COVER TO COVER (TUE.
.FRQ
0 (10) MATHEMATICAL RELA­
TIONSHIPS (THU)

1*0
0

(10 ) MATHEMATICAL RELA­

TIONSHIPS (MOW I

0 ( 1 0 ) STORY BOUNO (TUE)
0 ( 1 0 ) MATH PATROL (WED)
ID 11') IN S® * / OUT (THU)
0 1to) A U ABOUT YOU (FRQ
1:45
(10 ) MATHEMATICAL RELA­
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MATH PATROL (TUE)
• M O * /O U T (WED)
l) U T T E R PEOPLE (TH U
FRQ

a

2*0

i

n ) ANOTHER WORLD
t » A J THE WORLD TURNS
U O N FU FETO U V E
(TO) FOOTSTEP* (MON. WED)
(10) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC

O ) I'loVsOUTH SV NORTHWEST
(FRQ
2 :3 0
91 (35) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
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3 :3 0

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W 0 OOOO MORN NO FLORKLA

m

12:00

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7:30
TOOAY
OOOO MORNNG AMWBCA
J j (35) TOM ANO JERRY

O I O NEWS
i (35 ) THE WORLD OF PEOPLE

800
CAPT AM KANGAROO
5) FREO FUNTSTONE ANO
FRKNOS
I0IVR LA ALEGRE
17) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

(1 0 ) MATHEMATICAL RELATIONBISPE (WED. FTO|
»D M 0 ) COVER TO COVER (THU)
3 ( 1 7 ) FREEMAN REPORTS

8:25
O ( l ) TOOAY M FLOTOOA
® O OOOO MORNING FIORKM
8:30
(T) TOOAY
P OOClO MORNING AMERICA
(35) ORCAT SPACE COA6TBI
(10) REBOP (R)
(17) MY THREE SONS

3:20
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Tha Command
(Cl I t»Vtl Guy Mad.ton Joan War
don
4.00
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4 30
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0:30
(3 5 ) ANDY OroFFTTH
(17 ) ORCEN ACRES

5:05
12 (17) RAT PATROL (WED)

5:55

( 7 ) 0 new s

322-9442

500
(T ) O MARCUS WELSY. MO
(TUE-FRf)

11.00
. ^ J ( 7 ) 0 new s
35) BENNY HAL
110) TODAY St THE LEQISLATVJfK
0 ( 1 7 ) NtGHT GALLERY

® O MOVE ’ Laura 16/WI
(1*44) Dana Tiarnay Ciuton Wabb
Daaclad by Otto Pranahgar

S o u th e r n

a

OAVTME

5:35
O (17) WORLD AT LARGE (WED)

1:10

All Foods Cooked In
Pure Psanut Oil

F or others w ith a sim ilar
view, Adrienne Arpel took
some tim e out from her
duties as the head of her own
cosmetics company to co­
author, "How to Look 10
Y eara Y o u n g e r," w hich
Included h er tips on how to
In a television Interview, shop for slim m ing clothes.
Mackle w as aked If his You can cam ouflage what
m other wore hla designs. He can’t diet off, ahe lays. She
said no, they w eren’t her brought a slig h tly o v e r­
6
" m m l f k a m a
aj» papa P V
a4|F^M
4aikaaaa aarotMg weight made! to the "Mike
but stayed with what suited Douglas Show" to prove the
h er life sty le : polyester point.

Daytime Schedule

OlANTS Monty Python a John
Cloaia dona a raportar a cap bi
w atch at hta Noraogian roota and
tu aiwahgata tho groat V*mg apod

( D O new b

WB USB ONLY
TOP QUALITY CHICKEN

Bob Mackie’a fame came
first aa the costum e designer
who enhanced the television
Images of Cher and Carol
B u rn e tt. S u b seq u en tly he
has branched out Into the
retail field, moat recently
with a lingerie line.

9:30

R aflu lar S l.l l

lC \ * v
SV

put her nam e on collections
that Included elegant dresses

pantsuits. The implication
was that she thought eye­
catching outfits were only
for the slender.

and evening coats, often with
the oversired neck ruff the
still favors In her private
wardrobe.

0*0

O (fl HOUR MAGAZINE

jer-

&lt;0)Msne/ouT(MON)

to] AU ABOUT YOU(TUE)

12:15
(10 ) A U ABOUT YOU (MON)
(1 0 ) MATHEMATICAL RELA­
TIONSHIPS (TUE. FRQ
(101 LETTER PEOPLE (WEDI
(1 0 ) MATH PATROL (THU)

88

12:30
Q lT N E W S
1} O SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
(7) P R TAN E HOPE
(ftl (35 ) FAMILY AFFAIR
ID 110) ELECTRIC COMPANY (A)
(MON. TUE. THU. FRQ
0
(1 0 ) ELECTR K COMPANY

d(3 5 ) o a f f y o u c k

) 10) OVER EASY
1(17) THE FUNTSTONES
4 .0 0
) m MOVIE
O JOHN DAVIDSON
I Q MERV O Rif FIN
’ (35) WOODY WOOOPECKER
10) SESAME STREET Q
(17) THE AOOAMS FAMILY
4 :3 0
(35) TOM ANO JERRY
( 17) THE BRAOY BUNCH

1

5:00
35) I DREAM OF JEANNIE
10 MISTER ROOERS

17) I LOVE LUCY

5*0
M O H IO A N S I3LAN0
iO M 'A 'I 'H

Q NEWS
' (35) WONDER WOMAN
(10) C U C TA IC COMPANY (R)
' V«Vi HKJ.BH.UCS
(17) BEVERLY

�Evening Herakt, Sanford. FI.

May 12

TU ESD A Y
tv fM in a
600

n &lt;
ffi

t o

(fO)

&gt; onews
UN D ER STA N D IN G

h u m a n s e n Avion

IX (17) CAROL BURNETT AND

FRIENDS
630
0 4 NBC NEWS
I O CBS NEWS
0 ) O ABC NEWS
H (35) SANFORO A NO SON
ft) ( t O ) U N O ER STANO INO
HUMAN BEHAVIOR
(2 (1 7 ) BOBNEWHART
7:00
£ | 'i'l lUfiJutl
V O F U MAGAZINE BJI C H W
•ivii a lennng pioduct, lociory
un Gown domantliolM hit PfyCtac
powort. Mt&gt;y Grogori M h on
mOoor polio. Copt Cmiol On ho*
yn., nnnuta
Lindt
h u m tomptat Ctyun tooting m
Hr Ok w ii
0

O JOKER'S WILD

f t (35) BARNEY MILLER
ll) (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
RERORT
I t ( 17* A U IN THE FAMH.Y
7:30

a I ) TkC TAC OOUOH
&lt;T) O SM 0 0 0 PYRAMID
(7 i O FAMILY feud
iff (35) RMOOA
(D i 10) D*CK CAVETT Goott Hor­
ry DoUionto (Rail 7 ol 71
12 (1 7 ) BASEBALL Prtllburyh
P vtltt at Atlanta B u m

6:00

alua Aw u rg e , Seoulby nanalat
C U HAPF*Y DAYS A back .*|U&gt;
knoctl Manon ool Ol tha leopard
Lodga bowung iHeart and Havat
Howard atih thr laat ol hndmg a
raptacamant tor har
11 (351 THE ROCKFORD FILES
(D (10) SURVIVAL Uyttcuout
C*sf!‘v* Of Clay Tfw UwunAimg
id of tha Afitcan leriTMi* —■a
»p «£ * t ttfMCh ifv** in ttrang*. lamP*f •lo f*-C O M llO U t(J
•*,»T|D«n
mouftdt up lo 40 l«*i m ftcwgint -- is
a ipton d O rio n We&amp;#«rwtrfat*a

(l&gt; O

830
LAVfRNE 1 SHIRLEY A

rnofoua angaf prowd#* a ttoan-

heaiied Lu r k * wtlli « sutpusmy
on* *****of tt&gt;# *o**d

a

01 O TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT A Iaft ai ma ghotl at a Mane*
gjvot Murid tha anpraaann lhal
Harvy wat *&gt;lh another woman
arule tha wat away

BREAKTHROUGH

9 30

10:00

(J) O KART TO KART Wh*i# hotptitJiml with a tligM concvt**orv
Jennifer wstnottot a Haymg but
caul Q*t tiryofMi ** not m n
Jonalhan **to bHiev* hw
(LB (35) INOC PENDENT NETWORK

May 13

W EDNESDAY
e v e n in g

6:00
O ( I ) (J 10 0 ) 0 NEWS
ED (1 0 ) u n d e r s t a n d i n g
HUMAN BCHAWOR
12 (17) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
6 :3 0
) NBC NEWS
I CBS NEWS
J ABC NEWS
,35) SANFORO AND BON
(10 SAAJNO. CA1UHO
(17 ) TELEVISION: THE MORAL
SATTLIQROUNO
7:0 0
S 3 ) NEWS
) O P M MAGAZINE A woman
who won har own raiand ai a conletI BR Catate IraraN lo lha
world t Largatl haver te Otmowa
Plant in Kay Waal. O w l Ta* ahopi
tor broccob. Bavoriy Saaaoon on
EUll"
t JOKER'S WILD
15) BARNEY MK.LER
_
(10) MACNEIL t LEHRER
REPORT
7:30

O ® TIC TAC DOUGH
( T l O SSO.OOO PYRAMID
0 ) 0 i a m il y f e u o
■n , (35) RMOOA
B
(10) O C K CAVETT Ouaat
Slantay ENm
12 (17) BASEBALL Pdltburgh
Pvaiwt at Atlanta Brtvaa

6:00

B QDREAL PEOPLE Fathead an
•lt«mpf to lump a tan* ov«r hva
cart, an artist «b o paint* antfi har
bottom ih« human acho a baaupvtor for man, (R)

88

ENOS

1THE GREATEST AMERICAN
HERO Pam ta promoIad lo pmor
la* parmar and than Wtcoart that
har naw boat ta anlangtad in an

I t (35) THE ROCKFORD FILES

11:00

o

a t

i i
uncw s
II (35) BENNY MILL
GO 110) TODAY IN THE LEGISLA­
TURE
11 (17) NIGHT GALLERY
a

41

11:30
TONIGHT Mere!

1 trill,

Carton

(J O COLUMttU A ciuiia tirp a
featured vnger t» murdered and |Nt
Mkw pwi» fh* cum* on • muftsenm
(W) (Noht May t&gt;# pr&lt;K*ffip(«Kl by
0 'S MOVIE Tha Slat Mttur
lha
Min gam* if naettMry of lha
1 Part 1| iPramaral Rota Hudton.
NBA PtayefNI
Slitanri* Plathatla Tha tlor* ol 1
Q ABC NEWS NlOHTLINE
lioa*wood dwaclor onto a In act tar
i t (T s ^ w a n t e o d e a d o r a l iv e
Irantlnrmav) tnoanuat into adarnaU (1 7 ) MUV*
Man on a
Itonal ttartatl and a panchanl tar
TigMropa I1»»3I Tradne March
marrying hit cmitKma it lota
Terr* Moor* An ante* Crachoafo( I ) O MOVIE I ha f nra 01 Ma
•atian cacut iroupa aaacutat a
IPramaral Darta Banay Oaa Woldareig plan lo ettapa from bahtnd
laca A man lor manlad by iwjtiplo
tha ton Curttm
parwonaiiliaa taaat paychtaffd hatp
19 hnd out who ha Iii R it and ahai
12:00
it happonmg to lum
0
O
MOVIE
Btb* Blua
0 ) a THREE S COMPANY 3act
Minna I IS'SI Jan Mahaal Vatand Jonst lean aiio daiaclnrat wMn
card Olynnta O Connor
Cmdy myttartoutly tanrahaa :j
(12(35) JIM BAKKER
OH (35) STREETS O f SAN FRAN12:30
C isco
O 4 TOMORROW Ouaai SacroID (10) NOVA Tha Watar Cnan
lar* ol lha Navy John F Lehman Jr
An atammalion ol acta ram ai lha
Adaondacta walat racyctng ai
1:35
Catforma and conlanunalad want
12 (1 7 ) BASEBALL Pntthurgh
tn Mataachutallt la praaantad |R)
Pit ala* at Atlanta Brama

Sinatra Bob Na«hart Dorn
Del into arid Outcto Hawn ar#
among Ihot* laalorad m r , » loot tl
1 ha *o*t J ol Amancan comad*
Daan MoUJi hotlt
i l l U THE BOUr HUMAN THE
RavoMwnuf* biaatlhiought n
Iha hold ol maden* art Man m thn
■Racial locutmg on Iha uta ol
latatt tmme and to*npulonj«t
pant **ilun Iha hunan bod* 10 datl
**th tondiliont pyaytautI* meuf-

10:30
I t (35) NASHVILLE MUSIC

BOO

Q
DEAN MARTIN S COMEDY
CLASSIC Of ton Wolto, Fftnt

BIONIC

NEWS
0 ) (10) BILL MOVERS’ JOURNAL
A Convmifton With Dta*N CM
ton’d |i,’t MoyOrt tftiM **ft! formw
J’fenJftnliAj eitntot and Secretary
ol OotmiMp CtsvK CMtfwrt currpntfy
on* Of Waihmglon * top l,i*ytri
about ih* m*Ks Ipr *hom it*
AOfll'U
i)
IX ( U ) NEWS

(D |10) ANSEL ADAMS PHOTO­
GRAPHER On# ol lha graalaal
phdographara ol tha 70th cantiry
tan a about lea Ida. wort and par.
apactira on photography

BOO
0
(3) DtFFRFNT STROKES
Want. ■ alar pitchor. la wooad by
oppoaaig coachaa horn a taung
local team and a wmrmg aquad
acroaalown LJ
5 o
MOVIE Stand By Your
Man IPramaral Annatln O Touta,
Tan Metntra Tha ragnonchaa
1 lory 01 country m w e alar Tammy
Wynatla ta d*amaluad
(I) O MOVIE CMIorrra Su*ta
( 1*71) Alan Alda Jana Fonda Swr
eraf couptaa bacoma virohwd m a
aariaa ol unuaual wlualtona during
than alay at a port, hotal tj
(Ul (35) STREETS OP BAN FRAN­
CISCO
fD (1 0 ) K f NNFOY CENTER
TONIGHT ~A Salula To DiAa 5ar
ah Vaughan. Joe WRiama and omar
|au greats pay a apoctal inputs to
Duka tamglon
0:30
0 0 } THE FACTS O f LIFE Tha
gala raaorl lo ahopanmg lo gal Mrs
Gan ell a naca preaanl tar har buthday (R|

10:00

O ( D QUINCY An m (Mailer
prompts Outncy lo mvoal«aia stan­
dard Mlmo aataty procodurtt |R)
I t (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
N€WS
B (10 ) TIME MACHINE Tha party
history ol photography ftom
Napeam m 1677. through Daguana
and beyond, ta recalled
12 (17) NEWS
II

10:30
(3 5 ) AMERICAN L E B r n i

' Knule Rockno'

1100
_ O f T iO N C W S
5) BENNY HILL
10) TODAY IN THE IIO ISLA

H agm an C arries This Fan;
B lake D ebunks Techniques
By CINDY ADAMS
NEW YORK - P e le r
O'Toole, whose latest role
w as In the TV m ovie
"M asada," is looking around
for :i Broadway role "w here
I can use my resources more
a s a n a c to r " ... “ D eathtrap"
star Earley &lt;■runner won’t
tell (he title
of the
autobiography
he's
currently writing because he

2:00
0 &lt;4 DAILY d e v o t i o n a l
2 :1 0

Friday. M a y !. I f t l — 7

M IN I A N D E H S O N

fears people will steal it (rom I a m Ragman travels will
him... Would you believe n pie-table pocket fan. Too
John KKtrr gets up early much smoke in a ro o m ' Out
Saturday mornings Just lo imps the fan.
watch TV cartoons? IBs
A I amiI Anderson doll, in
favorite is "T arzan ."
Hie image and likeness of (hi
N ln e -y e n r-o ld
K ic k y original, will soon hit ihi
Shroder on his (ibn career: m a rk e t...Ja n e Wy ma n ' s
"liook, it’s better tlian Just running hot again. She's
sitting on the block anti done a half dozen shows for a
playing baseball... Ilnheri new series, "The Vintage
Blake; "Actors d o n 't need Years."
«****-*al le c h n iq u e s. Once
Un., asked Spencer T racy
whnt he Innkiul for in a
script, lie replies, ‘Days
o ff."
Bob Barker converled his
garage into a gym In order to
keep his y o u th fu l a p ­
pearance. He does push-ups
inside the garage, white his
car sits outside in all kinds of
weather gelling bronchitis.
At least it's keeping his
bones on te le v is io n ...T h e
"Mommy D earest" author,
Christina Crawford, is doing
it again. This tim e it's a
JOHN RITTER
novel... Rabid unli-einoker

Q ) O NEWS
2:4 0
(E 0
UOVS
M*t " n - m
(B'WI 11*47) Grant Gar ton Waller
Ptagaon
4 :0 5
12 (17) UNTOUCHABLES
4 :5 0
( I O f e d e r a l a v ia t io n

TURC
l2 (1 7 )H tG H T a A U E R Y
11:30
O (1 ) TONIGHT iloti Johnny
Caiton
Q 1 0 M ‘A‘ B’ H
( 7 ) 0 ABC: NEWS NIGHT LINE
11(35)[W
WANTED
AN TED OEAO OR ALIVE
m Love And
O (1 7 ) MOVIE
War |t*S6l Hobart Wagner. JeTkey Hunter The ebecta ol World
War N upon three Marmea bom
-aitty ddtarenl bechgrounda are
portreywd

STAND BY
YOUR M A N ’
A n n H I r O ’T b o le |H»rI r u y s c o u n t r y m u s ic
s i n g e r T u m m y W yii c lt e , u n tl C o o p e r
ll u c k a b e e p l a y s M is s
W y n r U r ’s f i r s t h u s ­
b a n d . E u p l c l l y r d , in
" S ta n d
lly
Y our
M a n ,'* u n e w m o tio n p i c t u r r - f o r t e l e v is io n
to
he
b ro a d c a st
W ed n esd ay on CHS.

1200
) STARSKY AND HUTCH
I LOVE BOAT The Brollierhood O l Sea . Lener To Babycat at
Demond t
waiter.
Daddy a
McKaon. Alsa Cord (R|
1 2 (3 5 ) JIM BAKKER

INVENTORY SALE!
Call Us
for

12:30
0 ( £ TOMORROW duett.

• ALUMINUM
AWNINGS

bonere reakeataw man John and
I redd l t d . George Slembrerww.
dial dor-tor Robert Alt m

1:00

• SCREEN
ENCLOSURES

(D O N C W S

1:10

0 O MOVIE *Wi Name Onry
(B'WI 11*161 Carota lombard. Cary
Grant
1:60
12 (1 7 ) BASEBALL Pittsburgh
Paatas at Atlanta Bravei

2:00
O 0

TM M il M y on IM ynirkol It IM Robin BollKlng. Vltll SkoRt
Amortco one (bosk lor QUALITY. ConilrucHd tar IM Sowlk Flo*too
Horrltono Codo Somo po.p*. toll tM 4t. WB S IL L BUILDINGS tar
0 u n to prKo

DAILY DEVOTIONAL
2:50

0 O

NCWB

4:5 0
0117)

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FOR ANY USE..ilZES FROM 4 'x 4 ' TO l^xSO '
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_______________
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m

3 :2 0
O MOVIE
A Gel. A Guy And
A Gob’ (B/W) (1*41) George Mur-

0

4:20
0 ( 1 7 | RAT PATROL

• MOBILE
HOME
RQ0F0VERS

M

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tAppyonmnoiy ?wk» toumaiH** « o

OPENM0N.-SAT. 9AM-6PMSUN. I-6

�Friday, May I, 1981

*—Evening Herald. Siniord. FI.

Go Guide
II you’re (Making ol getting oat o( the boast and
a r t looking lor lom rlhing to do this weekend, b tr t
a re a lew suggestions:
John Young Museum and Planetarium presents
"The Spring Connection” , live presentation ol the
cu rren t night sky. May 13-15 at J:J0 p.m. Premiering
May 15 a t B p.m., new P lanetarium show, "Outward
Bound", csam intng changing view ol solar system
based on probe data. For information call 896-7151.
S oulim a St r avi nsky, in te rn a tio n a lly renow ned
pianist, composer and teacher will be guest artist and

THURSDAY

14
0:00

EVC NINO

0:00
• V f H iia ir iO N C w s
*
( I D ) HERE'S TO TOUR
HEALTH Agmg |Ru;
12 (17) CAROL BURNETT ANO
TRIE NOS
630
( ) 4 HOC NEWS
J O CBS NEWS
71 Q ABC NEWS
,11) (351 SANTORO ANO SON

(D to) suMCusmc

U ( 17) BOB NEWHAM

7:00
c l A Ijruk/Q
) O P U MAGAZINE An m**r» # » Milti Ktf*M Suiinnc
th# mdow of aviation «v*i»d B*»
I mm mmm% he* l « l mofot p i daugn
thfough la lumpMion C M Tra
6k* SwUfidl, J*mUUtSHBil M l
i i /i « ci« m la pul co*o* m you*
&gt;h##*% JoyC*
g*»
d#nmg gat)g*ts
i / ) 0 jo k c r s w il d
It (35 ) BARNEY MillFR
tZ) (10) MACNEll / ICHACR
MfPOm
I I (17) A l l IN THE FAMILY
7:30
O 4' TIC TAC DOUGH
% OSSOOOOPVRAUO
T lO T A M lir f E U O
I ] (35IRMOOA
CD (10) OCR CAVETT Oku
Ce-eft ViNt. the :&gt;,Orwy jAfirt Cut
iPift i oi n
12 ( 17) SANTORO ANO SON
800
( 1 4) JANE OOOOALL ANO THE
WORLD O f ANIMAL BEHAVIOR
?h« Hy*D4 StOf y
lh*
moil mahgnwl proditori m lh#
wortd mm n loci
md I#a»I#** hunt#** (Wlumnod lo turvn#
&gt; O THI WALTONS Ro*##a#n*
%h# h ti « wf*ow*i h#aH condition
and tri#a to had# it from #v#ryon#
mdudinQ hw ham# Slant#* Pm*
km*
f O MORA ANO MlNOY Mr
I k l l t l * iOlh tkflMlr party turn*
mlo a cia/y ticM n g t of av#rybody •d##fr#tt %mtmi%
II (351 THE ROCKTOROTILES
(C (1 0 ) TLORIOA TOCUS
H (1/1 MOVIE RomAnHuAdA,
II9SJI Oteguf, Pk I Aud&gt;*&gt; Hrptiwrn A p*Tnt»5 tan* m tot* nth m
iiraiptfiaiman n M t on vocation m
Ram#
830

f O BOSOM BUOOtCS
&gt;«#n#y go to a u u j H tm

and
m th##
8 % -v o o t Huffy and MOdogaedo lR|
ID (10) SNEAK PRCVilWS Roga*
ftart and Gan# Sj i **4r n a * I ton
Of Th# ( W e i
Ft*d4y Th# Oth
Part U #n«i nth#**

0 ' l l MOVIE
Dracula (19/9)
frank lang#fla l ourone# Okno* In
a 1913 C**gfcVi to#*(ai toon an
ag#J prot#**or «a#kt v#ngaanc#
•gimit th# c#ntu»i#Vo*d vamp*'*
• h i murdntd he* doughlv*
I O MAGNUM PJ Whan TC «
arongfy orr#*t#d tor drug m ug
ghog h# r#tu*#t Magnum t harp
and l« i« hem h# mt#nd* to ptead
r (R)
o
BARNEY M ill I R Harr**
Oatrx h and WofO t#a Barn#y th#y
want to In k # th# l*1h for promo­
tion* at anothar prounct rj

(11! (35 ) 8TR ICT8 OP SAN FRAN­
CISCO
ffl (10 ) IVFNINO AT POPS
Country moxturnn Qtm Campb#i
Kim * Arthur FaOtot and th# Pop*
Orch#*tra lor a *#t#cteon ol *ong*
t&gt;y Jimmy WH.t) Ru**rm * Jourrv#y To Rtnwni and TthaOiovsky*
3rd# From Soon taka ora ot*o
p#rtorm#d
0.30
I ) o TAXI With th# cab company
out ol bu*er*#*« Ala* b#como* a
r*«ght watchman Bobby a fcdd*#
#nt#*t«n#v and lo u# ft*# moot
d#t#*labt# block br okor tn N#w
York (Part 3)
10:00
J) O
LADIES ANO QENTLEMEN BOB NEWHART. PART N
CamvEun Bob N n A v l » |MW|
b | O w n Ma&gt;tm D on R ic k m A r­
is e s M «t&lt;n lo p o k # lun «l to m * At
lit* ttlA ngef A l f K l I ol L i w u •

IN

Maitland Art Center, 231W. Packwood Ave. F ree to the
public.
"Collectors Day *81” in celebration of National
Museum Week. 1-5 p.m ., May 17. Maitland Art
Association and Maitland Historical Museum. 231 W.
Packwood Ave., Maitland. Free to the public. Anyone
Interested In setting up a display ol their own collec­
tions may call
645-2181. Special children's section
Fish fry to benefit the Crossroads Alcoholic tre a t­
ment Center. 5-6:30 p.m ., Saturday, May 9. a t the
center on U k e Minnie Drive off Highway 17-92 south of
la k e Mary Boulevard.
Third Annual Sprtng Arts Show sponsored by the
Seminole County Council ol ITAS, Altamonte Mall,
May 3-9. Work by a rea students grades Kindergarten
through I t E ntertainm ent by school bands and
choruses.

lecturer at a music forum at noon May 19 in the
University of C entral Florida music reh earsal hall.
Open free to the public.
F ourth Annual Greek Festival. May 8. 4 p.m. to 11
p.m .; May 9 . 11a.m. t o l l p m . and May 10,11 a.m . to 7
p.m ., Expo Centre, Orlando. Food, crafts, dancing.
Polka Dance, 8 p.m. to midnight, Altamonte Springs
Civic Center. Sponsored by the Polish National
Alliance l^odge 3216 For ticket reservation call, 645­
1983
"D am es At Sea,” 8:30 p.m.. May 14-16, 21-23,
University T heater, University of C entral Florida
campus. Matinee, May 17 at 2 p.m. with senior citizen
discount. UCF students free with ID. Nostalgic spool of
1930‘s musical.
Maitland Association ol Fine Arts Annual Members
Exhibition. 2-4 n.m .. May 10, opening reception.
1X (17) MOVIE
D n n Undar
T U tkn4~
ScpTua Loran.
Anthony P#rkm* Ba*#d On lugan#
ONoea* ptay On a N#* Ingland
farm m th# 1MO*. a baautihJ
*#ducbv# rvoman d#v#top* a pa*
non for h#r *tap*on

Hi...I'm Nanci LeGros
At one time I weighed 363
pounds and bicycling is just one
of many things I couldn't do.

12:00
(5 J O MCMILLAN A charmmg hd
man inform* Mac that ha r* he* n#e1
nctrm (Not* May ba pr# #mplad
by th# aevth gam#, it n#c#**ary of
th# NBA Ptayoftt)
(7) O CHARLIE S A N G U S A
cra/ad •• con *##k* r#v#ng# on th#
p#t*on r#*pon*«bt# tor he* anper*onmant -• »»#•? (R)
(U) (35) aM b a r k e r

D o n 't le t f u n

12:30
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ttrd Year, No. 23*-Frlday. May 22, lW l-S a n to rd , Florida »77l

Graham Vows To Veto Senate's State Budget Version
TALLAHASSEE. Fla. (U P I)-G o v . Bob Graham said today
the Senate's version of the state budget is unacceptable and he
still veto the proposal If It becomes law and call a special
teuton in June.
Graham blasted senators for not providing enough money
(or law enforcement and dipping into the working capital
reserve fund to meet pressing transportation needs.
The legislature must raise the gas Us to provide recurring
revenues for roads problems, which will be around nest year
while the working capital fund won't be, he u id . And "can­
nibalising" law enforcement programs to get other money for
transportation as the Senate proposes to do is unacceptable.
The House's spending plan is acceptable for the most part,
he said, although he opposes llie 1130 million increase in
required local property taxes mandated by the proposal.

His strongest criticism was for the plan put together a week
ago by the Senate Appropriations Committee and headed for
the Senate floor nest week.
"I cannot allow the adoption of a budget that does not meet
the most critical needs of the people we serve," the governor
u id at s news conference.
He demanded that legislators appropriate $4 million for ISO
additional Florida Highway Patrol troopers; provide addi­
tional investigators and crime lab money for the Florida
Department of Law Enforcement; provide additional staff for
state's attorneys; earm ark money to build and expand state
prisons; and provide the additional Judges requested by the
Florida Supreme Court
The people of Florida demand action, and I will accept
nothing le u than their full and adequate protection," Graham

u id . "If the Legislature strays from its responsibility to the
public, I will cal! it back Into session to fulfill Its proper duty.”

Senate conference committee will begin work on the final state
spending proposal.

Graham softened his position on the gasoline tax. He has
been pressing for a boost in the eight-cent-s-gallon levy to pro­
vide additional money. He won't veto the budget if the
Legislature refuses to raise this tax, however, he said today.

The Legislature is scheduled to adjourn June 3, but Graham
u id the chances of that happening are "slightly le u than SO­
SO." Lawmakers likely will have gone home once Graham gets
the budget If be vetoed the p ro p o u l he likely would caD a
special session before July 1, the beginning of the new fiscal
year.

Other state needs, including law enforcement, education and
economic development, can be met with existing revenues, the
governor contended.
The House already h u passed its budget. The Senate ap­
proved a plan three weeks ago, but recalled it after a con­
servative coalition charged it was designed u&gt; force a scles tax
increase. Once senators vote out their second plan, a House-

Graham said he would veto a plan given tentative approach
by the Senate Thursday that cuts the Board of Regents from 10
to seven members and dilutes the panel's authority.
The Senate voted 314 for the plirn. but the controversial
propoul w u left pending until next week on a motion for
reconsideration.

Prices D ow n, But
So A re Earnings
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A longawaited decline In gasoline prices held
the Consumer Price Index to an annual
growth rate of 1.1 percent in April — one
of the best readings in three yean, the
Labor Department reported today.
It w u the second straight month of
relief from double digit inflation. Mar­
ch's rate w u 7.J percent
The figures appear to give new hope
the overall cost of living may be leveling
off for the first time In years.
The April reading w u the second
lowest rale since February of 1971, when
the annual rate was I I percent The
lowest w u July's I percent rise,
generally considered a statistical quirk
caused by mortage Interest rate adjust­
m ent
But at the same time, the government
reported, real earnings of Americans
declined for the fifth straight month.
The Labor Department's 3.1 percent
annual rate, or 14 percent monthly rise,
In the Consumer Price Index was
seasonally adjusted.

Most striking in the figures w u an
actual decline in the average cost of a
gallon of gasoline. It w u a sign the
gasoline glut h u eliminated, at least for
now, a long-time inflationary villain, oil
prices
The decrease w u slight — le u than a
penny in the overall average price per
gallon — but w u a reverse from the
year's trend so far. Gasoline prices
declined through December, but rose
again when President Reagan decon­
trolled the price of domestic crude.
The average price for all types of
gasoline In April w u $1.39 per gallon,
down seventh-tenths of a cent In March,
the average went up by 3.3 cents. In
February, the average rose by 11 cents.
Food and beverage costs — although
lacking the dramatic turn-around of fuel
prices— helped the overall index by not
increasing. Prices for grocery store
foods declined 0.2 percent, following a 0.4
percent increase in March. Beef, poultry
and fish declined 1 percent, but egg
prices went up sharply, by 4.1 percent

Car prices went up 1.1 percent in April
because of the end of most auto rebate
promotions. But the entire transportation
index declined for the first time In nine
months, dropping 0.1 percent
The Consumer Price Index reached
266 8 to April, which means it cost $266 00
to buy what cost $100 in 1987.
But in a separate report on Americans'
real earnings, the Labor Department
u id the average weekly paycheck before
taxes and inflation dipped by 36 cents to
1749 36
Moderating food and fuel prices have
been the major good news, allowing other
categories of spending, such u rent,
home prices. Interest rates and auto
prices to become the inflationary
villains, a role previously reserved for oU
products.
But s gasoline glut, causing outright
gasoline price declines in many areas,
had a healthy influence on the April
measurements, according to the Georgia
State University forecasting project
director, Donald Katajciak.

Stall On School Zoning OK

M*r»M n u n n

ALMOST
READY

Ten

vukm

*

P o in tin g o u t w h e re t&gt;ook sh e lv e s w ill b e In th e m e d ia c e n t e r . P r in c ip a l D «4
I lev noUls (to p p h o to ! re c e n tly c o n d u c te d a to u r of th e I I I m illion L ak e . Iar&gt;
High S chool f a c ilitie s now u n d e r c o n s tru c tio n on a 40-acre t r a c t off
U n g w u o d -l-a k r M a n H o ad . T h e a u d ito riu m , (b o tto m p h o to I looked lik e th is
a s c o n stru c tio n c re w ^ w o rk ed to re a d y th e sc h o o l fo r its sc h e d u le d o p e n in g In
A ug u st. It is e x p e c te d to open w ith 950 s t u d e n ts in 9 lh an d 10th g r a d e ,
(e n ro llm e n t Is e x p e c te d to re a c h 2.200 w h en th e l l t h a n d 12th g r a d e s a r e
a d d ed .

____________ —

fact that the Lake Mary toning proposal
By SYBIL MITCHELL GANDY
would produce a "virtually aH-whlte"
Herald Staff Writer
Approval for the new Lake Mary High student body.
Although Dougherty Mid the meeting
School toning proposal which w u sub­
mitted to federal attorneys In March Is served simply u a platform for both
still pending, according to a letter sides to 4*11 out their positions, he did
received by School Board Attorney Ned admit that US . Justice officials felt the
propoul would "further isolate the
Julian Jr.
U.S. Justice D epartm ent attorney CroomsSeminole school tone from the
B urtls Dougherty a u u re d Seminole remainder of the county."
Although Hughes called the early May
County School officials that the civil
rights division continues to work conference "very productive" with a
diligently on the plan, but no decision h u "positive atmosphere" prevailing. U R
attorneys were still “non-committal" In
yet been made.
Schools Supt. Robert Hughes and other securing approval, Hughes stated.
The 114 million Lake Mary High
officials flew to Washington for a May 7
meeting with federal attorneys, hoping to School, scheduled to open next fall with
further clarify the toning proposal and approximately 930 9th and 10th grade
students, will only have a 11.7 percent
secure federal approval.
Hughes felt the meeting w u necessary black population if toning goes Into ef­
after Julian received a letter from fect
Federal officials did Indicate that such
Dougherty expressing concern over the

M ore Join Starvation A ssem bly Line
BELFAST, Northern Ireland tUPI) —
Two more Irish Republican hunger
strikers died on the M in e day and were
replaced today by two more festers In the
assembly-line starvations. Hundreds of
Catholics went on rampages that left one
civilian dead and six British soldiers
wounded.
Britain, which governs Northern
Ireland and has refused throughout to
grant the (asters' demands for political
status for IRA prisoners, announced Pa­
trick O'H ara's death through its Nor­
thern Ireland office, In virtually the same

terse statement made after the other
deaths.
“ Patrick O'Hara, a prisoner at HM
Prison Mare, died Thursday at 11:3
p.m ," a government spokesman Mid.
"lie took his own Ufe by refusing food and
medical attention (or 61 days." O'Hara,
24, died shortly before midnight Thur­
sday in the 61st day of his fast — the
fourth hunger striker to die in II days.
Earlier Thursday, Raymond McCrtesh,
iIso 24, became the third IRA Inmate to
complete a promised "fast to the death."
Police In Londonderry, hometown of
O 'H ara, reported the city's worst

violence since May 3 when Bobby Sands,
the first of four convicts died.
Three civilians were injured In Lon­
donderry rioting and one was transferred
to a Belfast hospital, the spokesman said.
Six soldiers suffered light wounds In a
hail of 13 gasoline fragmentation bomb
attacks, be said.
A Londonderry police spokesman said
one civilian wounded in the rioting died in
a hospital early Friday. No details of the
v ictim 's Identity or Injuries were
available.
In Belfast and other cities across
Ulster, police reported heavy petrol

bombing, dolens of vehicle hijackings
and rockthrowing ax gangs of as many as
200 people swarmed through the streets.
At least 12 stores on the edge of the
Catholic Bogsidt district were damaged
by fires started by some of the 200 petrol
bombs hurled at security forces, a police
spokesman said. A boutique, a bar, a
betting shop and a travel agency w en
destroyed.
Police reported eight to 10 shooting
incidents in Belfast with the army
returning Are on snipers. In one ex­
change at a hous|ng developm ent,
soldiers reported one gunman hit.

Lake Mary's Water Problems On Hold
haste, but Kulbes Mid the four-year-old
device Is no longer produced and spare
parts are not available.
Councilmen denied Kulbes’ purchase
request, opting instead to demand the
meter’s manufacturer —the Neptune Co.
of New York - either repair or replace
the equipment.
As long as the) were on the subject of
water, Kulbes u id he would Uke a second
meter and hookup to Sanford's water
main. "I'm really concerned about the
u le ty of citizens In this dty ," he said. "U
the water line breaks, the city would be
without water until It's repaired because
there is no second connection."
A second tap into the Sanford lines
would cost from 367.000 to $113,OOP. ac­
cording to city engineer Paul Porter. And

a quarter-million gallon storage tank,
which could hold a three-day supply of
water, would cost an additional $43),«W
After hearing the pricetag for the
project. Mayor Walter Sorenson said,
"I'm not so sure this Is as much of an
emergency u you've said, PbiL There
are people who have lived In this town tor
60 years who have never had a second
connection or a water tank. We can do
without It for a while longer." The rest of
the council agreed.
In other action, the council authorized
City Attorney Gary Masary to represent
Kulbes and councilman Ray Fox in a $1.1
million defamation suit filed earlier this
month by the developers of the proposed
$17 million Sunshine Park hone racing

TODAY
Artiea Reports .............................iA
Around The Clerk ..........................IA
Calender...................................... *A
(Ti Milled Ads .......................6A-IA
Comics .................................... 1*A
Dear Abby................................. $A
Deaths. ................................... $A
Editorial ..................................... 4A
Horoscope .............................. IIA
HooplUl........................................3A
Notion...................
Ourselves .............
Snort* ................
Television .............

Westhrr...................................... 2A
World............................................IA

Gamesters Sue
New York

For Now, At Least

By BRITT SMITH
Herald Stall Writer
There's an emergency brewing in lake
Mary's water taps, according to City
Manager Phil Kulbes. and he wants
corrective action which could cost up­
wards of a ha If-million dollar*. City
councilmen. however, don’t see (he
situation quite so gravely and have pul
Kulbes' plans on hold, at least for now.
At Thursday night’s council meeting,
Kulbes started out requesting only that
he be authorized to purchaae a new 33,266
meter to regulate water flow from
Sanfcrd which supplies the city’s water.
It seems the existing meter is inaccurate,
resulting in the city receiving more
water than Is recorded on the meter.
Sanford wants the meter repaired post

a small percentage may not fully comply
with desegregation guidelines which
provide that racial Integration be Im­
plemented " u fully u possible" for any
given school tone.
However, a number of factors, such as
racial breakdown of the area, number of
schools in the tone, and the burden of
school transportation on any particular
group, are taken into consideration,
according to Dougherty.
In addition to the low percentage of
blacks slated to attend the new school,
some 30 percent of those black students
are mentally handicapped, the toning
outline Indicates.
Although officials declined to speculate
further on the pending approval, they did
admit that the high percentage of han­
dicapped black students calculated in the
total black population may be adding a
new dimension to the tuning's problems *

track. The developers - Harness Radng
Inc. and Mld-Suie Development Co. were rebuffed by U k e Mary voters In
their efforts to build the track off U k e
Emma Road last December. The firms
then took their plans to Polk County, but
were denied radng permits by the stale.
H a rn e u Racing and Mid-State
Development filed suit against Fox and
Kulbes, claiming the two had made
aocuMtlone that the companies and its
princtoalx, one of which is Longwood
entrepreneur Marc Robinson, were
engaged in criminal activity.
Councilmen said Fox and Kulbes
should be supported because whatever
statements they may have made were
done to the dty's best interest.

NEW YORK (UPI) - The Inventors
of a game called, "Public Assistance,
Why Bother Working for a Living,"
are suing New York City for allegedly
blocking the game's m !c to dty
department stores.
Robert Johnson and Ronald
Pram schufer of Annapolis, Md.
alleged to their court complaint dty
officials asked such stores as Macy's
and Glmbel's not to stock the game
"because it painted welfare recipients
to a bad light"
The complaint filed Wednesday to
U R District Court to Manhattan
seeks $300,000 to damages for the
alleged lose of business since the
board game, played Uke Monopoly,
wastobetotrodnttedtoNrw York last
November. It asked for $3 million
more to punish the d ty far Its alleged
unconstitutional Interference.

Dr. Harry 8. Woodruff. 74-yearold descendant of a Seminole
County pioneer, looks forward to
a June retirement after 50 years
of dentistry in Sanford. Says Dr.
Woodruff: "I’ve got nothing
planned and from now on to do
iL" See story and pictures In
OURSELVES in the Herald
Sunday.

�lA -lre a ln g Herald. tairterd.FL

Friday. May 19. IW

Two M en Hospitalized A fter Shooting

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Begin Toughens Demands
Complicating Peace Efforts
By United Press U tcm lkm al
JERUSALEM. Israel - b ra d 's Prime Minuter
Menactwm begin, in a television Interview (or NBC's
"Today" Thursday, toughened his demands on Syria,
complicating delicate diplomatic efforts now under
way to resolve the crisis.
Begin demanded Syria's recently deployed anti­
aircraft missiles must be removed not only from
Lebanon but also from territory inside Syria near the
Lebanese border. He also said Syria must promise not
to fire missiles from Its own territory at Israeli planes
flying over Lebanon.
The rem arks came during a lull In the United States'
special envoy Philip Habib's peacekeeping mission.
While Hahib passed the night in Jerusalem before
flying to Beurut, the Ubanese capitol erupted In allnight violence. Residents hid In banb shelters as
Syrian and U banese Christians troops exchanged
rocket and artillery fire.
One shell hi* the presidential palace, smashing the
office of President Elias SarkU, and another 133 mm
shell hit the garden of US. Ambassador John Gunther
Dean's residence. Neither man has hurt.

U.5. On Formula Code: 'No'
GENEVA, Swltierland —For the second time In two
days, the United States stood alone in voting against an
International cod* d**ign*d t« regulate marketing of
Infant formula.
The final vote at the World Health Organtsation'a
annual aaaembly waa MM, with Japan, South Korea
and Argentina abatatntng.
A similar vote of 93-1 with nine abatentiona Wednesday in Committee brought an outcry of protest In
Washington. Several congressmen and health officials
calied the UJ». vote "stupid", "absurd" and "phony."
Dr. Stephen Joseph, chief health official for the
Agency for International Development (AID) and
Eugene Babb, AID'i top agriculture and rural
development official, resigned In protest over the vote.

Ripper Found Guilty
LONDON (U P !I—A sls-man, six-woman Jury today
found the confessed "Yorkshire Ripper," guilty of
murder on all 13 charges against him.
By a majority vote of 10 to I the Jury rejected Peter
Sutcliffe's plea of guilty to a lesser charge of man­
slaughter while Insane.
The Jury had reported earlier It had tailed to reach a
unanimous verdict on the sanity of the confessed killer
ind the Judge said he would accept ■ majority decision.
Sutcliffe was sentenced to life tn priaonmenl anti
Judge teatey Boreham said (he 34-year-uUl truck
driver must serve a minimum of 3Q years.

Surprise, South Indiana
Has More Sink Holes

By BRITT SMITH
Herald Staff Writer
Two Sanford men were In satisfactory condition at Seminole
Memorial Hospital today recovering from gunshot wounds
suffered in sn early morning gun battle at mm of the victims'
home.

Highway Patrolman R.M. McLendon spotted two buys
loitering around a black 19C* Mustang parked near the In­
tersection of 1-4 and State Road 44 near the Executive Inn in
Deland The car was later discovered to have been stolen in
Pennsylvania on Monday.
As McLendon approached, the youths ran. One of the boys.

cypress Are. and Ernest Harris, age and address unknown.
According to the city police report, Roland and Harris shot
each other with the same gun. The pair were i t Roland's home
about 2:30 s.m. when they got into sn argument of an unknown
nature. Harris reportedly pulled a .IJ-cabber revolver and
shot Roland twice, in the stomach and tn the left leg above the
Roland then wrestled the gun away from Harris and shot
■dm In the back of the head and upper left arm, police said.
Following the shooting, Roland went out Into his yard and
began firing into the air until he was calmed by a neighbor,
according to police. Criminal charges are pending.
TEENS NABBED FOR AUTO THEFT
Two Pennsylvania teenagers were being held In the Volusia
County Detention facility today after leading police from three
agencies on a three-hour chase through a stand of woods along
Interstate 4.
The episode began about 10 a m. Thursday when Florida

Action Reports
*

Fir »t
It Courts
*

P o lice

proved more elusive. Joining in the chase were officers from
the Volusia County sheriff* office, the Highway Patrol, and
DeLand police department. A helicopter and bloodhounds
were also used to track the fugitive.
He was finally apprehended about 1 p.m. in a section of
woodlands not fir from where the boys were originally spot­
ted.
The Identities of the youths were being withheld became of

Bought For $650,000

Picasso Portrait Sells For $5.3 Million
By FREDERICK 31 WINSIIIP
UPI Senior Editor
NEW YORK (U PII - A selfportrait that Pablo Plcaaao painted
in 1901 has been sold for 93.3 million
— the highest price ever paid at
auction f&lt;r a Picasso or for a 20th
Cenlurv work of art
It was also the fourth highest price
at a public sale for any work of art.
The three paintings that have
exceeded the price are Turner's

"Juliet and Her Nurse," which sold
for 16.4 million; Velazquex's “Juan
de Part]*,” which brought 93.3
million, and Rubens' "Samson and
Delilah,’*which aold for 93.4 million.
The consignor paid only (630,000
for the painting, "Self Portrait;
Vo," ■* go auction six years aga.
The portrait of the wild-eyed
young artist In a white blouse and a
red scarf, painted shortly after
Picasso arrived In Paris from his

native Spain, w u sold Thursday
night to an anonymous American
private collector at the Sotheby
Galleries.
It wax part of a sale of 12
Impressionist and modem paintings
and sculptures sold for a total of 924
Nineteen Items tn the sale were
not sold because bids did not meet
the minimum reserve price set by
the sellers.

However, the sale was hailed as a
success by Sotheby executives since
the total sales met pre-auction
estimates.
Record auction prices were set lor
works by painter Alfred Sisley —
9430,000 — and Rene Magritte
(9390,000), and aculplor Aristide
Maillol (9220,000).
The second highest price fetched
In (he sale waa 92 million for PierreAuguste Renoir’s "Two Young Girls

TALLAHASSEE. Fla, (U PIt - The Florida Sunreme Court
upheld Thursday a law allowing a mentally retarded person to
be committed to a hospital or other treatment facility.
The Justice* also ordered a new trial for Raymond Drake,
sentenced to death for the murder of a Pinellas Park woman In
1977.
The court, In a 3-2 derision, reversed the 2nd District Court of
Appeal and upheld the law allowing the involuntary com­
mitment of a person who is menially retarded or has other
developmental disabilities.
The ruling is considered a major one, comparable to the 1977
ruling in which the Justices upheld Florida's Baker Act, which
allows for the commitment of persons who are mentally 111
(The retarded are persons whose mental abilities are
hampered by birth defects and other physical problems, Men­
tally 111are individuals with normal intelligence and abilities,
but whose behavor is affected by emotional imbalance and
other mental problems.)
The caee Involved BlUy Lee Kinner, charged with the lewd
assault of a child In 1973. Ktnner waa found innocent by reaeon
of Insanity and placed In Florida State Hospital at Chat­
tahoochee.
He didn’t object to his commitment at first, but did later and
was discharged from the facility in April, 1971. The Depart­
ment of I lee lit and Rehabilitative Services began proceedings
to recommit him under the mental retardation act and won an
order from a Judge. Ktnner appealed to the hid DCA, which
found the commitment etatulc unconstitutional.
The appeals court found that the statute wasn't specific
enough to ensure that it affects only "those unable to weigh the

risks of freedom and benefits of hospitalisation and to those
dangerous to themselves and dangerous to others."
The Supreme Court disagreed, accepting arguments by HRS
that the law contains safeguards similar to those In the Baker
Act covering the mentally ill.
Both statutes say, basically, that a person may be Involun­
tarily hospitalized because of mental deficiencies of Illness if
he is likely to injure himself or others If allowed to remain at
liberty. This language is specific enough, the majority of the
Supreme Court said.
Chief Justice Alan Sundberg and Justice Art England
disagreed.
The procedures for Involuntary commitment of the retarded
and mentally ill are similar. A hearing la held before a circuit
Judge that includes testimony from three persons, including a
licensed physic ten, on U»e wed ter the commitment.
If the testimony is sufficient, the Judge appoints a panel of
experts to investigate the person whose mental competency la
being questioned. The panel reports back to the Judge, who
then decide! whether to sign the commitment papers.
The patient must be present at all of the proceedings and
represented by counsel, who has the right to cross-examine
witnesses and submit deferoe evidence.
Drake was convicted of murdering Odette Reeder, whore
partially decomposed body was found tn a wooded area in
Oldxmar. The prosecution theorized that Ms. Reeder had been
raped, but this could not be confirmed by doctors because of
the decomposition of the lower part of the body.
Part of the state's evidence was that on two prior occasions,
Drake had sexually axsaulted other women and bound the

People May Say We A re Selling
Kids Like A Tin Of Baked Beans. . . 1

P

children who would have grown up in an
institution wtU have families."
Ills social worker staff currently Is
trying lo place about 33 children, aged 3
to 13. Most are from broken or troubled
homes. Many have physical or mental
handicaps.
Its average "stock" ta a 7-year-old
youngster who has been in the Mate's
care Iir three to four years. He sees his
mother or father about three times a
year.
"My dad went away when I was very
little,” resds a note by Sophie tn the store
window. "When I first came in. my mum
used to come see me a lot.
"She had a green coat, but now the has
moved a long way and she has a new
baby," said the message In the hand­
writing of a 7-year-old. “1 live in a
children's home with a lot of other
people."
Three months ago Marks moved from
the bureiucratic maze of county hall and
filled the shop’s windows with pictures,
descriptions, even toys and clothing of
chikken who need families.
"We moved hers to be accessible," he
said in his office above the shop. "It Is

E irn ln j' llc n ild

iu im

important that we be available to
families who might be Interested in
adopting or fostering a child.
'Too often a service like this is
faceless. We are trying to pul a public
Face on it. It is a fundamentally different
concept.
"I see my Job essentially as one of
marketing," he said. "We have a
problem; there are children who don't
have parents to live with. 1 have to get
this message across to people. The child
really is his own best advertiser."
Marks estim ates an extra eix
placements In three months have come
Just from having the storefront.
Does such an approach hurt the
children?
"This could be a problem It Is &lt;**tatnly a very sensitive area of our work,"
Marks said. “There is ahraya the
possibility of further rejection of an
already emotionally battered child."
Each child agrees to have hta name
and profile Included tn the store's
"catalogue," and the social-worker staff
ks careful to put no pressure on shoppers
who wander in.

Federal Grant To Provide

AREA DEATHS
Walker and Mrs. Lillie B.
Reed of I&gt;oe Angeles, Calif.;
unde. Rev. Robert Griffin,
Cairo, Ga.; four aunts, Mrs.
Addle Meuse, Savannah. Ga.,
Mrs. Carrie B. P ickett,
Boston, Ga., Mrs. Alice
Zachary, F t Fierce, and Mrs.
Geraldine Zadiery, Sanford;
numerous nieces, nephews
*ei in i

'•Friday. May 22- t t t t —Vol. TJ. Ho MS
feakUikte Daily u ) tvnaay.
leiudar ty Tk« leeftra
iHtraW. le t. in n Franca t i t - lamer!. Fla Mill.
5wc*»a Cleat Fetiete Paid al Sealers. Flariat SUM
&lt;
&lt; Mama OMi.try Week. II. Mi attain, t r a i l Mtktke. SMN,
Z-Vtar, SUN Ir Mari w o t n i l . Merrtk, Iltlr I Mantes,
‘‘u eis. Vetr. UlM

Reading," bought by a European
private collector.
Another Picasso, “Still Ufa with
Jonquils and Irties," waa won by a
9700,000 bid from an anonymous
European Collector.
The record auction price fer a
Sisley landscape painted in 1681 w u
paid by a German dealer, the record
for Magritte, by an Illlnola private
collector, and a record for Maillol by
a New York private collector.

Supreme Court Allows Commitment Of Retarded

TERRE HAUTE. Ind. (UPI) — Southern Indiana has more
sinkholes than any other area In the world, but suffers leas
from them than Winter Park, Fla., did last week, an Indiana
Slats University geologist reports.
According to Dr. Donald Ash, a professor of geology at 1SU,
l topographical map of southern Indiana "looks like a moon­
scape," because of the huge number of sinkholes,
i "Thera are thousands and thousands of sinkholes in southern
Indiana," Ash said. "There is one square mile near Orleans,
Ind., where a man counted 1,022 sinkholes."
j Asinkhole appears when water dissolves the supporting rock
LONDON (UPI) - Sandwiched bet­
ground, and In the cases of Winter Park and southern
ween the dry cleaner and the carpet store
w that rock Is limestone. As It dissolves, large cavities
Just off the main street la a shop that
&lt;re crested under the surface into which the earth collapses.offers children.
; Despite the (act that southern Indiana has the largest
Tlie Family Finding Shop is an
(umber of sinkholes per acre, tt la still a safer place to build
adoption service with ■ difference. An
than the Winter Park area, according to Ash. The limestone in
arm of local government in the I-ondon
florid* is relatively young and therefore still unstable.
suburb of Greenwich, it uses a bright,
TEvery year sinkholes crop up somewhere In Florida and you
open storefront and m arketing
learof a car or houae falling into one of them," Ash said.
techniques mare familiar to business to
I The problem Is further complicated by the fact that ground
encourage people to adopt children.
devaUcn In Florida la so near the water table and when the
The window is crammed with in{urface collapses sinkholes fill with water.
Ior maiico about children available for
; Southern Indiana, on the other hand, hag an underlayer of
adoption or "fostering." Inside, in a
(try old limestone and the water has mostly subsided, making
decidedly un-burea ucratic atmosphere, a
&lt; relatively stable. The ground elevetlon is also considerably
social worker Is ready to talk about the
$lgher than the water table so most small sinkholes do not fill
problems and rewards at adopting a
91th water, ha said.
child. Interested parents can even take
{ Indians residents tn the area have learned to live with the
home a package of Information about the
problem, Ash said.
children.
1 "Some farmers will fence off sinkholes and allow livestock to
“We are trying to establish a contact
Am tn them, creating useful farm ponds," Ash said. "Others
point with the community," explained
(Imply ihovcl a pickup truck load of gravel Into the smaller
Murray Marks, director of the service.
ones and pretend they were never there."
"My goal Is to bring adoption and
, Ash said watching a sinkhole develop la not very exciting or
fostering out Into the open.
frightening. “The earth begins to crack and then slowly sub"People may say we are selling kids
We, giving anyone nearby adequate opportunity to escape."
like a tin of baked beans. If so, it Is the
Ash added that tinkholes are tmpaesible to predict and will
most tasteful marketing of baked beans
continue to occur with regularity.
ever. And by having this shop, some

I JUDSON GRIFFIN
ZJudeun Griffin of 1206 W.
lith SI., Sanford, died Sunday
a) Seminole
M em orial
liupltal
jSunfvor* include his wife,
Mrs. Katie L Griffin, Santdrd; brother, Lonnie Griffin,
Buffalo. N.Y.; three listers,
f^ra. Ada Worthy, Mrs. Cora

their age. They will be relumed to Pennsylvania for poasibh
prosecution, authorities said.
INSU RANCE SCAM UNCOVERED
A former Del-and couple, charged with faking a death ir
order to collect on a life Insurance policy, are being sued by tha
Insurance carrier they allegedly sought to defraud.
The Connecticut life Insurance Co. filed suit In federal court
In Augusta, Ga. Wednesday against John Henry Owens and his
wife Nellie Pear! ownes asking for the return of &lt;104,000 paid to
Mrs. Owens upon the suoooaed death of her husband in 1971
A third person, Robert McMahon, a former F t Gordon, Ga
soldier, was also named in the suit.
Mrs. Owens was awarded the money in 1973 as a result of a
superior court suit she filed seeking additional money from the
insurance company. She was originally awarded 14,OHO from
the firm.
But last March, the Owens were found living In DeLand and
their scheme was uncovered.
The body buried as Owens was exhumed and further medical
examination was made to determine the exact came of death.
The three have been In custody In the Richmond County Jail
since March, charged with murder and insurance fraud
After conducting its own investigation, Connecticut Life filed
suit, charging the three "conspired to and defrauded the
company of I1M.OOO - money wrongly paid U&gt; Nellie Owens."

and cousins
W il io n - E l c h e lb e r g e r
Mortuary is tn charge of
funeral arrangements
AlfftED JOHNSON
Aired Johnson of 207 S.
Beech SL, Syracuse, N.Y.
died May IS In Syracuse.
He la survived by his
daughter, Mrs. Rosetta
Williams, Qrlardo; brothers,
Ernest Johnson, Syracuse;
Richard Johnson, Detroit,
Mirh., James, Robert and
Charles Johnton, Sanford;
three grandchildren and
numerous
nieces
and
nephews.
W ll s o n - E l c b c lb e r g e r
Mortuary is in charge of
arrangements.

Funeral Notices
o e iffin . we judson Funeral w r i t n (nr Mr. Judeon
OriMM. nl tree W 19x SI.
Untore, who dud Sunday, al
Srminal* Memorial Holpilel.
will bn tt l « n Saturday, al
Alton Chnpnl AME Chutch. IMS
Olive Auf . Seniors, with Iht
an* John M woodird el
Ilooting Bur Ini in Unhewn
Camttnry. Stnlord Wilton
Eichttbnrgnr Mortuary in
Che'S*
JOHNSON. MB. RLFSlD —
Funeral vorvxn ter Mr Alfred
Johnton, N( 1. Beech SI .
Syracuse, N.Y . who died Mar IS
in Syracuse, will bn al It a m .
Saturday. at wiieen tlcnal
b trg tri Chapel, lilt Pew Ate.
Santord. wlM the Re* O W
Williams oHklaltnt Burial bi
Resileon Cemetery. Santord
Wilson Echerberptr Mortuary In
cherpe

15 New OSOTA Buses
UJi. Rep. Bill McCollum, R-Altamuate Springs, announced
Thursday a (2 million federal grant has been awarded to the
Qrange-SeminoieOsceols Transit Authority to purchase 13
advanced-design buses.
The new vehicles will supplement OSOTA's 47-bui fleet
already in operation in the three-county area. The new buses
will each be equipped with lifts for nonambulatory person,
McCollum said, adding only three of the fleet's current buses
are presently so equipped
The total grant from the U.5. Urban Mass Transportation
Administration li (2,014,214. Part of the money is to be used to
purchase faze boxes and radios with the remainder used to buy
the ne
"What this means is that Orunge-Seminole-Osceola counties
are going to have a significant increase in bus service. On s
broader scale the new buses will provide the added potential
for saving gasoline and decreasing traffic congestion,"
McCollum said.

victims hands behind their backs as Ms. Reeder's hands had
been found bound.
The connection between these incidents and the killing was
not strong enough to allow the submission of testimony on
them as evidence, the Supreme Court concluded In a 6-1
opinion.
There may still be evidence to support Drake's conviction,
the court said, so it ordered s new trial, rejecting Drake's
motion for a dismissal of the charge.

Bomb Panic Spreads
To Two Other States
United Press lntrrnatiooal
A weeklong wave of attempted bombings that has
frightened tome edgy New Yorkers into buying bullet­
proof vests has spread to Connecticut and Boston.
All of the explosives found Thursday — at the UN.
garage in New York City, in a men's room at a crowded
Boston bus station and outride a Hamden, Conn.,
department store — were removed safely. Police In
Watertown, Conn., said they found what were believed to
be ingredients for three pipe bomba In a restaurant when
the owner arrived at work.
A suspect. Michael O. Charland, 23, of Watertown was
arrested and charged with bomb manufacture and disor­
derly conduct He w u Jelled In lieu of (10,000 bond and an
arraignment w u set for today, police laid.
The pipe bomb found In a sanitation truck puked Inside
the United Nations garage w u the sixth bomb planted in
New York City tn a week. Police u y they do not believe
the same people were responsible for all six.
Ax the week wore on security devices were being
snapped up In record numbers.
Although the price of a bulletproof vest ranges from 9193
to 9400, armor plating for a car starts at 940,000 and a
"bionic" briefcase that can be used u a shield against
bullets costs (700, nervous diplomats and executives are
scrambling for the safety precautions.
"Everyone is getting paranoid," said a borobaquad
detective who regularly holds security sem inus for
businesses. "It always happens after a bombing or two.
Now It's happening with a lot more frequency and
urgency."
In NeW York, a Puerto Rican group h u claimed
responsibility for three of the bombs. Including one that
exploded Saturday at Kennedy Airport killing a 19-yearold news vendor.
Anonymous callers also led police to a hand grenade at
the Trallways bus terminal In Boston and two bomba
outside a Hamden, Conn., department store. In each case,
the callers gave no reason for the b a n ta and no groups
claimed responsibility.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: A spring storm carried gt
washing rains to the Rockies Thursday, while severe U
derstorms generated high winds and hail In the central Pla
Clouds covered much of the East, with light rain lingerln
the Carolines. Cool weather stretched Ira n Texas to
middle Atlantic Coast. Thunderstorms are expected to i
Unue today in parts of the Rockies and coastal Texaz, \
ahowers falling In some sections of New England and wesi
Washington. Skies will be (air in the East and most of
Southwest.
AREA HEADINGS (9 a.m.)-. temperature: 73; oven*
low: 60; Thursday's high; 83; U roaielric pressure: 30
relative humidity: 39 percent; winds: NE at 9 mph.
SATURDAY’S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, I
a jn ., 11:03 p.m., lows, 3:17 a m , 3:19 p.m.; P4
CANAVERAL highs, 11:31 a m , 11:35 p.m.; Iowa, 3:11 a
8:10 p.m.; BAYPORT: highs, 5:32 a m , 4:03 p.m.; lows. H
a m , 11;3S p m
BOATLNG FORECAST: SL Auputiae ta Jupiter Inlet,
39 Miles: Northeast winds 10 to 13knots through tonight. Se
to 3 feel
AREA FORECAST: Mostly fair with warm dayi and t
nights today and Saturday in Central Florida. Highs in
middle 90s. Lows In the low (Os Northeast winds around 1
13 mph today. Sunny elsewhere tn Florida with warm lo z
temperatures through Saturday. Highs In the middle 60s n
to upper 90s south. Lows in the 30s north Jo low 70s along
southeast coast and In the Keys.
EXTENDED FORECAST: Partly cloudy skies and i
Um&gt;ed warm days throughout the state from Sunday thro
Tuesday, with a chance of thundershowers in the tv
Tuesday.

�Memorial
Day Closings
Seminole Ccunty Cour­
thouse and offices, city hails
In
all
seven
area
m unicipalities, snd public
schools will all be closed
Monday in observance of
Memorial Day.
Abo scheduled to close will
be the Motor Vehicle
Inspection Stations, the
D river's License office
(always dosed on Monday),
banks snd post offices.
Sanford and Altamonte
Springs, which hsve city
refuse collection service, will
pick up as usual on Monday.

HaroM rw ii

THAT'S HOW
IT'S DONE

by

Seminole Football Coach Jerry Posey (left) pointi out a little blocking
technique to Ed lilnkavage (right), quarterback Jeff Litton (number 7) and
center David Williams. Tonight at 7 the Fighting Seminoles have their Intrasquad game. The game Is preceded by a hamburger dinner at 5:30 p.m.

'Person' Sought In Killings

NATION
IN BRIEF
Reagan Asks Bi-Partisan
Approach On SS Program
By United Press International
Washington — President Itragan, under attack from
congressmen and senators of both political parUes for his
plan to cut early reUrement and other Social Security
benefits, la la calling on leading lawmakers to compromise.
Saying the Social Security system la "tetiering on the
verge of bankruptcy", Reagan appealed to congressional
leaders to approach the issue In a bipartisan manner.
He said he La not "wedded to any single solution" and la
open to compromise. He sent a conciliatory letter to House
Speaker Tip O’Neill and Senate Majority leader Howard
Baker warning the deficit in the system will reach t i l l
billion in the nest five years.

No Fed Money For Abortion?
Washington — A ban on the use of federal funds for
abortions except when the life of the mother la threatened la
virtually assured of becoming law.
The Senate Thursday lined up with the House in ap­
proving the moat far-reaching ban on federal funds for
abortions ever enacted by the Congress.
With both of Florida'a senators — Lawton Chiles, DUkeland, and Paula Hawkins, R-Winter Park — voting
with the majority, the Senate refused, however, to go along
entirely with a House provision. The House's provision
forbade the use of federal funds for any abortion. Thur­
sday’s Senate vote eliminated rape and Incest as ex­
ceptions.
Opponents of the proposed law said It would deny benefits
to 3,000-to-t0,000 women whose pregnancies result from
rap*.

Ohioan Is Miss USA
Biloxi. Miss.—A browneyed blonde from Germantown,
Ohio, Kim Seelbrede, won the Miss USA Pageant Thursday
night.
The 9-year-old beauty, daughter or Herbert and June
Seelbrede, received the crown as Miss New York, Deborah
Ann Fountain, ousted from the contest earlier in the week
for padding her bra, watched from the audience.
Miss Fountain’s attempts at court action to force pageant
officials to let her rejoin the contest proved unxuccesssul.
The new Miss USA stands Woot-k and weighs Ilf. She will
represent the United Stales in the Miss Universe contest to
be held in New York on July 30. First runner-up In Thursday
night's pageant was Miss Indiana, llolli Dennis, 11, of Fort
Wayne.

Atlanta — Investigators arc hunting lor a "person" who
may be able to provide information on the death of one of 17
young blacks murdered here. A composite sketch of that
person may be released soon if Investigators cannot find the
individual.
Douglas County Sheriff Earl lee, a suburban sheriff, said
the person may be able to shed light In the case of Eddie
Duncan, 11, whose body was found on March 31 in the
ChattahorvW River la Douglas Couidy.
While lee could not say whether the Individual definitely
could provide help In the case, he added, "We just want to
talk to that person.”

Williams Indictment Eyed
Washington — Department of Justice lawyers are
preparing to ask a federal grand Jury in Chicago to Indict
Roy L Williams, interim president of the Teamsters Union,
and others In a labor corruption scheme.
A Senate subcommittee, meanwhile, is pressing the
labor Department to oust Williams as Teamster Union
president unless he answers questions about his alleged ties
to organized crime.
The repert from the Senate Permanent Investigations
Subcommittee, approved with dissent from some members,
said that Raymond J. Donovan, lab o r Secretary, as a first
step should formally summon Williams for questioning.
Williams has refused to comment on the Senate sub­
committee action.

Hinckley Guilty Plea Tried?
Charlotte, N.C. — Lawyers for the man accused to the
March 30 a Hi nation attempt on President Reagan have
unsuccessfully tried to negotiate a guilty plea for their
client, The Charlotte Observer reported today.
The newspaper, quoting unnamed sources, said attorneys
for John Hinckley Jr. have sought the plea bargaining
under the Federal Youth Corrections Act. The newspaper
said Hinckley will turn 9 years old next Friday and will no
longer qualify for the law's provisions.
The Youth Corrections Act gives Judges broad discretion
in sentencing offenders convicted before their 26th bir­
thday. The in lent of the law is to substitute rehabilitation
for punishment.

Flood Watches In Montana
United Press International
Torrential rains dumped up to 3 Inches of rain in the
northern Rockies and raised rivers to flood stage, promp­
ting a flash flood watch today in northwestern and central
Montana.
Heavy rains and record cold lashed the South and
stretched into southern Florida, bringing at least some
temporary relief to the drought-stricken region.
Fierce thunderstorms pushed into the northern Plains
region, with winds clocked at #0 mph in Lexington. Neb.

UMW Reverses Position In Talks
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The United
Mine Workers union has revised Its
‘ contract demand involving job security
—a key area of dispute in its two-monthold strike against the soft coal industry.
The amended demand was to be placed
on the bargaining table during today's
resumption of talks with the Bituminious
Coal Operators Association that had been
recessed for three days so the UMW
couk) reexamine its overall package.
UMW President Sam Church Jr. an­
nounced the resumption of talks Thur­
sday after the union's 39-member
bargaining council revised the job
security demand, the stickiest of seven
unresolved contract Issues.
Although Church would not disclose

Legal Notice

Tam vmcant

NOTICE UNDO*
FICTITIOUS NSMauaTUTC
TO W H O M IT M A V CO N CER N :
Notice It hereby givtn lh a l in*
u n d eeilg n ed pursuant te in*
" F it l lt l o u t
Nam * S i a l y l * .
Chapter H i Of Florid* Statutes,
•rut r t g iila r with tn* Clerk o* li e
Circu it Court, n end lor Srm.nol*
County, Flood* upon r*c»lp&lt; ol
pro d d in* publication d H ilt
nolle*, in* HctitlOul N*m*. to w,t
I) A Q U A C R A F T POOLS A SPAS
(• division ol BSC D*v*lopm*nl,
Inc I and 1) c a b i n e t C U R E la
division ol B A G D*v*lopm*nf,
Inc.) u n dtr wnicn » e ar* m«*g*d
m bvsln*ts *1 IS I N Maitland
Av* . S u il*
107. A ltam on te
Sprlngl. FI* M70I
7n*t in* rorportno n ml tra ila d
In f a d builn * M enterprise It a t
Id tows
GAG Gavetopmant, Inc
2SI N Maitland A v a , Si 107
Adam ant* Springs. FI* 17701
FublJin M ay IS. 17. 7* A run* A
HOI
O E l 71
FICTITIOUS N A M E
Nolle* it naraby given rnai I am
engaged in b u tin a ti at ITS A S
Wym or* Rd . Altamonte Spring*.
F la 177gi, S a m ln o lt County.
F lorid a undrr in* iictm o u i nam*
d TH E S U P E R SCOOP SHOP,
and m at I inland 10 register wa d
nam* with in* Clark of in* Circuit
Court. Saminol* County, F id Ida In
accordant* w ith in* provision* d
in* Fictitious Nam* statuiat, To
W it
S actlan l o o t
F lo rid a
Statutas tost
S*g E ld T E. Luckatt
Publish M ay I. IS, 71, 70, IN I

QEi-lS-----------------------------FICTITIO U S N AM «
Noiic* it naraby givan mat I am
m gagad m bu t.n rtt a l m i M ara
Court. Sanlerd. Sam,now county.
Florid* undtr the tictittout nam*
d H O U SE C A L LS , and Inal I In
tandtoragistar said nam t with in*
C la rk o l m o C ir c u it C ou rt,
Sommolo County. Florida m *c
coroanct wltn tn* provision* d in*
Fictitious Nam* d Statuiat. To
W it;
SaclIon la s 0* F lo rid *
Statutas li s t
Sig Robart L Craws
Publish May IS. 11. IT A run* A
IN I
O E l TV
P I C f lT lO U S N A M I
Nolle t it naraby given mat I am
angagad m business al a ll W ilford
Av* , Longwood, Stmmoi* County
Florida, u n dtr in* Itctlliout nam*
d O M N I O R A P H IC S U P P L Y , and
that I i d and to ra g itltr raid nam*
witn tn* C lark d in* Circu it Court,
Sam lnolt County, Florida In *c
co rdanct witn tn* previa tana d in*
Fictitious Nam* statutes. T o w n :
Faction IklO T Florida S ta lu itt
ItST
I N C W Pratnar
Publish M ay 1 IS, 77. 7T. IN I.
O E l Jf

Legal Notice
FICTITIO U S N A M E
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IVE N
the! I am engag'd m btrsmatt at
7*0 Watt Mwy *1A Longwood. FI
777SO. Sam lnolt County, Florida
under Ih* fic titio u s nam * at
A W A R D S U N LIM IT E D , and that I
inland to rag sla r said n a m t with
the Clark d tna Court. Sam mo**
County. Florida m acesrdanc*
with th* provisions of th t FIc
M id is Nam e Statutas. to wit
Section ia s o t Florida s ia tu in

l«T
Aw ards Unlimited. Inc.
By W illla rd G EariOiaft.
ria s ld a n l
Publish AAay 1.1. IS. 11. 1*11
D EI 1
IN T H E
C IR C U IT CO U RT
E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT .
IN
AND
FOR
S E M IN O L E CO UNTT, FLO R ID A
C A S ! NO. II t i l l C A B L E
IN RE TH E M A R R IA G E OF
SU E A N N L E E ,
Petitioner W ilt,
and
R IC H A R D P A T R IC K L E E ,
Respondent Husband

f riday. May M. 1HI—1A

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

A O v E R T I S E M I NT FO R BIDS
Tn* Santcrd A lrpnrt Authority
p roposes te h a r t constructed
A d d itio n a l w arehouse spac*.
additions to a v islin o buildings, and
a d d itio n a l c o v t r r d area lo r
t o t a lin g pr* engineered m tta t
structures tocMed on th* Sanford
A irport
Tn* w ork is mar* spec ideally
d rie rib a d as
Phase 1 10.700 S4 II M at*I
ULrjapplvui i *
H 14.900 tq «
\VAr*iwv*# Add tion
PM«%r III 9.900 tq n S u rttM M

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Nolle# It haraby given that I am '
angagad In business at 111 S a l‘
sum# Or . Altam onte Springs. F L '
17701. Saminoi* County. Florid*,
un der t h t f ic titio u s n a m t ol,
W IN T E R
PARK
S O LA R !
E N E R G Y S Y S T E M S . IN C . and!
that i mtond to register s a d nam*
w ith th# C la rk of th# C ircu it Court.)
Semingla Countv. Florid* M *c !
cordanct w ith th* provisions cT tht ■
Fictitious N a m t Statutas, T » W it:j
S acfen SH O T Fiorvea Statutas!
ITS7
V g G A Sharp#
Publish M a y IS. 17. IT A June 1
IN I
D EI *1

*

Addition
Any and a ll persona having
Inter asl In bidding this work at*
required to ca ll In* Engmaae for
tn* A irp o rt at 7117711. Plans and
specification* tor a ll thast pnasa*
a rt available tor a non rtfundade
IM 00 daposit
Th* bid opening data Is M ay 7*.
IN I at 7 10 P M m th* conlarvnc#
room of mo A irport Manager,
Bldg No I. Sanford Airport
Submitted by
A irp o rt Manager
Sanford AlrpprS
Authority
Publish AAay It. 77. IN I DEI M l

FIC TITIO U S N A M S
None* IS haraby givan that wo
a r t angagad in business al ITU
South F re n c h A v a , Sanford.
Sam lnolt County. Florid* under
in* H cldlou t nam a d U K N U
V A R I E T Y STO RE, and lh a l w*
me and io ra g iu o r said nam* witn
th t C la rk ot th t Circuit Court.
Sommolo County. Florida in a c­
cordance w itn tn* provition at in*
Fictitious Name Statute*. TaW it:
Section IAS 0T Florida Sia'utot
S.g W illiam Schroadtr
Gan* W aovtr
Publish M ay I. I. IS. 71. IN I
O E l II
FICTITIO U S N A M E
Not&gt;ct it haraby givan that l ami
angagad m b u tin a ti at J a il Slat*]
Road *&gt;4. Long wood. Sammola
County. Florida under th* tic
til,out nam * el Ol DONATO'S
P I I I A A SUSS, and mat I inland
la register said nam* with th t
C la r k ot Ih* C ir c u it C ou rt,
Sam mol* County. Florid* In *c
cordoned v n lh lh * provts lor* d Ih#
Fictitious Nam* statutes. io wit:
Faction M l Of. Florida S la lu ltt
1TS7
B r Antonie O l Donato,
president
Publish M a y 77, IT A Jim* S. 17.
ITS I
D E I IM

CORRECTION
In th© K-mart G a rd e n Center Advertisem ent
that appeared In the Evening Herald W ed.
M ay 20th and H erald Advertiser M ay 21st
th ere w as an error.
The price on C ana Lillies should have read
*2.77. Sorry for any inconvenience this
m ay have caused.

Church said he intends to keep the
Church Thursday vented some of his
anger with a verbal assault on Bobby R. bargaining council In Washington over
Brown, the industry's chief contract the Memorial Day weekend.

H isto ry C o m e s To Life
tt wonderful world of history and lnjon comet to light when Sth grade
igster* Sl Idyllwilde Elementary present
e Electric Sunshine Man," on Friday, May
at 7:30 p.m.
a delightfully Cast-moving musical drama
he life and limes of famous American
ntor, Thomas Edison, the Idyll wild*
ers present their very own version of what
ion must hive felt as tn Inventor in early

Mark Wolniak, plays (he brilliant Edison as
he makes the first phonograph, the first
electric light, and the first moving picture.
The original play has been coordinated by
Mrs. Barbara Brorup, a Sth-grsde teacher at
the school
Two performances are scheduled for Friday
morning at 9:00 a .m and 10:13 a m few
Idyllwilde students. But the public is cordially
invited to the 7:30 performance that evening.

Sanford Sets Twiggy Day'
anfonl'i most famous personalities
the water skiing squirrel - will give
jrmances as part of a special
promotion an Memorial
nday, May 30,
« t , Twiggy’a trainer, will jait his
d celebrity through her paces at 11
gain at 1,3, and 5 p .m on Magnolia

Avenue between First and Second itreeta.
The even) will also feature a boat show tn the
parking lot at First Street and Park Avenue,
refreshments, live entertainment throughout
the day, and shopping specials at downtown
stores.
The festivities are free.

HOSPITAL
NOTES
fern male M a m m a l H a tgtltl
M ay II
ADMISSIONS
Sanlord
E rin L Srunoohler
Jam as F t Non
M ary L. G riffin
Stella Hardy
Varna E. Pennell
Robart W. Sayrt. Chutugtt
Herbert A R ay. D eBtry
Chatter O w tim e r, Dalton*
A g n tt I Wilson. Dalton*
Nancy A. GIMan. longwood
Jastm L . Hugh**. Longwood
D ISCH A R G ES
Sanford

Eddie Williams, Winner

P orta E . P h illip s

A n d rt N. Sim pvm
Ruth G Swinnoy
John A. Ledford. Orange City

Tba cheetah la the world's
(a llo t known land animal,
attaining speed! ol 79 mph.

;

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T OF
T H E IITH J U O IC IA L CIRCUIT
IN
ANO
FOR
S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A
NO. Al u i r c A - a t p
C O U N T R Y W ID E
f u n d in o
C O R P O R A T IO N . * New York
corporation.
PI* Ini HI.
vs
JU A N R A M I R E I and JU A N A
N O TICE OF ACTION
G L A D Y S R A M I R E I . h it w ilt, and
70
R I C H A R D P A T R IC K
D
A V IO R A M I R E I .
L E E wnob* last known residence
IN T H E CO U N TY COURT OF I* b* d u d or allvg and, II dead,
was Slat* d A rlion *
TH E E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L in* unknown spouse, not known
VO U
ARE
HEREBY
IN
AND
FOR h a irs ,
d f v is t t i,
g ra n ite s ,
N O T IF IE D lh al an action tor C I R C U I T
S E M IN O L E CO U N TY. FLO R ID A
assignees, lie n o rs , cre d ito rs ,
dissolution ot m arriage has been
Casa
N
a
I
M
I
N
CC-EVD
trustees,
or
ofher
claim
ants br.
tiled against you In th* Circuit
S T A T E OF F LO R ID A
Ihrougn. under or a g e,m l JU A N
Court d Sam m olt County. Florida,
and you ar* required io serve a E i R t l. D O U G LA S C H ES H IR E. R A M I R E I and J U A N A G L A D Y S
S ta le A ttorn ey lo r the R A M I R E I ,
and
O A V IO
copy ol your written (tetanias. It J R
Eighteenth Ju d icia l Circuit ot in* R A M I R E I . and a ll p a ri its having!
any. to It on J A C K BRIDOCS.
E S Q U IR E , ot C L E V E L A N D A State or F io rd * , on bantit ef tn* or claim in g lo have any right. IHte ■
Monorabf# John E PolA. Snartlf of or Interest In th* p ro p e rly !
B R ID G E S . Post Ottlc# Drawer I,
Sam lnolt County, F io rd * .
described el gl.
Sanlord. Florida. 177ft. on or
P it Ini Iff.
Dolendenls
baler* J u n t IS. A O . IN I, and lilt
N O T I C I O P SU IT
in* o rig in a l with th* Clark ot Ifni vs
TO J U A N
R A M IR E I i m Court t it n t r batort t t r y ic t on O N E A E R O C O M M A N D E R IM
Twin
Eng
me.
blue
and
wh
Ilf
JU A N A G cn L IT 1 R A M I R E I . h it'
P a llllo n a r 'i A ttorn ay. br Im
w
ilt,
and
D
A
V
ID
R A M IR E I
L
i*
.-IU
H
ogislrollon
Number
N
m ediately thve*-**ff, piper wise. a
default and ultim ata ludgmvnl will II7S7M. a k a N SI0RR. Serial m la, and D A V ID R A M I R I not
b* enttrad against you tor the N um bers 000 177 41. **0 &lt;t? 170. known I* ha d ta d or ally* and. II
Defendant
dead. IK* unknown tp o u u hairs ;
relief oamandad In th* Petition
lie n o rs c r e d ito rs , tru ste e s or;
N O T IC E OF ACTION
W ITN ESS my hand and Ih# weal
omar claim ants by. through, under1
TO:
A
n
y
p
a
rtia
l
having
an
In
d this Court on this Sth day at
or tea m s! J U A N R A M I R u I and!
ta ra tt in O N E A E R O CO M
AAay. A O . IN I
M A N O E R i n Twin Engm* blua JU A N A G L A D Y S R A M I R E I . and
A R T H U R M B EC K W IT H . JR
and whit* bearing R tg-itration D A V ID R A M I R E I . and a ll parlies
Clark ot th# Circuit
Num ber N I l f It H, a s a N *#0R&lt;f. having or cla im in g I t have any,
Court
right, nil*, o r in l t r t t l In Hi*
Serial N um bers * » 17 7 «l. S*0 M l
BY; E v a Ctablra*
property d tscriba d In Hi* Com
114. their hairs, assigns and sue
Deputy Cloak
pa in i. Residence unknown
ir s io r s In Intartsi. and all par
Publish M a y A IS. n . IT, te ll
TOUR
ARE
HEREBY,
D EI «
sons. F irm s , and Corporations
owning, having or claim ing an N O T IFIE D lh a l a Com plaint has
ml eras I in or Han on th t abov* been Iliad against you by tn*
NOTICE OF
Piaim irt Hi in* above styled Court:
described A irc ra n
S H E R IF F 'S SALE
V O U A N D E A C H OF YOU A R E and causa lo r tn* purpose ol
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IVE N
H E R E B Y N O T IF IE D lh al th* foreclosing In* mortgage on in*!
that by virtu* ot Inal cartam writ
S ta tt ot F io rd * , as r t l Douglas fo llo w in g d ts c r ib a d p re p a rly j
of E lo cu tio n issued out of and
Cheshire. J r . Slat* Attornay tor situate and being In Saminot#
under tn* seal uf in* County Court
th#
Eighteenth Ju d icia l Circuit at County, Florida
of Sam lnolt County. Florida, upon
LO T
‘ l*.
B LO C K
17.
a fin a l ludgtfnenl rendered in tn* th* Slat* of F io rd * , on banail of
f ir s t ,
in# Honorable John E
Polk, W E A T H E R S F I E l d
aforesaid court on In* put day at
AOOITON.
according
10
in*
Plat
S h e riff of S t m in o lt County.
A p ril, A D 1*11, In that certain
F tor d o nas tiled a Rul* lo Show 'hereof a t recorded In P la l Book
cat* am iilad. General Finance
Cause m the Eighteenth Judicial II. P k g a t aa and *7 o l tn* P u b lic1
Corporation, Plaintiff, vt waitar
C ircu it o l Florida against any and ■ f c o r d t 01 S a m ln o lt County.
J
T y la r. Defendant, w hich
a ll parties having an interest In Florida.
aforesaid W rit of Elocu tion was
Including sp ecifica lly but not by!
on* Aero Commander *40 Aircraft
dahvarad to m* as Sheriff ol
Seminole County, Florid*, and I bearing Registration Number N ih t way of lim itaf Ion, in* following!
I1N 7H . o k o N t*ORR Serial Heiurat and equipm ent, 10 wit
nave itvia d upon in* following
Rang*
N um bers *40 I lf *1, *40 art I N te R ilv lg * ra io r
de te r Ibad p ro p e rty owned by
Yau a r t required la t a r v t a copy
snow causa why tn* a t o r t u d
Waitar J Tylar, t a d property
being le ra ftd In Sam mol* County.
a ircra ft th o u d net b* torleiled to of your tnew er or pleading on 1
th* us* of Ih* Sharltf of Seminole Pi* ml l i f t attorn* ye. T A Y L O R .
F lo rid * .
m o rt
p a r tic u la rly
County, F lo rid a , p u rtu tn l lo BRION, B U K E R 4 G R E E N E . M U '
described as follows
On* If t a AAonark Boat and Dilly
Section 70S II. F io rd * S la lu ltt B ric k tll Avenue, M ia m i, Florida
Trailer, green m color Dace) No
You hay# Ih irfy IMI day* Norn D i l l , Telephone No 17* T M li 1
AAay j i . IN I , to corf act mo STCN STROM . D A V IS A M O N
FLA tO aC P. v m n o on T railer
**1117. stored at Par ka rt W rackie
Honorable Alan A. Dickay. County TOSH, TOO W. H I Street, P O Boa |
Judge, sam ln olt County Court llN . Seniord. Pievide r o l l , Tel
Service. Sanford
house. Sanlord. F lo rid * 17771, » No 111 1111 and HI* Ih* original
end ih e u n d e rsig n e d a t I h t r lt f ot
you nav# any defenses •* ataael to answer or pleading in Its* OMR a of &gt;
S a m ln o lt C e tm iy , F io r d * , w ill at
m is a cS d n o r r 's im t ig lld a g a ln a l ih* C le rk of sa id Court on or before
11 00 A M , o n in * I t m day of M ay
A D I N I . o tta r lo r sa l* and t a ll lo ­ th* loeTallad a irc ra n Otherwise, m am s day of June. SH I H y o u la iC
•h* a irc ra ft w ill be tortaited Id Ih t 10 do to. • default w ill be entered
in# h ig h e st b id d er, tor cash,
u*a of Ih* Slier iff of Seminal* egtm st you lor Hi* r t l l t f sought In
su b ia c t lo a n y and a ll t s la lln g
nans, a l tn* Fran* ( W a l l D o o r * !
County o r s o d a l Pu blic Auction. in* Com plaint.
th* Sam India C o unty Courthouse in
W IT N E S S m y hand and aatl of,
W IT N E S S m y hand and u a l #f
S a n lo r d . F l o r id a , th y a b ove
m is C ourt on tn* letn day of Atey, sahl Count a f S a m ln olt C eu n iyJ
d e sc rib e d p e rso n a l p roperty
f r y M e. H ilt Sth day of M ay IN I •
IN I
IS E A L I
T n et t a d s a l* it being m ad* 1*
(S E A L )
A R T H U R M B E C K W IT H . JR.
u n i t y tn* te rm s o l t a d W r it at
A rthur M Beckwith
*e C le rk af aeM C ircu it
E lo c u tio n
at C la rk of In* Court
Court
John E Polk. Sharirt
B r: E lta n o r P Burette
• Y C r ir f t iH Pratt or
»
Sam mol# County, F lord*
Deputy Clerk
Deputy C la rk
,
Pu blish AAay JJ, J» A June I, II.
Publish M ay 1.1, IS, 11, with in*
Publish: M ay B. IS. 77. 7*. IN I
u i* on AAay la . IN I.
•TRI
D t l 41
D EI J
DEM O S

law

specifics, it deals with the union's negotiator.
He called Brown “a puppet for his
demand that UMW-covered companies
only subcontract work to firms that pay bosses in the oil industry," which
financially backs many coal operations.
UMW-scale wages and benefits.
Bargaining council members had little
Without this provision, the union (ears
to say Thursday as they left UMW
UMW miners would lose Jobs.
headquaters.
Church told reporters the xtrtke by
"I th'nk we're making some progress,"
160,000 miners "could be settled pretty
quickly” if there la progress at the said Paul Bitchco, International
Executive Board representative from
bargaining table.
Pittsburgh's District l
The strike, now in day 37, has bee"
"We Just talked among ourselves
marred by scattered violence in the coal
fields, much of it directed at nonunion today, that's all," a id Joe Davidson of
mines that have continued to dig and Beckley. W.Va., 1EB representative
from District 9 .
move coaL

t r o t t in g H e r a ld , ta n fo r d , F L

Eddie MfiKoas, 2019 Wiffiomi Are., Sanford, won *150 Last Weak ta POT LUK. At Airport
“ ASTRO” Food Store in Sanford, Joe Schaffer, 219 Woodmen Bird., Sanford won $250 in
POT LUX ert lalie Mary “ 66“ food Store in lafct Mary. POT 1UX ii afto in proyreu each
week ot Cassotterry "66“ Food Store and at Celery “ 66“ Food Ston m Sanford.

• i * t %* K « * •

�E v e n in g H e r a ld
flUM Ml MOI
JOON. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD. FLA. 32/71
A na Code 30W22-26II or 01-9993
Friday. May » , 19I1-4A
W lyne 0 Doyle. Publisher
Thornes Giordano. Managing Editor
R o tert Loventa/ry. Advertising and Circulation Director

A round

Haro* Delivery. Week, SI GO; Month, M B ; I Months, $34.00;
Year, MS00. By Mail: Week. |l . » ; Month. 63.33; t Months,
130.00: Year. 657.00.

Socialist Win
Panics France
The panic on the Paris stock exchange said a lot
about the likely economic consequences of
Socialist Francois Mitterrand's victory in the
French president elections.
At best, Mr. Mitterrand's election to a sevenyear term as president spells serious trouble for a
French economy that, despite its current slump,
had held reasonably strong throughout the
tumultuous energy and monetary shocks of the
1970s.
At worst, a Mitterrand presidency may also be
bad news for a Western alliance within which
France had recently em erged, however
paradoxically, as something resem bling a
relative pillar of strength.
The Mitterrand prescription for curing tho
unemployment and inflation that helped to deny
incumbent President Valery Giscard d'Estaing a
second term is uniformly the wrong medicine for
the ills of the French economy.
The Socialist party platform calls for a sub­
stantial boost in France's minimum wage, makework government jobs for the unemployed, an
increase in the money supply of up to 17 percent
per year, and an ambitious program of industrial
nationalization.
Should these programs be put into effect, the
predictable consequences would include much
more inflation, higher government spending, a
dramatic decline in investment, and falling ex­
ports as France becomes progressively less
competitive on world markets.
All of this undoubtedly would create unem­
ployment faster than Mr. Mitterrand's govern­
ment could solve” it by getting people to work at
the French equivalent of leaf-raking.
No wonder, then, that the franc plunged on
wprld money markets and the Paris exchange had
to be closed abruptly to halt the worst financial
hdmorrhage in decades.
How much of the Socialists' economic program
is implemented depends largely on the outcome of
parliamentary elections Mr. Mitterrand plans to
call in June. At present, the center-right parties
that supported Giscard d'Estaing hold n 100-seat
mpjortty in the National Assembly, a margin
large enough to block most of Mr. Mitterrand's Illadvised schemes.
Thus, the president-elect must hope for a
Socialist majority in the new* assembly to be
elected next month. If the Socialists fall short, as
thiey probably will, they must look for
parliamentary allies on the left, which means a
Socialist-Communist coalition.
flhe Communists, undaunted by their drubbing
In, the first round of France’s twustage
presidential election, will want to pull a Mit­
terrand government further left os the price of
their support.
,That would spell even worse news for the
Ffench economy,
But the most serious consequences of a
Sdcialist-Communist coalition would be felt in
fo reign policy. Under Giscard d'Estaing, France
hi d begun in recent years to lend welcome sup
pt rt to the Western olliance.
Although the French remained outside of
NATO’s formal military structure, Giscard
d'Estaing repeatedly sent troops to bolster
A rican states threatened by Cubans or Libyans,
deployed a sizable naval squadron to the Indian
Otean, and steadily strengthened French forces
Ityit would almost certainly fight on NATO's side
lit any showdown in Europe.
!A Socialist-Communist coalition would no doubt
tijm away from similar initiatives in the future.
Most unfortunately, the election of Francois
Mitterrand is likely to be regretted by the West no
legs than, in time, by the French themselves.

J

BERRY'S WORLD

The Clock
B , M M COOK

Imagine over &gt;,000 determined women mar­
ching toward you with mayhem in their eye*.
No, this t a i l the outbreak of acme angry
feminist movement. This Is the untenable
position of 10 poor wooden pins awaiting the
roOey of 1,000 bowling ball*
Saturday and Sunday at Altamonte Lanes and
Fair Lanes bowling alleys, the Florida Women's
Bowling Association State Tournament conThe Seminole County Women's Bowling
Association very proudly points out that this is
the largest state competition ever.
With 1.492 teams and 1,103 dnqbH and Angies
seta, the tournament breaks the record
established In the 1*77 state tournament as
Sarasota of l.M I teams and 1,301 acts of double*
and singles.
The tournament wU take place every weekend
through J i m B
Roll on ladiee.
3rd Weekend Results May II 17 -Xeaders In
the
FLORIDA
WOMENS
BOWLING
ASSOCIATION IN I CHAMPIONSHIP TOUR­
NAMENT.
CLASS A: 1st N a tl Bank-Homeatead, Greater
Miami, M l; Take Me Along Travel, Hollywood,
B it; Blaine Aviation, Tampa, B39.
CLASS B; WMOP Country dub, Ocala, 2443;
Fliers, Seminole County, M17; Beacon Bowl,
Naples, 107.
CLASS C: Semi- ole Bowl West, Tallahassee,
2373; Dewtr Dyes, Palm Beach County, 2373;

Mid Stale Fed Ini, Citrus County, 2B0.
CALSS D: Johnson k Bakst. PA ., Palm Beach
County, 0 7 , Woods Marine Service, Palm
Beach County, 2304; Five Alive, Lakeland, 2303.
CLASS E: Ace Peal Control, Clearwater, M l ;
Holy RoUera, Indian River, 2006; Tiny Tot Day
Care. No. Brevard, 2031.
DOUBLES
CLASS A: Mickey Engle-Barbara Zglinicki,
S araio ta, 1111; Gl WrubJe-Myla Wexler,
Hollvwood, 1171; Lynn De Kleva-Barbara Laws,
Orlando, 1159.
CLASS B; Arlene Applcbee-Mary Ann
Woefley. SL Lurie C«wnt&gt;, M l ; S&gt;Ui TuckerM iry Brady, Clearwater, MO; Martha BallJean Pnybyta, Orlando, M3.
CLASS C: Nellie RalstwvConnie Spink,
Bradenton, 1141; Helen MirshaD-Ubbie Hand,
Ocala, 1071; Virginia Hllbert-Loia Fletcher,
Daytona Beach, 1061
CLASS D: Marian Stammier-Jeanne Forib e rg , Broward County, 1014; Carolyn
Tomlinson-Dot Thomason, Winter Haven, 1014;
Nile Alien-Dot McDonald, SI. Petersburg. 1000.
G ASS E; Norma Webater-Dorothy Stanch,
Clearwater. NO; Kathy Ingram-Brenda Wine,
South Brevard, *49; Tammy De Grom-Hotly De
Grom, Daytona Beach, 937.
SINGLES
CLASS A: Wendy Gorman, Seminole County,
&lt;06; Lila Coleman, Orlando, 140; A rran Lum­
pkins, Greater Miami, &lt;34.
CLASS B; Bennie Hawn, Pensacola, 60S;

Daria Hyaell Clearwater. *03; Elaine LaFrance,
Ocala. 517; Bernice JeWaon. Gainesville, 3*7.
CLASS C: Pat Lyle, Winter Haven, 304;
B arbara Buaklrk, G e arw ater, 376; Helen
Harrison, Seminole County, 3 d
CLASS D: Jan Morrison, Lakeland, 370; Ludy
Beaver, SL Augustine. 331; Barbara Fntauff,
Lee County, 577.
CLASS E: Mary Fradette. Panama City, 332;
Dot Thomason, Winter Haven, 340; Kathy Wolf,
Osceola, 301.
ALL EVENTS (after 2nd weekend)
CLASS A: Barbers ZgUnlckt, Sarasota, 177*.
CLASS B; Dene Roberts, Gearwater, 1137.
CLASS C: Christine Bennett, Orlando. 1321
CLASS D; Cherie B u m . Seminole County,

lid
CLASS E: Dot Thomason, Winter Haven, 143*.
OVERALL HIGH GAME; Lila Coleman,
Orlando, 2 d
OVERA1X HIGH SERIES: Wendy Gorman,
Seminole County, 666.
ALL SPARE GAME: Myrtle Ann Smith,
DeLand. I d (bowled tod weekend); Karen
Shuar, Charlotte County, 117.
TRIPLICATE: Jlnl Petrocelll, Charlotie
County, 131
lit &lt;00 SERIES: Lenori Joyce Koker, Citrus
County, MO &lt;ave-l&lt;7); Libble Hand, Ocala, &lt;34
(ave-143).
100 PINS OVER AVERAGE: Ubbie Hand,
Ocala, 343.
All scores subject to verification

ROBERT WALTERS

JA C K ANDERSON

Formula
For A
Tragedy

U.S.
Firms
Seek AID
WASHINGTON - I've already reported
that Egyptian millionaires and comipt
bureaucrat! are growing fat on U A. economic
aid, while the improvertahed fellaheen wait
for some of Uncle Sam's billions to trickle
down to them.
There la another group that is benefiting
from Ih# Agency for International
Development money bring lavished on Egypt
as part of the UJ . government's “reward" to
Anwar Sadat for signing peace accords with
Israel. That group la American corporations.
And like the Egyptian beneficiaries, they a rt
getting fat at the US. taxpayers' expense
The law requires that recipients of AID
loans “buy American.'' It'i a logical
requirement. There's no reason American
taxpayers should lend money at giveaway
rates to businessmen or nations to they can
hire German or Japanese companies to build
their dams or factories And indeed, many
AID borrowers acknowledge that without the
inducement of AID funds they probably would
have thrown their business elsewhere.
The result la that score* of American firms
have ari up branch offices In Cairo to wangle
their share of the AID pie. And they have
taken to lobbying the agency for help In
competing with European companies for
lucrative Egyptian development contract!
For example, AID is currently par­
ticipating with the World Bank and tome
European countries to Install a new telephone
aystern in Cairo. Now American business
representative* are pressuring AID to taka
the lead on the follow-up project — switching
itsUoru for long-distance calls.
"We want AID to give more funding, soU.S
manufacturers will gat the market for the
switches," said on* American telecom­
munications consultant, adding: "O ther
governments help their Industries. It’s time
we started helping ours."
But in their scramble for profits, American
corporations often take advantage of the
“edge” that AID gives them. Several
Egyptian businessmen complained that US.
exporters often jack their prices up when AID
money ts Involved, knowing that the Egyp­
tians are required to buy American.
Adel K o i k e , the owner of a candy factory
tn Cairo, tc4d my roving correspondent Peter
Grant that the price of a sugar pulverising
machine ha bought from a New Jersey
company had gone from 67.900 to 611,000 in
just two years — a 41 percent Increase. "It ti
against the reason of the AID program," he
complained.
Sometimes, tn fact. It appears that steering
contracts to American firm* la the primary
goal of tha AID program.
For example, Adel Gabr, the Egyptian
representative of the Multi-Electric Co. of
Chicago, had been trying to win a government
contract to put in a lighting system at Aswan
airport. Gabr said the business was about to
go to a Dutch firm. But at the last minute,
AID cam* through with a 6600,000 loan,
enabling Multi-Electric to get the contract

D O N GRAFF

Rome And Beyond
The shooting of Pope John Paul II
demonstraUe a grim truth about violence
directed at public persona 11lie*: The problem
is worldwide; It is by no mean* an American
speciality.
It also makes several points about the
difficulties In dealing with the problem,
beyond the obvious one of providing some
reasonable degree of security for the
powerful and celebrated without isolating
them from the public entirely.
The pop* was scarcely out of surgery before
several governments with good reasons for
taking special interest were at discreet odds
over aspects of the situation other than the
victim's condition.
The would-be assassin is a Turkish
national, wanted for murder at home, who
spent the last year and a half underground in
Weetem Europe. Turkey, making the point
that It actively sought his apprehension,
seems to think the Europeans were leas active
In assisting. In particular West Germany,
where he was known to be at one time but
which was unable to locate him despite
repeated tip* from the Turks.
For their part, the Germans say they tried.
But the fugitive, using false names and forged
identity documents, had tha advantage of the
protective cover provided by the more than a
million Turks in Germany's foreign labor
force. Under the circumstances, anyone with
any skill at all in leading a clandestine
existence could be tpecled to elude detection
In an open society.
A point supported by other interested
parties, including U.S. State Department
officials chargee with monitoring terrorist
activities and Interpol, the international
police organisation that ts primarily an in­
formation-exchange operation. The Utter
notes that the sheer volume of travelers
within and between countries, with few
border formalities anymore, enable* wanted
Individuals to move about with virtual im­

punity.
It U a point that does notlmpreaa the Turks,
quite likely In part because theirs ts not an
open society these days
Turkey hai been under a military govern­
ment line* Utt September when the general!
stepped In — for the third time since World
War 11 — to hall the ctvtlUn government's
descent Iran democracy Into anarchy.
Assassination of public figures and political
foes had become epidemic. Strife between
religious groups — the dwindling Christian
minority, Moslems and sects within (he
majority Moslem community — was ap­
proaching civil war. Beset Ly Inflation and an
immense and unrepayable foreign debt, the
economy was approaching collapse.
To give them their due, the generals have
slowed inflation and curbed internal
terrorism. But at a price. Political prisoners
number in the tens of thousands and there
have been substantiated reports of torture.
And there is no Indication that they have
made any lasting progress toward solving
Turkey'i real problem — the country's ability
to complete the revolution begun by Kernel
Ataturk more than half a century ago with the
goal of transforming Turkey Into a Westernstyle secular democracy. Periodically under
the pressures of religious fanaticism and
political extremism, the rule of law breaks
down and gives way to the rule of force.
The pope's assailant is very much a product
of his troubled country, a religious and
political extremist releasing the hatreds
arising from Turkey's national contradictions
and conflicts In violence upon a world figure.
Su lung as there are open societies in which
public personalities make them selves
available to the public, and to long as there
a rt troubled societies and sodal situations
producing troubled personalities, there can
be no guaranteeing the security of president
or pope.

WASHINGTON (N E A )- A small group of
President Reagan's most senior advisers has
taken an action on an Increasingly important
global Issue that almost certainly will isolate
this country from virtually every other nation
In the world.
Ignoring humanitarian pleas and rejecting
the advice of highly qualified professionals,
the president's aides hare decided to commit
the United Slates to opposing a proposed code
governing the advertising, promoting and
marketing of Infant formula.
Efforts to secure an International con­
sensus on the issue were launched two yean
ago by a pair of United Nations agencies,
UNICEF and the World Health Organisation '
A final vote is expected at the annual meeting
of the World Health Assembly, being held this
month in Geneva, Swl tier land.
Senior Officials tn the State Department
and the Department of Health and Human
Services - most of them Reagan's own ap­
pointees — had reservations about the
proposed code but were equally concerned
about the ramifications of a negative vote by
this country's delegation on a proposal
supported by more than 130 other nations.
They advanced two alternative strategies
negotiate to secure modifications that would
meet the Reagan administration's objection!
by weakening the cod* or, if the effort failed,
abstain during the voting.
Elliot Abrams, assistant secretary of state
for International organisation affairs, was
dispatched to Geneva earlier this year to gain
commitments for those concessions and
returned believing that he had been suc­
cessful.
Abrams' mission was speciflcaDy approved
by Deputy Secretary of State WUllam P.
Clark, a longtime personal friend and
political ally of the president
But Clark's plan to defuse the potentially
explosive situation through a carefully
crafted compromise reportedly angered
Edwin Meese III, the president's counselor
and moat senior adviser on policy matters
On a Friday evening in early May, Meese
convened a White House meeting at which he
resolved the Issue with Lyn Nofxiger.
assistants the president for political affaire;
Martin Andenon, assistant to the president
for policy development; and Richard V.
Allen, assistant to the president for national
security affaire.
In a decision that was both Inhumane and •
unjustifiable, that select group agreed to
place this country on record In opposition to a
program that could protect the health and
save the lives of thousands of children every
year.
The draft code has been rigorously opposed
Dy a trio of domestic corporations that share
in the Industry'a estimated $3 billion worth of
International sales annually.
They are Abbot Laboratories, whose Ross
Laboratories subsidiary makes laomil arel
Slmilac; Bristol-Myers Co., whose Mead
Johnson subsidiary produces Enfamil.

EDUCATION WORLD

Opportunities Abound In Business

Do you hue tuch a thing as a prom night
loan'?"

f *

Py JAMES V. HIGGINS
UP1 Auto Writer
DETROIT (U P !|— Take heart, liberal arts
majors — General Motors Carpi wants you.
TTut, tits No. 1 automaker's hiring has been
severely restricted by the auto Industry', twoyear slump, dimming short-term prospects.
It's also true that the company is Mghly
oriented toward the technical and scientific.
But that doesn't diminish GM's ultimate
Interest In attracting sizable numbers of
college graduate* whoa* analytical and
language skills have been booed In a liberal
aria program, said the company's director of
worldwide salaried personnel
Participating in a recent panel diacuaiion
on nonacademic carters for history majors,
GM's William P. MacKinnon said 'real op­
portunities" salat for noo-technical graduates
in mainstream areas of tha corporation.
GM, MacKinnon said, la "seeking out the

very beat liberal aria graduate because we
believe, baaed on our experience, that they
will continue to bring a level of alertness,
adaptability and overall Intelligence to us
that la sometime* lacking In the unrtcrulted
or 'walk-ln' candidate."
Of GM's approximately 120,000 salaried
employees tn the United States, 40,000 are
colkeg* graduates and about 6,000 earned
liberal arts degrees. Many of (be liberal arts
graikiates are working in technical and
manufacturing areas
GM's objective, MacKinnon said, is to in­
crease the proportion of college graduates tn
its salaried work force. It wants to attract
•bout 3,300 new graduates each year and aa
many as one-third of Un h probably will have
liberal arts degrees, he said.
"Irrespective of area of study, we arc
looking for evidence of academic excellence,
evidence of social and leadership skills and

r ~~Mirrf ~r —J

evidence of Interest In private industry and
the automobile businm ," he laid.
Recruits who have become "top per­
formers" at CM normally were distinguished
by highest grade point averages. Involvement
tn student organizations'end same ties to
private Industry, usually through summer
jobs, he u td .
“We generally find that people who have
excelled in these areas are better able to
write, apeak and listen effectively,"
MacKinnon said.
"If these sound to you like only mythical
attributes of tha good employee, let me assure
you that we regard them as very real skills,
we value them highly and we are (waging
actively to locale people with these talents."
Here are MacKinnon's recommendations to
liberal arts graduates who want to pursue a
nonacademic career:
—Think about career planning early and

become familiar with the p rap ecti;
—Emphasize building strong oral an
written communications skills, mindful of th
high priority employer* place on those at
tributes;
-D o research on business organisation,
and plan n sales approach to get the job y«
want and can do well;
-Becam e involved in campus ectivttie
"which will develop leadership, planning an
organizing skills;”
—Uae summer employment to develop
knowledge of busmen organisations;
-D on't automatically reject large com
parties - their diversity and flexibility can b
an advantage;
-Combine an undergraduate liberal a rt
degree with a mejtere degree In business —i
combination MacKinnon described aa "un
beatable."

�OURSELVES
Ev*ntaf Herald, Sanford. FL

Friday,May n . INI—SA

Tom

Davis

JO A N MADISON TO HEAD

tlrhqa

AMERICAN UNIVERSITY WOMEN

Gardening

Moss Sign
O f Southern
H eritage
At we etm e to the end of Hay there la (till a lot to do around
the home. Let'i look at tome questions and answers that may
interest you:
Q. I have Spanish most in my trees. Should this be removed?
Also Is there any useful purpose for tyatU h
A. Spanish moss is a lichen-like plant whkb belong to the
family BremeUaceae. It la not a true moss since it produces
tiny, inmnspicous, yellowish-green flowers. The stems and
leaves are gray, thnad-like appendages usually found draping
from trees, especially live oaks and cypr esses.
It is an epiphyte that grows on other plants without taking
water and nutrition from the plants on which it grows. The
mass obtains moisture from the a ir by means of the scsie-hairs
that give the moss its gray coloring.
In many southern states Spanish moss is used as a packing
material. At one time It was commonly used as a mattress
material, and in upholstery work. The moss was collected
from trees and placed «i racks In the sun to dry. Upon drying
the moss becomes very thrtad-Uke and changes in color from
gray to black.
Today, Sparish moas la commonplace in many southern
gardens. It sets a tropical atmosphere to the garden, adding
charm and grace, and is a reminder of the heritage of the
south.
Spanish moss usually la s Utile or not detrimental effect on a
host tree. However, the abundance of Spanish moss has been
damaging to some southern commercial crops, particularly
pecans.
The moss shades the tree* and retard! growth, preventing
storage of the necessary carbohydrates for pecan production.
Spanish moss can be killed by spraying tree* with a copper
fungicide before growth begins in the spring.
Every year my poinaettia plants grow up very tall with few
flowers, flow can 1 get them to branch out more?
A compact plant may be obtained at flowering time, rather
than one with a few long, unbranched canes, if the plants are
pruned several times during the growing season.
The new growth, after It Is U Inches kng, should be cut back,
leaving 4 leaves on shoot. This operation taouid be repealed
every time the new growth develops until about September It.
Pruning in this manner wtU produce a nice compact plant
with many flowers, Pruning after September 10 may Interfere
with flowering, as these plants set their buds soon after
October 10.
Q. I've heard that one should use Insecticide qtrajrs to
control Liwn caterpillars. What kind of caterpillars would
attack a lawn.
A. Various lawn caterpillars, primarily the tropical sod
webworm and fall armyworm, are important pests of lawns In
Florida.
Webworm and armyworm Urvea feed on almost all of the
commonly grown grasses In Florida. The newly hatched
larvae are unable to bite out pieces of grass, but only scrape
away grass cells from one side of the grass blade and cause
little visible damage to the grass.
When they approach maturity however, damage appear* to
show up almost overnight with notches chewed out along the
aides of the blades and the grass has a ragged appearance.
Damaged areas are often first noticed along hedges and flowtr
beds.
Injury begin* In a few jpoti with the injured areai being only
1 or 1 feet across These spots enlarge, fuse and encompass
large areas of lawns tn heavy Infestation. When the grass is
severty damaged during hot, dry weather, tt may be killed
However, if the Infested grow is kept well watered. It can
recover from a Urge amount of webworm feeding
Armyworm if similar to that of wetratarns. When the larvae
are small, they scrape away tissues from the surface of the
blades leaving a colorless, membranous area at the tip of the
grass blade.
When it is establUhed that sod webwerms or other lawn
caterpillar* are the problem, start the control
promptly. Sod webworms, in particular,
development very quickly after they reach a sire where
cause noticeable damage. Recommended materials
duration, sevta, or dtaxinon sprays.
*Q. la s t spring my bean plants got a lot of small brown spots
on the leaves. What can I do to prevent thU?
A. TTila Is a fungus disease called bean ru s t It occurs on the
lea ves and sometimes the pods In Florida. The first evidence of
the disease is the presence of small pale yellow spots on the
upper side of the affected leaves.
Usually, two to three days later, cinnamon-brown pustules
about one-sixteenth Inch tn diameter appear tn the yellow p o ti
and break open, exposing the spores.
Use a fungicide wch t i maneb at 7-day Intervals until a few
days before harvest Also avoid using sprinklers for irrigation,
since this will tend to aggravate the situation It is best to plant
rust resistant or tolerant varieties to hdp avoid this problem.
Harvester (map bean 1, Dade or McCsslan (pole bean) ar good
ones.
Q. The squash on my plants aren't developing They grow a
bttle and then fall off. li a disease causing this?
A. This problem Isn't caused by disease but is most likely
due to lack of pollination of the squash. Squash has both male
and female flower on each ptanL Each female Oowtr has what
lnnti like a tiny squash attached to the petals.. The male
flowers do not have this.
The squash will develop only if pollination ard fertilisation
h a v e taken place. This is uually done by insects, particularly
bees. If Itese are not active in your garden area, however, you
may accomplish pollination by touching from the male flower
to tte female flower with you finger or an artist's b ra * . The
squash should then develop normally.
All Extension programs are open to anyone regardless of
race, color, sex or national origin.

M iry Bilk, outgoing president of the American
Association of Unlvenity Women, second from
left, presents givel to newly Instilled president.
Join Madison. Officers for the 1*81-82 y eir are,
J m e Carroll, tren u rer; Laurie Linditey,
secretary: P it Hurd, second vice-president; and
Joy Adams, first vice-president. The installation
wai held at the Quality Inn, Longwood. An
orientation meeting for new members will be held
at 7 p.m., June -1, at the Altamonte Community
Chapel. 201 Highway US. Altamonte Springs.

G re a te st Treasures' A re Lov
DEAR ABBY: Two men
who claim to be father and
adopted son just bought an old
mansion across the street and
fixed it up. We notice a very
suspicious mixture of com­
pany coming and going at at)
hours — blacks, whites,
Orientals, women who look
like men and men who look
like women. We even saw a
nun and a priest go Inside.
People come in everything
from
m otorcycles
to
Cadillacs.
ThU has alw ays been
considered cm of the finest
sections of San Francisco, and
these weirdos are giving it a
bad name. How ran we im­
prove the neighborhood?
NOB HILL RESIDENTS
DEAR RESIDENTS: Ya*
could move.
DEAR ABBY: My mother
is having a nervous break­
down. Her home was robbed

last week and she loot all her
jewelry and silver. (No In­
surance.)
You had a letter tn your
column some time ago from a
woman who had lost all her
treasures in a flash flood.
Your reply was brilliant Now
I'm sorry I didn't clip it out
and save it to I could show It Uiners and when I opened
to my mother. It might put them, all t found was mud and
m aterial things in their water!
I seems that a part of my
proper perspective. Please
try tn find that column and life is gone, and I am heart­
sick over I t I am COand have
run it again. Thank you.
PALM SPRINGS had a very happy life. Our
DEAR PAUL SPRINGS: 1 children are married and
gone, and there are just the
found I t And here it is:
DEAR ABBY: About a two of us.
I've tried to keep busy and
month ago we had a flash
flood, and I lost nearly all the not dwell an my loss, but it is
treasures 1 had saved far 43 on my mind constantly. I with
years. Albums filled with 1 could (cruel this terrible
*
pictures and snapshots, let­ nightmare.
Somenow I feel that you can
ters, clippings — none ot
which can be replaced. 1 had help me. Abby, have you ever
them stared in plastic con- lost any of your Ire*wires1

Dear

And If you have, how did you
get over It?
DEPRESSED
DEAR DEPRESSED: Yes,
dear. 1 lost my beautiful
mother la IMS. | She was only
57.) And a few y e a n later, I
lost a wonderful father, life
w astll. And not a day passes
but I don’t thank God for
letting me have my parents
h r *s hug s i t did. I know
many who were sol nearly ai
b in led as L aad I think of
those who have survived a far
grealrr tragedy — losing their
rkUdrta.
New, what were you saying
about dippings aad pictures
aad other "treasures?"
DEAR ABBY: 1 own my
own business and I hire many
high school students for parttime work. Abbv. you cannot
imagine how many parents
caU me and ask if I have a Job
for Ann or Tom!

If Ann and Tom want to
work, 1 think they should do
the asking. Having Mama or
Dad ask for them doesn't say
much far the child's initiative.
1 feel It is Important for
young people to work and I
give u many of them a break
as I can, but I have made it a
policy never to hire anyone
whose mother or father calls
and asks me to give the child a
job. If a boy or girls Is old
enough to draw a salary, he or
she is old enough to ask for a
job,
1 am sure other employers
share my viewpoint And if
this letter helps to wake up

Just one teen-ager, II will have j
been worth the time I look to .
write it.
E. IN MINNEAPOLIS ,
DEAR E : I'm glad you.
wrote. I'm sure you woke op
more than Joit Me leco-agrr. ,
(Aad a few parent*, too.)
Getting married? Whether
you want a formal church
wedding t r a simple, “do-. your-own-thing" ceremony , , '
get Abby'* new booklet. Send '
II plus a kng, w If-addressed, !
stamped ( tt cents) envelope
to: Abby'i Wedding Booklet (
137 lask'y Drive, Beverly 1
Mills. Calif. t0]12.

CALENDAR
SATURDAY, MAVtt
Casselberry AA, closed, I p m , Aacension t other an
Church.
SUNDAY, MAY t4
RaDrown and rtrand daactag, I p.m„ Temple
Shalom, Providence and Elkcam Boulevards, Deltona.
S em in o le AA, 3 p m , open. Crossroad*, Ml ta k a
Minnie Drive, Sanford.
Sanford Big Book AA, 7 p m , Flvid* Power and
Light, Sanford.
“ Yooag-at-Heart" danrr. t p m , DeBary Com­
munity Center, Shell Road, DeBary. Instruction, 7:30
p m . Open to public.
Memorial Day reremoolr* by Seminole County
Veterans of Foreign Wars, I p m , Alt Faiths Memorial
Park, lak e Drive, Casselberry. Open to public.
O atral Florida Blood Rank mobile urUI, 1:30 a m to
1:30 p in., All Souls Church parking lot, Mh and Oak,
Sanford. For information call 323-3C93.
MONDAY, MAVIS
Wright Watchers, 7 p m , Florida Federal SAL,
Altamonte Springs.
Sanford At-Aaou, 1 p m . First United Methodist
Church, Sanford.
Sanford AA. I p .m . INI W. First St.
TOPS Chapter 71, 7 p.m., over Baptist Church,
Crystal lake and Country Club, lak e Mary.
A3Ansa, 8 p.m., recreation hall behind StrombergCarlson.
Mrigat Watchers, 10 a /n ., Ascension lather an
Church, Casselberry.
Sanford Rotary, noon, Sanford Civic Center.

New officer* of Sanford Moose Lodge No. 1851 for 19HI-K2.

Garcia Installed Moose Governor
Sanford Moose lodge No. 1131 (Loyal Order of Moose)
Installed new officers for ltU JK1. Ralph Garcia Jr. was
Installed as Governor.
He originally joined the Loyal Order of Moose In June,
1M7 at East Rain tile, W. Va.; and after an absence of a
few year* while serving tn the USAF he was must*led in
the Sanford lodge in 1171.
G ard a has held the chairs of SgL of Arms, Trustee,
Prairie and Jr. Governor. He is a legionnaire and la
active in the Ritual Program.

He is married and resides in Sanford with his wife,
Marilyn.
Newly Installed officers are: seated frun left, Howard
Price, secretary; Ralph G arda Jr., Governor; Robert
Fanner, Jr. Governor; David Powell, Jr. Past Governor;
standing Clyde Burton, SgL Of Arms; L'arieton DuBois,
treasurer; Glenn Miller, trustee; Gregory Foye, trustee;
Norval Angle, Outer Guard; Wilbur Yarborough, Prelate;
Joe Hicks, Inner Guard; and Eddie Sessions, trustee.
Brothers Price and Yarborough hold the highest degree
given by the Loyal Order of Moose, The Pilgrim Degree.

M oreen Toastmaster Club, 7:13 a m .
Holiday Inn, Wymore Hoad, Altamonte Springs.
Free Dating ncrvlce far mature adults, I p.m.,
Deltona Public lib ra ry , IN I Providence Boulevard.
South Seminole AA, noon, Mental Health Center,
Robin Hoad, Altamonte Spring*.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 17
Dr. Hear; B. R aclb u ra J*. will lecture an
prevention of heart attacks tn Uw University of Central
Florida College of Health "Issues In Health Car"
aeries, 1 p m , UCF Science Auditorium.
Southeast Regional Self-Help Homing Conference,
Holiday Inn, 1-4 and State Road 43*. Altamonte
Spring! Tour of Apopka self-he Ip program, 3 p.m
Conference continues through Friday,
Faal B attar. . .
Sleep B a tta r ...
In A ir Conditioned
Com Ior t —

Rollins Sots
Graduation

Search Is On For
Outstanding Dad
June 11 ia Father's Day.
The Herald is searching for the annual "Outstanding
Dad," but we need the help of readers.
TtU us in your own words srby you think a certain father
is outstanding. First, writs your name, full address and
telephone number at the top of a page. Then add the name
of your candidate, giving tus full name, address and
telephone number. About a page and ooe-half of In­
formation on standard sixe paper is sufficient
Submit entries to OURSELVES Editor Doris Dietrich,
JOB N. French A n ., Sanford, 3771, no later than noon on
June 11.
UR. S EY M O U R

Rollins
illuu College President
D&lt; 71u ile u s Seymour will
!er more than 700
confer
Bachelors and M asters
Degrees on Rollins i t identi at
th r e e C o m m e n c e m e n t
ceremonies scheduled for
Saturday and Sunday.
Tb* dam of IN I will in­
clude graduates from the four
divisions of Rollins College:
the undergraduate College of
Arts A Sciences, the School of
Continuing E ducation, the
School of Education k Human
Development
and
the
Crammer Graduate School of
Business.

F in lan d ’* literacy f a i t
p a rc a n t

Central

, We a i f e i l f t ti C e n tra l—

jFG R T H F B E S T

A ir Conditioning Sr f la m

TV S E R V I C E

[A I-I I PLUMBING A
w r u u hea tin g inc

C A L L M IL L E R S
PH H I t i l l

feritr*

Iflaclric

Ph lit lift

&lt;i»ni

1001 S tn lo rd A»* S a n lo id

D O N 'T C A M B L K
w lthyour Intorancal
-C A U r

TONY
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IN S U R A N C E

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322-0283

IN S U R A N C E

�SPO R TS
»A—Ev««tin« Herald, laniard, FI.

Friday, May 23. i n i

Adcock Prevails IM P

C lem Leonard Shell
Falls O ff Roofing
P in t Federal was o u tfit seven to five
Thursday but still managed to beat
Sunnlland Corporation 74 to push Its
Sanford Little National League record to
IM .
In other games, Clem Leonard Shell
rallied to beat the Railroaders 11-11,
while eecond place Poppa Jay'a bombed
Sanford D.A.V. W
In today's action In the Sanford Junior
League, Moose plays Kiwanls at I p m. at
Chase Park, while Rotary battles Rika at
7 p.m.
Sunnlland Corporation scored a single
run In the top of the first, but First
Federal surged ahead 11 on consecutive
twoaiut singles by Andy Griffin, Craig
Olson and Kalvln Davis.
Sunnlland tied the game with a single
run In the too of the third, but FLnt
Federal regained the lead with three
runs In the bottom of the third. Rickey
Crisp opened the Inning with a walk,
Olson walked with two outs and Kalvln
Davis belted ■ three-run homer.
Sunntlsnd picked up a single run In the
top of the fourth, but Dixon padded the
margin with a tworun homer In the

bottom of the fifth.
Dixon and Davis eadi had a single and
homer for First Federal. Dwight Brinson
had a triple and single far Sunnlland
Corporation, while O scar M erthie
slammed a double and single and Tim
Graham rapped two stnglea.
The Railroaders scored 10 runs In the
top of the first Inning and led 11-1 after
two and a half Innings. Rut Clem laonard
Shell scored four runs In the third and
eight In the fourth to take a 11-11 lead
while starting pitcher David Goldstick
blanked the Railroaders In the fourth and
filth frames and relief pitcher Mike
Grom came on to atrike out the aide in the
sixth.
Goldstick, the winning pitcher, had
half of his team's six hits.
Terrance Can had a double and single
for the Railroaders, while J.D. Paul
added two singles.
Poppa Jay'a got off to a slow start,
leading only 14 after two innings. Gut a
12-nui third Inning put Poppa Ja y 's on
easy street
Ronald Blake had two singles and a
home run and drove In six runs for the

winners Blake and Stewart Gordon both
blasted Ihree-nm homers during a sevenrun fourth Inning.
Jeff Blake had three singles for the
winners, while Willie McCloud and
Lawrence Ayers had two singles each.
Reginald Lawrence and Ira Hall Jr.
had the only hits for the loser*.
lu M M lin S Ceroerotwn
101 111 — 4 1 1
f irst V t O t r ll
707 01* — 7 1 I
WP - C u t* 0110" n o t L P — T oo" e m i t
t i l l Hitlers Sunmtbnd Corporation — Tim
Or»"»m ] 1. D w g M Brinson 1 S double. O tto r
M erlhie 1 a double. Todd 0 avals 1 1. f i r si
Fadaral - Craig O iia n 11 home run. K alvln
Davit 1 ] home run, Andy C rlH m 11

ea ilrta d fri

00)11 000-

• I

Clam L fo a trd W a ll
10a K a — II a I
* e - D* rid Golds lie it ( 1 11 L P — Tarranaa
Carr |1 II H itte rs -n a ilre a d a fs - J.D P a u li
X Terrence C a rr 1 a double. M ika Boyd I X
1harem Tephebock I a double. C ra ig W alker 1 a
double. Waiter Hopson t a. Clam Leonard snail
— David o o to tiK k i a. D avid re te n a n I X
kronen! Locus 1 1. M ika G ross 1 a
Peg p eJA r't
101 III 1 — 10 11 1
laniard D A V
00] I — 1 1 0
WP ~ Willie McCloud (111 L P - Dwight
Everett (S a l Hitters Poppa Ja r'S — B e n tid
B ia k t 1 a home run. j t t t P la te 1 4 Law rence
Ayers I X W illie McCloud 1 4 Slew art Gordon
11 home run. Dertf* Debote 1 a. D.A.V. —
Kegineid Lawrence 11. Ire H e ll J r I I

-

H erald P h e le i by Ten Vincent

U m p ir e C hip S a u n d e rs (f a r r i g h t i s i g n a ls a n infield fly ru le a s th r e e A dcock
p la y e r s s tr u g g le fo r an e lu siv e p o p fly . A d co ck c a m e up w ith tw o la s t-in n in g ru n s
to d r o p C le m la-n n u rd Shell fro m th e u n b e a tr n s 11-10.

Federal Stops Sunniland
Adcock Roofing scored a pair of last
Inning runs and nipped previously un­
beaten Clem Leonard Shell 11-10 as the
record half of the Sanford Pee Wee
League season opened Thursday.
Rlnker M aterials edged Bulch's
Chevron IM1 In Thursday's other game.
Ken Kern's Garage plays Seminole
Sporting Goods at i p.m. today at Fort
Mellon Park.
Clem Leonard Shell was VO an t had
already clinched the first half cham­
pionship going Into Thursday's game.
Adcock notched Its fifth consecutive win
after dropping the season opener to Clem
Leonard Shell.
Anton Reid was the star for Adcock
Roofing, two-time defending Pee Wee
league champ. He had a triple, double
and single In three trips to the plate and
drove In a winning run..
Reid was a&gt;to the winning pitcher,
working In relief of starter John Bryant.
Each learn scored three runs In the
first inning. Clem Leonard Shell pushed a
tingle run across the plate In the top of
the second, but Adcock Roofing scored a

When In doubt, call ’em out. Umpire llrrky Cush gets ready to signal Adcock's
John Bryant out at the plate as Clem Leonard Shell catcher Bill Shaw makes the
tag. Adcock's Brian Howard takes a look with Cush.

pair of runs in the bottom of the second to Inning, taking a 9-3 lead. Bulch’s Chevron
□ut-scored Ktnker four to two in the
take the lead for the first lime.
Clem Leonard picked up an unearned second (rame and then pushed (our more
run in the third and Adcock Roofing runs across the plate In the top of the
padded its lead with four runs In the third to lie the score at 11-11.
(tinker used a leadoff walk to score the
bottom of the third. Clem Leonard Shell
relief pitcher Bill Shaw, the eventual winning run in the bottom of the third.
loser, was greeted by Jim Kitchenka with Eric Small had the only hit of the Inning,
a three-run homer that i vpped the four- a single.
Stev e Johnson had one of just three hits
run effort.
The Shell nine didn't give up, though, for (tinker Materials, a three-run homer
and scored five runs in the top of the in the first inning.
Wayne Palmer had a pair of doubles
fourth to regain the lead. The big hit of
the inning w ai a bases-loaded single by for Butch's Chevron.
Michael Hartman thaat scored all three
111 1 — 10 t 1
runs and tied the game. Hartman scored Clem Leone* d Sbyll
Adore Reeling
114 1— 11 I 1
the i‘o-ahead run on a pincb-hil single by W
P Anion B y.a (1 II L P
BUI Shew I I I).
Al Perkins.
H IT T E R S C lem Leonerd SIWII
M.cheel
John Bryant and Brian Howard drew Hortmnn 1 X A l P k fk .n l 1 I. M ,chert Grsdy I
I. J rtl D rrr I 1 duubie, B ill Shea 11; Adcock
walks lo open the fourth inning fur Rooting Anton R tld 1 1 triply, doubly. Jim
Adcock Roofing and Held smash*! a Kitchenke 1 1 homy run. John B ry tM 1 1.
7*4-11 t 1
triple to score them both and win the Dutch * Chyvron
Rtnkyr M y ly r ty ti
T il- 1 1 1 0
game.
W P E lb y rl W illio m i II II L P K erry Wiggins
Hartman had two hits lo lead the losers (111 H IT T E R S Bulch'S Chevron W irn y
Pyim rv n tara doubles, nevry Wiggins I I
at the plate.
ckruhle. Shawn W yihm glon I I doubly, Angus"
Rlnker Materials scored nine runs on Morgan I I. R ln ker M e le r le ll Steve Jotinlon
just two hits in (he bottom of the first I 1 homy tun. E r ic S m all 17. W illiam Mays 1 1

Waisanen, Dellarco, Partlow Pace Dell s Auction Soccer Victory
Sanford Dell's Auction 060 received
goals from Tim Waisanen and Jamie
Dellarco along with a standout goalie
keeping performance from Patrick
Partlow to blank Sanford 001 34 In
Sanford Soccer Club age 10 and under
action last Saturday.
Waisanen tallied his goal on an assist
from Jay Feutrhahn, while Dellarco
booted home a penalty kick.
Partlow turned away numerous shots
throughout the game to preserve (he M

shutout. Dell's Auction travels to Union
Park Saturday to take on Southeast
Orange. They are 3-1-2 overall.
In an age 10 ltd under “ B" division
conteat, Pine Itllli. downed Sanford New
Smyrna Speedway 4-1 to drop SNSd to *■
7 on the year.
Phil Cox and Chuk Roll booled the
Speedway scores. Roll added an assist
as did Cox. Saturday, Sanford New
Smyrna Speedway meets Winter Park
at Brookshire at 3 p.m.

Age 11 and L’ndrt
Sanford Boatworkx 380 battled lo a 3-3
deadlock with Winter Park W last
Saturday in "B" division action.
Boatworka got first half goal from

Sauteed Soccflt CM
Shea Whigham and two second half
goals from Matt Albert and Chris Ray.
Albert assisted on Ray's goaL
Tim Dcppen and Aaron Adamson

were defensive standouts, while
Whigham, Albert and Ray performed
well offensively.

lone tally. 3-3-2 Rich Plan of Florida
hosts Pine Hills Saturday at 2 p.m. at
Sanford Airport.

3-3-3 Sanford Boatworka hosts
Downtown at the Sanford Airport
Saturday al 13.30 p.m. Saturday.

Winter Park 301 nudged across a first
hall goal Saturday as the Wildcats
nipped Sanford Kiwams ZOO l-o In "t"'
division play.

In another “ B " division clash,
Maitland 380 scored four second period
goals lo maul Sanford Rich Plan ol
Florida 8-1.
Alex. Piquer scored an unassisted
goal in the first period for Rich Plan's

Damon Tackett played outstanding
defense for Kiwanls who dropped to 14l for the season. Kiwanls entertains
Southeast Orange at 3:30 p.m. Saturday
at Sanford Airport.

Age Eight and Under
F.C. United 860 pushed across s final
period goal Saturday to drop Sanford
Burger King 14 In "B ” division soccer
sctlon.
C enter-hsH bark Raymond Tossl
played a good position game lor Burger
King who dropped to 3-34. They travel
to Rrd Bug Park Saturday to take on
F.C. United 880 at 12:20 p.m.
There were no age 14 and under or
age IS and under games played last
Saturday.

Pace Lassie Wins
Lawanda Roberts smacked two
Ipme runs and scored three runs to
Igad Sanford Optimist to a 334 rout
«rer Kiwanls In Laaslt softball action
Thursday.
j In another Lassie contest, Mildred
Bailey crashed a grand slam homer
ahd drove In six runs s i Cardinal
Industries came from behind to whip
qowt America 114.
;U s Gahn stroked three hits as
Uiwe'i stamped Cooper's 344 In
Women's League play. Celery City
■bored seven runs In the last Inning to
tf&gt; Flagship 11-10.
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BAYHEAD'S
BEST

Hayhead Ladies and Guests Tournament Director Hettye Reagan (left)
presents tournament awards lo (left to right) Jeannette Alexander and Flo
Arnold, Sharon Moreton and Leigh Wallace, Consolation honors wenl to Kathy
Gray and Judy Holivvorth along with Jan Itenaud and Karen Newman.

�Ewenjng Hereld, Senford, Ft.

Ford Flattens
Birds; A s Drop
8th Straight
It was a tale of two streaks in baseball
Thursday night,
Dan Ford, who clubbed Oriole pitching
at a lO-for-31 para last season, drilled
a home run In the fourth inning against
veteran Jim Palmer, who had beaten
California five straight limes.
Retread Doug Rau and reliever Don
Aase combined on a seven-hitter for a 34
victory to halt red-hot Baltimore's eightgame winning streak.
Ed Ott chased home Don Baylor with
an insurance run in the seventh inning,
before the crafty Palmer fanned Rod
Carew to (scape the Jam.
Rau, who was cut loose by U s Angeles
after a rotator cuff injury deemed him
"unusable merchandise," hurled five
innings, giving up five hits and striking
out one.
The veteran left-hander was hit hard in
the early innings, but a fine play by Fred
l-ynn kept the Orioles off the scoreboard
With Rail I« u rr on fust, Lome Murray
lined a hit into right center field in the
fourth inning.
Lynn, ranging far to his left, cut off the
ball holding Dauer at third and then
threw a strike to second base to nail a
surprised Murray for the second out Rau
then retired Benny Ayala for the final
out.

D a n F o rd h o m e r u n b e a t s O r io le s

Aase took over in the sixth inning and
shutdown the Birds on two hits the rest of
the way (or his fourth save. Rau is 1-1.
Palmer Is 2-2.
While Baltimore had Its eight-game
winning skein term inated, Oakland
continued to have its problems, dropping
Its eighth straight 34 to Boston.
Jim Rice crashed a three-run line drive
home run with nobody out in the ninth
inning off Brian Kingman lo provide the
difference.
Dennis Echersley, who fanned 13 A's
batters, spun a nifty two-hitter for his
fourth win. Hr has lost three. Kingman,
who was touched for just five hits,
watched his record drop to 1-3.
Klee's blast Into the left-field screen
followed singles by Dwight Evans and
Carl Yastnemskl.
Elsewhere in the AU Seattle rode three
runs batted In by catcher Jerry Narron to
a 6-3 victory over Cleveland.
Gtcnn Abbott picked up his first win of
the season by going seven Innings and
scattering seven hits. Jerry Don Gleaton
and tarry Andersen finished the final
two Innings with Andersen picking up his
first save. Abbott has lost four.
In Milwaukee, G orm an Thomas
crunched two homers and drove in five
runs as the Brewers bombed hapless

M ajor League
By I'n llrd P r e u

American League
EAST

S ta a d iig i
Inlrrnallonil
Baltimore
Cleveland
New York
Milwaukee
Boston
Detroit
Toronto

National I-eague
EAST
St. louis
Philadelphia
Montreal
Pittsburgh
New York
Chicago

WEST
WEST

U s Angeles
Cincinnati
San Francisco
Atlanta
Houston
San Diego
TODAY’S GAMES
Montreal (L ea 2-1) at Chicago
(Krukow 1-4), 1:33 p.m.
Philadelphia (Christenson 1-3) at
Pittsburgh i Perex 04), 7:33 p.m.
San Diego ( Elchelberger 3-2) at
Atlanta (Boggs 14), 7:33 pm .
New York (Zachry 34) at St. louts
(Martinez 1-2), 8:33 p.m.
Ids Angeles (ltcu.cs 4-1) at CtncinnaU
(LaCross 34), 8:33 p.m.
San Franctaco (Alexander 3-2) at
Houston ( Kncpper 44), 8:33 p.m.
Minnesota 8-1
For the Twins, It marked the eighth
loss in a row. John Vukovich went eight
innings for his fourth victory in six
outings. Jam ie Easterly pitched the
Pete Hedfem, 34, failed to survive the
third inning when the Brewers bunched
five runs, Thomas, who led the AL in
home runs, two years sgo, ran his total to
11.
In Chicago, the Cubs snapped an eightgame talijping by dropping Ctncinnate 3I behind four hits by I*on "Bull"

Chicago
H 13 339 2^
Texas
19 18 M3 3
California
31 » .313 4
Seattle
13 34 331 10
Minnesota
11 23 .303 11H
Kansas City
I 31 .300 10H
TODAY’S GAMES
Cleveland i Blyleven 3-1) al New York
(Guidry 4-1), 8 pm .
Baltimore (McGregor 4-11 at Detroit
i Wilcox W ). 8 p m.
Boston (Tudor 1-11 at Milwaukee
(lUas 3-31,0:30 pm .
Minnesota iKoosman 14) at Kansas
City tleocard 4-4), 8:33 p m
Qiicago (Bums 3-3) al California
iForsch 6-1), 10:30 p.m.
Toronto (Stieb 3-4) at Oakland
ilangford 4-4), 10:30 pm .
Texas (Darwin 4-3) al Seattle
(Bannister 4-3), 10:30 p.m.
Durham and the clutch pitching of Bandy
Marti.
Marti, 2-2, stifled the Reds on seven
hits as he pitched Chicago's first com­
plete game of live season. The young
right hander struck out oneDurham slugged a three-run homer In
the sixth to give the Cubbies a 44 edge.
Durham also had a double and two
singles. The round-tripper was his third.
In the only other National league
game, rookie John Martin stopped
Houston on four hits as SL leuis used two
Astro miscucs for a 3-1 victory.

Tim Looks To Slumping Chicago To Wash Away Raines' Drought
The last thing Tim Raines wanted to
hear on a cold and windy Chicago
morning was, "What are you doing
going Wor-11*
Bui, that was my first question to
Sanford's young, Montreal phenom,
who Is currently impressing baseball
flocks from coast-toroisl with his
exriUng style of play.
Lately (the last three gam es),
however, Raines has been in a drought
similar to the one Floridians have
experienced the past month or so.
The last time Raines punched a hit
was Sunday. Monday against San Diego
he went hitless in three at bats.
Tuesday, he was 0-for-L and Wednesday
0-for4.
So, Tim what are you doing going 0for-127
"I hurt my hand, man. I Just can't
swing like I was," was Raines sleepyvoiced reply. "What time Is It anyway?

M A Y

What are you doing calling so early?”
Well, It was II a m. Chicago time, but
unfortunately for Haines, the Expos
had just gotten In from their threegame set In San Diego.
Sp o rts E d ito r

Raines current drought has dropped
his batting average 34 points to .333. He
was at .367 Monday morning, which
was second in the league

easy, but I've been picked off five nr six
times. 1 gotta be more careful. I've just
been loo aggressive," confided Raines

"I still think I can hit .300,” predicted
Tim. 'T've been hitting the ball hard
even though they’ve been catching It.

Despite Raines hot start and Andre
Dawson's awesome showing of late,
Montreal has slumped horribly the past
two weeks

"Out of those 13 at bats, 1 hit the ball
on the nose five times. It Just went right
at somebody," moaned the budding
young superstar.

Before Wednesday night'* victory
over the Padres, which featured two
Dawion homers, the Expos had
dropped 12-of-14 games lo fall out of
lin t place three games behind the
Cardinal*

While the average may have plum(netted some, the thievery is still ap­
parent. Raines has stolen 34 bases in 33
attempts.
"Yeah, I’ve been stealing prettv

IS C A R

C A R E

M O N T H

W \ Pails City.

( / A Z k \
V
/ ^ \ \

One of those 13 defeats came at the
hands of Fcrmando Valemuela In a
game where Raines didn’t start because
of his dislocated little finger on his right
hand.
In a previous meeting between the
two "Rookie of the Year" rivals,
Raines stroked a single in his first at
bat against "El Toro."

was quile a thrill, "It was really ex­
citing in the seventh, eighth and ninth
Innings," recalled Tim.
"Everybody was Just waiting to
make a great play to save the nohitter.”
After an off-slay Thursday, the Expos
take on the flubbing Cubs, who have
managed to lose 37 of their first 33 ball
games.
And you thought 1 was kidding when I
picked them to finish behind the Miami
Hurricanes and U k e Howell? The
Clem Ieonard Shell Pee Wees could
beat them.

"It was an infield hit though," Tint
laughed. "He's the toughest guy I’ve
faced this year. He keeps his cool on the
mound.
"He spots the ball real well and he
has a pretty good fastball which makes
his screwball that much better. He can
change speeds on his screwball real
good," said Haines about the (allow
vrllh wham he adorned Use cover ot The
Sporting News.
Along with facing Vnlenruela, Raines
said teammate Charlie l e a ’s no-hitter

“ Yeah, I'm looking forward to
Friday,” chortled Raines about his
Wrigley Field appearance.
The Cuba would be good medicine lor
anybody's slump. Even If IU a sorefingered rookie who la still hitting line
drives.

T IM 1 U IN K S
, . 0-for-L! b lue*

Super
Seminole
Results

AUTOMOTIVE
m
SUPERMARKET

\1
'

Thursday n*«ht rtttrtft
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TOO 4 30 4 00
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15,000 M ill WAIIAMTT

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AMERICA’S
CHOICE FOR
TIRE VALUE IN 1981

a lo o k i LA* N ew

• Waori Like New
GuoronTee lik e N ew

Free Mounting

k d r i c t - l 14.0; II 41

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^
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BUG s c r e e n s
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g r ille and oW was.

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PIU S L-. P

W H IT E W A L L S
Polyester New Tires

DIG 10 l E C O N O M Y R A D IA L

• FREE Mounting

• FREE MOUNTING
lift
m
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&gt;1M/B0«13 MM 141
Pitt/Ml M MM 711
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BUG O F F S C R U B B E R
S p o n g e
c o ttro d
w ith
n ykm n ei'.m g
S u p e r t v l -ell
purp ose

OPEN 7 D AYS

Parts City
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SUPERMARKET

a u t o m o t iv e

W
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H A bn

U n it ha e enough lor 16
car wash** _

L J 01614N

9:00-7:30

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Sat -Sun

SANFORD APOPKA
US W 25th Si

T) 323-4470

|

$ 2.59

9:00-6:00
MT DORA

123 W Mam SL

Golden Triangle (

886-8820

383-8135

ORLANDO

TITUSVILLE

4207 W Colonial Dr

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PERSONAL CHECKS ACCEPTED

7 BIG LOCATIONS
2650 S. ORLANDO OR. (17.91) SANFORD 32J-4M4
O R A M C I A V E 444114)
r. c o l o n i a l o n m M te
MORAN I L V O 111-4144

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IA—Evening HdriM. lanHrd, Fl.

Legal Notice
N O T IC E OP
n u t L ie h e b e i n g
H ir n o f w P r i i i i i l l l w
•( l i t W M I M m i|
Tn* County ot Sommql# *&gt;11 M M
* PubtK H ftr m g at I M U * « l l
County Courthouse. Norm P o rt
Avenue. Senlerd 4 lor&lt;64 H i l l , on
)u M
It*I «t M 00 0 m , lot I M
Pm r POM of ebte.n.nq w i.rien and
•TOI comment fro m I M public on
the proposed u l t l ot revenue
•Baying funds in I M upcoming
oudgot lo r f is c a l V o w I N I l&gt;
PH m ieresied ctlnono' groups,
lam er o n io n * end I tM o r c ltlisn
org*nit*t&gt;ent or* encouraged to
atltcW il»o M o t In* P o t u t J ot
Itodm * I M b ooting SMN Mo# I M
rignt I* provide women ong tool
com m on!*
ong
suggestion*
regarding possible use* of revenue
sharing fund*
fa llo w in g it im porlont pionmng
infer m e lio n tot I M potpon O uto
hooting
A m ou n t of rooonu* t t i t r ln i
lung* tip o c io g to M o v iiio b ie
Outing I M com ing Iit COI toot
P R S Ha 1 tl.STS.MS
ATTEST:
•ogor 0 Noitwongot.
County A g m in titfo to t
OwOgot O ttictt
Beard ot ’ County CommtMtonort
Sommoio County. Plot Mo
Pubtitn M o* IT. io*l
O BI M l

U N I T E D S T A T B S D IS T R IC T
CO U RT. M IO O L B DISTRICT OP
P I O R I O A . O R L A N D O D IV I­
S I O N -C O U R T MO. E E H T O R L
CIV R - U N I T E O S T A T E S OP
A M E R IC A . P lo in litt. »t P A U L C
• E l l y t r a c ie k im po w El l .
G E O R G E P R E O E R I C K POW
E L L . M in o r! ong I M unonown
h t lr t .
g o v lto o t.
g to n lo tt.
assignees. ot ether claim ants. by.
lArougn. undot ot o**m tl I M ES
TATE OP JU O ITM DOW LING
R B L L V , O o co o io g . ong i l l
unknown p o r t le t h iv in g ot
(M im ing t i novo in y rignt. into, ot
eOerotl m I M propotty, M ttm .
H E L E N H A N D E R S O N . SEM I
H O LE M E M O R IA L HO SPITAL.
• A L D W I N M C N A M A R A PU N
E R A L H O M E . L T O . ong SUN
R A N K OP S E M I N O L E . P A .
U o lo n g o n lt - N O T I C E
OP
S A L E — Notico It hotOO* given
Ihgt pwrtuont to o Sum m ery Pmet
Doc roe ot PorecM ture ontoroO on
April 11. 10*1 by I M Ibovo ontillod
Court wi I M i k o n *1*100 route.
IM vndcrtigneO Un.loO li#i*s
M irtn o i. or one i t n il duly
outnor 11od deputiet. w ill to ll IM
pro p e rty t llu o t * In Som lnol*
Count*. Plerid e. d o tcr.lo g A t to t
• ’ L A K E S Y L V A N ESTATES,
eccorgmg to plot m et rot recorded
mi Plot Rook II. peget II ong I t ot
IM Public RecorOt ot Sommoto
County. Plot M l. tuBloct. however.
to l u o t . it tn y Owe. lo r mo yoor
1*11. I I public outcry to I M higheit
eng b e lt b.dOer tar co in ol 11
s e le c t noon an Thvrsde*. Ju ra IL
10*1 o l I M W otl door Ol IM
Som m oio C o u n ty C lu rtn o u t* .
SanHld. P lo t M l D oled M l* IL
Ittl
George R G rotto
tin.tog L i l l e t M o r t M l
M iddle D it t flc l Ot
P lo t MO
Gory L b o ll
tinned H e lo t Attorney
MMdto O . t t r t t ol P lor Mo
Puoiitn M ay It. I t. 1* t iuno L
to il
OR I M

l e o a l a o v e r t iie m s n t
Th e r o a r o o p
c o u n t y c o m m is s io n e r s
Th e C O U N T Y o p SEM IN O LE

Frtoay.Mdyn.mi

Legal Notice
N O TICE U N O E l
PIC T IT lO U S N A M E S T A T U T E
TO W HOM IT M A Y C O N C ER N
None* it M r e b y given that i he
u n g e rilg n o d . p u rt w tn l I* the
• f ic t it io u t
N am e
s ia iv t e "
Chapter M S R t. PM rM o Motut*.
w ill register w im I M Clerk o* tM
Circu.l Court, m ond tor to m mote
County, flo rid * , upon recotpt ot
proot at me public e l o n *t me*
not ico. I M Ik Iil o n n o n e , to w d :
S PEC T A T O R S U N L IM IT E D IM
PORT. A D IS T R IB U T IO N under
which I a m engaged in b u tm ett i t
io n S u t t n Rood in t M C ity ot
Winter P o rk . P le n a *
That i m party im orottod m M M
butm ett ontorprtM it t t to Hews:
L n ritte p M r Co*tortt
Doted ( l O rio n d o . O ro n g t
County. PNOM*. M a y S. to ll
Publish M a r l IS. B . I t. I f l l
DEI V

NOTICE O P A P U B L I C N B A R .
INO TO C O N 1 ID S R T H E A D O P ­
TION OP A N O B O IN A M C B B Y
TNB CITY O P S A N P O R O . PLO R -

Nolle* i* M r* b y Riven m at a
Public H earing w ill be M M at t M
Com m it sign Poem in t M C ity H ail
m me City et Senlerd. flo rid * , at
T U r e le c t P M . on M a y M . IN I.
t* consider TM adoption et *n
ory-none t by t M C d y at Sontord.
fia rM * . e t leHdwt
O R O IN A N C B NO. ISSt
A N O R O IN A N C E O P TH E c i t y
OP SA N PO RO . P L O R ID A . TO
A N N E X W IT H IN T H B CO R
PO R AT B A R I A OP T H l C IT Y
OP S A N PO R D . P L O R IO A . U P O N
ADOPTION O P SAIO OR DIN
AN CC. A P O R T IO N C P TH A T
C ER TA IN P R O P E R T Y L V IN O
W I S T OP A N O A R U T T I N O
PA R R A V lN U B A N D R l T W I I N
W IS T S IT H I T R B B T
AND
L A U R E L D N I V li SA ID PR O
P E R T V B E IN G S IT U A T E D IN
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y R O A R D
SEM IN O LE C O U N T Y . F L O E iO A .
OP CO U N TY C O M M IS SIO N ER S
IN A C C O R D A N C B W ITH T H l
CORRRCTBO
VO LU N TAR Y
A N N lX A T I O N
N onet ot P ottle Hearing
OP
S IC T IO N
T M Sommoio County Raced ot P R O V IS IO N S
ITIlaa. P L O R IO A S T A T U T E S .
Commrtswnor* w ill hold o public
P B O V IO IN O
POR
S lV lR
MOrmg ui Room M l ot t M
ANO
Sem inole C o u n ty Courthouse. a b i l i t y . c o n f l i c t s
I
P
P
I
C
T
I
V
B
D
A
T
S
.
Sonlore, Pier Mo m M a y I L I N I ot
W H E R E A S , m a rt h*s been HMd
I M P M .o r « t loon thoroortor os
with tM C dy Clerk *T I M C ity *t
pM tib'e to consider m e tel low mg
U nlord. PM rld *. • pdtNMn can
A. P U B L I C H E A R I N O PO R
taming I M name* *t t M grggarty
CHANGE
OP
1 0 N IN 0
owner*
m m e *re* described
E B O U LA T IO N S
her omen er request mg enn*&gt;*t.en
E D W A R O P. O N E I L L JR
is IM cergerate tre e *1 I M City et
AND R A Y E W E S T E R M A N - R
Santgrg. tie r Me and requesting
i s in g l e p a m il v d w e l l in g
I* M Included therein; and
DISTRICT TO M l IN D U S T R IA L
W H E R E A S . I M P roperty Aw
DISTRICT - P i t s O EII—M - A
e r in e r *t S e m In a lt Cdunty.
portion et T ro u t L o k e S 0
fie r.d e , h a v in g c e rtifid d that
describ e d s t ts lle w t
L e tt I
mere are tw* property ewnert m
through T tn d Let* II through TL
OB 4. P d a . lot* I M loHerwme me ores to be anneied. and mot
deter Wed perl** Begin el * pom'
me getitien M r m n a xttw n, end
too* n N end H I T H W oM M S E
W H E R EA S . II has bean deter
comer at I M N E '« ot Sac T I I I L
mined that I M property described
u M p o m bom* titu oiod m i M l I
heremehyr .* rettandbty compact
comer «t Lot la . t t mown m t M
end centguout I* m e corporate
Plot f t Trout Loko 1 D. P R a. Pg
c l mono* run N ** g o g rio t TP IP1 w ee e« me CRy ** Sontord.
W Hon* I M I im* ot M M Trout ewtvee. e»w &gt;. nee » w v . uOSA
determined m at t M wtneaelldn dt
L ik e S D ter 1*0 M IT t e t M P 0 R
«t ino trie* el Mnd herem gner M M pr*p*rty w ill not result m I M
tre
etitn et *n eetclave; end
deter &gt;bed thence cent mu# N t t
w h e r e a s . I M C ity c l Sen lord.
degrte* IT* M*‘ W Ter It* M I I I* *
Pier
toe. N M a gasman te y r t . e e
point on i m E R W lino dt C urt Mr
H i thenco run N I degree* IS' TO" mimic Me I terv.ee* M I M property
W eiong l t d R W.ime tee IM 1* I* described twretn. and m * CRy
foo eoM t. m encerun S t* degree* Cenuntstien dt t M City *T Idn N rd .
IT' I f E H r IS* 0* ft T* * pome, pier Me. deems it m th# best m
thence run 1 1 degree* IT W w •tra il at t M C ity '* accept M M
getitien end le ennea la id
■or lease it le I M P O I . m i
property
porlqn c u rrm tly toned M l (In
NOW. t h e r r p o r b . r i it
d u t t r illl 11 d cre t M O L lE k t l ol

SR a il. d d ik cm t to m e eouth tide
ot M .inee School I (D ISTRICT NO
*1
Thoee m ittenddn ce w ill be
heard and written comment* m ay
be
Hied
w ith
tne
Lang
Management Manager Hearing*
may be cm lm u ed trgm tim e lb
H IM M Nund net otter y fu rth e r
oeieil* ovdl'dDM by ceil.n* H I
01N. E el IM
Pertera ere edvlted m et M they
decM t Ig appeal m y dtcN M n
m id * *1 meg* m atting*, m ay w ill
need * record t t t M proceeding*,
end tor w e n purges* I M y m*y
need I* ensure IM l t verbatim
record ol me proceeding* .« made,
which re c o rd
in clu de *
me
le stlm e n y tn d t v id m e t upon
which I M ip p e il 1s t l be med*
beard *1 County Cem m is
steners
Semlhaie County, PleeM e
b y S k O R l Sturm .
Chau men
Aiiest
Arthur H le c k w im . i r
Pubiith M ay T t IN I
DEI III
IN TNE C IR C U IT C O U R T PO R
I I M I N O L E C O U N T Y , P L O R IO A
PR O BATR DIVISION
Pile N .m b er II U S CP
O tvitW l
IN R E : E I T A T E O P
A V A R I L M LO G A N .
O f f lin e
N O T IC I O P A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
TO A L L P E R S O N S H A V IN O
C L A IM S
OR
DEMANDS
AOAINST T H E A P O v r E S T A T E
AND A L L O T H E R P IR S O N S
IN T E R E S T E D IN T H E E S T A T E :
YO U
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IP IID
I h il
Ih*
*d
m in is trs H tn o l th« t t i i i y e l
A V A R E L LO G A N . deceeted. P ll*
Number II MS C P . it pending m
•M Circu.l Court lor Seminole
County. PlerM *. Prewole D.v.twn,
me edd retl el which Is lem.no.eCeunly C o O rlh e u te , S e n le rd ,
H o r.d e IITTI
T h t p e rto n e i
repreteni* liv e dt I M eslele I*
WIMlam 0 Logan w M to e d d re tl
It ITT N W TInd Avenu*. Suit*
SAAII. M lim l Pier Me S U M T M
name and eddtet* et m e per*«n*l
le g rtte n ie i.v e t etterney a rt set
term below
W J. Hetternen. Jr.. Suite M l.
Ml
f
A ll t m m t e
D riv e .
A ilim erd e Spr.net. Pie r Me ll t g i
Alt p e rsm t hs*m * ele.m t ar
demand* ege.ntt me e tle ie or*
required.
W IT H IN
THRU
MONTHS f RO M TM1 D A T E OP

enacted by th e p e o p le op

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando •Winter Park

322-2611____________ 831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
• M A M. -

S:M P M

M O N D A Y Itira r P I O A Y

SATURDAY t

Now*

W t w uh H monk our lr Unas and
U nm et* end many denotUns
•hewn u* during I M r*c*nt
U»» *1 eur hem* due t* Hr*.
V tu w ill haver k* tw port on
Signed Thekme Brewer. Terry
Cogger and Tom m y Greene

* g*M inim um
I U n as M inim u m

4—Penonah
U f lt f y O v U U t f ll M f l t f
Meet ChrutlOA smpus m your
w oo Wrd* ieuthw n C tg utu oi
Scnput Club. P O A*k I t U
Sum m erviiu. SC 1S0AJ er ca ll

^ m W a a V -^nyou r t SIT Suppumanl you'
re tire m e n t
i n *141
ter
benetlh

4- Ptrsonits
*—Child Car*

wHL iiL 4 h iL ^ x ,:i:^ G«f
A M w r ' Oeimg Servu e A ll
•ges. P O boa «0TI. C h a r
water, PI U l t l ____________
LanstyT Wrd* "B rin g in g daip.y
together Delmg S w v t c g r AM
ages A Senur Cditen* P .0
IStl. p n t r woven. PI*. U N *
PLATE
CO LLCC TO R
( C a ra m ic s l in la ra s ta d In
buying, lolling, or trad mg
direct with other collectors*
I n le rm s lle n —w rite
P la it
Eachang* Club In te r. P O
baa N L Alhbboro NC TTTS1
CS.U.-A? A 2 A » P
Tek* | mm d t te n tla n to
recorded m * * M * e -l 10) V I
w n N i l or w rite Com pel A
Del* P O
iw . 1ST) Sum
m ervilU. 1 C l t d )
Lon ely* Naw sin g le s m eg.
Stamp eddrett envelop* ter
tree into
B ti
is o (IS)
ie yn ttn . P L IMS)

Legal Notice
NOTICE PO R RIDS

Special Summer Program ter A
II vr eld*. Wkiy tw im m m *.
Skatmg A m evles n i l U L
S e n le rd E a r ly Cniign***
Canter
LM yeu M veyevr * m s T Than g-rg
them me cere IM y deterv*
SM w k ter I. SO wk. H r 1 C a ll

asms

SPUN O P TH E M O M EN T
b a b y s it t in g

m no*

iA-HuffilXtairty
S H A R L E E h E R I T A I l BTS
W lO lL I V lE
a s tost

R e tire d
er
sem i re tire d
salesperson lie. cemm Per
ip p f C e ll HereM BIETET
N E E D A S I C 0 N 0 IN C O M E ! S
M rs at le ts pw week, could
rk rn SIM # pw mg B S T B t .
N U R S IN G C O O R O tH A T S I
Im m edigtt opening Etp eru n c*
w ith s tg ffln g and p eR llc
r s ijiu n * Cod Med-eel Can
cepts A*I«RSI_____________
C O N V E N IE N C E
STORR
C L S R R — Good company
benefits Apply Handy Wdy
food s t e r n . SdnMrd ere*
E r S — (O eiien a a r t t l
Sn mgie U rm g a n il IS *
•guar* M ust M t * own ***** A
Ira n tp o fla iU n S B ’ su

ro op

Pu ll tln M war bar Skilled Uwn
m a in te n a n ce
A
g sn era l
a g g rtm e n l w ork tat la r f*
cemp.es Apply m person # I
Tuesday
Oonev* O arden
hoars moms. ISAS W TV" 11.
N I I O l E C R A P T LO VERSI
A m a r lc a 't l a t l n l s rtw in d
neddlecrort company needs
dem en straH rt In tnu era*
Don’t m u t th d eicdm g new
way t* sou needuorstt Call
jack.* H r m teryUw
______ ue uw__________

d. C a ll I B Tail

■ e n n n w w w w
A AA E M P L O Y M E N T

Spr mg P ever Sou
W ttkm s Product*
a s mbs

Your hr lure eur ceecer*

NEEDED
TaWpfionf Soldton,

B—Good Things to Eat
R v ttM
Hip* Tomgtott I
IM II 00; » IM U SO
l # r*&lt;io4 C»rn U SO i c r t U
C rim to n t« t« t
12 00 1 up
l i g g t Product, }US U n to rt
a «« m i d i
Y fltow SQukih
4 IM t t 00
Acorn Sqwom
I for t l 00
Oononot
) fM OH
CuM i
10 for II 00
Groon Ooont
7&gt;M H O f
Wro(«rmo«ont
II SO up
lo rp o lo p o *
I f o r t l 4t
&amp;rwnO«*on*
lOondlOf II 00
2*&gt;w«tod
torn t f * * | t 00
PKhisMf C u c u m la ri Pw tM IUOO
fP rm p tour
conlotnor)
o io Poocnoo. Nociorm ot lb P c
Tomotooo
3 IM It 00

Now 12 Locations
17-92 n«xtfo
Village Smorgasbord
We Take Food Stamps
LeRoy Farms. SR 46 &amp;
Upsala Rd., Sanford

Port-Tim#

Cal 322-2611
E v e n i n g H e r a ld
LO O K IN G PO R A CH AL
l E N G E T w * need * mature,
c a re e r m in ded D E N T A L
A S S IS T A N T
E a p e ru n c t
pretw red IT m fwetied. send
resume H Bos So, flvenmg
Herald. Roe ItST. Senlerd

24— BsjElngfS

:»-Apfs.AHoum
____ ToShan
f em eu d e lv e * seme H shore 1
Bdrm house. S IM ♦ I* Hod
co sit Lobe M e ry BT 4111

7f— Roocm

II—Instruct ions
Tenn.t InetrwctUn U S P .T .J L
C w ltu g Group w Private
lebtont C n iM rtn a tpecudy.
Doug M b U cto w u i m i l t s
o i l th o se l u x u r y it e m s
P OR A P R A C T lO N OP T H EIR
COST P R O M TOOAY’ S WANT
ADSI

&amp; A N PO V O Rm
m kif 4
m onffily r t i t t U til Inc. K it SOO
Oftfc Atfvttt M l I t t l

Cate M u *1 See H r*
W *,'rest want**
A p p ly in person
I I I MBA
M l SC Y A R D WORK A lawn
mow mg M e iim v m TBeyt tt*.
I I t I IN wggktndt Prrtgr
ret,rag Cad ITS RTAT H r appt
Sem.neU Garda* Apwlm ent*
tH anded P ra ctica l H vrt* t i g
stun. P u ll at part lim a. Sen
H rd N u rfH g A CenvsUtcwN
Center Conrad M n g.vwn

Ewssa*

C P U Pud tim e S IS P M Shir*
A p p ly L a k e v lttv N u rsin g
fam tat. SIS I . b id S|,
mm%

P e d lim e Rartender WallrekA
Apply M *yl*le Country Club.
Cnty Club Rd. Sent. m i n t .
interstellar Photography twee*
Models A ll types. Inc. actors
Rea* P e r tH M BT n i l
Noed E it r * Incam* wfuH you
or* *1 homo * PS m*y b* I M
answer Prgg dyte.u EncUkg
Stam ped envelope P rtn c n
U y H . B et tAASL N.ies. Illm eu

% (y

La rg e New 1 *drm . Aw Heat.
Carpeted, appt tone n No pets
u b m o . s i n o*« m i n t
I v e s ______________________
Senlerd L a k e M e ry w e* New
Dupies. 1 Adrm, l&gt;t Bam.
Cent H A No pets a ll op
pi lances I M Tags A n t p m
H ave seme cam ping equipment
you no longer us#T Sen .» *H
w.m * Classified Ad m T M
H ersld C e ll B l l t l l at B1
eew end * Nwyvtly a* ra tn
w ill help you
A v a il AS. New 1 B X , 1 bath, bit
a p p t, carpeted, drapes No
pets t i l SOO ISIS RUgewead
Day m O B B * » • BE
N E W - I S O t M t L L O N V I L lE
1 B R . I Ram . K it A p p l. A C. No
pets. 1M0 » Deposit Eve U I
D U P L B X . &gt; Bdrm . *W. Kidk.
poet U M me Sav On Rentals
Realtor u s m o

22-Hou bm Unfumrthid
te n u re j Bdrm . I Rem. Gw***.
r * Y r. old B ric k heme UTS
T H l R V W A T E R CO M PA N Y
■ R A L T O R ____________ goaswo
S Bdrm . 1 Bam s C HA. fenced,
no pets 1st. U st A Sec StM
mo U I i n s
L A K l M A R Y S Rm t P v ll
kitchen. Carport. U M me Sav
On Rental* Realtor BtTTOO
I B D R M . lanced backyard OH
Las# M a ry B lvd . near l l #j
Steve, te tri* A water fur
rvtAeo a v i h e I SJ»* me.
1100 deposit BSASIT

LANDLORDS
Due I&gt;fu d tenants w ell M*
No tee U STM S
Sa* On R e n ia it R I A L T O K
Leketrw it 11. fa m ily Rm . C
HA. carpet. Idrw.ild* area
US3 # security B ld a S I
Cessetberry, S R m v K U t. Pots
SMO On . SMO M o US MOO
Save On R en teu R E A LT O R
1 Bdrm . U s Rath, screened
p a id , appliances. Con HA.
Garage. Im eed v n o JU O Jia

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

K if f b f»o«t 4 Bdrm AvAtlbbl*
July H t n 2 02U
3 Bdrm . } B«»n .
so Ob«to*%A
174102

U n to rt Coty Cotf#9« K id t U M
down, t i l l m o )3f 7300
U v On H f f l im « E A L T O N
3 Bdrm . I B»«* Unfvrnffhvd
hom« Coworod C4rpor1 «nd
wfil.ty rm I ISO M g 323 7420

Casselberry LeSetroM I R m t
AW. Kids. Pets S IN Mo le v
On Rentals Realtor US TJN
Modern. I mg your Heme* Sell no ■
longer needed but useful Hems
with e Class,hod Ad

w
1

t s n is i

e

Ret plus Income 1 Units total
Great location Super I .non
cm* O nly 1*».W0

A L L FLO RIDA R EA LT Y
O F SANFORD REALTOR
H U S fre n ch A re
i i v i v ' l TW enryi

Moyrng SeU 11 R L K . Carpers,
t e r t e la n c e d earner
m
county Cam ana Ataume I S
n urtgega Reetenebiy pr.cao
Si* #00

BATEM AN R EALTY

A v t.U b U June Stt N K f I Adrm
M o lu rtp e rs o n p re u rry e (IM
Ju n e
P e r il*
R e slty ,
R E A L T O R S B EATS
U n fu m U M d — Specious 1 Bdrm.
It* turn opt locals J In gwul
neighborhood Adults. M gets
B S Sail tts w S
■v i u r s Loudly I Perm, v Den.
AW. carpeted, e w a m x gem
Purn eve,I SITS Adults s tl
I R O R M O w age Apt
IB S
C*tl I B HIS iv tn in g s
1 P I R SON er m ar r u e esupe* SR
y r v ar eider No pet* U N
m o . DO dam J r p A M a ra p m
m i n ___________________
■ ■ la y ree ntry IlytagT 1 perm
A p ts . O ly m p ic s i. Peel.
I M e ia d ia k v .lu p e Ope* S-L

tu rn s

M w M a r t Y iiie ge on Lena a m .
I S Redrenm Apts Item IB S .
Located IT f l lu a l &gt;*uT" •*
A U pon ( lt d M Sontord A ll
Adult* m u l t
f R O M U B . L w pe 1 . 1 A 1 Adrm
opts PeeL lannc* court
B T acJO
M t iiu n y .iie
(te c *
a u &gt;s
Specuus. modern I Adrm. I
B a m a p t C arp eted, k it
e qu ippe d.
CHAA
N ear
ru t pile. A U k* Arndts. M
pets A1T0 I B (111

)1—Apartmanto Furnished
Loko M ary. P u rn EfticWncy
apartment PM# Set smgU
m an P riv a te cntrwsces Util.
Aid* . P a id . Screened perch.
S p otless. W a te r H a t No
children ar pots I B H U

\

Wonder w .a t in do w ith Two*
Sell On." - T M o u k k . te s r
Want A d w ay The m agic
rv,mrw* * t v T i l l *r U I SS»S
1 Bdrm .. I B a il, dn M , Nd d
C la ird porch, attached tiw a g*
, c w p o rl I D 000 1J ) *021
LO CATIO N LO C A T IO N W.thm
w a lk in g d ista n c e Item *
member of butm ett** I germ.
&gt; Bam hem*. Control *&gt;r B
heat. I.repiec*. tenced A more
Only 14! SOB
IN V E S T IN O R A N G E S Tk
Aery* at Or eng* grove with 1
bdrm ! bam brick hem*
Over 1000 tq tt ot livin g are*
# greenhruse. double gw eg*
A mere S1M COO
• OR L E A S E 1 Bdrm Ire.ler m
Osteen w e e I ar 2 edu.1i only
STS i m . Discount H ot*
STAM PER AGENCY
R E A L T O R I t ! Off I
Eves T4S SON. TM IMS. MT SETT
M etlipld L iltin g t a p is *
H iddm L a ke E t ie le t S Bdrm, t
turn s p lit plan hama Cant
Heat, a lt ; com m unity peel end
riutevw.se k it U r it s tm
A L O lR ft PO N O R E A L T Y INC
E R A m rta t

Harold Hall Realty
R E A LT O R S, M LS
323 5774

DayorNIqhl

R ID E YO U R M O R S t I* Htety.
qui«t I f i K t l p it t v f t * i b
Barn Ctwirtry 3 Barm . ( M
c rv ft Ibcfe. p4Ht*#d fam ily
rm.
w«ll c«fpvf Nt«r I
4 tnd
R«v»f M i »i t«
CBN »0dJ» 141 004 7 rant* on
fR 44
CO U N TR Y L U X U R Y . New H
K f f W»»l •I Senferd 3 Bdrm.
3 B4fb Lew down. LtvM if rm .
fdmtty rm . be»&lt;b firepfece
ShedoEt Lehe Woodt 1 ml. W
of 14 tn lrtm t. ft 111.444
A7 F O R O A b L l. N eel. 3 lerf#
B d r m i. te e m e d c e t lle f i.
Wry# thro Kitchen FM A VA
im e n rin f Only 137.ft#
L O V ff L Y C o u n try H$m$ 3
•drm . M i Beth. A t t e m ille
m e r f f if e . le r « e d e u ile
H ie d verd 444.444
R IN IC R IS T
N eel J term
III ftM w ith lew down tetence
f f t e f t ie ,
4 4 iy
m tn tb ly
M y m e n tt
ASSUM PTIO N . N t RddlifffRB.
Cb«k4 3 Bdrm . 1 Bern Levtfy
• e t4. me lode» F a m ily Rm
tnd F m I 141.144

C A L L 323-5774

STENSTROM
REALTY -

tu t

m

17-B— Renta IOffices

41—Houses

L A K E J E N N IE A P T S I. I&lt;* A I
Adrm on L a k e latm a M
la n ia r d
P e a l, re t ite m ,
outdoor • A 0 . lenn.s court* A
d itp e ta it Walk H tnopp.n*
Adults only Sorry M pets B&gt;

’

C o m m e rc ia l
f g . 1d .rg .
101
French A v t . Stnford 1.700
Sq f l Carpal. Coni #,r and
h*4? 172 MJ4

W - A p a r t m e n Ts

LUXU RY
APARTM ENTS
f a m ily A A d u llt seoilen
nearside 1 Bdrm * M e tie rs
Car* Ages. S B TSN Open an

e

B d rm . I S b ath , great
assumption, super ere* Clean
a t a pm. m ove rUPW &lt;n Ontv
sat.yge

17—Business Properly

1000 %Q f t . A ir CoMfiOftod
c* rp « ttd fo r p r o f m ib A t l
offK# or b u tm n t 333 77» or
1)4 1)04

U n f u r n is h e d

■ia lt o

Eves JJT M U

W M ttv e r I M accason. IM r a U *
c lo t id le d *d lo tatv* d. Try

Jtrtb b Jflb n b d ____
AVOW
R R P A I I I N T A T I V ll
S aeH rd T e t r lH r u i avauabU
M * » v » c a Heel s u s - V N .

m u l t ip l e l iit in o

323-7832

12—Houses Furnished
Evenmg H w e id Paper Route
Net SIM # w k Let* men jvy
hr* t day deHvery lim e Call
B IO S *

HAl COOflRT RfALTT '•*

JlA —Duplexes

1917 F R F N C H A V E .
C A L L 22)1176
C O R N !R OP lit*
AN D PRRNCH

T nine mg about that summer
vacation* Get ■ boftw te r
tn ro u V m* c le u d U d edt In
ta d e r't paper

P u m U M d Ipprtm w ns H r Senior
Cm ten* l i t P a im o tH A t * . J.
Cgwpn No pnene cam

It’S easy H p io c t • CuasdU d Ad

OON T S TO RE IT. S I L L IT wdh
* Uw cetf c u u d u a Ad

Security G uard H r wgekgnd
rughi »h&gt;n Apply in person at
N O T IC I OP SUIT
C a b le S ea t Company-. I N
TO: C Y N T H IA I E I E R l E . &lt;
S liv e r L a k e R d , Sam erd.
stnguperson, wheat rvsuence It:
m Lament Avenu*. Long wood
M A IO S POSITION O PEN
flo rid * JTJSB
Apply In person
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
D e r il t m l a A M . Rd a*
N O T IFIE D met an action U
te re c le t* * M w ifa g * an m *
W AN T 1 0 : P re tH S u n a i J t l AMI
•Mlew mg property m Seminole
P U y e rt 1 H 'S y n eap
Ciw nl*. r i a r U i:
C on ta ct O rla n d e Sem inal*
Lo* 0. R U cs T. SHADOW H IL L ,
j g . A lg l » t S B !
accw dm g i* m* p u t m*r*et e t
RN P u ll Urn* SO stud U n ttc a
recatdtd w P u t Reek IT. p*g*s t l .
N u rs in g tn d C tn v d U tc tn t
U ana U . Public Records at
Center Corned M n Irewyr
Sernmou County. P iw u a
S IA SA A
T O G E T H E R W ITH: R ang*
Rang* Hoed. O ito o u l ana OitH
m sM r
Scropm etel buyw - must be
e tp Reply Res SIC 0 Even,m
hat been HUd *g* met you. and you
Herald. P O . Baa US7. Sen
w * re*.,rod la ta rv t * copy *f
H r* . PI
your wnttan Petenaas. N tn y. M N
*n P L A IN A C O N I. P J L . P o tt
B U R O B R X IN O N*. SM Sonter*
US. Tampa, P lerld a
naw accepting appucatuna H r
O N I . eng im* i m engutgl with i m
part tim e days ( I I I I Apply H
C U r k s* I M obey* title d Court in
person 1 te S p m Eguel Op
ar baser* June j j . tts i, etharw lt*
perlu m ly Em puyW
* Judgmtns may be onlyryd

eg * * "ti you tec the re lie f
demanded in t M Compiamt
W ITNESS my bond and teal at
m u C m m an M ay IT. IN I.
IS B A U
A rthur H Rtckwdh. J r
C U rk at I M Circuit Court
By: Eleaner P. Burette
Deputy Clerk
V a n A Can*. P A
Pest OtHc* Aet ITS
Tem pt. PlerM * S M I
PubluA M ay » . IS A June L S I
IN I
O BI NS

A u p o n Etvd B J SMI
Cesse.berry B S IB S
Celery Ave m i n i
Lose M ary B U M S

l Tim*
l . M i Htw
1 consdcutivs lim a* I M a l ln *
T consecutive times J f i R n t

A ll C U ttitM d M e * T illin g a h * appears id Mu Evening
K t r iM stl Wf^nesBa* p receding I M Her l t d Advertiser TTu
rates iTuwn a bar* A r t Ter both days

t—C*rd o&lt; Thanks

C O N V E N IE N C E
STOEB
C a s h i e r s — We attar I wee*
pa&lt;6 v a ce iu n every t manthg.
New Uekm g He gspgrigncgd
peepH reedy H work Per

RATES

DEADLINE
Noon Tuesday

THE CITY OP S A N PO R O . PL O R
o n ia n r ih o s ir v ic b
IDA:
Tm Clerk at tna C ircu it Court
SICTIO N l i Thai I M lelld w tn f
end me Beer* at County Com
deter.bed property
H tu e ltd In
m u su n e rt at Sam mole County,
SemUMle County. P u r Me. b t end
her am attar rtterrad t* a t " T m
IM same It hereby ttw eaed le and
County" by way at tn u document,
mad* a pari *1 I M City *1 Santera.
r e g u t t t i p ro p e te it end co m
PlerM*. pur w a n t N the voluntary
pet .live dvoftlwn* at handling or
anno lotion prevision* at Section
serv let charges lo purchase me
IIIcat. PlerM * Statute*:
bon kin g services t s s p e c ifie d
Lets IT, It. I t I V A N S SUR
herein tw • Peru* at two year*
D i v i s i o n , according M I M plat
A ll propose tt must be subm itted
m ortal. Plot Book 1. Pep* IT. (lets
&lt;n seeled anyth*** bearing an I M
beginning gi m* N E corner et Let
out*id* I M nem* at i m bonk. I M
IT. run west tu n * the North Ime et
edd retl. i m H tu at m * proposal,
Let IT. a d.n a n ce *1 l&gt;4 S tee* M
and i m word* “ SemlnoM Cpunly
I M SW earner a t Lot I I H I Ad
h r0posed tanking Sarvices " T M
d illtn M Park VM w . P ia i Reek &gt;.
gregetbl m u ll be kigned m I M
fee * tt. thence run South I* toot
M m * at I M bank gnd must bear
tnenc* run l e t ! ISC S teet. thence
I M slgn eturi at I M per ben at
run N w th i t teet te I M Peed at
portent duty author ited lo lig n the
Begun mg I
propetb! M utligU propeteit may
The yeev« eescr .sea property le
letmov Oeecr.be* e t a p tt titn et
OuetHene retatm* to I M b U
met certem pteger'y it m* West et
spec H K e iu n t may be answered by
one eeutttng P e rk Avenu* and
ceiim g me O ttict at m* C le rk of
between weal Ttm Street and I me C u t ltd Court i t m a m Rat
L e v rtl Drive M M property being
D a er U S
tilu e le d la S em in el* County.
Tm County rn e rvy * me righ t to
Pier Me
reiect eny w an propeteit. to
SICTIO N I: Thai upon m u
waive any irregular.ties ar m
ord,nonce becoming ettectiv* I M
*ermoldy In tn y k U t at in I M
grepw ly owner* and any re t Men I bUdm*. and la accapt ar re ia cl
an me groper ty described her i n
any itam ar cam km alun W item t
shell be entitled M d ll I M rig h t!
Ip o c irv a tu n t and l u P erm s
and w hr i lege* and im m unities a t
may be tecured Item m* O tflca at
Wd Ifwn time M lim a granted M
me C U rk at the Circuit Court.
return !* and property ewnert at
Roam KM. Court house. Senlerd.
I M C»y «l Samerd. tie r Me end at
fu n d *
w e lu rth tr prgvMed M Cnegiw
Completed propeteu together
M L PlerM * Statutes, ana m ail
with i wo III ca p u t are is be
lurrner be tubioct I* I M re t pan
return** by competing banks no
noun.** oi residence or ownership
igtw Ihen June I, I N I *1 IS N
M may Horn lim a te llm * be
Noon
determ ined by tna g overn in g
T*
authority *1 I M City *1 tenter*.
Arthur H fe c tw ith Jr.
PlerM*. and m* provlsw ne at t*M
C U rk at m* Circuit C tv rt
Chapter ITL f u r Ida tld tu ttt.
Room coo. Caurmeuta
SECTION I It any tecIM n er
P O Drawer C
portion et a tec I Ion ot m u Or
Senltrd. f io r d s IITTI
dtnenct grove* le ee wtveiM,
B M t ratal ted by I M deadline
unlawful er vn con tH tvtM M l. it
above w ill be opened d l H p m
then net be M M le MvaUdaio er
Juno I. IN I. m mg I C C meeting
im ped me valM ity. force ar g le e t
teem. Ream No TOD. Sommoto
el any taction er perl at m u or
County C e u rtM u te . S e n le r* .
f u r tee
SECTION*. T h p ta ilO rd in a n ce !
(S E A L )
W p o m or Ordinance* In conn let
Arthur H C re te ,m Jr
herew.m be end me u rn * er*
C U rk ts me Board
hereby ra g a tu d
at County Com m u tu n ort
SICTIO N S. Thai tht* Or
Sernmou County, f u n d *
a rra n t than bocam* ettectiv* Pubirtn M ay IL U . IN I
immadialety upon IH past*** and DRI a
edopHen
A copy shall be available at I M
Orttct el I M C ity Clark t*r a ll
per ken* petvm g t* eta mm# i m
IN T N I CIRCUIT CO U R T O P
TMR R I G H T I I N T N JU O IC IA L
A ll p a r tia l In IM e rg s l and
C IR C U IT OP T N I ST A T B O P
cHiiant SMH M y * an apportvnity
P LO R ID A
IN
ANO
PO R
I* be heard W u - d M a tin g •
S R M IN O LR COUNTY
■y w * w W I M C ity Commission
C IV IL ACTION CASE NO. I ! NSW m* Cdy *t Santera. P lerM *
CAOSK
M N T im m . J r
AOOLTON. A L L E N 1 W IL LIA M S .
Cdy Clerk
!NC_ j '. Y p a i t U L
Publish M ay 1.1. I L T t ( M l
PUUVNt.
0 (1 t l
vs.
C Y N T H IA fl E I E R L B . * single
person.

leporoi* to n e d PM* tor itomt ot
Itie g bo tow w ill bo received m i m
O il« a ot I M 0 trotter ot Put
chasm*. Sem.nolo Count* Service*
Building. Ind flo o r. Com et ol lit
Street end P o rk Avenue. Sontord.
PL I t i n . until 1 Ot P M . H e ll
time. Wodnotdoy. Juno It. tO tli 11
wnicn lim e end goto bM t w ill bo
publicly opened ond rood aloud
EM NO 111 - f u r n th SlOOt
Motet n i t lo t W ile t Tree!men!
PIpAt
. Rid
No
ITT—
A n n u li
^ R e g u irim o n tt
—
P in
E i. Iingunher r o tlllt end te rv.co. toll
■ c n lu n e d b ro o m in g t p p i n t u t
* oetill ong regulator repo n
:
Rig
No
IT * A n n u li
&gt; Regvitom entt — bunker Goat
;!
M No ST* - P u m lth Inti til
!• Tronic S iR n il Eguipm eni
;.
RM No M R - P u r n lt liln t lt il
.; m o te riii •# re torpor tre es ot
)• Coutmoute
fo r Rid No III S Do IT*
•; O N L Y - Successful bM det m l* be
I- togwrod lo convey n it bM price*
o n d c e n tn c l le tm t ong condition*
I t l m u n lc lp illt lo t and other
"• governmental
egenciet enlii.et
witftin Sommoto County
. . f» r R M N o J l t O N L Y - P odor t l
&gt;:-Vkoge Rotes w ill tp p ly
Upon t h e p i r s t p u b l i c a t i o n o p
THIS NOTICE. I* III* with I M
3 p f d , lu c c o tttu l bidder M A Y M
'
"^ orod ig turm tn poymont ong d ark *1 i m *beve court * written
ttetem ird ot *ny cla im ar dtm end
etormoney bonds, oech m IM
mey me r M v * Each c la im m utt
nt ot MR per cent ot t t t i l bM
be in wr n « t end m ust in d lctte I M
. . w — nt i t wotl o t praot Ot
b i i e ter me cM lm , •»# - • —# j —C
&lt; ;jur# nce
Rond farm * n .ll U
eddrett et Ihe c r e d iltr er hr* egeni
.*v^irovMod by m e Sommoie Count*
N O*iuo ot Purchasing
Clam ed |t I M c la im It M l ygt
■:
fo r RM No MR O N L Y - Sue
Ac*, i m date when it w ill become
^ (otctul bidder w ill bo reouiroo to
due than be li n e d it m * c la im N
L luttuiA potm ent and per tor m ine e
IN T H l CIECU IT CO U RT OP
conl.ngent at uniKyuMa'ed. I M
i bond*, lo c k M I M im o u n t ot E l
T H l I I R H T R IM T H JU D IC IA L
m ctetam ly ttvall be H aled II t M
- per coni ot total RM am ount! tnd
C IR C U IT .
IN
ANO
PO R
da.m it tecured. t M ta cu rlty m a ll
SEM IN O LE CO U N TY. P LO R IO A .
V proot ot In tu rin c* Rond torm t
5 w.il bo lum -thod by I M Sem mote be deter .bed T M cla im a n t m a ll
CIVIL ACTION NO. II #T1 CA**deliver w tticM nt cap M t at t M
■
-I* 0 ti.e e ot Purcnot.no
A ll w o rt motor to It tn o ll bo bt claim I* I M clerk Id enable I M
IN R B . T H l M A R R I A O I OP
dark i* m ail one copy i# each
;. o c c ir d in c e w llti t p o c lllc it lo n *
JIM M Y R. BETTIS.
pec tec wl representative.
o n iio b ie m i m Ottico ot IM
a h person* vuycesltd in i m
; Director at Purcnotm g
T M County ro to ru e t I M ngtH to esiH e t* w M m a copy a* tht*
M I C H lL C M O R E L A N D BETTIS.
Not .cool A dm m iitra lla n ha* bam
P e l .lu n a r Wd*
roiect m y or o il bids. » iin or
mailed era rm u,rod. W ITH IN
ft w ithout
c iu t l.
to
n a iv e
NOTICE OP A CTIO N
three m onths pr o m
the
technicalities, or to accept me bM
TO. JIM M Y R. B BTTIS
OATB
Of
THE
P IR S T
J- ***1&gt;&lt;h in li t lodgm ent best teevet
lU t Pm# Drive
OP
TH IS
•j I M interett o l I M County C m l ot P U B L I C A T I O N
Cewege Park. GeergM B ia s
NOTICE, Ia Hie any oetectient
Subm.itol o l m it bM It contMerod
YO U
A ll
H IR C R V
IM y may have that challenge I M
; on oporalionol cost ot I M bMdor
NOT ip i I D IM l an action ter
vaiM .tr at t M decedent t well. I M
■! ong than not M p o tted on to ar
d u te lv tu n t l m trru g * has keen
g u a lillc a lia n t o l ih * pe rso n a l
!• born* by I M County
tiled e**m*l you tn d you art
ttpcesenlallet, or I M vm u* or
Peetont ore odvitod m ot.II IM *
regm rtd U tw v* a copy aS your
lurttdittion o l I M court
; doc Me to appeal m y decision
w r itttn M fm t r t &lt;1g n y ,le d tn 0 .
A L L C LA IM S . D E M A N D S . A N O
^ made o l this meet mg M o rin* .
A N D R EW S P I E R . Attorney tat
O BJECTIO N S NOT SO P I L E O
. iM y w ill need o record ot IM
PtCHuner. who** eddies* U III
W ILL I B fO R B V B R B A R R I O
.; proceed-ngt. and. tor w e n pur
west
Cemmwctel t i l e d . Senlerd.
Oat* o l t M Hr*l pu b tkatM n t t
p, pote. may me* need to m t u r i that
P u c Me STTTt. t a w betcee June L
mis Notice a) Aom ln .siral.en
a v e rb a tim
re c o rd ot i m
I lf I. And IU* I M b rig J M l with I M
May IL IN I
proceed*net N mode, w hich record
CUTS at IhU Court either bakery
W.ii.am A L o g m
M T V V I an p*t.tuner * slie rn e y *r
J, include* the t e tllm o n y on*
A t Pertonei Represent olive
&lt;• upon which appeal ‘t to
Im m e d ld llly t k e r e e tltr ; din e r
« me E t ia ie et
I bated
wise t detovd w ill be entered
Ayarei Logan.
again st you tor in * r a ilg l
| R lo ctm o n . C P M
Decor &lt;04
demanded m the PetdUn.
r o l P urchotin*
ATTORN V f O R P E R S O N A L
W ITNESS my M n d and i m seel
I County S orvicdt
R C P R I S E N T A r 'V E :
at
m u Court on Apeil Tl I N I
w j. r git or nan w . C m
Arthur H Betkw im . Jr.
flo o r. Corner t t Ikt Street
Suite t l *01 East Altamonte
As Clerk at t M Couft
P a rt Avon t v
Drive
By C a n .y E Rudttndr
fL tan
AJIamante Spring* f* -rM a B i l l
As Oepu'v Clerk
i n u i o E at la i
I iM eonce. IMSI AM I tea
Publish
. • ' « !». : t 1*11
M a r I L it *i
Pubien M ay I L 11 I N I
D E I*
IK d
1 OEl n

41—ffaincs

0 1— Apartments Furnished

Legal Notice

IN

B ool E l t i t t BroAor
3440 U n fo rd A v«

REALTORS*

Sanford's Sales Leader
WE L IS T ANO S E L L
M O R I H O M E S TH AN
A N Y O N E IN T N I
S A N P O tn A P E A
JUST L IS T E D T Bdrm . 1 g .m
M m * la Midden L a b e l Sour
Edri* plan, decay leu ekes.
CHA. new WW carpel. PM
Rm. perch. k R g mere!

l ilt s *

1 Bdrm . It# Bom . Larged tone ad
corner let. appll included,
m et ere* S G .d O U S eon
M ID W A Y a B drm . bis t a n e v i
on at i t at lend le r pet a .
tenced yd u t.T M I B A U S
Senlerd VWtege t Bdrm . ) Bern
dn Lg* LS I SS1.0M Wm
A M iictu w tk. R E A L T O R BT
TSU. Eyes U I I N I
IT JO H N S R I V E R (C a n e ll—)
bdrm . I bath, central M e t e,r.
w ell te w all carper. I car
g a ra g t
im m a c u la te con
drtlen 100.1J0 Prin etpa u a M y
m ir n o r B U M
LO C H A R B O R - 1 bdrm. 1 M m .
&gt; ivopceces. dan. large S ll
cnen. fu lly eqwpped mcludmg
new Jams AW convection 0,rn
( r ill
r t t r ig e r e i er, g itn
wether, w a ll te w ell carpet,
central M a t aw. I car carper*.
U rge workshop. Heated sn T
H t t . O a k tre e*, ta c t lle n t
c o n d itio n
M any
e a tra t
U T .soe
P r in c ip a ls
only
■ etu en c* I B MT*. Bus mess
m i n i . S l l 1 I I M o n P rl
IAAAAACULATE 1 Barm I bath,
spacious dm ing rm . Hying rm
with b rick Iw ttM C f. screened
perch New root A carpel,
m any e s tra t La rg e shaded
HI Good a rye Only 1U.IOO
H I S ll*

A T T R A C T IV E | Bdrm . | Bent
M m « le le t A ir I Large comer
H i. ear tq h i t . M ’ w m m g t o
•#•&lt;• bdrm pfaa. P P L . CH A A
e s trts r n s it*
JUST POR YO U ! IR d rm . I M I S
hem * la S e a ia a d i P t a c t d
Y*rd. PI*, rm .. U rge perch «
M lie . utility rm A m erer Lets
at peH nnalt S1I IM
P A C K A O R O fA L . Two T Bdrm.
I berg k e m e tl o * e d l*.
veslm enli Said m a t
tend
Psaced yerdsi G r . t t HcatMe
W Dreem w eMI s m se s ly c .l

R ID G IW O O O A C R E S ) Dvpiy,
H U lin e d , a ll v f.liM s . paved
ree d s. N ea r
shsi
w ill
sukerd.aar* H r M u d e rs ■ „
•*■1 l u d new at le fe ri Jest
II b i l l F rtra SI4.I3SI
M A V P A IB V I L L A ll 2 A ] Bdrm
I Ram Cende v u ia i. ■*&gt;• r*
May la ir Cavalry c i . k Select
ye#r H I. IHer pH * A mferter
decor I Oeelcfy ceeslrucled by
SAeemaktr le r s ir it s A epl
Ope* Safer day H I S I M ft
Sve Neon SI
ASSOCIATES NE C O E O I New
•r espenenced C a ll Herb
Sleas'rem er Lee A lbright r»
dey A e.icever iv c c e s tl

CA LL A N Y TIM E

JUNE
rotzfc t u i r r
■ a*. R t a l l t H H Areesr
111 s a lt
R vs US-TSSS
O s n E k m o t iv a t ld i
Nestled under U rg e Oe* trees.
IhU I Bdr m heme h ot * U rge
fam ily room w ith l i t r e In
s u ia ile n te r tew ndpr**tin*
Owner says M N hold mat
•gag* tool Asking SIT.J00

* 322-2420
C A LL ANYTI

ms
P rta c k

DOO
U

i J

i
■.

“'•r 323-i
R EALTO I

Multiple Listing

�u
41-Houw*

R O B B II’S
REALTY
m i j Fr**c*
I m 't «
U n i* rtf
L I K E C O U N T R Y Sanford home
with owner financing Large
*0*. tented lo ft of n ' r « i CaM

S

CallBart

C o m p a n y

■ 1*1 e s t a t e
’ or m im

K J S I C
i: s r V I I

111-0041

me

MLS

LO CH A R B O R a ttfrm . I a im .
Ya m .tr B m , latitfa U lil.tr.
Carport. N n Cant H A. large
tancatf rartf U f .M t
S A N P O R D I U r n . I Bat*. O K
arte*
l. r t p ia c a ,
paaaiatf
F a m ily *m . Cgwaped ait
c*an, New carpat and etnyf.
L a rta Oat ihatfatf 1*1 l l t l . M

OBI Wte#H a l l '. ) M r m ) Bath
at
ID *. m la ra tt
Oonrt
p aym ent and tp ta ovar
p ir n . m u C all art i » U )

0110_____________ __
Sat out uaautitui new B R O A D
M O R E , trortt B raar B R 'I
CR EG O R Y M O B IL E HO M ES
M U O rlando Or
H I SUM
V A A F MA Financing
I) E ic o n ! ITkSO
V rrrC 'a a n . U ntum .ihad U.S00
D lllS d o r H l l t e l
E v E R Y O A Y IS B A R G A IN O A Y
IN T H E W ANT AOS i n M U or

111tttj

Concord 71, l i t 10
F a ir conn , Unlum .thad. liSOO
C all M l IMS

43-Lots ft Acreage

R C O U C B O I U r n . T Bat*,
R e n te a titn alm att camplatatf
Akkmg H i m
M a ta raa.
ta n ia ia ollar

S E M IN O L E WOODS e ie tu liv *
homt*ff«
f p*u1| j * r f* ^

o*n#r c«it Orundo in mo
WSSSddifs a t it r l p m

pan t n a il M B U Y R aal I t la ia

311-0041

REA LT O R S

wiiw tstsi

m in i

U

Tomorrow m#f be th# day you
ttd thAt roM A wav' bed row’v*
nG w rw rftoro ll aw av
M you
P*A&lt;« A Clft**if*d Ad todAY

k

I Acras naslird at tna mountains
Good accatt This tr a d is
raatfv to bu .K on Good na&gt;gh
eort idaal lor cam ping trailar
or cabin Dwnar s a d sail
SI1.S00 00. I I . 100 00 down
rnakas you tha naw owrwr
That# ara a law ot over MOO
listings Wa haua all If pat ol
properly tor 1100 00 par acra
and up Wa have sm all tract,
wa also h a v t savaral cabins,
hovsas. old farm s, ate W ritt
hr CSV ! X b r to4 a lia a titling
brochuta y o u can ca ll fraa b»
dialing 1 too O f M i l Write or
can today
C H ER O KEE LAN D CO M PAN Y

M U R P H Y . N O RT H C A R O LIN A
It SOI

52-Appliances
MICROW AVE
Brand New push button con'ro!
hat probe O riginally **&gt;*.
balance S lig. IIS monit ly
( &amp; R E M ’ M 1NP$ A T

'pl^'teKi,mteNjiilKR

4 j- L o r s A c lM g e

_______ .ITMH*______

V20RK«

______

M IC R O W A V E

Home tita overlooking Crystal
L a st with larga lawn a rt*
Su,table tor lentils, putting
range, or Gardens Over 1
Acre, c Wared tom e citrus
Terms Slf.000
C all Terry U U H I
O O NALI1G JA CK SO N INC
R E A LT O R ____________ H I t i l l

tachftng* S Brdfoom l|9 f f Im
CMv. North CffOt'h* Hou** •

10 A C R E S &lt;n Northwest Orange
County sal 000 1 0 '- Down,
balance at 10 s m l 111 raoa

in v«*fof
B u yin g
in com e
PfOpeffe PniH ipfti* owlr N o
brofter* Aigffftn
Boa **I3
*.n»ef P if* . ^1 177*3

f i f * piftce*

pec• n

tre e * ,

ft

C iftU if ed Act* null ftiw iy* gi«#
yow rwor*
WvKh , Much
More fhfto you enpetf

Save your equity and credit from
ts re c lo u ir e i n t o p ro p a rr,
with Hm equity and assum able
mortgages oatirad I Pr.ce and
tarm t negotiable C a ll 111 aiat

FOR YOUR F A R M
OR AU ILO INO LOTS
Sulca C a rp a .il,an Inc 111 1141
ar 111 N i l

ftd* M f v f th f O vying 4

ing pcniibl# tenth feftl dgwh
pvmt 177*407
it row won’t tell peopte. how ft'*
they going to knowY Ten them
with * ctft**ifttd ftd. by C iltin g
337 3*11 or 1)1 «f*3

R e a d 4 v t « f t w n 0*1*0

Aluminum Siding ft
Screen Rooms
Alum inum Application Service
Alum n A vinyl tiding, sottit.
screen rooms, windows, doors,
gutters n * I 111 a . as
WANT AD S A R E B L A C K A
W H IT E A N D R E A D A L L
over

I

O U A l i TV O P E R A T IO N
S fts f t p Patios. Driveways.
etc Wayne Baal H I m i

concrete w ork, footers Moors A
pools L a n d s c a p in g A tod
work F raa att H I 1101

Cypress Mulch
Top O uftU ly M u Ich tf«4tv*r*0 to

item* or b w ilfiiV t 11 Y d t U S
WO C am (M o 1?| VH

Beauty Cere

Boarding ft Grooming

Rustic Whole R ail, cypress lance
end pest Da H yeurtell er we
install 111 t i l l er H S a a tl
Free Estim ates

Snowftill Kennels proud to an
nour.ee me add.two or L a rry A
Batty, form at Iv w.th Anim al
Haven. 14 Hour Cara Full
Service IBS S il l
Tha Bast Buy In Town - A low
COM Class .Had Ad

E v a H i a s a t o r l M U 1W 1 * 4

NO JO B TOO L A R G E O R
SM A LL Owalitf « rnuif C f M
t lig g n . u i Y i s i Free E s i

Plumbing

lO N S F r a
P lU M B I N G
Con
Structwn. M epe.rt. E m e rg e n
cy Ltc . Bonded. Ins H I M IS

L A R G E T H E E I N S T A L L tR
Law ns

M ost
p ric e

Mobile Homes. Houses. Roots.
Trucks. Tra.lae, Etc Portable
Um l Harold Rankin H I IM S

Dad ana Dare L a w s Cara
Shrub A Trad Removal. Clean
ups. Haui ng I t lO m

Remodeling
Com plete nom e R e p e lr* 4
Remodeling. Feinting, room
edditiont. drrw e il. «9c. 30 yr*.
eap C&lt;ii 1)1 &gt;0*7 ewe*

Rem odeling S p ecia list
S e rv ic e

We hftrvlie ftw
Whole Bftii Of Wfti

Com pttie lawn cars 111 1M l
B ill A Jim 'S Form
’ tore R el ini thing A
Restoration Wa buy
A sell Can U l l i l t
attar h rt U l ST1S

* *41”

V ' f if i
N»‘ t r |
r&gt;? ' f i r
y i'

Handyman
Handyman

Ratirad

B. E. Link Const.

CrocketPt Law n
BaautH icalionand
M am iananta SarvKa
Tha par soti«i touch I
m «A7

Fmanclng A ju lg b ls

w gi

ha

m w H _____________________

L o w F '.c e t Ray I $11 S f f l

Hauling ft
Yard Work
Hauimg A Yard Work 11*. aft
with Ad U S 1111 no a n t »1
n n L a rry , Joyce Bryant

Home Improvement

V

M ewlag
LLaw*
ai
yard
Oaeaga c u m ua
V
e rb A &lt;
■ ru ta R t m e r il
H T .L A C K B Y
m aeai

». Staf* C a ftifit tf
i9 C o n t r a c t o r

*1 or

C o * tm « rcla i'

Itm odoiod

K 2 0*M

Burglar Ban

A L L P H A S e i R E M O D I L I NO I
Plum p.ng. E le c . Carpentry
It v r t Eap Q uality Work
le a s Rates F r e e E t t 111 t i l t
Hey Kids Looking tar an e itfa
Dollart A sk M om A Dad to let
you h a y a a c la t t iu a d ad
baregt ta la
R e m od e lin g A Repair. D ry YvdV

Hanging. Tekturpd Catnngs.1,
r , Baitrtf. m a u l , n i AMS
r a il A b ility ironworks
lor W iiMow A Door Guards
F r r s E t l H 114M

Carpet Cteaning
Shampoo A Deep Steam L ly .
Out Rm , Han. U l I N ea
aodrttenet rm 111 bate

Ceramic Tilt
M C lN W E * T i l E
l i t * u# r rp * f r M r ih o » e r * c v f
Ip tiia M y * IS F t* E » P l i t 45*2

C E N T R A L F L O R ID A H O M l
IM P R O V E M E N T S
Panning. Rooting. Carpentry
Ltc bonded A GuaranieeU
__ Ftee Bkfuwatek H U M S

Home Repain
Q U A L IT Y A T a F A IR P R IC E I
Gen Rrpa.rs A Improv II ( f t
lo t Ally. Setter D isc. H111BS,
Corpentry A Remodefifte
No .oh toe sm all
H I la s t or A lte r I W

Insulation
Clock Repair
save

G W A L T N fcT J b W f L C R
lO iS P a rk A » «
U lt u t

en erg y

a

do llars*

B a ll A Blown P R C N T O IN
SU L A t ION CO m 4111 or 111
111! F re t Esi,m ates

Freeter. t i l t F irm rttasl typy.
H cu tt SOI Cherokee Lene.
Sun Iand E si alas
D.n.ng Rm Suite. Bassett
press. Wood. Cane. Gtass.
Table with beveled glass m
serfs. I (hairs A tiled china
SI,100 Call 411 a m

it s

OrlftMtedB I M i te *

COLOR TELEVISION
Jemth IS" color TV Original
price over STM Belance due
SiSg oe take over payments 111
per month Still m werrenly
NO M O N E Y DOW N
W ilt
deliver Ftee home tria l Call
M l SMI Day or n.t*
Good U s a d T V t.'llS A up

rtvf k ia ltln 1 It p retty good. Out
rh e tin d ln 'ls k in d e ’ poorly ‘til
y*' git Is thk W AN TAO S
TV repo &gt;*' le n ith SoK orlg
S4F1 7S Bet t i l l 14 or H r mo
Agent IIS SIS*
T V 'S FOB R I H T
Color A Block A white F re t
delivery A p.ckup J.m m y s
TV Rental Phone Anytim e

______ w»it;»

54—Garage Sales

74 PontiAc G randvilte
Good P a rts tor Sal*
41| E la t h s t H ia t a l

62—Lawn Garden

N E E D A S E R V I C E M A N ’ Y o v il
fmd him listed in our Businest
OirecterY,

F I L L D tR T A T e r SOIL
yello w

sand

------------------ ------ iu:
77—Junk Cars Removed
■'
"
s"
• BUY JUNKCARSk TRUCKS

c a ll Clark A H lr t m r s a o
LA W N M O W E R s a l e 1 Star
S p e c ia l A v a ila b le now here
but Western Auto. Santord

F r o m S t b t o l» a r m o r *
C a ll H I 1*14. H I *4*4

65— R p t v Supplies

79-Tnjda f t Trailers -&gt;'■

Hover Pups, AK C. a Weeks
Faw n or Brindte Parents on
M em .set. 117$ H1414S

AS Chary Panel Truck, as teyl
I1CO0 Cash
Phone 111IS44
I

A R M Y N A V Y S U R P LU S
FI LpcSer. trunks. Outlie Bags
li b Sanford Aye
H1S7SI
Converse!.anel P i t - l b pieces.
s e rim o A e n e lu r a l fa b ric
Scolchguarded. »*Sb *14 4 N I
N E E D A SER VICE M A N 7 Y o u 'll
l.n dh im luted m Our Business
SerS.ee O.rettoey
SSB AVb.ie CB. SI10. Go Cart.
Site. II FI. Alum inum boat,
motor and trailar. S IX For
Sale or Trade tor II FI. or
long Canoe i n 4114 A lt I p m

Oftr«g« Sft't
OnNow At
701 B riftrcttfftSf
Y A R D S A L E Sftt . Sun 4 Man
J0« S Sunlirsd Dr • till I Mf*C
IttlTt*.
f r t 4 S«f M ftftfiol. button*,
g irl* c lo lh t t , b rlc o broc
Priced to lo ll 401 Juonfto C l .
Sunlftnd 333 *75$

Retien Game Set Glass topped
tebie A 4 chairs, l a x . W Kkar
shall unit. SIX) Rattan bar
stools III. I » *• M l ltd*

S ftf. 33rd *07 Poor! Rd. Wintor*
Spring*, off M o y ff Rd Crib.
* bftby item*, toy*, p ng pong

tftbift. ftntonno. drop**
C o u th and ch a ir, avocado gfeun.
good condition. S I X H I la***
a lte r t p m

55—Boats &amp; Accessories
1*7* 1} tt Coble Trl H ull, ts Hp
E y .n ru d t,
top ,
tan ks,
gal trailar 1)1 Fata

i l -Household Goods
IF71 lin g er Future F u lly auto,
repot tested, used very short
tim e Original m l . »bi S i l l or
t i l mo Agent US 1 X4

Johnson Outboard motor, 11 Hp ,
1*11 m odal Used vary llttte, in
a i com . Ph i n m i

lif e r 1 p m

I f

66—Horses

&gt;

BO—Autos for Sale

-------------------------- r~
CA SH FO R YO U R CA R ,

Mft'fltn Molor SAIf* ,.
7015 F fro th

67—Livestock Poultry

'Vftl F O R D Gftlftey
Good Cond AC $300
339 75i$or 331 0011

68—Wanted to Buy

*

Alum inum . cAns. copper, lead,
brat*, silver, gold WeeSdeys
• 4 10. Sat 1 1 k o k s M o Tool
Co *11 w 111 SI H I I tOQ

ia V 7 6 n *a
I TW

Hi IMi

A N T I Q U E A M o d e rn d ells,
K e w p i* d e lls A fig u rin e s.
A lt ten d er dolls 4*4*411

72—Auction
ly

‘J i
*•&lt;

97 i

a u t o a u c t io n

Hwy *1. 1 m il* w rit ot Speed
way, Daytona Beach, w ill hale
a public A l i l O AUCTION
every W M n tsd ay *11 p m &lt;1 s
in*oniyon*
H ripe yo u s*i
IIS# reserved price C a ll SBli
.
M U ’ Of Imtnev details
.
M il C apri v a Rebu.it engine
end brakes New paint Recant
im p , S 1)10 111 SJF1
•

D ia m o n d s
O il
O riental Rug«

O R LA N D O s On

32)71)1

jE E P l. CARS. TRUCKS '
ftvgtliblft through go v frn m tn f
•g«n&lt;lf|. fnftny %fll fay undf¥
$700 00 Cftlt *07 941 M l*
No 9*00 tor your d.ftetor y gn
how to purchft*f

I F R E E H O RSE WORMfcR
Or your chOvct w ith ourchasa ot
M bags ot Hors* Feed
W.lce Seles —Hwy 4FW, S M l W
*1 14 Santerd H I 4171

Sr 4»*t At-' a,*s

S*

____________ .... a

Saddle end Acceuor.es
For S a tt.lM O
C a ll H I 0040 ur 111 lb li

A n liv u » s
Paintings

v

Top Dollar P a ,d tor Junk A U y d
cars, tru cks A heavy equip
ment U l S«*b

La rge M a le Basset
Neutered. 1' ■r r * oW
S » C a ll H I BUS

i t o p 'o o l l a V s.
,,
For yorr cor or truck. rr* br
d irts ot cond Prefer runnngj.
Fre* lowing 111 l i l l Ageni

M O N T H LY

~ ' ' ■

ANTIQUE SHOW

i——■-■ -

y*i

NO M O N E Y DOW N P e y m m ls
SIS month ta Cpuger I S ;,
PS. PB . Aulo. A M F M tle fru .
air A many other ealres l| f
S IX or 111 eaOS O m it

F f f t Adm.ftiton 4 Pftf Ling
S A f , M A Y 3), 9 ft m t o f p m
1UN .M A Y 34. 10 ft m to * p m

Has 4 cylinder dodge D art wtfh
AC , 40 O X m iles, eicelieiat
cond . I*M m 17S4 A ll 4 ]o

N A T IO N A L G U A R D A R M O R Y
7909 5 F n n c r m A v f.O rlftix lo
1 Blfc 5 of M ich igon S i
O V E R 40 D E A L E R S fo r Into
Cftll 199 70*4
H M PRO M O TIO NS

71 Pinto. 4 Speed
N .c t Car SH I
M l 1214

________
F o r E ifftte , C o m m trc iftl or
Rtthtontifti Auction* 4 Ap
pr*i*ftl* Cftll Doll'* Auction
37) 5430

CHssItted Ads 4re in* smallest
big newt Hems you w ill 'ind
anywhere
t t Pent GTO, R u s t A d u vet
good Needs body work, t ISO ar
w ill trade ror an tiq u ei o l equal
value t i l l , M aple

* Auction Sale A
Friday Nit* 7 P.M.
O ld G e r m a n k in g s ,le bedroom
set, c o m p ie f* , c o u th , cha .rs.
T V s . d in e t t e s t f . t l a c f r l c
ran g e,
o rg a n ,
c a r p e t in g ,
b e lh ro q m l, e lu te s, lin e Ing.
la m p s, Ilb d b « 1 U aw con
d .ltcm tr, k itc h e n ca b in u l v a ll
k ind s o l ite m s, large A sm a ll
cash o o o n

Mev»f&gt;0 Sftlft SOfft. I
. YihYl,
m oiching choir 4 oftcmftfv
m&lt;j tftble*. drop loaf d^Mftft
fftfefft 4 chftir*. Iftmpft. brown
cftrprt 10ol7. m«9i * c»o»h»* *f
*4. fftdir* *r 13, rvg*. Ling l i l t
bed*pr««d, v in y l chofr, * dr
che*i. luugftQtr w&gt;gi O vffd a
Cfwtrol 4 Vin# 30$ 7111

con m i n s

p r iie s

Dell's Auction Center

71 Ford S ill, on Wagon. L T D
brougham, t a lr a clean, new
tires, air, PS. P B . M X o r make
oiler 111 14*1___________
H I I M averick A Cylinder Agio
T ra n k , AC, Clean. New Pa.ol,
E ic e lle n l C o n d itio n 1 H W
Goad lor Sludanl H I IM S
IS M C a la ii* » 1 A ulo Trans. A ir
co n d ,lio n . C la a n , E k c e llt n l
Cond,Hon. I l . o x H I M * *

H w y a* W est, Santerd

H I said

75—R ecreational Vehicles
t i l l Oodgr TravcO Cam per van
t , ton h.gh lop. A ir. Cond ,
a m F M tap*. Cruise control.
Stov*.
R e fr lg .
Sink,
B a th room Sleeps a M u ll
sacrifice IS TM Day i l l ball.
E re U l a n t

IF7«VW Bren*
Rune P erfect SHOO
C a ll H I **.n
- v --------- — - ...........

'
a,.

W riC h ry s le r Newport
A ir, P I , PB. C ru ise Control *
SAM O t W*1
’J
FOR D G a la a y . 1171 S400 '
1*01 C h a u Ay*

111til*

17 tf H oliday Ram bler Ideal tor
Iravrl.ng or camp.ng T w tlr t
Oaks Cam pground inquire at
L o ll s Santord a M i w on a*

VW 11*1 P ic k Ub Truck •'*
Good Meehan,cal Condllterl
sasb H I aaa*
we-

TRANSMISSION SERVICE '
• Adiust bands B Linaag*
• Chan** Fluid. F ilte r 4 Geiket
• Check Opereheh B Certeil.M

M est C a rt B
Tan Pick U*4

*2 8 1

JIM LASH'S

BLUE BOOK SERVICE CENTER
4114 Hwy 17 FI Between la n ia rd B Langwaud, Phan* II t *741
Bant a lt a r s
Ava.iabfa

H a u rsi M a m

lafilbb m

NEW LOCATION

M.kt main

j^diS'

Masonry
A ll Types or M a so n W o rt
Spec lalHing m Fences and
Addliions 111 1M1.

NEW Concraia b v W in g t. a ll
tija*. U E A
A t I 4 A SR aa
14 Industrial P 4 tk n 10041

Nursing Center
OUN RA T ES A R E LOW fcR
L a k e y ie w N u rsin g c b it a r
SIS E Second S I. Santera

1U4W1

Sandblasting

Scott Smith Olds Invoice Specials,

SA N D B LA S TIN G
O A V I lW lL O I N O
n it n t . s a n f o r o

Memorial Day Marathon Sale, 86 hr.

Tax ft Accounting
Services______
Or

Fri. 22nd, 8 AM Continuously 'til
Mon. 25th, 10 PM

Bartinesi and in d ly i* ia is
E n ia b tth A G rtedteC P A
i n has

Tree Service
I t o r in g

it m a k e s w a s t e —
s e l l i n g it m a k e s c a s h
p l a c e a c la s s if ie d a o

INVOICE

1) OMEGAS « ■ be told at Factory Invoke

SALEM

■yva. r.a . *w yyif v m i fy -y

Painting
\\
ts
*4

84 K S III* N M ill* Av* (17 911

SCU BA TANK. Alum ifkim
10cu It Just im p elled

ROOFS, le a ksfeea ved . Rea**&lt;a
rattea aavet and sluagla w*t*.
i i s a s u l . la su rsd . baad td.

Mi ni-U-Lock
Bui Wing Contractor

T R U M P E T •’Conn”
Eftcofignt Cond
C ftU m K U l

Roofing

A t Law n Cara
AJI M i u l to a Q u IlitX

a ifiw tt A n yth in g m ifw horn#

gj, S

Pressure Cteaning

Rt

Franks Law n Service
A Landscaping Q uality F .rsl
C a ll ir o n ;»*41S0Collect

C e fso n l a w n

Brush Cutting
CU STO M W ORK
R ia s o n a b la
R ates
F ree
estim ate C all E a rly A. M or

Painting f t
Pressure Cleaning

II y o u 're In I he b u im e ta ot
b u ild in g y o u ' b u sin e ss use
the C la s s ifie d A d s often

Furniture Refinishing

A nim al H a r m Boarding and
G ro o m in g K e n n e ls Shady.
Insula led. screen. My proof,
malde. outside tuna Also AC
cages W acalea your pars 111
s i s i ____________

w a llp a p « riH 9 , pa m l ing L ow
p rlci* Q in r wor* 111 4 l i t

F re d d ie R a b ln ssn p lu m b in g
R e p a irs, la u c a lt , W
C
Sprinklers 11) U I0. 1110104

Lawn ft Garden
Service

TO W ER S B E A U T Y SALON
f o r m e r l y H a rrie tts Beauty
mocb u s e tst s i . n i s t n

t e r r y s in t e r io r s

Spr.ng Y a rd C le a n U p M o w in g ,
bads m ulched, sh ru b p ru nin g,
w eeding, b a sic y a rd car#
M o n t h ly
ra tts
C a ll
lo r
r t ! jo n n t e r SOaO A m P m

Lan d sca p in g . O K
p la ce d la s 1501

Fences

Tha "G oo d Ola D a r t" hay*
never left tna Classified Ad
s
Tna Buys ara s till Tha
Basil ________________
^

Paintlr

Lendscaping

man

T ELEV IS IO N
RCA. i f television X L I X Solid
S t ilt
C olor
Fortftbi*
Wftrr*nly P l y ||4f or $14
MonfhlY Pihooclwg No Down
P iY m tn r

,
m il le r s
14tt Or U n d o Dr
Ph H I 0111.

SO—M i s c e ll a n e o u s f o r S a le

Iro n w o rk s

tha n a n her is perfect tor a
b a c k y a rd
t a la
—
sail
everything last with a want ad
Call H I ib is or 111 ra n

w ilin g com m unity t v t r y dfty

S3— T V R a d i D S l e r e o

4» Country Property

C e v a l'e iM o fo il"n .H ( u

C iB U tf

Large serection Apartment s.rr
g a t ranges
Guaranteed
Sanford A u ctio n , n i l 1
rrwnrt, y y stsin

47 A—Mx1 gages Bought
ft Sold

O rig in a l O il e e ,n t i" g t
liq uidate stock, h a ll

A n y th in g
C o n crete
Stabs.
Drryaways. Concrete color Mg.
Etc Quairty work at fair
penet Ron i n ears A it S p m

R E F R E P O 1*cu ft Irswt tree
Or.g ISIS, now 1101 or I1F mo
Agent 11* IM*

We pey cesh tor 1st A Ind
mortgeges R ty Legg. L K
Mortgtg* Broker US 71ef

To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

C bm 3339737

kenm or* parts, seryis* ulw l
washers M O O N E Y A P P U
ANCEI lllb lt t

have cash

AND LET AN EX PER T DO THE JO B

CiNrtt w ill iu r v lc t AC'*,, r t i f i f ,
( F t v n r t , «r«t«r c o o it n , m l*c

Wash*? rrpo O k d e iu ir model
Sold n g laps i s used then
l.m e Bel SIB* la or tt* 11 mo
tent 11*114*

42— R e a l E s ta te W a n te d
W t buy tg w ily In Houses,
apartments, (scant land and
Acreage
LU CKY
IN
V ES TM E N TS . P O B m 1100.
Sanhvn r ' j . 1T?1. B i- f f f j

76—Auto Parts

S»—M usical AMrdvindise

beftuif 305 71) M M

em tft* nos,coo O w m f 11 tH in c

Window Guards. Door Guards,
Sliding G lass Door enclosures.
P a tio and P p f l ra ilin g s .
Fences. Gates. E ire Escapes.
Sleet S tilts : O rnam tnrst iron
Furniture. Etc Coma «re pur
display. 1X1 E ISi It right hafa
«n Sanford1 A b ility ironworks,
i l l nod
________

Brand new Tappan microwave
oven Only two l i t to te ll *1
this price SIM cesh or lid a
month NO M O N E Y DOWN
Fre# home tria l, No obligation
C all U l S1S4 day or nlta

47 — Real Estate Wanted

O R C A M HOUSE
30 Acre* *•** River Right* A
fro m * Log homo 1 Bdrm , 7
tlftth w&lt;m dec*, pool, lot* of

C o n c re te W o rk

m mi

V

Larga trout t'ra a m Is at a eras ot
n a tu ra l m ou n tain t a u t .
P le n ty ot Dogwood, M tn
la u r t l Troul Hr ram bordaas
th.s tract P ia n tr ot privacy,
good h e m
several bldg
Idas Raal m et lim bar. good
«wws. cool and quiet Pneatf
right at 1111*0 00 Tarm t a r t
SI HO 00
dow n,
is s u m a
r i. ll. n g loan

n . s a il

Side by S.de R e frig Stove upper
towvf. harvest SOM n r.r
le a n , new Hammond Organ
w ith in stru m en ts re v trb ta
lion fUueith White entlgue
r ',ester bedroom u4, Ouren
l l l e Custom d ra p e ry and
m a tch in g bed sp read, blv*
shag carpeting, lewn mower
E ilr a s . e ifra s. e itra s Week
isavs art 4 p m 1i t S lH

S9P*:

CONSULT OUR

Air Condition

111 i u e . F IR S T ST.

a Nevy green crusneo veivei
swivel reckert. SU0 each 1
matching ottoman. Sab

L .B ^ C 'J

NORTH C A R O L IN A
M O U N TA IN S
Mountain caBln with l.rapiaca
Oantfr oardan spot This is a
•tentfynbn lp s c ia l beenute rt
■s not finished .ni.de, rough ad
w.ra and plumbing co m p ittt
Wafer and tha outsKa Is
carnplatad
L a rg a
d te k
ovarleoting mtns You can lira
in it whila row Hntsh it up 1
m.las troth M u rpn r t i l . MO 00.
U 000 00 down a ttu m a Wan

l:

W ILSON M A IE R F U R N IT U R E

.RESPECT) A PC,MJN5TRATON
HirnN'AJf'rfrr*
C f BU R H E'6
R t f W T E B * LIKE T E 5 T iN WITH
p u p a b iu t y
Hlft
^ H A V IN ' C R E A M W I T H
THAT WILL
HIDE.
A T W E LV E W H EELER ’
CONVINCE
NOT
EVEN AC E ! j
HI*

4S-A-CM of Slat*
Property

■42—Mjfttle Homes

T H I F O R E S T &gt; BOrm. I Bat*.
S plit Plan la m .lr r n , Dae*,
naar Clap Haota Pool. and
Saaoa. s ii.s ta

B U Y R a a l fltla ta and n a it l ll
L A W A N A K IS H
realto r

Wa h a rt la v t r a l 10 acra tracts
m a r OaLantf I t o x cash or
110 000 n it h S1.S00 down
SIM IS paa mo for S ra a rs

iiS C o n S m h iu n *
For Site
V IL L A S
J
| SAND ALW O O D
B lrm , 1 Path. ww dw. WAD.
c AM, pool, v tr ra tio SH.SOO
- " " ‘T
—

J1-A—Fumlfurt

I'D 60 W W N W f PU N C H T \ v&lt;,W WLTSP. HMWAMHI.
RHJftf) H27W PERCEPTIVE.’
O JT K l M W H B U T T P
W ELL PUT &lt;?N
K PU T K The jlammeri. 1 W IH f \

J t ,t

Hove* Trailar Per Saw litlO . }
Barm . I Bat*, par H r turn .
mad repairs C all H I l t » a *
a n , l i t pm

r e a i

H E A L

i &amp;

Th* T.m* te u e d T ,rm
r n
Rite R e e iE ita f* BtoAer [ J j
I0SW C o n m e fc ta iS I
IJ7 * U )

24 HOUR Q) 322-9283
C X fo n B R .IB
F A M I L Y HOM E
in town but vfrir p n v it f !■
c e llm t co nd itio n including
brand n**r root 4 pft.nl ioq
Y u u ii lm $&gt;v.nu M in t le t

i . J J m

with Major Hoopla

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

O— Lolv Acreage

41— H o u s e s

Frteay,M*y». IM I-fA

tm hMo Harold. tewfsre.FI.

2) CUTLASSES w3! be sold at *50 over Factory Invoke

i »*•*,,

3) OLD'S 88 w i be told at *100 over Factory Invoke

h arper s t r ie ie r v ic b

Ttlmm.ng. removing A Land
scaping F ree E tt H lf ll * !

m o use p a in t in g

la
'•le rie r A * ile tte r
NT L A C K E Y l l l l « 4 t

tte.iman Pa m .n g A R tpe.rs
Quality work Free E s i Disc.
I , le n te n FM u s g Meter____
Mouse Pa.nter *sl C la st Work,
reasonable peaces IS years
e*p Kenne&gt; Molt 111 S il t
/WlpJ n'«a c ffff 8
P ro le s slo n a l
P a in lln
fetter inferior.
L k ms Free 1st 1- u l U l r

e

Cwtlgm D tiorar.n g Pa.ru .ng
■rueraor e ittrte r. plastering,
•allp a per mg Q uality work.
Reas Frye E s i i n ItM

Typing ft
Bookkeeping

a

1 Tv
7

Xwwl Brtetb
t a g tig
N

4) OLD'S 98 win bo told al *150 over Factory Invoke
19

*

5) Toronodot wil be sold at *200 over Factory Invoice
6) A8 Diesels wil be sold at *250 over Factory Invoke

W IL L 0 0 ty p in g , tesum g.
reports In my home on IBM
co rre c tin g s e le c tric . A ls o
bookkeeping 121*0)0
C LA S S IF IE D ADS DO A JOB
WHICH CAN B E OONC NO
o t h e r W AY c a l l H I M i l

L;
Wallpapering
Wallpapering Ere* Est IS
Yr*, e .p C a ll A L (M ac)
■ M exm n*r m *4*0 )* m 7pm

1177 N. SEM ORAN BLVD
(H W Y .-061
PH. 678.1717

HOURS:
M ON,-SAT.8:30*10 P.M ,
SUNDAY NOON-6 P.M.

0

�BLONDIE

WA—Evening Herald. Sanford. FL

Friday, May a , m i

by Chic Yeung

ACROU

I I Woo
IS Orongo pekoe
I Musical tow 1 7 ____Seen• SNk o

Answer to P rm ovt Peate

i

12 Greet colony
II Unfurl
II
I*
.
II Too* bod
II BtheMr

SO Slow (mot)
| ] Snortod
14 Dotty
15 Merit bmo
I I Tint knottod
fabric
17 Actiont

Ruptured D isc?
Exercise Helps

DEAR DR. IAMB - I
would appreciate anything
teVtoN
you can tell me about rup­
DOWN
20 Omimonttl
tured discs. About a year ago
rtM
I picked up a sack of groceries
22 A uOw m
t Picture hour#
2 31st President
21 CtOMhrmfy
at arm 's length and ruptured
1 Htmborgor 21 Piper
II Alilt
21 Voko
a disc in my lower back. I
girmtti
mettvrt (pi) 40 In com not
stayed
in bed about three
21 Relettd
4 Piece for
23 Nothing
41 Oglod
weeks. The doctor I went to In
Iktlmg
21 luolty clomp
24 Comp m
4] Mm coroo
I Socml
mmj
orthopedics X-rayed and told
tppomtmont 28 foot d&lt;grt
20 Start period
firm
me what It w u , but when 1 they have a little girth control
12 Como to tormo • S u n n ____ 27 UnuiuiKy
41 Give mmo to
asked him about recovery, he problem.
7 looton
II
21 Cry of
41 Mild OipfttnrO really didn't commit himself.
I Gne* dwty
Strong abdominal muscles
iu rp n M
___
Ml
• HoyordoM'l
It la still touchy and makes help to splint the back and
21 Spnld to dry &lt;• Surrounded
17 Aftormott
rift (2 wdt |
n * tired after any strenuous protect it from sudden strain
21 Intolligonco
by
11 Doy of wool 10
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activity. I am so afraid of a that leads to a ruptured disc
(•Mel
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42 Grodwtto of II Subtle
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recurrence I’m not as active and muscle spasm problems.
14 Sly mow
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as I would otherwise be. Are Your continued sedentary
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there any exercises that habits may make matters
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would strengthen It? I am worse for you. The greatest
1 2
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t
10 11
about 20 pound* overweight cause of backache In our
and would welcome exercises. society la Inactivity. You also
12
13
I'm 44 years old.
need to learn how to lift
DEAR READER - Your without straining your back.
14
14
doctor probably didn't want to
DEAR DR. LAMB — A year
comm it himself because ago I had my uterus and
17
19
11
people who have back trouble ovaries removed and my
tend to have a recurrence of bladder replaced. The doctor
19
20 21
22 23 24
the problem. Whether a prescribed estrogens but I
person has a recurrence or never took them. Two weeks
21
29 37
21
not often depends upon what ago 1 had a checkup and the
he does in his Ilf* style.
doctor was upset because I
29
30 31
I am surprised that your had not.
12 32 14
39
doctor didn't give you some
I have read several articles
exercises to strzngthen your stating that tf one doesn't
M
37 21
39 40 41
abdominal and back muscles, need estmeen* it 1* best net to
as part of a program to take them. I am 34 years old
42
43
44
minimize chances of a and have no symptoms other
recurrence. A person with an than a few hot flashes. Now he
44 II
47 41 &lt;9
acute ruptured disc SHOULD has given me another
NOT exercise but should be prescription and I don't know
10 91
42
43
off his feet, which usually what to do. Is there some
means in bed. That phase other reason why he wants me
44
44
usually lasts a few days to two to take estrogens?
weeks. After recovery you
91
47
DEAR READER - Too
u
should do sit-up* and modified little estrogen
causes an
leg-Ufls that don't strain the Involution of the sex
m tw io o n in in r in n n iii t u m
back muscles, and exercises ch aracteristics that were
that strengthen th» seat originally induced at puberty
muscles and spinal muscle* when estrogen increased.
I am sending you The That includes drying of the
Health Letter number 1310, vagina.
Backache and What to Do
A m oderate amount of
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL
about It, to give you In­ estrogen helps to prevent
formation on the types of bone loss, which If unchecked
For Saturday, M ay 23, 198 1
exercises you should be doing. would result in a buffalo hump
Check them out with your and Increased ri*k of frac­
YOUR BIRTHDAY
(omethtng different, even if doctor to be sure they are all tures, such as breaking a hip.
B reast lumps and the
May O, INI
It's Just dining at a new right for you. Others who
want this issue ran send 73 danger of cancer of the lining
During the year following reitaurant with friend*.
your birthday you could make
SCORPIO (O ct 34 Nov. 22) cent* with a long, stamped, of the uterus are the two main
self-addressed envelope for it dangers in taking small
•ereral cxdUng new poll. Extra push will be required
to me, in care of this amounts of estrogen Con­
Each night Introduce* you into today In order to be successful
newspaper, P.O. Bo* 1331, sidering the pros and cons it is
new fun groupi, thereby In your endeavors. This
Radio City Station, New York, wise for a woman to depend
giving you the opportunity to shouldn't disturb you. You're
NY 10019. Incidentally, these upon her individual doctor to
expand you circle of friend*. a strong finisher.
exercises also help people advise what Is bwt in her
GEMINI (May 21Juno 20)
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23You have the ability today to Dec. 21) You're likely to be tone up their abdomen in case individual case.
build a better mouoetrap than more fortunate today working
other* construct You may on new project* than In
have two occationa to utilize pursuing old ones. Spend your
your talent*. Romance, time productively on your
travel, luck, reaourcei, freshest interest.
possible pitfall* and career
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♦ A 74
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19
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TAURUS (April 28-May 29)
any play would work in that
come up with aomethlng Early in the day you may By Oiwald Jarohy
case No play was going to
clever.
and
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experience difficulties In
work if East held four to the
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HOROSCOPE

WIN AT BRIDGE

by S to flel A H a im d a h l

TAKE IH E R ES U SWOCPRSH
SPECIAL Off THE MENU
pc std o a v

ANNIE

F R A N K AND E R N E S T

by Bob T h a v a s

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SEE YOU AT PIHNERTIAE,
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T U M B LE W E E D S
‘F Y E , GUYS, GOTTA GFT P A IR

TO FLORIDA. I’MSCHBPULEP
ID W RESTLE AN ALLIGATOR.

T*An*t P l l

by T. K. Ryan

F L E T C H E R 'S U N P I N G
by Craig Leggett

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LEISURE
Complete Weok's TV Listings
Sanford, F lo rid a — F rid a y , May II. t t l t

A rtis t D a y
A t The Zoo
ny SYBIL MITCHELL GANDY
Herald Stall W riter
lio n s and tigers and bears were captured In Sanford
Saturday — on paper that Is — during C entral Florida s
3rd Annual "A rtist Day At The Zoo." Youngsters
crayoned and penciled and chalked the critters for prixes.
More than 80 Seminole and Orange County children
competed for cash prUes In age categories pre-school
through 12th grade.
Sponsored by the Central Florida Zoo, Burger King and
the Central Florida Council of A rts and Sciences, the
creative confab Invited area students of all ages to come
and capture the anim al of their choice in any media they
chose.
.
c
,.
Children were briefed on contest rules when they
registered for the event.
"We simply told them they could accept no help from
parents but they were free to wander around the park as
they pleased and draw any anim al th at they wished." said
Beth Brinson spokesman for the xoo.
"By the 3:00 p.m. deadline, we had 82 drawings and
sketches. We Informed the children that winners would be
notified on Monday," she added.
Bob and Patsy Nintnger. ow ners of a Winter Park
com m ercial artist business, chose 3 winners in each
entegory and 2 honorable mentions, entitling recipients to
trophies, cash prixes, theatre passes, electronic games
and lots to eat at the Burger King Awards Banquet
Wednesday night.
Kathy Kimball of the Central Florida Council of Arts
and Sciences said the event was designed not only to
promote more Interest in anim al life at the xoo, but also to
give kids a chance to develop their own style of capturing
an im age in free-hand.
"We were very pleased and proud of live artistic quality
shown in the drawings Although our entries were down
from last year, we couldn't have been happier with the
response," Ms. Kimball said.
The contest was staged as on in a continuing series of
children's events sponsored by the xoo.
Walking oft with the prixes: In the pre-school category.
1st place, C arrie Johannesmeyer, M aitland; 2nd place.
Mason Wheeler, longwood; and 3rd place, Glenn Cobb,
Longwood.
G rades K-2, 1st place, lU chel K eeler. Winter Springs;
2nd place, Rebecca Waters, Altamonte Springs, anil 3rd
place Alison Je tt. Maitland. Receiving an Honorable
Mention was Hank Daviero of Sanford.
G rades 3-5. 1st place. Joseph Adkins, Orlando; 2nd
place, Jeff Whitney. Ungwood; and 3rd place. Kimberly
Kettles. Casselberry. Awarded an Honorable Mention was
Tania Russakov, Altamonte Springs.
Grades fvfl: 1st place, Chris Stickney. Sanford; 2nd
place, Phillip Zabukovec. F ern P a rk ; and 3rd place.
Melaney Maclnnis, Altamonte Springs.
G rades 9-12,1st place. John Ripley. Orlando; 2nd place,
Lynn Trombmo. Deltona; and 3rd place, E ric Nyros,
Sanford.
.,
„ .
All first place entries will be m atted for display in the
Central Florida Zoological P ark conference room. Ms.
Brinson said.

M ore Photos, Page 2

Vincent

Six-year-old Chris Pedrlck of l.ongw ood was one of many Seminole and Orange ^ u n ty young
sleri who sketched for prixes in the Cenlral Florida Zoological P a r k s 3rd Annual Artist Day
at the Zoo. The young artist, who attends Woodlands Klementary. tries to capture his favorite
2c h i

animal in ct ay on.
Eft

�ARTIST D AY
WINNERS
C h r is tly S tl c k n e y t l e f l ) .
c o lo r c h a lk * a m a n d r i l l ,
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C 'hrlH , a n l l - y r a r - o l d
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s tu d e n t w a lk e d a w a y
w ith a f i r s t p r i z e t r o p h y
th e 6 th t o Xth g r a d e
c a te g o r y d u r i n g " A r t i s t
D a y A t T h e Z o o ." Lynn
T ro m b in o ( r i g h t )
it
c o p y in g
th e
s c e n ic
o f a c o lo r f u l p r a l.y n n w o n s e c o n d
p la c e in th e 9 th to 12th
g ra d e c a te g o ry .
N f f lt t f Photo toy Tom V m co n t

Bill M oyers Is Back A t CBS
NEW YORK (U P I) After three years of lobbying
on the part of CBS News
I“resident Bill U-omird, It's
finally official - BIU Moyers
is back on the team and for
the first time since the
departure of Eric Sevareid,
the "Evening News" will
have an ace analyst.
l.eo n ard and M oyers
called a news conference
Wednesday to tell everyone
what they already knew —
that Moyers, who quit "CBS
Reports" a few years ago to
return to his multi-award*
w inning "B ill M o y ers'
J o u rn a l" on PBS, w as
coming home.
Moyers already had pro­
nounced the "Journal" te r­
m in al Not only has federally
u n d e rw ritte n
p u b lic
bro ad castin g fallen upon
hard times under the Reagan
administration's budget a s,
but after eight years, Moyers
was tired o( it and ready to
move on.
"I'v e carried the Journal
as far as I can," he said.
"The beauty of television is
it's a constantly changing
challenge.”
Moyers said Leonard, who
relum ed to CBS News three

years ago Just as Moyers
was leaving it, has been
campaigning him ever since,
and th a t even se rio u s
negotiations a year ago with
ABC's Roone Arledge never
really threatened CBS' In­
side track for his services.
"The timing was not right

B IL L M O Y E R S
and old loyalties die very
hard ," he said.
The
only
q uestions
rem aining, then, were when,
in what rapacity, for how
long and for how much?
The first three were an­
swered Wednesday: (I) on
Nov. 1, (S) as something
ap p ro a c h in g a one-m an
battalion, and (1) for the

nest five years.
The only buck discussed
was the one that got pa seed
back and forth.
Asked about salary under
the new pact, I-eonanl said,
“ If Bill wanU to answer that,
it's all right with me."

Include senior news analyst,
re p o r te r on m a jo r news
events, such special events
a s political conventions and
elections and " a s many CBS
docum entaries a s he has
shoes to w ear out."

He said Moyers' duties as
new s a n a ly s t for the
Echoed Moyers, "If Rill "Evening News" will be
wants to answer that, it'a all sim ilar to those once served
right with m e."
by Sevareid, but that they
N either wanted to answer will "go much deeper."
that.
Moyers said he was of­
" I consider It a private
m a tte r between CBS and fered Sevareld's spot at the
d esk
when
m e," said Moyers. " It's a n a ly s is
Sevareid, bowing to CBS's
enough."
m andatory retlrem enbat-tt
It had better be. From a policy, stepped down, but he
rundown of duties spelled out refused it then.
for Moyers by leonard, he'll
" I t's a very difficult role to
earn every penny of it, even
if. as industry sources claim, fill," he said. "F irst, I didn't
want to Immediately follow
it comes to “ a multi-milliondollar p a c t" over the five E ric S e v a re id because
nobody in his right mind
years of the con tract
•mm.U1 do th a t And second, I
"W hether you look at hard wasn't read y .”
news broadcasts, specials,
Is Tie ready now?
docum entaries — wherever
"In
the last three years,"
you look, you will have no
difficulty at all In soon he u i d , " I'v e done M hours
of original broadcasting."
realizing Bill Moyers is an
integral p a rt of the CBS
In the forge fires of televi­
N ew s
o r g a n i s a t i o n , " sion, th a t's not Just enough to
Ixo n ard said.
make ready. T hat’s enough
He said Moyers' duties will to make ste e l.

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Friday, M«y » , IW 1 -J

B a la n c h in e O ffe rs Sp ellb o u n d Child'
Since its debut i t the
T heater de Monte Carlo In
1933, "The Spellbound ChildL‘E nfant el les Sortileges"
has been linked to George
Balanchine. At that time he
w as Just 21 y e a rs old,
collaborating with the for­
m idable talents of composer
M aurice Havel and poetnovelist-librettist
Colette.
T w enty-one y e a rs la te r,
B alan ch in e brought the
production to America, and
in 1973 he revived it (or the
New Y ork City B allet’s
Havel festival. But Balan­
chine w as never completely
satisfied with any of the
productions: He thought the
theater w as too real for this
lyrical fantasy.
In a new undertaking,
Balanchine and collaborator
K erm it Love have reconc elv e d " T h e Spellbound
C h ild ," th is tim e for
television. It will a ir on the
G reat Perform ances "Dance
In A m e ric a " se rie s on
Monday, May 23 on PBS
(lo c a l tim e s m ay v ary ;
check listings).
"T he Spellbound Child" is
the story of a young boy’s
jo u rn e y
in to
an
un-

Susan F reedm an) rise up
and dance their own dance;
the
fire
(K a rin
von
Aroldingen) plays dangerous
tric k s; a n d h is fa v o rite
storybook princess (K aren
Hunt) scolds him for tearing
her from the only world she
knew,

UALANCIIINK
controllable fantasy world.
As played by newcomer
Christopher B yars, the child
re s e n ts
h is
m o th e r's
directive to do homework. In
defiance, he sticks his tongue
out — and is promptly or­
dered to his room.
F ru strated and enraged,
the boy destroys everything
within reach. Magically, the
spirit of his tan tru m infuses
the m angled rem ains of his
belongings. The arm chair
(B ryant Young) comes to
life, threatening to swallow
him up; the teapot and
teacup (Mel Tomlinson and

I WONDER
I wonder if there is a planet
that would alw ays have
peace.
I wonder where I would be
living
when I grow up.
I wonder if I could ever
see God.
I wonder how the world
got started.
I just wonder.
John Nguyen
T h ese po em s a re by
Kastbruok E lem entary
Seminole County students
5th G rade
kindergarten through 12th
grade. They resulted bom
SILENT FOOTS! EPS
the Florida Poetry In the
I see footsteps
Schools program taught by
But they a re sile n t
poet Bob Wished of Oviedo
I can not b ear them
and Evylyn ManU of De­
But I can see them.
ta i l! . Pupils are provided
1 ran feel them.
with a general theme, but
They a re as soft as cotton.
a re not told what they
They look like clouds
shouad write.
la the sky.
Where God Uvea, al course.
Now I know who Ibey are
SUNLIGHT
from.
Sunlight is bright
They a re the footsteps of
Like the color of red.
God
The sunlight is yellow
Jancne Quillen
lik e a little (lower.
Kastbruok Elem entary
It shines its light
5th Grade
All over town.

Young
Poets

It keeps you warm
The sirens w ere ringing,
When you a re cold.
The (ire w as crackling,
Sunlight says, "Slop,
1 was running in my p .J j.
Take off your c o a t
The hose w as com ing
I will get you warm
alive;
So you w on't get cold.”
It started to inflate;
It keepa me w arm
Water w as gushing o u t
With all its might
What a big mesa!
And brings m e home
1'U never forget that time.
With Its lig h t
Robin RaLhbim
B arbara B alrh rld tr
P ast brook F irm rotary
Saba I Point Elem entary
Sib G rade
Ird Grade

A black slngtng cat leads
the boy Into an e e rily
beautiful garden inhabited
by giant Insects and over­
sited frogs, none too happy
with their hum an visitor.
The boy encounters many
creatures — the dragonfly
whose m ate the boy has
pinned to the wall, the tree
suffering wounds the boy has
carved In It, the squirrel the
boy has caged, and more.
These a re q u a rre lso m e
animals, eager to fight the
boy and each other. Sud­
denly, a sm all squirrel In­
jured In the fray cries out in
pain. The boy bandages the
wound and his compassion
startles the other creatures
who, In an effort to m ake
amends, c a rry the boy back
to his "n est"...an d to his
mother.
Balanchine spent a decade

in Europe as an acclaim ed
c h o re o g ra p h e r
b e fo re
moving to America in 1933.
T ogether w ith L incoln
Klrstein, he founded the
School of American Ballet, a
com pany d e d ic a te d to a
classical approach to dance
and an all-American troupe.
As artistic director far the
New York City Ballet ror
more than three decades,
B alanchine is g e n e ra lly
regarded as the foremost
living choreographer in uie
world of ballet. In 1973, ha
was proclaimed a m em ber of
the legion of Honor by the
French government and was
also inducted Into the
E n te rta in m e n t H all of
F am e,
the
firs t
c h o reo g rap h er to be so
honored.
The ballet-opera score Is
performed by the New York
City Ballet O rchestra, ac ­
companied by a 24-member
chorus and nine soloists.
"T h e S pellbound ChildL'Knfant et les Sortileges" Is
produced for W NEThirteen,
New York by Emile Ardolino
and Ju d y K ln b erg , w ith
Ardolino directing.

Young Christopher llyars stars as a naughty
tray who throws a temper tantrum and learns
some lessons alter a trip into an un­
controllable fantasy world In "The Spellbound
Child" a lyrical fantasy ballet airing Monday
on PBS.

An Opportunity To Help Create TV Show
NEW YORK (U PI) - Waller Mltty
crouched In the canvas chair Uke a
great wolf about to spring — muscles
dean and sinuous as piano wire, eyes
blazing orbs of genius behind the dark
glasses.
"Take one," he rasped. "RoU 'em !"
"Tapoketa, tapoketa, tapokeU ," said
the cam era....
Ja m e s T h u rb e r is n ’t around to
promote the latest Incarnation of (he
old video show "You Asked For It," but
if be were, his Im m ortal daydreamer
would be just the m an for the Job. The
Walter Mltty who dwells In all who
breathe Is about to come Into his own as
a television producer, director and,
where possible sta r.
Sandy F ran k Film Syndication Inc.
has purchased rights to Ihc old
program which w as hosted in the 1930s
by Art Baker and, a decade later, by
Jack Smith. The 1900s will see Rich
U tile al the helm , with the first show

slated to hit the a ir this fall In more
than 100 m ajor m arkets and 19 foreign
nations.
Under the original format, m aterial
produced cam e a s a result of letters
from viewers asking that a given
subject, or idea, be explored. Hence,
the title. The new one will follow the
same line, but with a difference.
As with the original, stories filmed
will be suggested by viewers who "ask
far It," but this time, those whose
suggestions are accepted will be paid
$30 and if poasible, Uwy will be put on
the show.
"W e'll be m aking 130 half-hour shows
over the next nine months,” said
Mendelson. "We have 13 film crews
worldwide to handle It. People often
complain about television. Well, we're
going to give the public an opportunity
to say, ‘This is w hat I'd do If I were a
producer' ... It’s the first opportunity
ever for people to create their own TV

G o G u id e
If ysu’re thinking of getting out ef like bouse and
arc looking for something lo do this weekend, here
are a few inggcstioa*.'
lltb Annual Winter P ark MaU Craft Show, May 22-24,
400 N. Orlando Ave„ Winter Park; 10 a m. to 9 p.m.,
Friday and Saturday and 12:304:30 p.m., Sunday.
Free Concert a t Loch Haven Art Center, 2419 N. Mills
Ave., Orlando, 2:30 p jn . featuring K aren M arshall,
soprano; Russ Whtdden clarinet and Novie G reene,
piano. Open to public.
Annual M em bers’ Juried Art KxhiMtioo, May 23July 12 at Loch Haven Art Center, Orlando. F ree to the
public, 10 a.m . to 5 p.m ., Tuesday through Friday, noon
to 3 p m , Saturday and 2-3 p.m., Sunday.

show ."
M endelson, who also produces
“Charlie Brown" and the "Peanuts"
gang for television, said an initial
a d v e rtisin g cam p a ig n a lre a d y has
harvested 10,000 letters suggesting
everything from visits to the health
■pas of stars and the pyram ids of Egypt
to p ro b es of llfe-a fter-d esth ex­
periences and the famed ghost of
Warwick Castle In London.
But 10,000 Is Just a drop In the film
can.
"E very show will contain five stories
and we need 30,000 lelters to do 1,000
stories," Mendelson said. "And 1,000 la
what we’re going for."
"All you need to do Is think of
something, some place, or some person
that Is Interesting, exotic or unknown,
anywhere in the world," It said.
W alter M ittys can send th eir
production ideas to "You Asked for It,"
P.O. Bos 710, Hollywood, Calif. 90023.

"V intage," presented by Musiraua Enterprises, will
perform a benefit concert at 7:30 p.m., May 30, at the
Maitland Civic Center with all proceeds going to the
Mu sienna Foundation and the Association for Children
wtth learning Disabilities. Tickets at the door or
various local outlets.
"The Clubhouse," a musical dram a featuring 28
enthusiastic area children, 10 a m , May 23, Musicana
Dinner Theater, W inter Park. Call 623-9834 for
reservations.
Central Florida Art Association Spring Art
Exhibition, 10a.m. to 9 p.m .. May 2930, Colonial Plaza
Mall, E. Colonial Drive, Orlando.
Zellwood Sweet Cora Festival, 10 a.m . lo 3 p.m., May
30 and 11, Ponkan Road, Zellwood. Country Music, by
Sage Brush and M other's Choice, carnival rides, meal
with all the corn you can eat. Advance tickets on sale a t
ticket outlets. Bring chair or blanket

�Friday, Mjy ]l, i?ii

4—Evening Her*Id, Sanford. FI.

Bacall's 'By M y s e lf O n e O f B est Celebrity Books
By RUTH THOMPSON
Trying to Uliy up the
booki written by celebrities
i whether by them selves, coauthored or ghost w ritten) is
a hopeless task. The list
multiplies In slxe (aster than
a snowball rolling down a
well-powdered Swiss Alp.
It's easier to sort the moat
visible of
them
Into
cate g o ries. The la r g e s t
category, of course, Is the
autobiographies... and th at
subdivides Into the dull, the

B

trash and the treasures.
Let's forget the dull ones.
F t r g e t , too, the tra sh y
recollections designed to sell
on the basis of the author's
alliances with bigger names.
1*1 the focus be on books
that have something positive
to pass along as Inspiration.
Of this genre, one of the best
Is still "By M y se lf by
luiuren Baca3
She has been famous since
she was II. And she doesn't
thumb faded scrapbooks of

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th e m se lv e s to overcom e
their fears and avoid the
com m on
m is ta k e s ."
L ln k le tte r c u rre n tly does
about 110 speeches a year for
fees th at he characterises as,
"eith er nothing (to benefit
good causes) or 110,000 and
up.‘ People don't respect you
unless you charge."

soap
o p e ra
"G e n e ra l
H ospital" where he plays
himself, nagging people Into
better nutrition patterns and
dally exercise. But last fall
he launched his own syn­
dicated dally program and, a
little m o re th a n three
months ago, he published his
"N ever Say D iet" book,
which has rem ained No. 1 on
Until a year ago, Richard the bestseller list for weeks.
Simmons was a big name Now we h e a r h e's preparing
only to viewers of ABC's a cookbook sequel.

e arlier triumphs either; she
keeps setting new goals.
Right now she's the toast of
Broadway In a high-energy
musical, “ Woman of the
Y ear,"
Though she doesn't pul It
In those term s herself, the
lady is a postlve thinker. If
you get something from her
exam ple, or from her en­
tertaining, fine. But If you
w ant a rule-book guru, look
eslewhere.
1 -A U IlK N HA C A L L
T he offering specific
g u id e lin e s for personal ferenL These two are the
betterm ent are rare among m oat v isib le television
celebrities' writings, but the personaUties now in demand
books o# Richard Shrmons on the Interview circuit as
and Art ldnkletter are dlf- authors of how-toaystema.
A rt lln k letter, long known
as a talk show and game
show host. Is also a suc­
rj
c e s s f u l In te rn a tio n a l
businessm an — and many
TW ISIk
tim es a millionaire. Me can't
re m e m b e r If his new est
book, "P ublic Speaking for
..
a u ia g w * 3 5 r
P riv ate People," is his 15th
( ^ W M I ] r im «
or 16th, but says that it Is
TAKE THIS JOB AND| something different for him.
"I h a d to be urged by the
SHOVE IT
re
p u b lish e r, B obbs-M errill,
[ PLATA n D ALICE
but it has more meaning fa­
me th an the earlier books. I
DUMB V W D N D B R J b A N D l see it as a reference book
... CD j&amp; y n i i
that h as lasting library shelf
value, as something that
could outlive me.
« •! H IM

SLAUG H TER IN
SAN FRANCISCO I

He continues, " I didn't
write it for the natural ex­
troverts like myself but for
the scaredy-cats who need to
m ake speeches and can train

I

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93 Musician —
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18 H elps
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74 Carbohydrste virtu
75 Actor Clwtt
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41 — names

42 Mecened
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45 legends
49 Commercials
50 Actor Law
—
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55 Humor
54 Oatry — of
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57 Arafat's

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54 Teachen
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54 Actress —
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60 Young gig

Perry —
10 Wai heroes
11 Bundle
19 — John
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24 Ryen —
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26 Am erOptometric Aawt
77 LA footballer
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36 Bert — (U s
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40 Actor Meson
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44 Nick Charles
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46 Kind
47 — Strael
48 Blemish
5 1 1Only Have
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Evgnlng H flM , SantorO, FI.

Frldsy. Msy M, l*tl—5

TELEVISION
May 22 thru 28
C JM a Cft

CaM * Ch.

D O
(D O
D O

( A B C ) Or land*
(C B S ) O rltn d *
(N B C ) D a y la n * la t c h
Or land*

IndapanOvnl
O rla nd o

dD (35)
(5) (17)
(1 0 )©

Indapandanl
A tla n ta . O *
Or la n d * p y b lic
S r a a d c a ih n g l y i l n a

la a dditw a la lh * c k a n n a li lu ia d , c a b itv m a n iv k t c r lb a n m ay r*n« la t* Indapandanl ch aaaal M,
tt. P a ta rtb a r* . k y tu n in g 1* channal 1; htaing I* c k a k n a l II. o k ic h c a r ria t a p a r n a n d th* C k riitia n
I r a a d c a it ik t N atw ark ( C S N I .

Specials O f The W eek
ID

SATURDAY
A rn m o o x
1:30
(7) o IN O U M A M X M MO FESTI­
V A L PAAAOC Ho*! Bob Bark*
Grand mk/ahkt Joyc* D*Wltl
rVtNIMO
900
O (I) H TEAMS O F COUNTRY
M U S C Par for marl including John­
ny Com. Ray Chartu# and loraita
Lynn low hoal* Own Campba*. Roy
Clark and tvwy Parlon for • uk/ia
lo country m u K |R|

SUNDAY
EVENING

SONO

ST

BONO

rack |R|

10:00

(X) m e n

WHO RATE a " N T

ft)

(10)
W OMAN

9 :0 0
THE ARTIST

W AS

A

10:00
0

MONDAY

TUESDAY

EVENING

8 00
O 0
S O B MOPE S ALL-STAR
C O M E D Y BIR TH D A Y P A R T Y
Fkiabatn Taylor, O aorg t C Scon
U irk ay Roonay and Mary Martin
ars among Iha tiara who |om Bob
Hop* al W aal Pomt lor a cawbraIron o l hta TSth btrlhdty
S P F X : TH E EM PIRE
S T A K E S B A C K Th* lachnoiogy
bahwd cw am aiic apacid abaci* a
ravaaiad in Ih it tpacuk hot lad by
Mark Harm*, kaalurwg tap* kom
lama including Th# Empa* S tra ta
Back ’ and ' Cloak Encounlara O l
Tha That) KW d " |A|

dl o

7 :0 0
(Z) O MYSTERIES OF THE SEA
M an a adw ilura*. chauunga* and
acnravamanli m lh* ootid • ocaana
and IP* raaaona bahwd hw /ournoya aia aiptorad. w » a m Hoidan
nanalaa |R)

( E O LARRY O ATU N ANO THE
O A T L M BROTHERS BANO Johnny
C a w . Rogar U au r and Dorn* W all
yom tha Ganw Brolhara lor an hour
oT country muarc andcomady

® WOMEN WHO RATE A " tO"
Morgan Fairchad. Erik Eatrada
Gloria Swanaon. Barbara Edan
and Howard Haaaaman ara hoal*
and Brook* Sfualda a rt /cunad by
lor a ravaaang too* al lh* apacirum
Ian glamorou* l*mal*a lor a look al
01 Iwmala baauty. from Mao Watt
1 ha moat Or Citing man o l t*C*nl
and MarPyn Monro* lo OoPy Parlon
ganaralion* |R)
and Mr»l Piggy (Rl
0

10:00
t D ( 10) t h e s e a r c h f o r ALEX­
AN D ER THE OREAT Conqu**l Ol
T ha Par Iran [ n p r t 1' Aaiandar
Wad* hta armraa out 0 * Fgypl and
ll&gt;a Par Iran army luma on ill laadar
O a r u i N-thotai Clay ttara |P*&gt;13|

(1 0 )

' snaidon lia r ruck Maacani Uar
bn. Juka M cH a n ta David Kaman
and apodal guaal Howard daSdv*
par form tonga from "FlddHr On
Th* R o of," ■ Sh# Lova* I**.'1
"FMxaao ‘ and Th* Appro Traa" m
■hit tr/bula lo ly i M I Shat don Mar-

EVENING
9 :3 0
(1&gt; EE NATIONAL COLLEGIATE
C H E E R L E A D IN G
C H A M P IO N ­
SHIPS Sn lop coaag* chaarwadmg laama compai* lor achoiarihip
lunda n lh* fourth annual pdMion o*
ihr# avani. John Dovidaon Vrclorla
Principal and Andy Orbb hoal

WEDNESDAY
EVENING

8:00
( !) O

GUYANA TRAGEDY: THE

STORY OF J B i JO N ES Th* avanit
that banalormad lh* Rav
Jan
Jon** from a aocitf Wadur lo a cutbat who Wd Iha tottwra ol Jonaatown. Guyana. M thaw daalh* ara
aiarranad (A)
ffl
(10)
W O R LD SP E C IA L
"Agawal W nd And Tat* A Cuban
Odyaaay" Tha youmay o l l o r
Cuban rtfugaat lo th* Lhulad
Stalaa W tracad kom lhau dapartur* to thaw ptaaanl M u tto n

THURSDAY
EVEM NO

8:00
O (3) NATIONAL OEOQRAPMIC
S P E C IA L "Th* O ta a l Mo|av*
Plat art
QD O
FOR B E T T E R T FO R
W O RSET THE AMERICAN FAMILY
Hoal Hobart UacNaa aianuna* tha
Itamandout impact ol tacant w e a r
uphaavaia on Amarlean la n tw t
8 '3 0
9 2 ( 1 7 ) TELEV ISIO N THE M O R A L
BATTLEG RO UN D

10:00
GD

O

CM

R EPO RTS

Nu t m

Wfswt AtmYaw? Mailarw S*nd*f ■

• i sm m # i
cr ft teal tfw v ia o a of
n u rta t in th** cou ntry and lo o k s at
t a n # o f ih a r a a s o n i fo r and impfc
c a lto n t of IN* in o r tagw

Sports On The A ir
SATURDAY
MORNtHQ

8 30
O

(3) I-COUNTRY FISHING

7:30
1 2 (17) THE b a s e b a l l b u n c h
Hoal Johnny Banch
AFTERNOON

100
O

® WRESTLING

2:00
O
(3) BASEBALL L o t Angara*
Dodgart al CWcaaiau Rada
2 :1 9
0 (3D BASEBALL RagronN covar
aga o l lo * AngaWa Oodgara al Cwcmnatt Rada, BalUmor* Onom* al
OalroH Tigara, Do*ton Rad Sen al
Mdwauaa* Brawara

300
® O MEMORIAL G O LF TOUR­
NAMENT l hr# covar aga ol th*
third round o l Nut PG A tour avant
{kom Murrhaid Vrtag* God Ckjb w
Oubkn, Oruol

can braak an opponant a
Q
5 :0 0
(T) O WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS
Chmaaa Acrubal* ol Canion in
apacul partormarjd*. a raporl on
Iha aamr-knala ol lh* U S Amaltur
Bering Champronthip*. Halronal
Champwnalup Owl Car Racat (kom
Roaaburg. Ohm)
tD ( 10) S O C C E R MADE PI GER­
M A N Y It a ya rn
M u n ich
Vt
5 '3 0
92 ( i 7) w r e s t l i n g
EVENING
7 :3 0
a
(17) B A S E B A L L San Oago
Parka* at Atlanta Brava*
1 0 :3 0
N A I L S O C C E R Atlanta
Clu a niv*
va ISan Dwgo Sacatra

...
a (i7)

1 1 :3 0
© (35) WRESTLING

2:00
a

(17) BASEBALL San Dwgo
Padra* at Atlanta Brava*

SUNDAY

m O PROFESSIONAL BOWLERS
Sp r in g
t o u r Final*
at in*
1105.000 Northarn Caktorm* Opan
[kvw Rom tha Moary Lana* n Framorvt, C a k f)

4:30
(I)

O

Boring -

SPORTS SATURDAY
IS-round WBC Junior

and WIRad Baratai (tv* kom La*
Vagaa, N av)
m (10) VIC BRAOCN-S TSNMS
FO R THE FUTURE "Th* U&gt;* And
Drop SUM"
nr alas how a

MONDAY

1.00

tVEHINO

1 :3 0
(T) O W RESTUNG
12 (T 7 )T M B W EEK P4 B A SEB A LL
2 :0 0
12 (17) BASEBALL San
Padra* al Atlanta Brava*

Dwgo

3 :0 0
(X) TOMORROW'S CHAMPI­
ONS Uv* and lapad covaraga ol
boaatg kom San Ramo. Italy,
ta a lu rm g u n d a la a la d
(unlot
mrdrfawwrghl Tony Ayala va Pal
Haiacy w a 10-round bout, and
Ala* Ramo* va Danny Long m an »
rounrt mrrtrbawargni hnut

11:00
■
(10) V ic
FO R THE FUTUR E Smgwa Slratagy T' Vtc Bradan ahowrt viaatia that
no amount of Uralugy can ovarcom* a lac* o l good hwdamanlaN

3 :3 0
(D
THE AMERICAN S PO R TS ­
MAN Gan* Hack man Irapahoota
with top markaman
4 .0 0
Cl) O MEMORIAL G O LF TOUR­
NAMENT IN* c o w a g a ol tha knal
round ol IN* POA lour avant (k o m
Muakwld V&lt;aaga GoP Clu* W Dubtn. Oruol
4 :3 0
U S Amaltur B e in g Cham pon•Np* (kom Concord. COM t Catovaraa County Frog Jumping Cham
pronahtp (kom Angola Com p.

CMS)
5 :3 0
8 2 (1 7 )W flC B n J N O

TUESDAY
CVENPfO
7 :3 0
12 (17) BASEBALL lo *
Oodgara at Allan!* Brava*

2.-00
12 (17) BASEBALL Lo* Angara*
Oodgara al Atlanta Bravo*

WEDNESDAY
EVEMNO
a

530
(1 0 )
BAIL! N O .
" B aaing Haurda"

7 :3 0
12 (17) BASEBALL LO* Angola*
Oodgara atAINnt* Brava*
1:30
8 2 (17) BASEBALL Lo*
Dodgart al Allama Brava*

THURSDAY
82 (17) S I8 E E A U

AFTER N O O N

12:00
(10)

(D

0

9 :0 0
INDIANAPOLIS

Lo*

Oodgara at Atlanta B rava*

7J O
(Id (35) SPORTS AFIELD

RUN. AMCIWCA. RUN

SAILIN G

6.-00

O

1JO
"K M "

Irene Cara portray# the wife of a People's
Temple member In "Guyana Tragedy," a
two-part special lo be rebroadcast Tuesday
and Wednesdav on CHS.

1:40
12 (17) BASEBALL Lo t Angara*
Oodgara al Anania Brava*

o

(J) Q WCE WORLD OP SPORTS

is

7 :3 0
1 2 (17) BASEBALL LO* Angara*
Dud gar* al Atlanta Brava*

o

Schawa"

3:30

a nararda and banak t a o iiw u n g |R|
O (3) THE AN GLER

a country-western special starring Johnny
Cash and Itogrr Miller on "Larry Gatlin and
the Gatlin Brothers' Band,” Monday on ABC.

8 2 (17) BASEBALL Lo* Angola*
Oodgara at Atlanta Bravo*

4

After eight years, Jan Mason is leaving her
job as a hospital m ine, frustrated and burned
up at the system. Iler feelings are examined In
the CBS special report, "N»p*e, Where Are
You?" to air Hiursday on CBS.

�»—Evening Hbfi M, Santard, FI.

F r i d a y , May il, m i

M acRaes Launch C a reers;

SATURDAY^

By CINDY ADAMS
NEW YORK - Rickard
G ere il tr llirm chums he
loves the tiny community of
P o rt T ow nsend, W ish,
where he's holed up for nine
weeks shooting Param ount's
"An Officer and a Gen­
tlem an " ... It was Gordon
M arR ae who launched the
c a r e e r of ex -w lft Sheila
1 U " m , « « i i t waa aarua
who launched the singing
career of daughter Heather,

S A L L Y K T I tl T IIK IIS

and It Is Broadway and
m ovie v e te ra n H eath er
w ho’s now helping kid
b ro th e r B race w ith his
n ig h tc lu b a c t ... While
re h e a rs in g the upcom ing
Broadway show, "W ally’s
Cafe" w ith Jam es C ars and
Rita Moreno, Sally Strothers
took to feeling poorly so she
sent over to a dell for chicken
soup.
F ro m
R ed
S teig er:
"Trouble with a m arriage
license Is It doesn't expire
every y e a r a s other licenses
d o " ... F ro m M lrh sel
B randon: "E d u c a tio n Is
something a guy spends
years getting only so he ran
work fo r som ebody who
hasn 't any at all.'’ From
Dave Winfield, who earns
$116,000 each month: "I had
my m inks before. Plus my
Mercedes, raccoon, coyotes
and my diam onds."
The tall fellow In a suede
topcoat who was lost In
thought while standing alone
on Third Avenue and 65th
Street looked like Anthony
Qutna. It w as Anthony Quinn

M a y 22

FRIDAY
CWMNO

BOO

5:55
(D O OAR.VWORD
8.00
7) r r s
susm ess
8 1IHOTFUOOS
your

8:20
0 3 ) OAKY DEVOTIONAL
830
3 X s Cwurnnf MOHRKl
1 O MIGHTY MOUSE / HECKLE

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ANTHONY QUINN

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0:30
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10:30
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11:00
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11:30

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10:00

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7:30

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12:00
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8 00

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12:30

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(D (10) M A C N S A J LEMRER

MOVW

R 0 B 0 N IC

0:00
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0) O FONT ANO THC HARRY
DAYS OANO
Of (35) AMAZMa QRACC M U

0:30
a r t ) m k news

(X )

THREE

... And the lady who was
walking up Madison Avenue
7:30
causing a few humans to O
O R UO AN -S ISLAND
nudge each other was Dinah ') I O STAR TREK
Shore ... Composer Sammy
Caha went to a busy eyeglass © (17) THE BASEBALL BUNCH
Not! Johnny Bm cfi
b outique on
I s lin g to n
8:00
Avenue to lest his vision.
' X THC rU N TS TO N EB
While his glasses were being OV O
TOM ANO JERRY
fitted he sang two choruses m a t
of " T h re e C oins In the I t ( 3 5 ) O R
tD (10) HERE! TO YOUR
Fountain" to a gaggle of HEALTH -Tha Bun And Yam Skin
stu n n ed c u sto m e rs who m a
couldn't believe their lenses, 82 ( 17) THS PARTRIDGE TAMILY
8:30
ses.
(S) a BOOS SUNNY / ROAD
RUNNER
(D (101 FIOROA HOME OROWN
0 ( 1 7 ) MOVW Slavas Ol Baby,
tan" I ttu i Richard Cants. Linda
Christian Nobuchodnanar « capIvrsd by an tarasMa ahapnaid M

(171 C A R O L BURNS TT ANO

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7.00
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6.00
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5ISIOMC WOMAN
10) AU. CREATURES GREAT
SMALL I
6:30
NBC NEWS

( X Q s u m m e r s e m e s t e r (R)

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n w oath Mary Crosby oI T V s OafIM~. single* oho ora adrartisaig tor
lompamonolsp. Jorry Bokor an
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11.00
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MUSIC Psrtormor* nctudmg Jonnny Corn Roy Chan** and lorslta
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to country rrauc (R)
(7) Q LOVE BOAT Isaac trio* to
•vod hte totmm Enghth lucNr. •
piiwngn brmg« along hw pat Ml.
and a woman harps har as husband
pack out iraw
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11 (35) PORI GOES THC COUN­
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SPRING TOUR Finals al tha
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Friday, May 71, l t l l - 7

Evening Herald, Unlord. FI.

May 24

SU N D A Y

8 ) (10) FIRING LINE
12(17) RAT PATROL

U p co m in g S p e c ia ls

5 :3 0

1 2 &lt; 1 7 )W R C ST l*4 Q
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5:30

10) FLO RM A F O C U S

12 (17) AGRICULTURE U S -A .

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6.30
(B Q PAITH POR TODAY
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800

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(1)
ROBERT SCH U LLER
l PICTURE O P H EALTH
11 (3 5 1CHANOEO LIVES
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8:00

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THC ANGLER
STAR TREK
O&amp;CUSSIOM

11 Guoet
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II (35)
(3! M O W •Airport ISIS" (C)
(1ST4) Charlton Heaton. Keren
Btarr When the crew o l a 74f w
read at e been accident, the chief
ttewardeee mutt peot the huge fet
to aelety
CD (10) W ASH M O TO N W EEK M
R tV W * (nr
1:30
0 (41 M O W
Flermng Feather
(C) (I9S7) Sterling Hayden. A naan
Whalen A bend ot wgeentae ridwe
lo the reecue ot • white women
cepheed by • tribe ot renegade
Indiana
( J ' O W H ESniH Q
CD (10) W A U IT R E E T WEEK
Dancing u p waa S heet" Quart
Artful Murray (R)
12 (17) THIS WEEK M BA SE B A LL

O '4) VOICE O P VICTORY
iI I O R E X H U M S F R O

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10] SESAM E STR EET (R )O
12 (171
(IF ) THREE S TO O G E S ANO
IN K NOS
8 :3 0
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I ORAL RO BERTS
151 JO S H AMO TM* PUSSYCATS

0:00

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I O SUNDAY

( j ) O K I ) * ARE P EO PLE TOO
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CD (10) M S T I R R O G ER S (R)
U ( l7 ) lO S T M S P A 9 t
0 :1 5
0 ( 4 ) OUTLOOK
0 :3 0
O 4 O O S r tL SINGING JU8ILCE
.1 t(3 5 IT H t JCTSO N S
03(10) WORLD OP THC SCA

10:00
(T lQ lU O tW O M L D
I t ( J ‘D MOVIE
Who Oona RT "
|B/W| 11*47) Bud Abbott. Lou CooMao Tho com e duo l o i n • my»Mrf at a radio elation
• (10) THC C O U S T E A U OOYSSCY The Mia" Jacquee and PM-

thet the NAe he* had on i w t n d
throughout hvtory ae they continue
thee tourney down the 4 000-mile
long river to the M etplertanoen
«Pkr17)|R)
12 (171HAZEL
10 :3 0

0 ® M O V * ' Pony Ceproee " |C1
I ' t i l l Charlton Heaton. Rhonda
Item ng A pae of cowboy her oea
help to anaiee that the mart g o a l
through
( S O THC LAW AMO YOU
(7) O F M S T BAPTIST C H U R C H •
12 ( 1 7 1 M O V *
Sergeant York"
(1941) Gary Cooper M aher Brannan After beetg reread at themourvtaete e l Tarmeaaae a young man
becomaa a World War I hero by amgie handedty capturing a German

11:00
( 1 ) 0 SPECTRUM
S
(10) V C B R A D C N 3 TENNIS
TOR THC FUTURE Sm^ea Strata
ffy r Vic Braden ahnwa n ewera that
no amount of atrategy can over­
come a lace of good fundamental*
P
' 1 1 :3 0
FAC* THC NATION
O TONY B R O W N S JO UR N AL
(351 M O V *
B lo nde Mae
Sonant Trouble (B/W) (19401 Pen­
ny Singleton. Arthur Leae Blonde
•nd Dtgoood tend tn*l h e man—on
tftov’fb tUytng m to hquntqd
GD110) FAST FORWARD
0

8

13:00

I SLA CK A W A R C N S M
I M S ANO A M B W tR S
(1 0 ) H u n . a m i m i c a , r u n
Medical author net and common
M k decuaa It e haierda end banet*ta ot lunnmg |R|
12:30

8.00

1:00

5:55
(Z) O GAS.V WORD

EVCNB4G

200
(1) O MOVIE
Judge Dee And
The Monettary Murdare" (0(19/4)
Kfwgh Dhsqgh M a*o A 7th-century
Own— ( t o o c M ta d iiM mn unuou
at c a m (nvoMng ttwoc y&gt;«»— . a onq(7) Q
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Three On A
Match (B/W) 119371 Joan Btondad
Bette Dana Three women chadhood Intndi bocomq m v o M d m
kdnippmg wton th#y m —i i f l v
many fM ft
CD 110) PREVIN A)IO TH C PITTS­
BURGH "Tribute To Bentemm Butten" Concert tenor Robert Tear end
French normal Berry Tuckwea ere
featured aotoreta when Andre Pra­
wn part tribute to one of England •
teadwg 70th century compoaera
12 (17) BASEBALL San Dwgo
Padraa at Atlanta Brarea
300
l|) TOMORROW’ S CH AM PI­
ONS live and taped coverage of
boring trom San Remo, Itefy.
la a tu rin g u n d e fe a te d lu n lo r
tmddteeeight Tony Ayala ve Pel
Haaecy at a 10 round bout, and
Alar Rjmo* va Danny Long at an ttound mddNuoigni bout
ID (35) MOVIE
Rrherty And The
Gold Dual Twine" (C| (19FSI Alan
Arkw. Seay reaerm m A bored
C a h le rn ie driving in elrw cto r
ancountera two lam ala hilchrveeri
who demand a ride to New Orleena
( D (10) SURVIVAL Leopard Ol
The W*d" Dewd Nrven narratae IMa
■rue atory ot an orphaned leopard
which bridged the world ot protect
ad cjptrnty and her natural habitat
in the wade ot A are g

O

3 :3 0
□ TM* AMERICAN S P O R T S ­
MAN Gene Hack men trapehoole
with top tnerkemen and royalty
mchKhng HRH Prince Andrew and
Captain Mara Pnaapa m North
WaMe. Sandy HR Haven to the |ungiea ot Borneo to imeover the atory
o4 the endangered orangutan.
Olympic t i a r i Leonard Sloch and
Bernard fVreai go actereemq down
the Cariboo Mount erne m Canada

CD

400
MOV*
•Thq fighting
S tlb M I
(B/W) (1944) John
Woyno. S uu n H t q i f d A group ol
World War H S«4b— n aaatgrwd to
ropar mariary matadationa dangorouaty Cl— lo anamy tar r it or y
J O U IU O A U L O O i f T O U R ­
NAMENT l iva coy«raga of tha final
round of thia POA lour avanl (from
Muir hard Vaaga Ood Club to Dubart. Ofao)
© (10) NOVA Mo«ng Stto Tha
eWorld of Ngh- and km-tpaud pho­
tography ia capturad m this pro­
gram whtch fa lo a t tha asparlmarvlal «Kxk dona at tha *aid and 4a
poaastoto appacafiorta (R )y

O

CD

4 :3 0
(7) O W CC WORLD OP S P O R TS
U S Amelei* Boiw g Chempwmr apt (from Concord. C e « L Ceiaverer County Frog Jumpeig Championahip (hem Angel a Cam p.
CN d I
12 (17) LAST OP THC WILD

Women Artists, Cuban Refugees, Vanishing Nurses

S
/ l i f S b&amp; S tC
Carter, former preee apoaaamen tor
wto tha nawt conaumar to x ryica d
by pr— covaraga
0 :3 0
0 ( 2 1 THE WUPPETB
11 1O CBS NEWS
(710 ABC NEWS

0

(TOl AOROtaRKY

ano

ro a ro e

NY
12 (17) M CE PEOPLE Noel David
7 :0 0
O
( D DISNEY’ S WONDERFUL
WORLD The Academy Award-win
twig him "The Three Little Riga '
and the Dianey cleauc Pottyanni
•cert |R)p
J O »0 MINUTES
O MYSTERIES OP THE SEA
Men t adventure* challenger end
achievement! m the world a octant

8

neya art eapiored Wtham Holden
narratae (R)
(H! (35) WILD k in o DOM
tD
(1 0 ) 8 0 N 0 BY B O N O
ShaMon Mam&lt;t * MiMw^nt Mar
ttn. Ju M McKanita 0av*d Karnan
and tpacial guati Howrard daS^ a
partorm tongt horn flddM r On
Tha Root.**
Sha Lo—
Ma."
Ftorafto and "Tha Appfa Traa" In
ttwt tnbuta to tyvicttl S haidon Marruck (R)
11 (17) TUSH Mott ft* Tuth
7 :3 0
3D (35) BRORTS A flfL O
800
n)
MOVtC
Srtoar 6traak
(1979) Oana Wadar, Jto Ciaytiurgh
A mad mannarad boot add or acc*
dantaty bacomaa aniangtad tn
romanca and tha buarra pfof of a
cunrwng art thtaf during a croaacountry tram nda (R)
q i (35) DAY O f D tSCO Vf RY
CD ( id ) TN8 COUST1AU OOYftSCY Lott Rahct Of Tha Saa
Jacguat Couttaau goat to tha
ocaan t Door to obtarva tom a of
tha moat tamout tfwpvracfct on
Carih (R)
11 (17) MOVti
Wondar Man
(1945) Danny Kaya Vtrg— Mayo
A rughtciub antarlam art tain
brothar it accutad of murdar

o

g 30
8D (35) JERRY PAL WELL

m

a

000

INDIANAPOLIS
&amp;00"
Seme day covet age of the world a
graataat auto raco from tha tndtan
apotet Motor Speedway, Jan McKay
( E 110) UASTER PN CC THEATRE
FESTIVAL OP FAVORITES
The
Golden Bowl Baaed on a novel by
Henry Jamee
0 :3 0
(ID (35) JR4MY SWAOOART

10:00
C l (41 m e n w h o r a t i a - t o [ 10)
8 1 (1
0 ) TO THC MANOR BORN
1 2 (1 7 )
10 30
(1)
THE J E F F C R S O N B
F lo ie nce'a vivid im agination
tranrmrma the Jefteraone end thaw
trtandt into charactart m a tra p
opera (R)
A M BANKER
THE OOOO NC1GHBORS

O

mt

Tracing the achievement*
of women artist* from the
late Renaissance to the the
20th century, "The A rtist
Was a Woman" will a ir on
PBS Monday, May 25. (Local
lltu ee may very; cnecK
listings.)
Jane Alexander n a rra te s
the program. The artists to
be examined Include such
women as the little-known
Sofanlsba Angulssols from
the Renaissance to the wellknown G eorgia O 'K eeffe
from the 20th century.
The
hour-long
documentary will focus on
the artists' works with still
photos of places they studied
and painted. The special wtU
blend quotations from the
actual writings of the women
with comments from con­
tem porary critics and ad ­
m irers. The music on the
program will reflect the
style of each period and, like
the art, is composed by
women.
Cuban Crisis
Fleeing their homeland,
126,000 Cuban re fu g e e s
em barked on a year-long
Journey that took them to
Florida and throughout the
United States.
This esodus is the focus of
a PBS "W orld" sp e c ia l,
"A gainst Wind and Tide: A
C uban O dyssey," a irin g
Wednesday, May 27. (Local
tim e s m ay vary; ch eck
listings.)
The documentary, through
the efforts of a group of In­
dependent filmmakers who
followed the dram a from the
b eg in n in g , p o rtray s in ­
dividuals and their families
from their departure to the
c u rr e n t situ atio n a y e a r
later. The program shows
what went wrong with the
o ffic ia l handling of th e
refugee situation in an a t­
tem pt to provide insight into
the problems of the country's
im m igration policy.

experiencing a life-or-death
crisis that can't be remedied
by new technology and
m edical breakthroughs. A
shortage of nurses in this
t r i * i t r y ’s
hospitals
l«
c a u sin g this d angerous
situation, according to a CBS
News special report “Nurse,
Where Are You?" to sir May
28.
" I t is the nurse, not the
doctor, who is our first line of
defense against the llines*

Clenr Wilder (left) and Hichard Pryor Irani up
to rludr the law, catch up with a (rain and
prevent a murder on "Sliver Streak," a
special movie presentation, also starring
Patrick Mcdoohan, to be rebroadcast Sunday
on CBS.

BREAKFAST SPECIAL
Monday Thru Friday
0 p e n 4 :3 0 a .m .

Includes: 2 Eggs, 2 Strip* e
Bacon. Hash Browns. T o a s t ‘T

Disappearing Nurses
A m erican hospitals a re

My

BREAKFAST8 LUNCH S E R V E D 7 OAVS
LUNCHEON SPECIALS MON. THRU FRI,
LOUNOEOPEN7 DAYS-11a.m. T i l . . .

(£ O M OW
The New Mever
le t" ( t f f l| Jemee Garner. Jack
KePy

j r e’err r y s

8 2 ( 3 5 ) TO B

12.-00

uh

he

12 (17) M O W
Gemee- |tM T)
Stmone SrgnareL Jemee Coen

11:30

5 :0 0
ID 0 5 ) M O W
Stood And
Band" iCl (1941) Tyrone Power.
Hit* Hayworth A buehgfifar couooa

Q)

done fwe wrte tor another eonteo

Q ()10A4.Y DEVOTIONAL

I Q
■ »

C a n S e a l U p T o 200
S o c ia l A n d B u s in e s s P a r l i e s

11:30
O
8 ) MOW
The lonahael
Runner ' (I9IE) Brian Kwth la n c e
Karwm

a&gt;a

■
■

B A N Q U E T FACILITIES'
A V A IL A B LE

11:00

aODlXiONCwa

1 2 ( I F ) O PEN UP "1 Am
Brother e Keeper"

we are fighting," says CBS
N ew s
c o rre sp o n d e n t
M arlene Sanders, who an­
chors the program. Yet,
"ninety percent of American
hrwn(t«!- arc ,-ipuiuii* a
serious shortage of nurses."
The report reveals that
less than half of the nation's
1.4 million nurses stay in
hospitals for the length of
th e ir c a r e e r , and few er
people a r e entering the
nursing profession.

O MOW
The Americano
(C) ( l i s t ) Glenn Ford Frank Love

a te re rs
SAN FO R D A IR P O R T T E R M IN A L
B U I L O I N O N O .m

for

SAN FORD

PH. 323*5204

200

CUBAN REFUGEE

JDn

�Friday, May 11, 1981

* — E v e n i n g H a r a k l . S a n fo rd . F I .

Y e s , A m

e r ic a ,

E d d ie

NA5HVILI.JS, Tenn. (U PI)
- Eddie R abbltt was back
off the road a few days to
“ put In the ooha and ahha"
on his new album.
Rabbitt, looking a UtUe
bigger in person, strode Into
his Music Row studio (shirt
open down to h e n ) and
greeted the staff he hadn't
seen since the first of the
month.
A kiss on the Ups for office

acta asking how he got it,
settled Into a nearby sofa
and talked about being one of
the hottest m ale singers In
music.
“ I'm Just trying to figure
out what my sta r's going to
be, m an. Like this new
album — it goes for the
throat. I took five months off
the road to work on It and it
has the 10 best things we
could do," he said.

manejer Kent, fete* m (hr

T h e B r o o k ly n t ia IIv p , w h o

ch eek
for
rec e p tio n ist
Debbie, a bear hug for
producer David Malloy and
handshakes far two of his
w riters.
" I t's good to see you guys,
good to be b ack ," he said,
and you could tail he meant
It.
R a b b ltt,
w hose
b eer
comm ercial has other top

made It "overnight" after 30
years in the business, said
the album m ay be out by late
June o r early July — “ As
soon as I can put the
finishing touches, the oohs
and ahhs on It."
It follows on the heels of
lV79's gold one ("T he Best of
Eddie R abbitt") and 1980's
platinum "H oriron."

May 25

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laraaNd n IRit apAcial RoaiAd by
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lama incknpng TRa f nyiaa SMAaa
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(7) o

LA RR Y O A T L M ANO IMS

A

scooping lew cream in that
Howard Johnson’s in E ast
Orange, NJ . , 13 y ears ago.
He saved enough money to
come to Nashville on a bus.
Nowadays, R abbitt travels
in his own bus — whiling
aw ay the en d less h o u rs
listening to his early music
or watching tom e of the
umpteen video tapes of “ Star
Trek."

" I really don't like any
alack In an album . E very one
(song) has to be a killer. I
mean th ere’s no use In
putting two or three good,
com m ercial songs on an
album and then filling in
with leaser stuff," Rabbltt
II pays off — R abbitt had
two enorm ous hits ("Drivin"
My Life Away" and “ I Love
A Rainy N ight") oft the last
effort
He w rites most of the
m aterial, with help from
partners Even Stevens and
David Malloy, but also keeps
a m in i-sta b le (th r e e ) of
w riters at hla B rlarpatch
Studios.
" It was fun just now, fellin'
one of tl&gt;a guys he has a song
— a good song — on the new
album ,” R abbitt said.
O ATU N BROTHERS BANO Johnny
C aa R RogAT MittAT and D o n * Waal
Jotn Kw Otlttn B r a lf w i for an hour
N country m uvc and commitr
(111 (33) THE R O CKFOR D m t a
ID j 10) Q RCAT P E R F O R M A N C E
' Datica m Amanca TR* SpaAbound Chad r L lntant El I M Sortaagat" Mambary ol IRa Nan York
Criy Banal parlorm iRn lyncal lanta
•y cencanmd and cRwaogragnad
by Oaorga BalancFana anih a muarcal tcora by Mmirica Bayal

EDDIE RABBITT

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1 2 (17) NEWS

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HOLLYWOOD R EPORT

5:30
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CD D U LY DEVOTIONAL

Rabbitt isn't looking to
movies or television — he
turned down a aeries last
y e sr because he doesn't
want to lose any m ystique
his heroes had when he w as
growing up.
“ I like that little m ystique.
I don’t want people to ask,
'oh, did Eddie Rabbltt sing 'I
Love A Rainy N lg h tT 1 w ant
them to aay, ‘Yeh, Eddie
Rabbitt. He did T Love A
Rainy N ight’ You know ?"
Unfolding tight Jeaned legs
and navy cowboy b o o ts,
Rabbitt smiled.
" I t's good (o m eet you,
man, but now It’s tim e for
some oohs and ahhs.”

.1! (35) O C R VAN DYKE
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11:00
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sometimes I lose a pound of
sw eat during a show. It's
hard work out there, but I
love I I "

D aytim e Schedule

CD O HO USE CA LLS
0

Yes, America, Eddie Rabbill's a Trekkie : ”i love it.
Sometimes, Just the sound's
enough to keep me company
in
a
m otel
room
somewhere."

He knows w hat It m eans
when a music star records
someone else's song: Elvis
He Joga In H s motel room,
Presley recorded B abbitt's
"Kentucky R ain" in 1970 for likes tooa ("I have a g reat
his 50th million seller and disguise") and, generally,
that got R abbiti's career off tries keeping his 6-3, 316pound frame In shape.
the ground.
It was a long way from
"I
have
to.
Look,

0:00
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(10) M A T M U IA T C A L R E LA ­
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12:15

(10} ALLABOUT YOU (MON)
(10) MATHEMATICAL RELA­
TIONSHIPS (TUE, FRI)

8

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(10) MATH PATROL (THU)

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12:30
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O RYAN'S HOPE
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17) THE ADOAM1 FAMILY

4:30
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E vintng H irild, Sanford, FI.

Friday, May 11 , m i —'t

They Keep Getting Letters

A B C M issed Th e Boat
In Sinking 'Phoenix'
NEW YORK (U PI) There just h as to be a sinking
feeling in the ABC E n ter­
tainment board room — the
sort that comes of recurrent
d ream s Involving m issed
boats, fumbled bails and
brass rings unseized.
The fall lineup Is set. t/im e
n rte n in a firem an’s hat,
Mike Connors with a badge,
Robert Stack with a SWAT
team and E rm a Bombeck
with a ‘‘M aggie’’ all are
girded to go fo rth and
conquer the Nielsens.
But ’“The Phoenix" is mis­
sing, and ABC keeps getUng
letters about iL
“ The P h o e n ix " — a
godlike "ancient astronaut"
bearing the nam e of Bennu
— cropped up in a one-shot
late-season p ilo t in th e
personna of an e th e re a l
young actor nam ed Judson
Scott.
Benmi w asn’t the usual
sort of television cliche hero.
His powers w ere, for a
change, spiritual. He wore a
golden pendant. He read
minds. He fought with love,
not muscle, and instead of
blowing people aw ay, he
healed them.

The show — with several
sc rip ts a lre a d y w ritte n
against the onslaught of the
writers' strike — seemed
like a n a tu ra l for in ­
dependent producer Mark
Carliner. It scored a 30 share
in the ratines, but ABC
passed It by. The viewers
apparently did not.
Scott, who ironically cast
now as a psychopathic killer
In the old Mickey Spillane
chestnut “ I the J u ry " Is
shooting on location in New
York and though h e 's
relatively unknown, he was
recognized again and again,
after "The Phoenix" aired.
“ My God, it w as u n ­
believable," he said. "The
first thing I noticed w as they
wanted to make physical
contact with me. I've never
seen people react this way
Carliner said since the
airing, his Los Angeles office
has been beseiged with calls
from people wanting to know
where they could buy the
musical sound track from
th e pilot o r re p lic a s of
Rcnnu's pendant. Neither is
for sale, b u t th ey led
Carliner to believe, once

May 26

TU ESD A Y

again, “ The Phoenix" m ight
be.
" I even got calls from
three bishops," he said. “ It's
n grassroots phenomenon.
The people out there really
can affect what choice the
network mnkaa
have to do is write letters.
In the two weeks following
the airing of the pilot, the
network received 96 letters
— 93 of them praising iL
“ T hat," said a netw ork
spokesman, "is respectable
atte n tio n . People u su a lly
write to criticize. They don’t
run to the typewriter to say
they like something. They
only w rite when th e y 'r e
sore."
Since 93 of the “P hoenix"
w riters were not sore, docs
that mean the show yet m ay
rise. Phoenixlike, from its
own ashes?
“There’s no Indies Ron of
its bring held in rese rv e ,"
said the spokesman. “ It’s
just a pilot that was not acted
upon."
Hence that business of
boats, balls and brass rings.
Sometimes not acting can
be m easu red in r a tin g s
points too.
0D O

HART TO HART

COMPETITION
SPECIAL

Barbie Benton (right) and Marilyn Mir liar Is
guest star on the “ Fourth Annual National
Collegiate Cheerlratllng Championships,” an
en tertain m en t-com p etition sp e c ia l to br
broadcast Tuesday on CHS.____________

INTREPID
BEAGLE
Snoopy, the Peanuts
beagle, and Woodstock, his vulnerable
secretary and pal,
share a perilous ad­
venture, ‘ III "Itacc
F or
Your
Life,
C h arlie
Itrow n,”
anim ated
feature
film to be rrbroadc a s t T u esday on
CBS.

Tb* Hath

horn* i* t in u c k t d by ■ stockbrok­
er tM rcN ng for k fortun* t
(IP (35)

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grant vi a romantic m n u a t tanlai.
S i (35) tm * n o c A F o n o n i t s
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IN THE L fO IS L A -

1 1 (17) NEWS

10:30
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11:00
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11 ( 17) NWHT O A U IR Y

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LAN! MAPI SLVD A »U*I 0»IVt LA«I *M»»
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�l»—Evening Herald, 5anlprd..FI.

F riday,M arti, m i

Life With Leo

B io g ra p h y D e p ic ts Tolstoys' H o m e Life
By BILLOTT
A m erican lib ra ry Aw l
It wasn't easy having I« o Tolstoy around the house.
While most biographers of the revered Russian novelist
have argued that it was his wife, Sonya Andreyevna, who
was largely to blam e for the tempestuous nature of the
Tolstoys’ m arriag e, "Sonya: the life of Countess
Tolstoy" (Simon t Schuster, 11$ M ). a revisionist version
of the couple's story, paints a radically different picture.
Anne Edwards, author of the bestselling "Vivian
I«igh," sees Sonya as a loyal, loving and devoted wife, but
also as an intelligent and strong-willed woman, lite r a ry
genius though he ira*, the Tn,«*ny that emerges here —
seen from Sonya's point of view — is something less than a
model husband.
Edwards and the other Tolstoy biographers agree on
one point: the m arria g e w as a storm y one. Sonya w as the
teen-age daughter of a Kremlin doctor when Lev Lvovich
Tolstoy, a count who had made a reputation a s both
soldier and w riler, swept into her life in the late IBSOs. She
was 10 when they were m arried in 18*1, and her ex­
pectations of the life that awaited her proved as naive a s

ABO UTBO O KS
D

Capsule reviews prepared by
the American Library Assn.

her notion that Toisloy was a schoolgirl's rom antic
dream.
A rake as a bachelor, Toisloy loved and left a string of
peasant women across the Russian countryside. Vet when
it came to m arriage, he shared the double standard
typical of the age, expecting drastically different
deportment from a woman In the m aster bedroom than he
did in the servants' quarters.
When Sonya proved to be a passionate woman, eager to
love and be loved, Tolstoy reacted with horror, ultimately
avowing a belief In "m a rita l chastity " and characterising
m arriage as "dom esticated prostitution.” That Sonya
remained responsive whenever her husband’s instincts
got the better of his beliefs, he saw as proof that she w as a
tem ptress, scheming to thw art his struggle to attain a
philosophic ideal of purity.
As Edwards tells it, the Tolstoyan philosophy was even
more difficult to Uve with than Tolstoy himself. For the
first years of their m arria g e — while Tolstoy was writing
"W ar and P eace" — Sonya served ably and contentedly
as liis literary secretary , copying manuscript, discussing

work In progress and even doing some astute if timid
editing.
Eventually, however, Tolstoy all but abandoned novel
writing and became the leader of a messianic cult whose
followers saw Km as a aalnt and Sonya as a decadent
rem nant of an Immoral society. P art socialist, part
religious fanatic, p art ascetic, the new Tolstoy was ob­
sessed with ridding himself of all the symptoms of moral
decay — mainly money and sexuality.
Domestic tranquility, obviously, was not much In
evidence at the Toljtoya'. Instead o( the sense of ac­
complishment that came with assisting her husband the
novelist. Sanya laced the ignominy of having to stand by
as her husband the would-be saint cam e more and inu««
under the influence of his disciples, particularly a
Rasputin-like figure called Chertkov. Shut off from her
husband, Sonya was left to find some sort of life for herself
that would not offend Tolstoy's finely tuned sense of
m orality: " I have the feeling of being locked up, held
back," she wrote in a letter to her sister, "and l want to
push through and run away a s quickly a s possible."
Sanya’s story is not “A Doll's House,” however, and she
is not Nora Helmer. Fundam ental to Edw ards' portrait is
Sonya's absolute devotion to her husband. Even when the
dying Tolstoy abandoned his wife, preferring his death to
come in (he company of his followers, Sonya refused to
give up, following him lo an abandoned railway station
where she watched through a window as her husband of 4&gt;
years prepared to die. In a bitter irony, this gruesome
death scene became a Russian "m edia event," with the
press characterizing Sonya a s a shrew who would not lei a
tortured genius die in pesce.
le a v in g for others — probably psychoanalytic
historians — the Herculean task of determining if
Tolstoy's philosophy was a product of his neuroses, or vice
v e n a , Edwards focuses Instead on the effects of that
philosophy, and those neuroses, on Sonya and the Tolstoy
children.

BARBS

Faith Is what enables you to
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D o d g e rv al A u a n u h a

8:00
a

LON QW OO D

Anne Ed wards, author of "Sonya: the Life of
Countess Toisloy," sees Sonya as a loyal,
loving and devoted wife.

W ED N ESD A Y

Phil Pastorel

SPECIAL DISCOUNTS

The life of Sonya Andreyevna m akes a touching story,
and Edwards is extremely sensitive to its contemporary
resonance. Her melodramatic prose is occasionally
cloying, and her insistence on m aking Sonya into a
fem inist mouthpiece a bit heavy-handed, but she tells a
d ram atic story of distorted ideals raising havoc with real
life.

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O (35) N A S H v a jJ MUSIC

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Friday. May 11. I t S I - l l

E ve ning H e ra ld . Sanford. FI.

The Little Foxes' Big Event Of Season

Liz Is A Superstar On
NEW YORK INKA) - It’s just never born tn Eltiabeth
Taylor’s nature to go about anything in the small or quiet
way. She’s a true superstar, the d ram a o( her own life and
loves often eclipsing her perform ances.
So It’s no surprise that h er recent Broadway debut in a
revival of Lillian Heilm an’s 1939 dram a. "The Uttle
F a te s ," was the big event of the season here.
No surprise, somehow, that she was suddenly felled by a
throat infection a scant two days before the opening.
Would the show go on? Hoarse and gasping for breath, she
vowed to her public that it would. And it did.
No surprise that the advance reports about her weight
were true. She has lost 40 pounds. She does look fantastic
— trim , regal, lovely. True, the
(* much kinder tv »
49-year-old actress than a c am e ra. But even so you have
to pinch yourself. You’d sw ear it’s still 1960.
And It’s no surprise that she pulls off her Broadway
debut in smashing style. Poised, assured, in command.
After M films — and O scars f o r . "Butterfield B" and
"Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf’’ — Elizabeth Taylor
knows what she’s doing. The lady can act. Don’t ever
doubt that.
What is surprising is how unkind the years have been to
Miss Heilman's play. "The li tt le F o ie s" is a dated,
heavy-handed melodrama about a greedy, conniving
Southern family at the turn of the century. It creaks and
groans its way through three unendurable acts, making
you fidget and squirm like a 13-year-old kid dragged to his
first opera. Picture "D allas" taking itself seriously and
you have some idea of what you're up against.
The production is mighty plush. The Victorian set is
opulent. Miss Taylor's flowing full-length gowns of
maroon and lavender a feast for the eyes. But ap­
pearances are all it has going for It. Director Austin
Pendleton has treated his cast like the inhabitants of a
w as museum. It's a stiff, solemn outing. If anything was
to be gained by reviving "The little F o ies" — if a
freshness cculd be found — we'll never know. Nobody has
bothered to find out.

May 28

TH URSDAY

H ence, M iss T sylor co m m an d s o u r atten tio n
throughout. She is completely at home in the role of
Regina Gtddens, the classy Southern lady who bumps off
her ailing husband and squeezes her two brothers out of
the family fortune. The role w as originally played — by
TaluUah Bankhead on stage and Bette Davis in the 1941
film — with haughty nastiness. Miss Taylor plays Regina
much the way Vivien leig h played Scarlett O'H ara. Sweet
and flirtatious on the outside, cold steel on the inside. It
works for her quite well.
The Giddens are presiding over the destruction of the
old South. Regina's brothers, Ben ( Anthony Zerbe I and
O scar (Joe Ponazecki), are about to p artn er with a
Yankee businessman to open a cotton mill in their town.
They will become millionaires.
Yes, the old South is on its last legs. Muses O scar’s wife
Birdie (M aureenStapleton) about the good old days: "My
mom m a gave me elderberry wine for the hiccoughs when
I was a little girl. I don't think people gel the hiccoughs
anym ore." la te r . Birdie runs through the town square
without realizing she’s still wearing her bathrobe.
R egina's shriveled husband, Horace (Tom Aldredge),
' who Ls consumed by heart disease and self-hatred, refuses
to kick in his one-third of the bankroll needed to complete
the business deal. This deal will never come off, he vows,
as long as he is alive. "1 hope you die soon," hisses
Regina. " I ’ll be waiting for you to die."
She kind of helps him along, as it turns out. The brothers
are n ’t to be denied this deal, so they steal I1BB.OOO of bonds
from H orace's safety deposit boi with the help of O scar's
simpering son le o (Dennis Christopher), who works in
H orace’s bank. They figure H orace's, won't notice the
bonds a re gone.
They’re wrong. He finds out. His response: He won't
prosecute them but he will cut their sister. Regina, out of
his will. Her response: She refuses to fetch his medicine
(or him when he has an attack. Instead she sits calmly in
an arm chair while he slithers up the stairs (or 1L choking,
gagging and finally collapsing with a loud thud on the
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MLts Taylor fares much better than the rest of the cast.
Though many of them are able perform ers, they sink into
this antiquated showpiece and barely survive. No m atter.
The 10-week run of "The little F o ie s" is already Just
about sold out.
Miss Taylor, like Regina (iiddens, em erges on top What
a sham e that the play she’s chosen for her first trip to
Broadway hasn't aged as gracefully and beautifully as
she has.

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Klizabrth Taylor. Novrlla Nelson and Ann
Talnian in a scene from "The I.iUlr F oxes,”
Lillian Heilman’s 1939 play about a greedy,
conniving Southern family at (hr (urn of the
century.

1 0 :3 0
(11 (35) C A R CAR E CENTRAL

n m
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Hi...I'm Nanci LeGros

iai7 )O N Z W s
BENNY MILL

10 POSTSCRIPTS
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At one time I weighed 363
pounds and bicycling is just one
of many things I couldn't do.

NIGHT GALLERY
111 17| N

1 1 :3 0
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(3) TONIGHT Ho*l Johnny
Carton G u m It Slav* Lean ante
Mturaen Murphy
iI O M ' S ' S ' n
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nor Parker Baton* ot toldrer anti
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(fi O

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SANFORD

1:00
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JoalM cCraa
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upstairs landing.
R egina's not through yet. She then demands a 73 per­
cent share of the new venture in return fur not turning her
own brothers in to the law. Ami gets it. Trium phant, she
beads upstairs to pack her bags "Somewhere there has to
be what I w ant," she cries.

3 :3 0
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(Cl (ftS?) Daao J*99*r. fcdward

11:00

6 :3 0
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b o s o m BUOOtES Ktp and
Henry compete n t h a confining
m at at the ad agency tor a lucrative
account |R|
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beat teali«a tame produced by the
new breed ot American mdependent tammaaare |R|
11 ( 17) TELEVISION THE MORAL
BATTLEGROUND

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2:00
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HOURS: (AllOffices)
Mon. thru F ri.fiM 1:00 A1:W4:0S
'W here weight control is more than just a diet”

�U—Evtning Htra W. Sanford. FI._____ Friday, May M« Itil

D oes Best A ctor A w ard A lw ays G o To Professional?
DEAR DICK: Dot* the award lo r tw*t actor always go
to professional actor*? I law the movie "Jo * l," and the
ita r wa* a handicapped woman who played h e n e ll. I
thought the wa* great. ANDY COLLINS^ Ventura, Calif.
I assum e you mean the Oscar an d , no, there la no rule
that It must go to p professional Any studio can push the
candidacy o( any performer In an y eligible film. But, of
course, professionals do &gt;9.9 percent of the acting, so they
get 99.9 percent of the Oscars. Harold Russell won an
O scar in '46 for his supporting perform ance in "The Best
Y ears of Our U vea." He w as a soldier who had lost both
hands during the war, and he w asn 't a pro.
DEAR DICK: Please settle aa argum ent between a twin
brother and sister. I say that Daalel T rav aatl Is my m m tn
woo let! many years ago to become aa actor. He lived In
K enosha. WIs. He stars on “ lllll S treet Blues" now. Please
advise If he la the same Kenoshan. LESLIE, Racine, WIs.
T ravantt Is from Kenosha, but h e la y s he recalls no
eouain named Ita lic . If you had given me your last name
it might have helped.
DEAR DICK: la this true? M aureen Stapleton, Jean
Stapleton, and Ruth Carter Stapleton a re all related In
tom e way. Please settle an argum ent. H.A.D., Trenton,

A s k D ic k
K le in e r
By DICK KLEINER

little then te r work. Could this be the Gordon Jum p of
UWKRP In Cincinnati"? They would be about the sam e
age. K M . O'DELL, Columbus, Ohio
Ns, It's 2 different Jum p. Gur Gordon Jum p aid do a lot
of radio work In his early years, but he says Watertown
was not one of h li stops. He worked in Dayton and Topeka,
mostly.
DEAR DICK: Please settle an argum ent between a
schoolmate and me. 1 say the Munster* and the Addams
families had the sam e father, mother, grandfather and
son. P at says they only had the tam e mother. I also say
that the Munster* had a niece, Marilyn, and the Addams
family h ad a daughter. P at says the Addams family also
had a grandm other. Who's right? J. I1YER, Michigan
City, Ind.
You're both wrong. No one actor appeared on both those
shows. H ere w ere the families: the Ministers — Lily, tlie
m other, H erm an, the father; Eddie, the son; G randpa;
and nice, norm al niece Marilyn; and the Adilamars —
Morticia, the m other; G om el, the father; Pugsly. the son;
daughter W ednesday; Lurch, the butler; G randm am a;
Cousin III; and good old Uncle Fester.
DEAR DICK: A couple of y e a n ago, Lauren Rarnll and
Carol B arnett m ade a movie in S t P e tm b u rg , Fla., at the
Doa C aesar HoteL It was called “ Health.” Was It ever
■boon a t theaters? WUI It ever be on TV? MRS. J.

N.J.
The answer is no. Maureen, Jean and Ruth are
unrelated.
DEAR DICK: Could you tell me w hat happened to Lash
la R u e , the cowboy who was most famous lo r his skill with
the buUwhlp. U he Is still alive, w hat is be doing now?
WIIAJAM SHIELDS, Kalamaioo, Mich.
U R u e , who is 60, has had a h a rd time since he quit
films, or since films quit him. He'a done a lot of carnival
work and some bits In pornographic movies. He even tried
his hand at evangelism. All this — a n d 10 m arriages, too.
DEAR DICK: When I lived In W atertown. N.Y., years
ago, I recall a Gordon Jump. Ill w aa active In radio and

Backstage Talent G et Showcase
starrin g Tom Snyder and
Fiona Barrett.

Movie stars aren 't the only
ones who get to act at NBC.
Even the unsung, behindthe-scenes heroes will get a
chance to show their talent in
front of the cam era as NBC
p re s e n ts "T h e
Second
Annual NBC and Only NBC
T a le n t
Show case”
on
"Tom orrow Coait-toCoast,"

The NBC employees who
can sing, dance, yodel, play
piano, run a flea circus, do
stan d -u p com edy, spin
dishea or fall over creatively
will have a shot at appearing
on th e program, to air im­

-

DEAR DICK: I enjoy watching "C H lPs" but why, on
every show, Is there some kind of traffic pllrup on Ihe
trccuay? I
U'» « UuJc liuiuw no. KEGiNA
CRAMER, Allentown, N .J.
How many weeks would you watch a show that
featured a couple of highway patrolm an watching the
traffic glide smoothly by?
DEAR DICK: I say Jackie Gleason, Dean Martin, etc.,
g tt royalties from the Tobacco Institute foe smoking
cigarettes on their program s. My friend says no. Who Is
right? KEN MUNZ, Tucson. Arts.
They do not get royalties. All they get is a good chance
of lung cancer an d heart disease.
DEAR DICK: I'm writing on behalf of my husband, who
feels yon can help him (ind the book. "T he Outlaw", lie
doesn't rem em ber tbe author. The book was made into a
movie by Howard Hughes and starred Jane RutselL We
have gone to libraries and bookstorrs and written to
publishers, but no luck. And nil the time my husband lays
I’ll bet Dick Kleiner could help. Can you? JOSEPHINE
BRUBAKER, Creekslde, P a.
There m ay very well have been a book called "The
Outlaw." But the credits for the movie say that it w u an
original screenplay by Ju les Furthm an. There Is no
reference to it being adapted from a book.

"The Starter Home"

m e d ia te ly follow ing the
Tuesday, May 26 edition of
"The Tonight Show."
—

LUPARIELLQ, Trenton, N.J.
Yes, "H ealth" was released. But k did very poorly both
with the critics and a t the box office, so it had an
unhealthy run. It was recently sold to a cable network.
DEAR DICK: I hope you can settle a question for oar
family. My Mom and D ad ssy Ron Ely didn't star In n
“ T s n a n " series. My sister and I say he did. Please settle
this for tu. DONNA TAYLOR, Ashland, Ohio
Sore one for younger generation. Ely certainly did play
T a n a n In a TV aeries, which ran from '66 to '66.

...O W N Y O U R O W N H O M E
N O W A N D EN JO Y

FLORIDA'

THE GOOD LIFE!

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F ° r T h e P r ic e O f 1

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J llt o t O

SANFORD

- &lt;C t l L M I I C T
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6650 E. Colonial Drive, Orlando
P h o n e 2 7 5 -5 9 5 0
SALE ENDS MAY 31. "81
l St

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                    <text>73rd Y ear, No 252—F rid ay , Ju n e 12,198i-San»ord, Florida 32771

Rescuers Try Desperate Move

m m *
m

E vening H erald (USPS 481 280)—P rice 20 Cents

- '

To Save Boy, 6, Trapped In Well
FRASCATI, Italy (DPI) - The condition of a 6-year-old
boy trapped 111 feet down a narrow water well suddenly
worsened today and rescuers tried a desperate move to save
the child, who suffers from a heart ailment.
At 11:4S a.m (5:45 a m. EDTl, nearly 42 hours after Alfredo
Rampi fell and got Jammed half-way down the KWoot
unlined artesian well, a firefighter with a hand drill and
oxygen was lowered down the shaft rescuers dug parallel to
the well
The idea was for the rescuer to try to drill a passage
through to the well shaft near where the boy was trapped
At this time the rescue shaft was only about 111 feet deep, a
few feet above where Alfredo was trapped But the MMon

drill had hit another layer of granite-like volcanic rock and
doctors warned the boy could not survive a long delay.
The doctors said a microphone lowered lo the boy earlier tn
the rescue operation recorded a sudden Increase In his
breathing rate, indicating his condition was serious.
Rescuers said the boy also stopped responding to the soothing
questions from his mother. Franca, and father, Ferdinando,
40, who were keeping in touch with him by means of a
megaphone.
Rescue officials said there were obvious dangers in trying
to approach (Tie boy from above his position. Earth and small
rocks could fall on top of him and there was a danger he
might slip further down the well.

Under Reagan Tax Plan:

Rich To Pay Less,
Poor Pay More
H »r»M root* by T tm VlIKtnl

BEAR
HUG

F o u r-y e a r-o ld Multlu-vv W n lg rn iu tli of A ltam o n te S p rin g s g e ts a b ig h u g fro m
n o n e o th e r th a t S n in k rv th e I t e a r , w ho \K ite d th r c h ild r e n 's sto ry b o o k h o u r
a t th e A lta m o n te S p rin g s L ib ra r y T h u rsd a y c o u rte s y o f th e c ity fire
d e p a r t m e n t . S m okey to ld th e y o u n g s te rs a b o u t fire s an how to p r e v e n t th e m
— a n d , y e s , not to p la y w ith m a tc h e s .

D e s p ite H C A S u it L o ss

SMH Won't Require Its Doctors
To Carry Malpractice Insurance
Alter kiting * 110 mUU'o malpractice
lawsuit in Fort Pitrce recently, same ol
the Hospital Corporation ol America i
120-member medical (aclUUes are now
requiring all their doctors to buy
malpractice insurance.
However at HCA-owncd Seminole
Memorial Hospital, no changes in that
regard are anticipated.
"It has always bten recommended that
our doctors have it (malpractice in­
surance), but not r e q u i r e d , s a i d
Semin &gt;le Memorial spokeswoman Kay
Bartholomew. 'Whether there's a new
dtrecUve coming out on the m ailer, I
don't know."

"There Isn't," said HCA olliciai Bob
Beeves. "We don't usually send out
system-wide directives It will continue
to be up to each individual hospital and
its board ol directors to decide whether to
require their stall physicians to carry
malpractice Insurance."
One ol the doctors involved in the suit
involving the lawnwood Medical Center
In Fort Pierce did not have the insurance
— leaving the entire 810 million expense
with HCA. a Nashville, Tenn-based
corporation.
"Very (rankly, I thought all '1 the
doctors had insurance already," said
laiwnwond administrator Basil King.

"We're now going to require that they
do." E arlier rep o rts that the
requirement would be made at all HCA
(artlltles were In error.
Meanwhile, olltdala at l&lt;awnwood
Medical Center are worried that another
huge settlement like the 110 million
awarded tu quadraplegic Jeffrey Burling
last month will pave the way for dole ns
ol similar lawsuits.
“ It cost 118 million to build lawnwood
Just a couple of years ago,” said
lawnwood Dr. John Sullivan. “That sum
could be wiped out with two ol these
ridiculous suits."

WASHINGTON (U PI) - House
Democrats question the fairness of
President Reagan's tax cut — a proposal
they say will boost the lax burden on lowincome workers next year while saving
some wealthy Americans more than
220,000.
An administration spokesman con­
ceded Thursday the tax cut in its first
year would have such a disproportionate
effect, but he said all tax brackets would
be reduced in the second and third years
of the plan.
For a second consecutive day,
Democrats on the tax writing Ways and
Means Comm ittee questioned John
Chapoton, assistant treasury secretary
for Us policy, about the Reagan plan.
The panel's I* Republicans were cnotpiruously silent.
Rep. Barber Conabie of New York, the
panel's senior Republican, said he was
"bemused” by the rambling line of
questioning.
“The Democrats have imi bill, no
strategy," Conabie told United Press
International. "Their only Idea Is to poke
at targets of opportunity."
He added, "Why should w.' participate
tn that?"
Chairman Dan Rnatenkowskl, D-III ,
announced the panel will begin drafting a
tax rut bill next week for passage by
August.
Democrats generslly favor a two-year,
15 percent reduction with cuts aimed at
workers earning between 823,000 and

We'll G o Along, School Board
To Tell Justice Department
By SYBIL MITCIIKLL GANDV
Herald Still Writer
Seminole County Schools Supt. Bob
Hughes signed a consent order this
morning promising U.S. Justice
Department officials conditions specified
In their approval ol latke Mary High
School toning would be met.
In a live-minute meeting scheduled at 8
a m. todiy, lour school hoard members
agreed unanimously to give Hughe* the
authority to do so.
School board member Pal Telson was
absent.
Although parents who had opposed
Lake Mary toning were present, the
meeting was relatively uneventful.

School Board attorney Ned Julian, Jr.
had released Wednesday a Justice
Department letter which gave the goahead to county school officials on the
la k e Mary High School toning.
Federal attorney Burtis Dougherty
said the tuning plan would be sanctioned
by Justice officials providing the com­
bined
Sentinole-Crooms
student
population would not fall "substantially"
below 2.065 and that the black-white ratio
would remain ‘ substantially” at 35
percent black, 65 percent white
The conditions appeared to directly
address concerns parents who opposed
the plan expressed regarding the con­
tinued quality of education at Seminole

and Crooms high schools.
They advocated a racial balance at
Uke Mary and Seminole to give equal
growth opportunities in curriculum
programs at both high schools. Parentleader Hurley Moak said the group
(eared that a dwindling enrollment at
Seminole would deteriorate Its academic
and athletic quality.
When the formal vote was taken this
morning on signing the consent order, no
objections front parents were voiced.
According to school board sources, the
consent order will be mailed today or
Monday lo the U 5 . Justice Department
as well as to U.S. District Judge George
Young of Orlando for final approval.

850,000 a year. Reagan proposes a 33menth, 25 percent across-the-board cut In
individual tax rates.
The Democrats have yet to draft a bill.
Roxtenkowskl has appointed two task
forces to come up with suitable proposals
on individual and business tax cuts.
During
T hursday's
meeting,
D em ocrats complained the ad­
m inistration's across-the-board ap­
proach would be unfair to poor
Americans who still would feel the sting
of rising Social Security taxes.
On tlie average, workers earning
between 85,000 and 810,000 a year would
receive a 858 income lax cut in 1M2 under
Reagan's plan, said Rep. Donald Pease,
D-Ohlo. But when the offsetting effect of
higher Social Security taxes are con­
sidered, he estimated the m u ll would be
o 842 net tax hike next year.
Conversely, he said, people tn the

820,000-830,000 Income range would
receive a 8406 tax cut on the average.
Even with higher Social Security taxes,
they would save a 8103.

Those earning 8200,000 or more would
save a whopping 820.300 tn taxes even
after the Social Security Increase was
considered, lie said.
"I don't dispute (the figures),"
Chapoton said. "We have a progressive
income tax. And if you are going to cut
taxes i cross the board... more of the rut
will go to the bigger taxpayer."
Meanwhile, President Reagan ts using
all his powers of communication to make

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Waste Makes Haste
OREGON CITY, Ore. (UPI) - For
garbage man Lewis Johnston waste
makes haste.
Johnston, 41, a loader for the
Oregon City Garbage Co., trim s for
road running competitions by Jogging
through bis shifts, sometimes
carrying garbage loads weighing
upwards of 65 pounds.
His on-the-job training helped him

handle the lough uphill stretches in a
run by a five-man relay team that
established an over-40 group record In
Ust weekend's 67-mile Roeeburg-loCoot Bay run.
“ I've been working for nine years
now," said Johnston of his garbage
Job, “and I've always run from house
to house to get the work done as fast as
I can."

Arabs Call For World-Wide Boycotf

Khadafy Wants To Bomb Israeli Reactors
Sl By FRF.D SCIIIFT
* -t -•'•tiled Prr*. L-'-tmtion*!
Arab naiioid &gt;3 * 1 fw worldwide
trade and diplomatic saxic^r •&gt; Ip punish
Israel For destroying Iraq’s nucleai r . a » .,
to r and Libyan leader M oam m ar
Khadafy said Arabs m a t rei-boi* by
b m b ir ; Israeli tractors
The emergency meeting of Arab
League foreign ministers tn Baghdad,
which tingled out the United r-Utes for.
supporting Israel, d ispatched a
delegation to New York for a meeting of
the U.N. Security Council late today to
urge cn end io all trade, diplomatic and
military relations with Israel.
In Washington. P resident Reagan
moved personally to calm Middle East
tensions over the raid, assuring five Arab

Reagan said e a rlie r lh al Israsl
violated guarantees of using American
arm* only far defense when ii sent U.S.buitt F-IS and F -ll aircraft on the
dram atic i l n t r i k e that Tel Aviv
maintains was necessary to prevent
construction of an Iraqi nuclear bomb.
Diplomatic sources in Washington said
•he United States could support a
He made the remarks to a group is '
Council resolution crillcixing
Arab diplomats and lo the Israeli am­ the I s r a e l i hqt anything stronger
bassador in separate meetings in the would be vetoed, a s
Arab Lo«*.*
Oval Office Thursday
conferred a few miles from Uw J'rL'ryed
However, Reagan also assured the reactor, Khadafy was telling a crowd kIsraeli envoy there would be no major the former U5. Wheelus airbase in the
change in the special relationship with Libyan capital that Arab nations must
the Jewish stale despite his decision to a uadi Israel.
"After the Israeli aerial attack on the
halt the delivery of Ivor F -li fighter
bombers originally scheduled lor today. Iraqi nuclear reactor, Arabs have no

ai nbassadors Thursday the United S tain
had no part in the Sunday attach Just
oulude the Iraqi capital of Baghdad.
Reagan said Israel could have conviewed peaceful alternatives to the
bo&amp;t&lt;L&lt;&gt;rd *vo United Slates plans no
"tundamm ui fw£y'JcalW ." of relations
with the Jewish state. ' V' - , 77

dwice except to bomb Israeli nuclear
reactors " he said In a speech reported
by the Ubyan news agency Jana.
In the lung speech repeatedly in­
terrupted by the chanting crowd,
Khadafy gave backing to Iraq against
Israel despite political differences,
saying the Israelis "m ay be responsible
for a Third World War."
He included the United States in his
attack w d warned Western Europe,
which imports mud) of Us energy from
Libya, not to stand with Washington
,'yminil Libya.
'*
are ready to expel all West
European ■ V g e n and keep Iubyan uil In
the ground and L \ o v dealings with
these countries," he
.
farad defended Its attack. ».cv. Prime

sure Congress feels the same heat on his
tax cut plan lhal it felt prior to his
overwhelming victory in last month's
budget fight.
While problems to the Middle East
diverted some attention from his selling
campaign, Reagan Thursday gave it
Labor union presidents a personal run­
down of the program si the While House
and hosted a cocktail reception to the
E ast Room to enlist the support of
comm unity leaders and polilical
organizers.
At each event, the president vowed to
stick with his call (or a three-year, 25
percent reduction in lax rates, saying
inflation would eat up anything less.
"We absolutely inuit" have the threeyewr program, he told SO people he
dubbed the "new superstars of grass­
roots politics," including Moral Majority
leader Jerry Falwtll and civil rights
leader Ralph Abernathy.
"We're not going to settle for less."
In his meetings Thursday, Reagan took
a few swipes at his opponents, declaring
that a Democratic alternative “won't
even match Die built-in lax increase lliat
they themselves are responsible far."
•'Our opponents want more money
from your family budgets so they can
spend it on the federal budget and make
it remain high,” Reagan said. "It's your
money, not their*. You earned II, they
didn'L You have every right to keep a
bigger share than you've been allowed to
keep for a groat many years now "

Muuster Menarhem Begin say ing (or the
first time Iraq had built a secret
nu m b er for constructing a nudear
bomb 132 feet below the mam plant. He
said It waa undetected by international
inspectors in January. Begin also named
friends and enemies in the Hea gin
cabinet, accusing Secretary of Defense
Caspar Weinberger of seeking a total
embargo against Israel but saying
Secretary of State Alexander llalg “in
friendship and devotion" fought to limit
sanctions.
In a foreshadowing of the U N. debate.
Iraqi Foreign Mmut?r Sadoun Hammadi
said in Baghdad the “Arab Ministers
have called on all countries of the world
to break relations with Israel."

C o m m itte e
O K s

F ilm s

The Ihlcs committee of the University
of Central Florida is preparing a draft of
Its findings supporting Dr. Randy Fisher
and his instruction of it* class,
"Psychology of Sexual Behavior”, for
presentation to UCF president, Trevor
Col bourn.
The seven-member ethics committee
completed a preliminary draft of Its
findings Thursday after an investigation
of the course and complaints received
about the course's sexual content.
Dr. Frank Juge, chairman of the
committee, said that Fisher did not
violate any academic or ethical stan­
dards of the university and films shown
tn the course are appropriate lor the
subject matter. Complaints were filed by
five persons claiming the films are
pornographic.
A final draft of the committee's report
la expected to be completed next week
and forwarded at that time to President
Col bourn. Calls to Colboum for comment
today were being referred to Juge, who i*
on annual leave.
&gt;
Five formal complaints about the
course wart received by the university
during the past two years. The com­
plaints generally were that tha claaa was
not providing a balanced view of
sexuality and was biased against
morality.
Rev. John Butler Bock, pastor of the
Northside Church of Christ In Altamonte
Springs, said today Fisher has refused to
either allow him to view or burrow the
video tapes used tn the controversial
d a is . Book said earlier he objects to the
films. Book said If Fisher persists in this
position, he will rent the tapes and show
them to the public to permit the public to
determ ine whether they a re p o r­
nographic or not.
- DONNA ESTES

�I

JA ftntafHt i Id, U n H rd , F I ______ FrW«y, Jun« a ini

5,000 Buried In Iran Quake?

N BRIEF
olfsh Parlfamenf Facet/
Vith Soviet Ultimatum
.WARSAW,, Poland (UPI) - Faced with the sternest
Lvlet ultimatum yet to quickly rein in the reform
Mvement or face "mortal danger," the Polish parliament
u called into session today to hear the government'! plan
restore the economy.
In Washington, the United Stales accused Moscow of
serious” Interference Jn Poland's internal iflalra by
fnding a threatening letter to Warsaw that warned the
fcilish Communist Parly that "lima Is not walling."
! Poland's parliament was convening .one day after a
tierial twfrday meeting In which Polish Communist Party
j.*s Stanlslaw Kanta promised to carry on with the rtf can ,
’ "odnowa" movement, and also beat back a challenge by
ro-Sovlet hard-liners to oust him.
Today Prime Minister Wojchleh Jaruielski, who along
ilth Kanla was cited by name in the Soviet letter as not
Roving sternly enough to halt the Solidarity reform
* mvement readied Ms plan nf reforms to rebuild Poland's
Economy burdened by a 127 billion foreign debt and
(atlonlng of food shortages.

la/g Arrives In Hong Kong
*, HONG KOSti (UPI) - Secretary of State Alesander
fljig arrived in Hong Kong today for last-minute i.trategy
kssiona before (lying to Peking to try to broaden telations
millChina. Haig u expeclrd to face glowingQurrae anger
over American arms sales to Taiwan.
The secretary, who is on a two-week Asia tour, flew Into
the Rrillsh colony after a 22-hour trans-Padflc flight and
scheduled his first call with (long Kong Gov. Sir Murray
MacLehow.
Sunday, he files lo Peking to begin a thrre-lay visit — the
centerpiece of his trip designed to broaden relations with
China and blunt Soviet expansion throughout Asia.
From Peking, Haig is to fly to Manila to attend, as an
observer, the annual meeting of the Association of
Southeast Asian Nations and then to Wellington, New
Zealand fur a meeting of the ANZUS defense treaty part­
ners — Australia, New Zealand and the United States.

NATION

ANKARA, Turkey I UPI) - Rescue workers cleared
away heaps of rubble in a massive search for 5,000 people
buried beneath buildings flattened by a powerful ear­
thquake In southeast Iran, Tehran radio said. The govern­
ment said up to 2,000 people were killed.
Helicopters flew into parts of Kerman province, 470 miles
southeast of Tehran, lo remove the injured to hospitals, tnd
the state radio said 1,500 seriously injured were rushed lo
hospitals.
Iranian Prime Minister Mohammed Ali Rajal said over
the :adto that although no exact casualty figures were
available as yet, "between 1,500 and 2,000 people lost their
lives and much damage was caused."
Tehran University measured the quake as having a force
of 61 on the opened-ended Richter scale, a reading in­
dicating the quake was capable of causing widespread and
severe damage, the radio said In a report monitored in
Ankara.

Brezhnev Warns U.S.
MOSCOW (UPI) - President l-eonid Breihnev today
warred that the Soviet Union will "react rapidly and ef­
fectively" to the US. military buliduo. making his
strongest attack on the West since Ronald Reagan became
president.
Ttw 74-year-old Soviet leader gave the clearest Soviet
response yet to the rebuilding of the U.S. defense program
that Reagan has made a centerpiece of his administration
"One cannot fall to see that the militarists from the NATO
bloc, in the first place U5. militarists, show signs of fervent
activity in conditions of a military hysteria," Breihnev said
In hla strongest attack on the United Slates and NATO ilnce
Reagan became president.

China Criticizes Pope
PEKING (UPI) — Oiiua lias accused Pope Julw Paul 12
of trying to "sabotage” the communist state and rejected
the first Vatican appointed bishop In 26 yean, dimming
hope* of a rapid reconciliation between Peking and the
Catholic church.
A statement released by the official Xinhua New* Agency
on behalf of China'* Independent Catholic movement
criticised the newly appointed Archbishop of Canton,
Monstgnor Dominic Tang, 73, a Jesuit who apenl 22 yean in
■ Chinese prison.
The Chinese statement said the pope’s appointment of
Tang last Saturday was "illegal. We firmly oppose it "
"The Holy See'* move rudely interferes in the sovereign
affairs of the Chinese church. This cannot be tolerated."

'Scottsboro Girl' Fights On

IN BRIEF
Refiners Cut Gas Prices
Up To 3 Cents Wholesale
NEW YORK (UPI) — Leading UJ1. refiner* have trim­
med wholesale gasoline prices by up to three cents a gallon
in the past two days amid intense competition to hang onto
their market shares, Industry sources said Thursday,
The source* said the refiners Included Standard Oil Co.
(Indiana), Gulf Oil Corp., Mobil Corp, Shell Oil Co„ Amoco
and Phillips Petroleum Corp.
They said millions of motor ills will be affected,
especially in the Middle West and Southern areas of the
country where oil supplies are highest.
In the past two days, Amoco raised its wholesale gasoline
prices one to 3.1 cents p ir gallon. Gulf one to two cents per
gallon, Mobil one to 1»» wnta, Shell one to two pennies, and
Indiana Standard by as much as 3 cents a gallon, the
sources said.
They said die cuts were effective most places except the
west coast where sup p Lita are more In line with demand.

Transit Order Overturned
CHICAGO) UPI) —Tiie Illinois Supreme Court refused to
block a massive regional transit shutdown by ordering fare
hikes, and a 521 Million payment that could delay a tran­
sportation crisis for 1.25 million commuters was on un­
certain ground today.
The high court without explanation Thursday overturned
an order issued last week by Cook County Circuit Judge
Arthur Dunne that directed the Regional Transportation
Authority M keep the transit system going with fire hikes
and service m l-.
In effect, the order gave the R.T.A. - which la 190 million
m debt - permission to go out of business, shutting down
mass Iransil h r 1.25 million commuters.

Nuke Workers Contaminated
JONESBORO, Trnn t UPI I - State officials found tw^
employers were contaminated with radiation at a nuclearrelated armament* plant closed by a month-long strike t*y
workers charging unsafe conditions.
Stale officials said Thursday they cited the Tennessee
Nuclear Sendees plant, where uranium Li used to nuke
armor-piercing shells for the Air Force, because two of aix
workers tes'ed had suffered radiation overesposure.
One worker had radiation levels 13 limes higher than
allowable s'andards and another had levels more than five
tunes above lunits, the officials said.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Nearly 50 years after the
Supreme Court first stepped Into the racially charged
prosecution of the "Scottsboro boys," the case is once again
before the justices.
The chief prosecution witness In the controversial 1930s
trials asked the high court Thursday to review her $6
million defamation suit against NBC over a network movie
about the case.
Victoria Price Street is challenging a federal appeals
court dtgUlon Jhat ruled against her claim on grounds she
talUd to prove NBC aided wiUs malice in UWvlnng the film,
"Judge Horton and the £kuiuix*i&gt; Boys."
Her attorney told the justices, "The movie portrayed her
in a poor light in almost every respect," adding she was
called a "w h o re " and a "bum" in the film.

Slap At Moral Mafority
LOS ANGELES (UPII - Southern Baptists - the
nation's largest Protestant denomination — condemned the
Equal Rights Amendment, anti-Semitism and con­
traceptives to minors before concluding their annual threeday meeting.
And the Southern Baptists look a slap at the Mural
Majority with a statement deploring "the right of any group
lo define and pronounce for ail the people what la the
Christian faith and seek through political means lo Impose
this faith upon the American people."
The resolution, which was not critical of any group by
name, was pushed through by the Rev. W.W. Flnlalor of
Raleigh, N.C., who attacked the growing movement of the
political-religious right.

VD Checks O bsolete?
LANSING, Mich. (UPI) - Brides and bridegrooms
should be allowed (o obtain their marriage licenses without
first proving they are free of venereal disease, the Michigan
Senate say*.
The Senate Thursday voted 33-1 to repeal the 44-ytar-oid
state blood teat requirement and sent the bill to the Home.
Sen. Edward Pierce, a physician-legislator and sponsor
of the bill, u ld the blood test requirement for marriage
licenses no longer serves Its purpose.
Routine blood testa given to p&gt;rgnanl women now serve to
detect VD and unborn children can be treated. Pierce M id .

Funerals For Gacy Victims
CHICAGO (UPI) — The last nine unidentified victims of
mas* murderer John Wayne Gacy were prepared for burial
today under grave markers bearing the simple inscription,
"We remembered,"
Medical examiner Dr. Robert Stein u y s he hopes the
funerala will prompt parents of the nine young men and
boys - some unidentified since 1971 — to finally come
forward.

A R EA D EA TH S
NOKLIS BROWN
THOMPSON
Norris Brown Thompson.
20, of Geneva, Fla. died on
June 4.
He h survived by hie
mother, Mrs. M ib b Oliver;
grand nother, Mrs. Lillie
llillxr an; 2 brothers. Freddie
OUvr.'and Jhiuny Thompson;
amt a various hw&gt;l of other

relatives.
W il i o n - E i c h e l b e r g e r
Mortuary is in charge of
arrangements.
AINU Oi SHERMAN
Amo O. Sherman, (6, of 76
tanlana Dr. In DeBary died
Thursday at Florida Hospital
South. A native of Finland,
she moved to DeBary 11 years
age. Ch» was a beautician ai

f.truing HvniJd in**
Friday. June 12, IN '-V o t. 73, No H2
Jtotatat* DaOr m 4 u m i t . •««»*• 4*to«e*&lt; tv Tt*
h«i i M.Mk , .to N
* » . I r - I O t 71* &gt;1»l.

Saatare

I ( t w &lt; Clan Psoas* P a * al Saaleri. PMrOa D il l
Haw*
t* W ,

« i 'V

Ml N Bf W &gt; 'i
tss-ts. t.*--. tsr.tt

II M . M a«M . U H &gt; * MaatM, 1)41* &lt;
Waae 11.11' " » * » ** '•» ' **• '» »

(he Shear Magic Beauty
Salon.
She la survived by her
husband, Leo C. Sherman and
one sister, Mrs Ruth Tanev of
Deltona
David Lang Funeral Home
it in charge of arrangements.
FRANK MITCHKU.
Frank Mitchell, 57. of 1031
Glendale Blvd., died Tuesday
al Jess Parrish Memorial
Hospital In THusvillt. Fla. He
lived in Mims, Fla.
He is survived by his wtfe,
Mrs. Savads Mitchell;
mother, Mrs. Mary E. Mit­
chell; 3 daughters, 5 sons; 4
brothers; 4 sisters; 9 grand­
children; and one great
grandchild.
W ils o n -E ic h tlb e rg e r

Morvuary is in charge of
arrangements.

Fu neral Notices
TrtOUPlO*). u o a s u SBOWH
Fun*f*l ta &gt; * x n tor U n i )
Brown Thompson. JO, o) G n t n
•no owe Jon* 4 •ill oa n*i* *111
a m Saturday *1 N#w trttwl
* M E Churcn. G*n*v*. mth
in* Ray S Byrd oltlciaiVw
Burial •ill tolkM &lt;n Oanava
C a m tla ry , C a n t,a
Wilton
Eicn albarga r M ortuary In
inarwa
M I T C H l l L . f BANK Funaral
tarvitat lor Front Miitnoii, II .
or ten Cim data # 1, 0 . M im i
•no d u d Tu ttd a y t t Jots
PartAM M anorial MoWuUI in
lilu tv il'f ao*ll b* hold i t l p m
M 'u rd a y a lS I Mary MiStionary
BarWitf Churcn. Wilay Avanoa
Mi m l. •itn lha Rav O* &gt;0 Pal
larton o fU i*)n g Burial ■III ba
a* la cra n o a Caoufan. H i m
W toon (icnatoarsar in enuya

HtraM PkeM » T Jsae Ca w W M rry

uci p p o p
n t L r rU K

HUNT'S HOUSE

O n

T om , , u n t - a r e a v ic e p re s id e n t fo r F r ie n d s of R M H , Inc. h a p p ily a c c e p ts
c h e c k fo r 1500 fo r th e p ro p o sed R o n a ld M cD o n ald to be b u ilt n e a r S h a n d s
T e a c h in g H o sp ita l in G a in e sv ille fro m J e a n C lo n tt (le ft) p re s id e n t- e le c t of
th e S e m in o le C o u n ty M edical S o ciety A u x ilia ry , a n d M ary B eth W e lg a n d ,
a u x ilia ry p re s id e n t, in b e h a lf of th e ir o r g a n iia tlo n . G ro u n d b re a k in g fo r th e
h o u s r is s c h e d u le d fo r J u ly K.

Sexual Battery Charge

AAilliken May Be Retried
It appears as If Clifford Milllken Jr. of Sanford will be tried
for the second time within a year on charges of sexual battery
involving an li-year-old girl.
Following a Fifth District Court of Appeals decision over­
turning Miiliken’i 1960 conviction and 100-year prison sen­
tence, Chief Assistant Seminole State Attorney Chris Ray
said today he will present the case lo a grand jury, but hasn't
decided exactly when.
Milllken, of 422 San Marcos Ave., was convicted last July 1
on four counts of sexual battery including allegaUons he took
nude photographs of his victim Now-retired Circuit Judge
Voile Williams Jr. sentenced Milllken to four consecuUve 25year prison terms.
Mllilken’s public defender appealed the conviction, citing
slate law prohibiting any person from being tried fur a capital
felony — a crime which carries the possibility of life Im­
prisonment ur death — without first being Indicted by a grant!
jury.
The state contended that Mllilken's crimes did not warrant
prosecution as capital felonies, and therefore no grand Jury
indictment was necessary.
The appellate court disagreed and remanded the case back
to Ray's office for possible retrial.
ANOTHER PRISONER RECAPTURED
For the second day in a row, a Seminole County trusty
prisoner who had walked away from the county jail, has been
recaptured.
James Mallory Weir, 30, of 103 S. Central Ave., Apopka, was
apprehended shortly after 6 p.m. Wednesday at a residence on
Clifford Avenue in Ixxigwood.
Weir, who had escaped two weeks ago while awaiting hn day
In court on charges of obtaining a controlled substance by
Iraud and auto theft, may be charged with escape which
carries a maximum penalty of 15 yean In Jail, a 110,000 or
both.
Nineteen-year-old Faunce Levon Pearce, a trusty who
Sunday walked away from a work site at the county main­
tenance compound near the Jail, was arrested at a Casselberry
residence about 5 p.m. Tuesday.
Pearce, who had only three months left to serve on a sixmonth burglary sentence, faces up to 20 y ean in prison, five
y ean for violating his probation and 15 y e a n for escape.
SERVICE STATION ROBBED
The Eastern service station on Stale Road 436 In Altamonte
Springs was robbed by a knife-wielding bandit Wednesday

night who cut an attendant before escaping with 5560.
Attendant Grady M. Cheek, 21, told county sheriffs deputies
that he was placing the day's cash in a floor safe about 6:45
p m when a tali, thin man In his mid-20s entered the station
and hit him in the back of the head.
The assailant grabbed a bank bag from Cbeek'i hand and
ran for the door. Cheek, however, lunged for the bag, causing It
to (ear and spill change on the ground. Cheek said the thief
swung at him with a pocketknlfe, cutting him on the right
thumb.
A customer in the station witnessed the robbery, Cheek

Action Reports
★ Fires
■k Courts

★ Police
reported, but said when he asked him to stay and give a
statement to police, he left without Identifying himself.
TEENAGER SEXUALLY ASSAULTED
A 17-year-old girl walking through the parking lot of a
Casselberry bar was abducted and raped Wednesday night,
police reports say. .
The girl told Casselberry police that she was walking in the
parking lot of the Level HI Lounge, 401 State fload 436, around
11 p m. when two men grabbed her and threw her Into the hack
seat of a car.
She said the was knocked unconscious and when she awoke,
one of the men assaulted her. The girl escaped when she
Jammed the car's gear shift into park, causing the car to stop,
and scrambled out a door.
Police aald she ran to a nearby home and called police. She
was treated at Seminole Memorial Hospital and released.
RESIDENTS CAUGHT WATERING
In the last three weeks, more than 100 Casselberry residents
have been caught violating the d ty 'i outside watering
restrictions, according lo police record*, marking a recent
upsurge In violations since the moratorium began May 11.
But according to Police Chief George Karcher, no fines have
been Imposed on anyone as yet. So far, only warnings have
been Issued to Illegal waierers.

H ealth
Vasectomies Safe
BOSTON (UPI) — Men who have vasectomies are
generally free from serious conpUcatlms Including heart
attacks, researchers reported today.
Dr. Alesander M Walker, a Harvard University
epidemiologist who headed a study of 1,992 sterilised men
for nearly two decades, said the results were quite
reassuring In that no serious, long-term complications of
vasectomy were discovered.”
"It's support of the safety (of vasectomy), but It's not
proof of the safety," he said.
Findings from the largest follow-up study to date of men
who ha ve undergone vasectomy were published today in the
Journal of American Medicine. The men, aged 30 to 59,
were sterilised at the Group Health Cooperative Program
of Puget Sound tn Seattle, Wash.
The one exception among Ihe 6,093 men who had un­
dergone vasectomy wax that diseases of the genito-urinary
tract were diagnosed more frequently at the time of, or
shortly after, a vasectomy, the researchers said.
About 250,000 American men undergo vasectomy each
year. In 1976, more than 10 percent of men married to
women of childbearing age had undergone the operation.
Until recently, there were few suggestions that the
procedure might have long-term harmful effects.

Smoking Lethal
BOSTON l UPI | - The New England Journal of Medlctnt
in an editorial has recommended a drastic cigarette tax
hike lo get more people to kick the habit and to finance
research programs to cut down on smokers' deaths.
"it's generally accepted if you double the price, you’ll
decrease the number of cigarette smoker* by 35 percent,"
said the author, Dr. Richard V. Ebert of the V eteran
Administration Medical Center In Little Rock, Ark.
So far, Ebert said most of the research money to study the
hatards of smoking has been spent on Investigation of
cigarettes and cnnccr. He said more is needed to study tht
components of cigarette smoke which are responsible for
chronic bronchitis, emphysema and heart disease.
"Heavy taxation of cigarettes could reduce consumption,
strengthen the trend towards the use of lest lethal forms of
tobacco and provide funds for research on smoking," ha
wrote,
Ebert said tobacco companies' efforts to develop "safe"
cigarettes have been Inadequate because the danger of
contracting lung cancer Is related to the method of
smoking, "especially to the holding of cigarette m o k e in
the lung," and the number of cigarettes snaked per day.
Cigarettes are U sed by the federal government at I cents
per pack. States levy their own taxes.

W EATHER
NATION Al. REPORT: Ftoodwaters that submerged Austin,
Texas, under 4 (eel of water, forcing the evacuation of 250
people, receded into the Colorado River today. An elderly
camper was swept away In the downpour that swamped Texas
and the Plains. Authorities In the south Texas town of Devine
reported the esmper was missing after being carried off in a
flaih flood. Three of his companions were rescued clinging to
trees, and five rescuers nearly were pulled under.
In Florida, a brief rainstorm slowed a 1,100-acre wildfire,
which was burned out of control (or two days. The fire near
New Smyrna Beach t u sparked by lightning June I and
fueled by underbrush baked bone-dry by three days of record
heal.
AREA HEADINGS (I a.m.); temperature: 79; overnight
low: 73; Thursday's high: 93; barometric pressure; 30.II;
relative humidity; 61 percent; winds: southeast at 7 mph;
Thursday rainfall, 1.1) Inches.
SATURDAY’S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 6.04

v , r“

am ., 1:11 p.m.; lows. 11:53 a m .; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 5:56 a m ., 6:23 p.m.; lows, II :46am .; BAYPORT: high
11:23 a m ; lows, 5:35 am ., 6:30 p m.
BOATING FORECAST: S t Augostia* Is Jupiter Inlet, Out
56 Miles: Wind mostly southerly arounl 10 knots today
becoming southwest tonight and Saturday. Seas 3 foot or Was
Scattered thunderstorms mainly late afternoon and nighttime
hours.
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy through Saturday with
scattered afternoon und evening tnunderstorms. Highs la the
tnid 90s. Lows in the mid 70s. Winds southerly II n ^h. Rain
probability 50 percent today, 10 percent tonight and SO percent
Friday.
EXTENDED FORECAST: Chance of mainly afternoon to d :
evening thunderstorms. Temperatures will be warmer than
normal with nighttime lows tn the mid to upper hto except .
around 60 onuthMst ro a jt tn d K sjs. Daytime IJgia unwiiy m
the 90a.

I

�Ivewinf HenM, tew ferl FI

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
"There's A Man In My Room"
Hoax Caller Tells Parents
HOLLYWOOD, FU. (UPI) - "Motnm», Morons.
There's • man. He's In my room," the hysterical voice
on the telephone said. But police say it was a hoax —
one o( a series cl such calls to pamAs around Broward
County.
One night this week, the Hollywood police depart­
ment received reports from a hall-dozen parents that
they had received calls from a tearful, frantic woman
*b° said she was their daughter and she was being
attacked by a rapist.
The calls began “a few months back" in nearby
Cooper City and Pembroke Pines, shortly alter two
women in Pembroke Pines were raped, Hollywood
Police Chief Sam Martin told the Hollywood SunTattler.
Then no calls were reported until the flurry this
week, he said Thursday.
Police at Hollywood, Pembroke Pines and Cooper
City say every adult receiving a call does indeed have a
daughter, the daughter is never home at the time ol the
call and frequently the caller knows the daughter's
name.

M urderer Seeks New Trial
TAMPA, FU. (UPI 1- US. District Judge George C.
Carr has been asked to order the State of Florida to
grant a new trial to convicted murderer Johnny Paul
Witt, or to order a new sentencing for the death row
inmate.
Defense attorney Paul Helm of Bartow said under
new guidelines set in two Supreme Court rulings last
month, a written confession made by Witt should be
ruled inadmissible as should the testimony given by a
psychiatrist during the sentencing phase of his 1974
trial.
Witt, now 77, was convicted and sentenced to death
for the 1973 sUying and mutiUtion of U-year-old
Jonathan Kushner. A co-defendant, Gary Tillman,
pleaded guilty and is serving a life prison sentence.

Gunter A sks Sinkhole Study
TALl-AllASSF.F.. FU. (UPI) - Insurance Com­
missioner Bill Gunter wants a sUte university
research center designated to study the nature of
Florida's “sinkhole phenomenon."
Pushing a recommendution of a group that attended
an inquiry into the recent 300-foot sinkhole that caused
52 million damage to a downtown business section of
Winter Park, Gunter said the Board of BegenU should
assign the project to a university interested in the
sinkhole problem.
Gunter said there U a need to pull together all
avalUble Information un sinkhole occurrences in
Florida and update map* and designations of sinkholeprone areas.
, t *r t .
t

Rain Cools Swamp Fire
NEW SMYUNA BEACH, FU. (UPI) - A brief rain
shower brought relief, but firefighters braced for more
(larrups In the 11-day old Crane Swamp fire that has
destroyed 5,100 acre* of woods since June 1.
The rain "bought us a little time,” said Jim Brian, a
spokesman for the sUte Division of Forestry. "There’s
still fire out there, It's Just hiding In the swamp."
The shower Thursday came after fire firefighters
spent a frustrating two days watching wind-whipped
flames hopscotch over their hastily dug fire lines.
Every lime a new trench was completed the flamrs
crossed it.

Space Shuttle Damaged
CAPE CANAVERAL. FU. (UPI) - Minor problems
have deUyed the painstaking examination the space
shuttle ColumbU must undergo, but space agency
officials say the shuttle's second mission, scheduled for
Sept. X , won't be affected.
One of the problems developed as the ColumbU's
hydraulic system was being checked Thursday. An
elevens —a (Up on one of the shuttle's stubby wings —
was damaged when it hit the access pUtform, officials
reported
About 15 to II heat-resistent tiles on the e levon were
damaged and will have to be removed so the structure
underneath can be checked, officUU said.

Hastings Hears Haitians
MIAMI (UPI) - A federal Judge was scheduled to
hear arguments today on a complaint that saved 78
Haitian refugees from a Jetliner ready to take them
back to their homeland. HU decision could affect the
way immigration officials deal with thousands of other
refugees.
U5. District Judge Akee Hastings will decide
whether the U S. Immigration and Naturalization
Service used illegal means in determining that the 78
Haitians should be deported.
He will hear arguments at l:X a m. today on a
complaint by lawyers representing the Haitians that
INS officials kept the refugees from getting legal
advice and bullied them Into giving up their right to
seek political asylum.

Frfdey, June ti. tWI-ZA

House-Senate Leaders Say Progress Made
P o lic e S e e k Id e n tity

Budget Faces Obstacles
TALLAHASSEE, Fla (U PI I le a d e n of the House-Senate committee
trying to write a budget say they've
made progress, but that some serious
problems still stand in the way of a final
compromise.
Both sides have made major con­
cessions and are now trying to remove
transportation and education deadlocks
that forced the legislature into a special
session
The conferees, led by House
Appropriations Chairman Herb Morgan
of Tallahassee and Jack Gordon of
Miami Beach, will resume their work
today and bargain over the weekend if
they believe they arc close to a final deal.
The conferees returned to Tallahassee
Wednesday after a five-day recess.
Rank-and-file
leg islato rs
aren't
scheduled to return until Monday.

Gordon and Morgan must decide if
working the conferees Saturday would
result in a 59.4 billion budget for the full
legislature to consider Monday and,
whether, in fact, the rest of the members
of the House and Senate should come
back then or wait until later in the week.
They see no sense in working all
weekend if the legislature is going to be
around most of next week anyway.
The conferees made some progress
Thursday.
House budget bargainers agreed for
the first time to use some of the working
capital reserve fund for transportation
projects even though the money is
available on a one-time-only basis so
legislators will have to fund these
programs from some other source next
year.
The concession followed a major one

by Senate negotiators, who agreed for the
first tim e Wednesday to increase
required local revenues for schools,
which carries with it a slight property tax
increase.
The conferees still are far apart on how
much the socalled "required local effort"
should go up and how much of the 1417
million working capital fund ran be spent
for roads.
And they must still find money for local
roads and law enforcement and a local
option sales tax increase of a quarter cent
or half-penny rem ains a possible
solution.
But Morgan and Gordon have seen
enough movement lately to make them
optimistic.
"For the first time in this entire con­
ference, we’ve got to the point where we
ran talk to each other about choices."

Barfield Death Penalty Reversed
Tafero, 34, and two accomplices
murdered a Florida Highway Patrol
trooper and a visiting Canadian con­
stable at a Broward County highway rest
stop in 1976.

TALLAHASSEE, Fla (UPIi - The
Florida Supreme Court Thursday
reversed the death sentence imposed on
John Barfield for the murder-for-hire
killing of a Jacksonville businessman.

Jury's recommendation that he be sen­
tenced to life in prison.
In other cases, the high court upheld
the death sentences unpused on William
T. Zeigler Jr. and Jessie Joseph Tafero

In a 5-2 decision, the Justices concluded
that the Judge who sentenced Barfield did
not have sufficient reason to overrule a

Barite Id, 33, was paid 1125,000 to serve
Zrtgler, 35, fatally shot his wife and her
parents in an Orlando furniturr store In as the middleman In the killing of Forrest
1975.
J. Harris Jr. in 1977.

w

O f A i r C r a s h V ic t im
FLAGLER BEACH. TU. (UPI) - The charred remains
of what appears to be a man who died In the llrey crash of i
twin-engine plane In a swamp Just weal of Flagler Beach
Thursday were taken to Halifax Hospital for an autopsy
The Aero Commander, which was being pursued by twot p
Customs Service planes at the time of the crash. Ignited In a
ball of fire when Its tail clipped a tree In the swampy area
between the beach and the tntracwaiUl Waterway.
Flagler County authorities estimated the plane was
carrying 1.K0 pounds of martyzana, much ol which was stki
burning when deputies arrived at the crash scene by canoe
at daybreak Thursday. The crash occurred at about 2 a m
The body of one person, believed to be that of a man
because of ■ cowboy belt buckle, was found In the copilot's
seat. Deputies searched the underbrush for any sign of
another man. The pilot's seal was empty.
"We don't know if a person could have miraculously
walked away from the crash or not," said Flagler County
Sheriff Dan Bennett.
Numbers taken from the charred fuselage of the plane
listed the plane's owner as A. W. Hlrshberg, of Jackson­
ville, but Hlrshberg, contacted at his home, said he told the
plane four months ago to a Chester Sanders of Gainesville.
Jim Dtngfelder, a spokesman for the UJi. Customs
Service In Miami, said the Customs planes picked up the
Aero Commander abcut 11:30 p.m. Wednesday in Ihe
Bahamas and decided to keep it under surveillance.
They followed at a discreet distance up the East Coast of
Florida. The pot plane headed over land near Vero Beach
and went to Orlando before turning north again and flying
toward Flagler Beach.
The Customs agenta said It was flying extremely low
when it hit tha top of a tree near Flagler Beach and burst
into flames.

S p e n d a
3

§

lit t le

n o w

:•

to

ii
11

ft i

s a v e a lo t .”
“I would say that any time you can spend a little money
now to save a lot of money over a long period itk a pretty
gtxxl investment. And thatk how I feel about insulation
and those other energy-saving features in our house," says
Mr. Robert McMahon of Gxroa. He and his wife, lean,
estimate they save $30 to $40 a month because of their
initial investment in the Watt-Wise Living'- package at
the time they built their home.
W hari a Watt-Wise'“ package! Irt a combination of
features that meet FPL’s energy-saving standards and can
be easily included in the construction of a new home.
Over a period of years they can save you substantially
more than they cost.
Watt-Wise homes have cost-saving features like
extra ceiling and wall iasulation, solar or heat-rccovery
units for water heating, a higher-efficiency air conditioner
or heat pump. I\rwcr savers like fluorescent lighting and
a microwave oven, and thermally efficient windows and
doors, with glass areas planned to minimize heat build-up.
Today, there are many ways to save on electricity
without giving up comfort. You'll find them in FPL's
Witt-Wise Living Program. Today, it’s one of the wisest
investments you could make. Stop by \our local FPL
office and pick up a free brochure.

FLORIDA POWER A LIGHT COMPANY

it
it

Iranian Faces Deportation
MIAMI (U PI) — An Iranian who has been booted out
of two counties and twice been flown across the
Atlantic faces a deportation hearing today that could
put him In the air once again — bound back to Iran
Javab Fahihi, 25, who once had a permanent U.S.
residency card but lost it when hr left the country for
three years, has been ordered departed by
Immigration and Naturalization Servtve officials.
Today's hearing is expected to make that order formal.

DCSIGHCD
FORWjOT-W1S€

Hkt S Guests BPOf 1241

Summer Dance &amp; Buffet
30' DRINKS from S -9
Special Man's Fashion Show

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W a tt'W is e L iv in g . I t sa v e s y o u m o re th a n it c o s ts .
A s k y o u r b u ild e r .

Music by Sun Down
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�Evening Herald
iu ip i

;
(.(

Jfi

They Just have to be the hottest things going
for the CtMelberry police. Even Chief George
Karcher has to admit that things • round the dty
Jail wouldn't be quite the same without them.
They're charming, they’re delightful, they're
efficient, and they're the best Casselberry police
team in the d ty .
But they don’t ride around In a squad car or
pack guns. Bettie !. Neal and Barbara A. West
keep things In line In the police records office.
They're caDed everything from " n it and
pepper” to "half an Oreo" and everything in
between became BetUe'i black and Barbara'a
white.
Betides providing Information on police
arrests and accidents to the press, these girls
have mastered the a rt of keeping filed police
reports In order. And that’s certainly no small

« i no i

MO N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD. FLA. 31771
Area Cod* 3QW22-26U orUl-W U

t

F rid ay , June 12, 1911—dA

Around

Wayne 0 Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

Home Delivery: Week, 11*10; Month, *4.25; 6 Months, (24.00;
Year, *15 00. By Mail: Week, {1.25; Month, *5.25; 6 Months,
{M OO; Year. *57.00.

Small Is
The Clock

More Vulnerabk3
Opting for a compact car has obvious ad­
vantages.
First there nre tremendous fuel savings. The
older Detroit models get about 14 miles a gallon
while some of the new compacts can deliver more
than 40 miles on the same amount.
Then there's the parking advantage. Little cars
can zip right into those spaces that were always a
toot too short for standard vehicles.
Now the bad news. The Highway Traffic Safety
Administration points out tht even though only 3a
percent of the cars on the road are compacts, they
are involved in 55 percent of the fatal accidents.
Despite the safety problem, more and more
motorists are switching to smaller cars. Last year
64 percent of auto sales were compacts or subcompacts Within five years, compact cars will be
in the majority.
In the meantime, it would behoove the small car
pperator to drive defensively. Keep an eye on the
road and that safety belt fastened.

Licensing
Journalists
(Reprinted by permission of The Sacramento
Bee)
The controversy concerning UNESCO’s
proposed New World Information Order" is not
quite as simple as it first appears. On the fringes
are all sorts of troubling questions regarding the
regulation of communications satellites, the flow
of information from undeveloped countries into
the data banks of Western corporations, and the
general feeling in the Third World lhat the West
treats information originating there as it used to
treat bananas, cocoa nod rubber — something to
be harvested abroad for domestic marketing,
m anipulation and profit. Not surprisingly,
therefore, the nations of the Third World, abetted
by the Soviets, are seeking more control over
news and other information that comes from
within (heir borders or somehow Impinges on
their interests.
The result, nonetheless, Is simple and awful —
the Orwellian new order" under which jour­
nalists would be required to promote government
policies, subscribe to a code of information
ethics" and carry identity cards that could be
withdrawn if UNESCO disapproves of a jour­
nalist’s work. In effect, that would amount to an
international licensing system controlled by
nations which have never been known for their
respect for the free flow of Information or their
excessive zeal In protecting free speech.
It was therefore encouraging when, for the first
Time, Western news organizations fought back.
Meeting in France, representatives of publisher's
organizations, press associations, wire services
' and other groups from 20 nations pledged to fight
; the proposed restrictions, urged UNESCO to
; abandon attempts to regulate news content and
; formulate rules for press conduct," and pledged
; to expand the free flow of Information world| wide." They also pledged to support efforts to
assist developing countries to fashion strong press
:l institutions of their own.
Hie opposition from those organizations may
not be decisive. UNESCO officials say they are
drafting the order" despite opposition from
Western governments. Yet the opposition and the
declaration it produced will at least make it clear
to those who care to read that freedom does not
mean censorship, that journalistic responsibility
cannot be defined by the politicians and
bureaucrats who are the subjects of the news to
which they object, and that the power to license is
the power to suppress.
Wc are deeply concerned," said the
declaration, by a growing tendency In many
countries and in international bodies to put
government interests above those of the in­
dividual, particularly in regard to Information.
We believe the state exists for the individual and
has a duty to uphold individual rights...." The
phrase New World Information Order" could
have been dreamed up by Goebbels or one of
Stalin's commissars of culture, and so could its
spirit.

BERRY S WORLD

Team work Is the reason. They complement
eadi other. Barbara likes to type and flit. Bettie
likes to answer tne chone end handle requests
By SYBIL MrrCHELL GANDY from people who come Into the station. And those
two ladles keep the spirit lively round the place.
Barbara calls the detectives "defectives"
while Bettie wrap* her arms around her
shoulders end gives herself a great big kiss.
Lucky, lucky Casselberry police department!
How did the d ty come upon these treasures?
Well, they got Bettie almost 11 years ago when
she was chief radio dispatcher for the dty of
Eetorvttle. Prom the Caaeelbeny &lt;tl»pMrh

O w v**»

p - -w

w

W Shew! ■ * te * *

4b ,

***

Barbara mentioned this one particular tnrident that put the place In an uproar Wed­
nesday.
It teems a man was arrested and brought into
the police station. Although I can't tell you what
the charges were, chances are they relate
somehow to tbs fset that this geMlciium lud

obviously been drirking his breakfast.
As the story goes, one of the officers wss trying
to give the min a test for Intoxicstion. Of course,
there are several, but this man was told to walk a
straight line, putting one fool In front of the
other.
He told the officer, *'l don’t know how to do
that" at which the policeman gave him a
demonstration of how the test is done as he
carefully walked a straight line with perfect
balance.
The arrested man goes, “Oh, I gotcha.” And
then he proceeded to walk. Well, said Barbara,
there has never been so much bumping and
knocking against the walls at that place In a long
time.
Bettie, who is prone In humorous un­
derstatement, simply says the man was "ob­
viously In no condition to pass the test.”
Well, he tried and tried, stumbling and
bumping all over the place. And then in a sudden
rush of frustration, he told the policeman, "Oh, t
can't do that. There’s no need to. You've already
done IL"
Well, you can Just Imagine that It wasn't until
t :00 Wednesday evening until the girls could stop
laughing about that one.
Betti* will be the first one to tell you: "We
didn't have to listen to the soap operas on the
radio today. We had our own soap opera right
htr*,"

WILLIAM STEIF

BUSINESS TODAY

Social
Security
Idea

American
SST Not
Dead
SEATTLE (UPI) - Only a decade ago, a
U!m 1x* gold and white silhouette of a
supersonic transport adorned one aide of the
Boeing Co.'a huge developmental center In
Seattle.
A full-scale mockup of the SST, designed to
cany 300 passengers at 1,100 mile* per hour,
stretched out Inside the mammoth building. II
had coat about *10.6 million.
By early 1971 a work force of 7,000 waj
employed on the development aid con­
struction of what was supposed to be tha
American entry Into the business of flytng
canmerrial passengers at speeds greater
than the speed of sound Subcontractor! for
(hi expensive project, supported by federal
government loans to be repaid later from
operating revenue!, employed many more.
The American SST was to be both bigger
and faster than tha Russian m elon or tha
French-BriUah Concords. Twenty-six airline
companies had put down deposits to reserve
delivery positions on orders for I S models of
the Boeing SST.
Then on March 14, 1171, tha US. Senate
shocked the aviation world by voting to slop
funding the SST program. It was a victory for
conservationist forces led by Sen. William
Proimlre, D-Wla., foremost opponent of the
SST In the Senate.
Boeing Immediately made plana to trim Its
payroll by 7,000 workers, adding to the
"Boeing depression" of the tarty 1970a. About
a year later the SST mockup was told at
fiction to a buyer for an aviation museum In
central Florida.
But that didn't mean an absolute end to
plans and hopes for an American SST.
Boeing and other aerospace companies
quietly hare continued with research on
supersonic transport technology.
A *1.21 million contract was awarded
Boeing recently by the National Aeronautics
and Spare Administration's Langley Ro­
search Center under a program "t i Identify
and validate technologies required for future
supersonic a irc ra ft"
Boeing giokeaman Jim Boynton of tha
firm's commercial airplane company laid,
however, an American SST still Is a long way
from production.
Meanwhile, Boeing end Its competitors a n
keeping busy with tha research, determined
to be ready whenever tha call cornea to
produce an American SST.

JULIAN BOND

Who Should Go First?
There are 30,000 Cuban troops In Angola at
the Invitation of that nation's government.
The United Stales wants them to leave.
Thera are 20,000 South African troops In
Namibia, illegally occupying a country that
South Africa has dominated since the end ot
World War 1. Tha United Slates doesn’t seem
to know that they are there.
The Cubans era In Angola to protect the
Angolans from the South Africans, who
regularly croaa Namibia's northern border to
bomb and strafe refugee camps. The South
Africans say that tha camps are being used as
staging grounds by guerrillas from the South­
west Africa People'i Organisation.
SWAPO wants the South Africans to follow
through on the agreement they made three
y e a n ago to allow Unltod Nalioowupervised
elections In Namibia.
The R eagan administration and tha
governments of Britain, France, West Ger­
many and Canada recently announced that
they would try to negotiate a constitution and
other guar an lees designed to persuade South
Africa to live up to Its pledge of "free and
fair" elections for Namibia. But they did not
explain how they would placet* South Africa
without losing the support of black Africa.
Namibia, a panaly populated land aa large
aa Oklahoma and Texas combined, contains
tha world's most valuable uranium end

diamond deposits. But South Africa Is less
Interested in minerals than In insulation
against the slow tide of freedom that
threatens to flow into the last domain of white
supremacy on the African continent. In the
past tlx years, guerrilla movements hare
freed Angola, Moiambique and Zimbabwe
from colonial domination.
The 4 million South African whites who
deny 10 million blacks, coloreds and Aslans
the right to vote, own property or move freely
In their own country are understandably
concerned that their race-determ ined
privileges may end. They hope that Namibia
will continue to provide a buffer between
them and the doctrine that all human beings
are m a te d equal.
They believe that they now hare a strong
supporter in the While House. They are
cheered by the Reagan administration’s
shifts In foreign policy and by the president's
statement that South Africa is "an old ally" of
th t United States.
"When Namibia will be Independent and
the aggress loo against Angola from South
Africa finished, then we will say to our Cuban
comrades. Thank you very much, you can go
home now,' ” aaya Paolo T. Jorge, the
Angolan minister of foreign affairs.
But the South African troopa wlU hare to go
home first

Tom Woodruff has a dynamite idea: he
wants In raise the Social Security payroll Us
Woodruff, who's executive director of the
expiring Presidential Commission on Pension
Policy, may have Hie key to keeping the
Social Security system solvent and lowering
your income Uxes.
Woodruff says “It's essential to link tax
policy to retirement policy." He would
provide this linkage by giving income Ux
deductions to all people who pay their Social
Security payroll tax — that's the little box
marked "FICA" (for Federal Insurance
Contributions Act) on your paycheck.
The way Social Security works today is that
you, tlie employee, pay a proportion of your
wage, deducted automatically, into the
system. Your employer matches your con­
tribution. For your employer, his half of the
total payment Is a business expense, a
deduction that he takes when he files hta In­
come tax return, thus lowering his Income
tax. You and 1, a s employees, are not per­
mitted to lake that deduction.
This year, for example, the FICA will be
collected on all wage* up to (29,700. The FICA
this year is * 65 percent, matched by your
employer. That means that if you earn *29,700
this year you’ll contribute *1,975 to Sods)
Security and if you were permitted to deduct
lhat amount from your Income tax return
next April IS, you’d save yourself hundreds of
dollars. Under the theory of “supply side"
economics that sect u to have gripped the
nation, you would presumably invest your
savings, stimulating the economy.
But you can't do that now. Only your em­
ployer ran, by virtue of his matching your 6.65
percent FICA.
Woodruff calculates your 6.65 percent
deduction would result In a *25 billion tax cut
next year.
Woodruff notes that under current law the
Social Security payroll tax rate will rise to
7.06 percent, matched by employers, on Jan.
I, 1965, after which there should be little
worry about the system going broke until the
turn of the century. He says raising the 6.65
percent to 7.05 percent next Jan. I, three
years ahead of Hie scheduled Increase, would
pick up *9.9 billion next year, averting any
chance of the system going broke.
"My own feeling," he ssys, “Is that If we
keep the &lt;6.65 percent) Ux InUct, or maybe
accelerate it a little (to 7.06 percent next Jan.
1). and make It deductible, the income Ux
savings will more than offset the raise."

JACK ANDERSON

Senate Eyes Tris Users Bailout
WASHINGTON - At a time when tttlln b
process of lopping a million people off the foci’
stamp rolls and cutting back other eodal
programs to save money, the Senate Is
considering a (SO million baBoul for
manufactured of baby clothing that was
treated with Tris, a flam* retardant that la aa
proven carcinogen.
When the Consumer Product Safaty
Commission banned the sale of Tris treated
clothing In this county four yaare age, more
than 100 manufacturers were left with stocks
of (ha dangerous garments a t hand. Soma
companies solved their problem by reporting
the baby cloth**; others bald onto their In­
ventories In hopes of being compensated by
tha federal government.
T hen are a t least I million Trisfreatad
garments In storage awaiting congrearional
action. Jimmy Carter vetoed a compensation
more, but tha bailout ie now being pushed by
the unlikely combination of Sans. Strom
Thurmond, H~1C„ and Ted Kennedy, DAlthough the legal rationale behind the
bailout U that manufacturers were caught In
a bind by tha government'! baa, tha poetical
politics behind Thurmond's and Kennady’i
support Is pretty obvious: Among the bandful
of firms that would bwveflt most by tha
compensation plan are tha R isfri Textile
Corp. and Stone Manufacturing Co. of
Greenville, &amp; £ , end the William Carter Co. of

"For heaven's sake, don't ted me YOUR pfoblews — I'm in the savings and loan business. "

division, she has moved from records clerk to
records supervisor.
Barbara started with the d ty of Casselberry
three years ago In accounting. A year later, she
went Into the records office. The team clicked
and the rest Is history.
Neither of the ladies ever dreamed of an exdttng career In police records, they readily
adm it
Bettie always wanted to be a flight attendant.
"That’s what 1 dreamed of aD the while I wss
growing up. I wanted to be a stewardess ...
coffee, lea, or me," die ssys laughing.
Barbara, on the other hand, never wanted a
career stall. "My children have this bad habit —
they like to e a t" she Jokes.
Bettie, or "Pepper," wis born in Mayo, Fla.
and Barbara, also known ss “ S a lt” Is a native
New Yorker, Long Island, no less They’re a
delightful dash of the North and South.
And If there's a good Joke around, you can
always count on them for i few giggles. And If
there’s not a good Joke around, they'll think up
one.

Tha Carter company took tha precaution of
retaining Thomas Suawnan, former s u it
director of the Senate Judiciary Committee

k M

N M

H H I

*

..hen Kennedy was chairman, to lobby for Its
Interests. Suaemsn told my assortst* Tony
Capacrto he ha) left tht active lobbying to the
textile Industry association and has not
spoken to either Kennedy or members of his
staff.
A spokesman for Thurmond said his office
Is In “ dose contact" with a Riegel Corp. vice
president on the legislation.
One punting feature of tha bailout bill Is
that It might allow indemnification to ba paid
to companisa that dumped their Triscontaminated baby dotting on unsuspecting
parents In foreign countries, mainly In Latin
America.
In May 1971, the product safety commission
called 61 m anu/actaren and determined that
a at most had exported or triad to export
their Tria-trualed stocks. Leaving aside tha
dubious morality of selling baby dothea
known to have been (reeled with a cancercausing substance, It'a obvious lhat com­
panies that auccreafuQy unloaded their InrentoriM should be tdenufkd U MmponsaUon
time eventually arrives. But the commission
has not diackred tha identities ot the com­
panies to Congress.
According to tha romiriarioo's confidential
Hat, the following are among the companies
that admitted exporting all or part of their
Inventory of Triatreatad baby ckrfhes:
Blue Star Knitting. Inc., Milwaukee, Wis.,
KB,IN worth Id Mellon; Slayun Products,
!nr., Greenville. S.C., *656,606 worth to South
America; Henry L Miller 4 Son, P o rt Carboa, P a., I j m doaen garments to Ghana;
Kessler, Inc., Wayiand, Mich., 4,000 d a m to

South America; Greensboro Mfg, Green­
sboro, N.C., 15,000 doxen; Porter Mills, a
division of Onelta Knitting, Andrewr, S C ,
17,000 doien to Chile, and a division of the
Riegel Corp., an unspecified but "very Utile"
amount of clothing "probably" to South
America.
Footnote: Blue Star Knitting is now out of
business. Spokesmen for the other firms
claimed all oversea* shipments were com­
pleted before the Consumer Product Safety
Commission banned the export of Trittraated clothing in June 1976.
A BOY'S BATTLE: like Walter Polovchak.
the 13-year-old Ukrainian boy who la fighting
his parents' desire to take him back to the
Soviet Union, l» year-old 1U r aid SchleUfer
wants to sUy in the United States. Unlike
Polovchak, however, young Schlelffer is an
American citixen — and American courts
aren't helping him In hU fight to sUy here.
Authorities In Indiana, where Herald lives,
seem willing to let him be sent to Sweden
where he was bom and where a '*•?*
awarded his Swedish mother custody r* Q~?
boy,
What rankles the boy’s American father,
Eric Schleiffw, la lhat the Indiana courts
hare never to much aa held a hearing to
determine the child’* best Interests —
standard procedure In most custody cases.
Tha Swedish custody decree w ts handed
down In 1179, after Hamid had already been
bring with his father In Indiana for a year.
Tha Swedish court w u told that the boy’s
father was living a "vagrant lifestyle,” when.

in fact, says Schlelffer, he was at the time
regularly employed as a musician and
baaaoon tester In South Whitley, Ind. The
charge has proved to be self-fulfilling,
however: To stay out of the local court’s
Jurisdiction, Schlelffer lives like a virtual
fugitive, supporting himself and Harald with
occasional musician Jobs.
"I wish the Supreme Court would decide
what rights my kid has, or would at least
Instruct the Indiana court to hold a ’best In­
terest' hearing for him," Schlelffer told my
reporter Jeff D rumtra. "The boy la an
American citixen. Give him a chance to
speak. He has tried to speak, but nobody has
listened."
BLOODY BIGOTRY: Two black Red Cross
employees hare charged lhat a Moose Lodge
where their Blondmobtle wasset up refuted to
let them ta l In the dtnlng room, while inviting
their white co-workers In T*-- M&lt;V-« &lt;r.
curnd at M o n - •
su tn H s p r t t r ^
Mu,
t
, -*
Tr~ - T H u ? : r u i r : complained to their
’- son, Uk. . . . nun Federation &lt;i State,
County and Municipal Employees The union
passed out leaflets at the Red Crosi'i recent
100th birthday party—which was presided
over by the organisation's chairman, Dr.
Jerome Holland, who Is black.
Incidentally, the three white to-eorken —
Red Cross nurses — refused to go Into the
Moose dining room unless their bladt
colleagues were invited too.
Red Croaa headquarter* confirmed that the"
discrimination had occurred. A spokesman
far the lodge had nothing to say.

�m

Evening Her*Id. S»nlord, FI.

REALTY TRANSFERS
Jerry A Sprwidffcwf Ei8«neto
V a r 14 I G
Ta y lo r, lo t 25?
Wrenwood Mt* , Un Two 149.566
T h o m at V
H a rr it &amp; * '
R o w n a n t f© Ernest J Kirby IK &amp;
wt Kay, L o ti 14 K IS B it 0
Saniando Spring* Tr. 10. 2nd repi
It? 000
Dannie M Robert* &amp; w t Brenda
to Antonio Attorn 1 wf Maureen
U H , Hie Of W'ndtor. 51)4.500
Stanley M Steven* 1 wf Mary
to John T Bennett i w f Ruby L . 5
to of Lot 4. all of s. Bill TO. 2nd
SEC San Lanta. $3) 460
JW
Humph left to Joseph 9
Oucote, I t 14. ilk o Seminole
Site*. 145.700
Johnny C Chandler to Sandra
Airier I A Le&gt;va Gy man, Lot G 14, in
SEC 14 10 JJ. 5 acre* tll.SOQ
Kent J Cattleman A *4 Vicki L
to J W Humphleft, Lot It, Bik D
Seminole Site*. $45,700
Ron Davidson. Jr , Ind A Tr to
Ahftfn T R Rahmet, Loti 11, 12 4
lie Le Toymeau Ac ret, P00
H Ron Davidson, J r , Tr, lo
Alwlfl T R H ah met. Lot 10 I t
Tourneeu Acre* $100
Barclay Wood* to R u n Home*
inc.. Lot 31, Barclay Wood*.
$14,500
H R Earley A A m erltirii Dev
to Rut* Home* inc Lot I T Barclay
Wood*. $14,500
Samuel Zell. etc # Irutfeet It
Equity Realty Inc Un 114, Sandy
Cove 1100
Faulty Realty Inc lo
Reich, igl , Garry R #«h A *f
Eli/ . un 114, Sandy Cove. $74.«30
Stephen woiclfc wf Sophie to
Thom#* P
Wentworth A al
Rebecca N 80 34 of Loti u A 14
Blk H, T r 30, Santando Spring*

F ew p ro pit* h av e in flu e n c e d tin* c o u rs e of m o d ern
a e ro n a u tic s , r o c k e tr y a n d a s tro n a u tic s as
pro fo u n d ly as T h e o d o re \ o n H a r m a n . In th is 1911
p h o to at M arch F ir td , I t i v r r s i d r . C a lif., a u ro u p o f
T h e o d o re

V on

c o lle a g u e s w a lrli a s von K a r m a n d o e s so m e lastm in u te c a lc u la tio n s on th e w in g of a n K rcoupe
a i r c r a f t p r io r to th e first je t - a s s is t e d ta k e-o ff.

K a rm a n :

A C a re e r In A e ro d y n a m ics From
W righf B ro th ers To Joh n G le n n
By RITA C, BOHOWSKI
Smithsonian NV»» Service
Scientist, engineer, teacher Advisory
to heads of government, consultant to
Industrial firms, founder of international
organizations A rticulate and witty,
continental both in style and appearance.
All these qualities describe a single
man, Theodore von Karman, whose
career In aeronautics and astronautics
spanned sit decades — from the Wright
brothers of John Glenn.
Theodore von Karman may not be a
name familiar to most Americans, yet lie
possessed one of the great scientific
minds and most colorful personalities of
this century'. More than any other single
Individual, von Kantian was responsible
(or the direction th a t m odern
aerodynamics took in America during
the 1930s and later. Each Jet that flies
overhead, each spacecraft that probes
the outer reaches of the universe are
realities tuday thank* In purt lu the
questioning mind and unrelenting
determination of this man.
This year will mark the 100th an­
niversary of his birth.
A native of Budapest, Hungary, von

O ne «f th e g re a t s c i e n ti s ts of th e
Uoth c e n tu ry . T h e o d o re vun H a r ­
m a n h rlp ed s h a p e th e c o u r s e of
m o d e rn a r r o n a u tic s a n d a s t r o ­
n a u tic s. T his p h o to o f th e Hung aria n -lm m s c ie n tis t w as ta k e n
in 1962, a y e a r b e fo r e h is d e a th .
Karman was born on May 11, 1MI, into
an tntelectual Jewish family. As a child,
von Karman was a math whiz who often
entertained and im pressed family
friends by multiplying large numbers in
hts head. His father, worried that tne boy
would become an in lrn i prodigy,
discouraged these public displays of
precociousness and steered him toward a
carter in engineering — advice which the
young Theodore took to heart.
Duitng the summer ol 1908, following
stints at the Royal Joseph University in
Budapest and Gottingen University in
Germany, vat Karman visited Paris.
There, he and a friend drove at dawn tu
an airfield just outside of Parts to watch
the French aviation pioneer Henri
Farm an Fly In a heavler-thsn-alr
machine. II was an image, von Kantian
recalled later in his autobiography, that

gave him a lifelong fascination with the
airplane and aerodynamics.
“My strongest memory of the earliest
flying espermicnts in this period," he
wrote, “ was the wonderful courage
exhibited by the airplane pilots. Usually
a flight ended In a crack-tip. . . . The
iluuntlrss pilot, if he was suit able, often
would lake off again, as If nothing had
happened I wondered whether anything
could be dime to make flying safer."
He turning to Gottingen In 1909 as an
assistant in the aeronautical Laboratory,
von Karman worked on a mathematical
prnolof one ol the most central concepts
In aeronautics — form drag.
When an object is set in motion, the air
around it does not conform to the object's
shape, but rattier b re a k s off on either
side in alternating vortices, similar to
small whirlpools. As von Karman ex­
plained, "Instead of marching two by
two, the vortices are staggered like
lampposts along both sides of the street."
The phenomenon became known as the
"Kantian Vortex Street," and it helped
explain oilier effects not clearly un­
derstood before, such a s the oscillation of
radio towers, chimneys and other tall
thin bodies in the wind.
The publication of von Harman's
theory in 1911-12 catapulted him into the
international aero n au tical spotlight.
Even today, the Karman Vortex Street
continues lobe a fundamental concern in
the design of planes, ships and raring
Cara And, by streamlining objects, a
designer can minimize the effect of form
drag; thus Jets can fly faster than the
speed of sound and rockets can pierce the
upper atmosphere.
One of the most notable applications of
this theory came In 1M0, when von
Karman was hired by the state of
Washington to look into the collapse of
the Tacoma Narrows Bridge, a 18 million
suspension bridge that had broken up in a
light gale and plunged Into Puget Sound.
Von Kantian argued that the designers
had (ailed to take Into account dynamic
forces and the Karman Vortex Street, an
assertion that was verified In wind tunnel
tests at the University of Washington
In 1913, von K annan accepted the chair
of aeronautics at the technical Institute In
Aachen, where he remained throughout
the 1930s When World War 1 interv ened,
he served Austria-Hungary as an aircraft
designer and aeronautical specialist.
But. in the late 1920s. as Nazi ideology
began to infect the German academic
community, van Kantian began lo look
abroad for a position, a search that
eventually led him to Caltech, where he
became
d ire c to r
of
GALCif
(Guggenheim Aeronautical Uboratzey
al Caltech |. He settled in Pasadena In
19)0 lone of the first Jewish intellectuals
to flee Europe for the United Slates) and,
under his guidance, GALCIT became &lt;n
of the world's leading schools of
aeronautics.
‘ By 1933, von Karman was truly
Americanized," says historian Paul A.
Hank, a rung chairman of the Space
Science and Exploration Department at
the Smithsonian's National Air and
Space Muxrum. H ank's (ulhcothlng
book, "B ringing Aerodynamic* to
America: Theodore von Karman,
Ludwig Prandtl and the . rd u ig ol hte
Graduate School of Aeronautics at
Caltech,” covers this period of von

Kantian's life.
“ In the 1930s," he continues, "von
Karman represented American in­
terests. He courted high government
officials and eventually would become
one of the chief udylsors to the US.
military."
In 1938. as tensions In Europe in­
creased. von Karman was summoned to
Washington,' There he was told that the
Army Air Corps, the predecessor of
today's Air Force, wus looking fur some
form ol jet-osststed takeoff for its heavy
bombers.
Undaunted by the Buck Hogers aspect
of Uic Job, von Kurtnan and Ids students
began working on lha project. Two years
later, they proved that it wws possible to
construct a constanl-prcisur*, longduration, solid-prupicllant rocket engine.
ThbP development pointed the way to
engines that power today's long-range
missiles and other solid-fueled rockets
that have become the mainstay of
America's space program.
For von Karman. that project would
shortly make him the principal scientific
advisor to the U S. Air Force. For the
United States, it signaled a new direction
for postwar aeronautics and rocketry,
largely on the busts of von Hannan's
recommendations," Hank* says, "the Air
Force built up nnd redirected Its
technical and research programs after
World War II. It Is Ihts relationship lor
which von K annan Is best remem­
bered "
In addition lo his impressive scientific
credentials, von Karman Is also
remembered (or hts quick wit and
European charm. At a meeting of hie
Royal Aeronautical Society, famous
Brilish flier Amy Johnson asked him to
explain in a few words that causes an
atrptane to spin. "A spin Is like a love
altatr," Die scientist replied with a smile.
"You don’t notice how you get into It, and
i| Is very hard to get out of."
Von K annan continued to be a con­
fidant to the nation's highest-ranking
military and government figures. A few
months before hts death in 1963, he was
again summoned to Washington — this
lime lo accept the flrit National Medal of
Science from President Kennedy. At the
ceremony, von Karman, then 13 years
old, paused at the lop of a staircase as if
In pain. Quickly the president offered hts
•arm, whlch von Karman gently shook off.
-Mr. President." he said, "one does
not need help going down, only going up."

YOU

mevae,

'mmimmj.
ODD

(HOUR FIGHT
AGAINST

BIRTH
DEFECTS
MARCH OF DIMES
•re T S ?
-r* ig

.• 3

Th* S i. L»*v»ene« Rtv#i V alliy it lh* moil densely populated legion in Canada.

•

* # k « I .T * &gt;

’'rt.B yr.W .w .

*■»D f , - * ) ! : '' ?rt T--TrHcrt;

%w

$11000
Winter $pg* Dev to Cuitsm
Design*. Inc , Lot 45 TutcawiHa.
Un t $70 000
Olin A m rf Home* to Steven A
Adams, ig l A Paul I
Adam*
(M arr 1 Lot 31. Bik R, Sterling
Can* $57,500
Charles W Turner Jr A Belly
L to Donald L Anderson A *1
Debra F . Lot t, Bit 2. Flora
Heighti $14,500
James W Hickman lo James W
AMord 4 w f Linda T , From NE
cor 04 N W • Ot SEC 79 IV )0 He
ISO.000
Linda C Clark. Ind A tr to
Gregg t Carter A wf Ellf A , Lot
4 Ramplewood. Un II, P I 300
(Q C D ) Bobby Ray Burch, J r , to
Cheryl Kay Burch. Lot IS, Bit I
Wood mere Park, 2nd repl 1100
Clarence L Coleman A wt
Susan E to Jamet L Shirley A n t
Susan S , Lot 17. Blit B, Swtet
water Oak*. SEC 3 $105 000
George W nsm berger A wf Ida
to Don M Karl A wf Kathleen I ,
Lot 97, Oakland Hill*. $H *00
The Hotkey Co to Deccalei*ne
Const r Corp Lot 35. Bid C.
S«yeetwater Oaks, Sec H 124 000
The Huskey Co to D.amend
Conttr . Lot 1. Oik C Sweetwater
Oaks. SEC II $74 000
Blue Ribbon B ld r t , Inc lo
ifn a ilO Martin*/ A wl Lifllan i .
Lot S. Blk ft Carriage Hill, Un
Four 54).500
K irk Dee Corp to «»chard 0
M iller. Lot 23. Blk A. Fa.may
Cove $17,500
George « Taylor A wf Eleanor
to Patterson W MotHey A wf
Sherry El , Commence at N ’W cor,
04 G m l L t 4, SEC 1) 31 30 He
4440,400
la b e l Polnf P rep. ■»©*, lo
GaUimora Home* Inc* Lot 45.
C y p re u Landing at label Point,
$17,000
Winter Spg* Dev. to Delco Inc .
Lot 44 Tvscewilla. Un * $2$.too
William M ilebbim A wf Cindy
to James Cite* A wf, Lynn, l et )f.
Blk A, Seminole Mtight!, 147,500
D ayton Hudson J r
A wl
Marianne' L to Ted William* A at
Selma. Lot 31. Tw enty Well
534 500
M Longa/*) Co rn tr. Inc to
John Jay Ltnko, if f ,, Lot 31, nik
E. Repi Sanora Un 1 A 3 $57,100
(Q C D ) T*d William* A at
Selma to Larry T William*. Lot*
41 A 4). Frank L Woodruff* $D

$100
(Q C O l Sharon Bi*hop to Larry
T William*. LOU 41 A 43F rank L
Woodruff * d, $100
Larry T William* A wl Shirley
to Dayton Hudson Jr
A wf
Marianne, Let* 41 A 43, Frank L
Woodruff* * d, 51* 600
Anna A Bull*, wid to Larry I
WtlHam* A wf Shirley W , Lot* 14.
IS A N' j of 14. 550 000
William T WadiwoMh A wf
Franee* etc to John M Siaton J r ,
Hunter Slaton, Samuel C Slaton A
Joatph P Slaton, Beg 10 N Of | i
cor of ! W « of S W •of SEC la 30
30, ru.T w ISO' N 21? ElSO’ S m t O
pob 5100
I B C D ) Marvin Fuller, igl to
RuthaMae F trg u * o n tg l. N 13Tof
5 344 of E 330‘ of N W '« of S l '4
5100
Ruth D avit fa Wi'iard M Davit
A wf Charlene. Lot 30. Btk G.
Mob.lt Manor 2nd SEC $1)000
Tne Bennett Corp to F ra n c u x
Brennan, Jr A wf Joan. W M of
blk D. The Coiionnade*. 1*1 Sk .
CB SH.ISO
M ichaelP H 4»pin A *t Lindafo
f r / r k O Klein A wf Shirley A ,
Lof 14. Bik B, Crystal Bowl 2nd
A ^ n n . 550-300
William E
Simmer* A wf
Deborah G to Anfhonyh E Feoia
A w f Patricia. Portion of Lof* D A
13. Villa Brantley, 574 000
Jam t* A tiraguia A wf Mary
C to James L W N on A wf
Sharcn. Lof 705. Wekive Hunt
Club. F o « Hunt. 5EC 3. 547 000
Bet Aire Home* Inc to Fran
cries C e rrtro A wf Elba. Lot 304.
Bel Aire Hill*. U n 3. 551.000
RCA fo Mary Lou Saiber, tgi
Lof 43. Hidden Lake Pft If, Un. I
544.300
A J Thome* Jr A Ella Mae
M errill fo Vvonna M Baird, Do. It.
Mayfair Villa*. 553.300
H a rr•* G Herl*t» A wf Angrtm
to Michael V. Shettutd A wf Linde.
Lot 71. Queens M irror So Riptet
Addn C B . 534.500
Gloria J Allen to Thome* C.
Brevtg A wf Jeennia. from pt
101 t r S i f d*g 0$ mm 4f sec i A
1100 N of 5W cor. of SEL* 84 St«*
Sec 3431 7* etc , $41000
Winter Spring* Dev fo Carrol E ,
Tempktn* A wf Jo Arm, Lot 41#
T u u j w .lU . Un A 119.400
Martha Malvm. w&gt;o *3 Rtcharo
B Mutgreve. * g l. W 71 U of Lot
4. Bik O. TangtlwooJ Sec ) R*pi.
547,500
Amo* H Barr J r „ *gi A Wilma
J . *gl fo Diana A Angel# *g», Lof
5, Blk 33. Towns te Of North
Chulugfa, 534 500
Edw ard H. Mar.ley Jr A wf
Gera must to Kenneth 5 Dumond A
wf Isabel A . Lot 114. Garden taka
E*t* . U n 1. 574,400
w
Aiphonso Cariw righi to
B e rn a rd G
K ra m e r A wf

Legal Notice
IN THE C IR C U IT C O U R T C*
TH E E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
C IR CU IT OF T H E I T A T E OF
F L O R ID A
IN
AND
FOR
SEM INOLE C O U N TY
C IVIL ACTIO N CASE NO II MI­
CA Ot K
MOL TON. ALL C N A W ILLIA M S .

Margaret Marie. Lof 31, Bfk A,
Saniando Spg* , T r IS. 2nd repl .

$5,900
K elhryne
A.
W ym an
to
Kethryne A Wyman, tgi A Philip
A Byrd. Jt Ten. Lot 23. Blk 10
BH Aif, $100
lOCOl Home B'JikJer* Inc to
Seminole BancorporafJpn, part of
NW ..C4 S E '« o t Sec 24 21 30. $100
(QCD) O lv tn flia d Fin Svc to
Sem Bancorporaf*onpartof N W '«
of NE . ot Sec 24 31 30. $100
Weyne M Bennetf A wf Susan A
Gilbert A Principe A wf Sandra to
Fertaki* international Corntr C o ,
Lof 94 A S IS' of 95. Norlhwood
$57 500
The Spring* to Dwrmlll. Inc , Lol
11, Whispering Pine*. Sec One.
b»k A. Tne Spring*, $11,500
Olin Amer, Home* F I , Inc to
jack L May A wf Patricia H , Lot
33, Blk B Sterling Oak*. 543,900
Harry H Ha ye*, agi to Wen Mao
Chiu A wf V* P ng. E 37 52 Of Lot
21 AW 37 52 Of 34. Blk 44, Saniando
The Suburb Beautiful Palm
Sprint Sec . 543.000
E*m*faido Morale*, to Peter
Ouinone* A wf France*. N 't of Lot
10. let* E 20‘, Little Washington
Estates 510 000
Etmvraldo Morale* to Pet*r
Oumone* A wf France*. S’ * of Lot
K) A E 20" ot N 11 ot 10. Little
Wash mg I on Ett* .IlOQOO
Fairway Oak* Dev to Caywood
E Cooley A wt Mary C . Lot 5,
F ilfw a y Oak*. Un One, $117,400
u « u v « j M«i»* L a ! Sr.Uley fc
LSI, Inc . N l » o# Blk 3 T.er 10.
Sanfctd $142 000
tOCD* Jerome O F finite in A wf
Joan,to Robert H Greene A wf
Laura, Lot 14, Blk L Spring Lake
M l * 5rc 5 etc . $100
W Henry Wight1ft Is David 0'
Freygang. *gl , E 430' of W 754 ol $
1111 of E » io f N W U of Sec 4 20 31
lest pert etc . $$7-500
Larson Inv to Ronald D Brown
h wf Leur «e P #Lul i, ie*k W IS lui
r d , Apple Vetley. Un 4. $11,500
Vewfivld Apt* . Inc to Lout* J
Latino J r , sgl , Un 09 3454,
Cedarwood Vill Cond I, $42 500
I QCOl Richard L Templeton Jr
A « t Diane E to Richard L
Trmplfton Jr (m arr 1 Un 170
Country Club Manor, Cond, $100
Richard L Templeton Jr to
jam** h Mackie A wt Joan E
Ur, 130 Country Club Manor,
Cond . $37 900
Potvak Corp. to Gar y E Chase 4
wt Donna M . Lot 41. Wekiva Mills
Sec 9. 5101.000
Shedrick William* Sr to Willi#
F Jackson Jr , Lot* 1 3. Btk 74. M
W Clark * * d 110.000
Urban Eap Corp to Lelanj
Corntr # Inc. A Wekiva Dev Corp,
Lot 14. Wekiva Cove, Ph On*.
541 900

INC •» corpwolion,
Pum tllt,
vs
C Y N TH IA E
prtson.

E B E R L E . o singly

D»!#ndrnl
N O TIC E OF S U IT
T O ; C Y N TH IA E E B E R L E . &lt;
smgi»p#rson, whos# r*s&gt;d»nc# Is
101 lamont A v m u f, Langwood.
Flor.d, 1)1 SO
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D &lt;h«l on ocTion to
toroclet# o M ortgage on in#
following property In Semmol#
County, FloriO*
Lot I. Bloc* I. SH AD O W H ILL,
according to lh# plal th#y #ol ai
recorded m p|#t Booh I). P#ots ol.
11 *nd SI. Public Records Ot
S»mmol« County, F loetda
TO G E T H E R W IT H
Kang#,
K.ng# Mood. Disposal and D m
washer
hat b#«n tiledagamst you. and you
are required to serve a copy ol
your writtm defenses, if any, lo it
on BLAIN A C O N E , P A , Pent
OtHct Bo. 11*. Tampa. Florida
11 , 01. and tile th# original wdh lh#
Clerk of Iho above slyitd Court on
or brtoro Juno 11. n i l , otherwise
a Judgment may be entered
egalnti you lor thp relief
demanded In the Complain!
W ITNESS it.. hand and te ll 3'
Ih.s Court on May l*. I ett
(S E A L)
Arthur H Beckwith. Jr
Clerk ol the Circuit Court
Br Eleanor F Bur alto
Deputy Clerk
Blam A Cun*. P A
Post Office Bo. les
Tampa, Florida IMOt
Publish M a , 71. IF A Juno }, tl.
Itll
DEI I0F
IN T H E
C IR C U IT
C O UR T.
E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT .
IN
AND
FOR
S C M IN O Lt C O U N T Y . FLO R ID A
CASE NO FM1S CA M l
IN RE TH E M A R R IA G E OF
B A R B A R A
, J O A N
LaBRUSCIANO.
Petitioner WHe.
and
JOHN F L lB R U S C IA N O
Respondent Husband
N O TIC E OF A C TIO N
TO JOHN T LaBR U SCIAN O.
whos* address and residence is
UNkNOW N
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D that an action lor
dissolution of m*rr&gt;*g# has been
bird agamst you m the Circuit
Cuurlot Sem.no!* County, Florid*.
Cast No II H I CA Ot E , and you
are required to serve a copy ot
your wrd Ian drlcnsrs. it any, lo It
on JACK T B R ID G E S . ESQUIRE
ot C L E V E L A N D A BRIDGES.
Post Ollica Drawer Z. Sanford.
Florida 117)1 on ur befort July Jlh.
A D . ItSI. and III# the original
with lha Clerk ot this Court either
brtora service on P ttlllo n tr s
Attorney*
or
Im m ediately
rhefeattfT.oiherwis* a default and
ultima!* tudgment will b* «n t.r»d
ag.inst you lo r th* r tli# l
demanded m th# Petition
W ITNESS my ti#nd and lh# sea*
I ot this Court on this Ird day ol
June. A D , It* I
IS E a l i
J
A R TH U R M B iC t C W ItH . JR
CRTS ot th* Circuit
Coutl
BY Cynthia Proctor
Deputy Clerk
Publish, Jun# S, 11. 1*. M. I N I

Friday, Ju.ia II, I t l l —JA

Legal Notice
NO TICB o f P U B LIC H E A K IN G
OF PROPOSED C H A N G ES AND
am en d m en ts

in

c e r t a in

D IS TR ICTS AN D B O U N D A R IE S
OF TH E I0 N IN G O R D IN A N C E
AND A M E N D IN G TH E F U T U R E
l a n d u s e e l e m e n t o r fM I
c o m p r e h e n s iv e

pla n

of

TH E C ITY OF SAN FO R D . FLO R
IOA
Notice it kftebv 9 'vtn that s
Public Hearing mm11 b* held df f'h*
Cbmmi**ion Room m th* City Nall
iff th# O l f of Sanford- Florid# #*
7 00 o’clock P M on Jvn* J 7 1981
to convdrr thing** #r»d amend
mpnt* *o thf Zoning O rdm incf
and *m#fYiing lh# Futi/f# LRhd
U*« El#m#nt of th# CoFn
prfbnniivf Plan of th# C rfv#of
Sjntord. Florid#. «* follow*
A portion of fh#t c # rl F L
prop trty lying North
----- hofe. Ajya
abutting VVni 171ft
*
in STr—
Mr eel* -laf*
t5#»we#n Laur#! Avfbut
i#ftu# and i t f y
Av#nu# it propbiPdI 1
to b# re/onM ^
from
SR I
ISingln F a m ily
Rf*'d*f*tl#l D nfllin g) D iftricfifp
GC 2 (Can###! , C o m m c ro l
D lilrict *4«d property ton*a m l
particularly
d e tc rib td
af
follow* Lot 11# Pintcrait Mtigftl*
R#pi#f. Plat Book t. p#g# 77.
Public Rtcord* ol S#mmn,ptf
County, .’ lorid#
All partit* in in f# r# ii and
citi/fn* *h#u have an opporturilt*
to b# hoard at *#»«! htanng. * ' *
By order of th# City Committl?*/
ol th# City ol S#ntord, Ftori&lt;lAtr i{|
H N Tarrm# Jr
City 0**k
Publ-*h Jwn# 2, »7 1911
C C J4
IN TH E C O U N T T C O U R T OF
TH E E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC I#
C IR C U IT
IN
AND
SEM IN OLE C O U N TY , F LO R ID A ]
C a n Na It li f t CC E Y D
j, [
S TA TE OF F LO R ID A
Es Ral. DOUGLAS C H E S H IR E ,
JR
Staff Attorney tor tftf
iighlfenth Judicial Circuit ol lh t ‘
StBtf Of FlAfida nn M*h*i» nl #h4&lt;
Honor aMe John E, Polk, 5h#rit| 0 f
Sem,nole County. F)orid*«
, /
Plaintiff.,

m

ONE AERO

com m ander

bearing Registration Number. N
4J7I7H. a h a N 4I0RR. Serial
Numhee* 4WJT7 41, ffOciey/*

Ocfritxf.^n

NO TICE OF A C TIO N
£
TO Any parfie* havir^ #»n if"
te rttl in O N E a e r o COM
M A N D E R 410 T w n Engine tiu#
and white bearing Registration
Number N 11747M. a k a N AAORH.
Serial Number* 440 377 41. 680 4&lt;9
116. lh# if heir*, at sign* and hv.
ce**or* n mfvrest, and all
i. Firm*- and Corporator*
ownirxi hivm g or claiming an
meresf in or lien an the eb^ve
described Aircraft
YOU AND L A C K O f Y O U A%L
hereby
N O T IF IE O that (U»r
Staff ot Florid.*, #■ i#t Om&gt;ugiA*
Cheshire, Jr . State Attorney ik*
FIC TITIO U S NAME
the Eighteenth judicial €lrcu-l( g’»
the State ol Florida, on behaitj ^
Notice i* hereby given that i am
the Honorable John t
PniN
engaged in but in*** at P O Bov
4109 Lake M a ry , F la
377)1
Sherilt of Seminole Cowhl|
Seminole County, Florida' undtr
Florida ha* tiled a Rule to Stiow
Cause in the Eighteenth Judltigi
the fictitious name of W A YN E $
Circuit of Florida again*! any f « d
H E A T IN G
AM D
AIR
ail parties having an interesi (m
C O N D ITIO N IN G and that I intend
one Aero Commander 440 Aircfafi
to register said name with tftt
tte«r&lt;ng Regisiration Number. , N
Clerk of the C ircuit Court,
•3717H. a k a N MOHR, S ejili
Seminote County, Florida In a&lt;
Number* 6#g 377 41. 440 449 \ A
tordancf w .ihthe provision* of ihe
khow cause why lh# atoreaH*)
F K i l l tog* Heme Statute*. To Wit
l olfi f ah thou fd not to#' tori filer* fo
Section 1*5 &lt;M Florkta Statute*
lh# uie ot fh# Sheettt ©» SemiH^H
19$7
County, F lo rida , p y r iu a n i^ t o
John Wayne Hoffman
Section 70S It. Flond# Statu/r^
Publish: June |f.
j* a July 3
1981
You have thirty IM ) day* m dp
May
tl, 1981, to cpmact fh#
O f 17 J
d e j at
Honorable Alan A. Dickey* Cougty
P ie r iT io u i « * m »
iudqe. teminoi# County foUtf
FICTITIO U S NAME
Not i t . It K*f »b y
lh#i I im
house. Sanford. Fionua 31/7^. ff
Nolle# H hereby given that I *m
you have any defeneet to #*tee^)o
OTg.0 #d ,n b u .ln # u #t MS Portsl
engaged in bulin#** at P O Boa
re** action or r'aun* to file ag/wi?
O r.. C * » # l l ) # r r r . F Is
tilth
3617. Longwudd, F l# « Itminol#
S#m.nol# County, Florid# un#»r
the forftiledl #leer#ft Otherwise,
County, Florida under th# tic
the aircraft will be forfeited lo th#
to# licl ‘tout n#m# ol C tN T S X L
hlio-ui
nam#
of
T
R
E
A
T
E
D
m e ol the Sheriff of Stmftsb*#
F IO R IO A IJ N o t KG HOUND. tnS
TIM BER k S T E E L SU P P LY CO
County or ftokl at Public Aucfipn
lh*t I r.f ,-mi 10 r#«ltl#r M &lt;0 r\#m,
and that l intend to r#gitt«r *#id
»,th tn#C lrr go t lh , Clftuil Court,
W ITNESS my hand and seal fct
nam# with th# Cl»rk of th# Circuit
S#minol# County, Florid# In *t
th»* Court on the tfth day of Mfcy.
coro#nct n ,lh lh# (iroy-stons ot lh# Court, Stmingl# County, F (grida in
i9it
n
accordancf with lh# provitiom ot
Fictilloul N#m* s t .h .t .v To Mil
is e a d
th# Fktdiout Nam# Statute*. To
S*tl-on i .s o# florid# sr«iuiM
Arthur MBeckwith
* •i
Wit
Section 845 69 Florid#
a* Clerk ol the Court
&gt;t
isu
Statute*
1#57
tig 0#nni* DrO*rt#nl
By Eleanor F. Ouratto
S g W. Pofoy
PuthMi Jun* i. It. II . U 1*11
Deputy Clerk
Pv»0l'*h May 29 i J i f lt 1 17. 19,
OEj #»
Publish May 77. 29 4 June 5f!)2.
1911
1911
N O T IC I
OF
F R O F O IID
OEI 175
DEMOS
4
H EXK IN Q TO H T H « It .M t t !
t u n o l T FO R T H I R IV C N U I
SHARING T R U S T F U N D FOR
TH E
C IT Y
OF
SAN FO EO .
FLO R ID A
N O T IC E lt htrcuy o&gt;v*n Ih .l «
Public H#*rlnu will b* h#ld #1 lh#
SlHIYOLt COGHtT PlJVU-US AnG ZGniNG OMUiTXIGN i)
Commission Room In th# City Mall
I JULY, 1981
700PM
« oon 2 0 0
,,
In th# City ot S*ntord. Florid*. *1
ScwetOLZ C o u n t y C o u b t h c v u
S a m g r g , F lo r ib a ■
] 00 o’clock P M on Juno ZJ, m i,
locom-dor u u i ol lh* lunds ot Iho
H ,«#n u. Sharing Trust Fund to b#
rre o m m tn d td
by
lh#
City
M#n#g*r lo tho City Commission
ol tho City ol Ssntord, Florid#
AH p o rllt s In ln l# r# tl And
cltitons Shall n#vt « n opportunity
to Submit written commmts. tr to
! » h*ord ot sold htO'Ing
W E Know lis
City Mon#g*r
City ot Sonlord, Florid#
Publish Juno tZ. 1*11
D EJ I

Legal Notice

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARIN(j ’

IN T H E C IR L U IT CO U R T. IN
AND FOR S I /.IN O L t CO U N TT.
FLO R ID A
C IV IL A C T IO N NO l l i m C A F S

I
IN R E T H I M A R R IA G E OF
R IC HA R O H M OW ER

Petitioner
and
P A TR IC IA MOWER

Responded

N O T IC X O F A C TIO N
TO ; P A T R IC IA MOW ER
r e s id e n c e
UNKNOWN
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D i hat an art Ion tor
dissolwlron ol matriag# has bam
liiad agamst you. and you are
requited lo serve • copy at your
written defenses to It. II any.
C A R R O LL B U R K E , Attorney
Petitioner, whose •ddr.es Is
Sentord Atlantis. Bank BulUmg.
Sanford. Florida, aid III* in#
anginal with th# Clerk ol CYcuit
Court, Sanford. Seminole County,
Florida, on or batoro the Ird c - ot
July, A O IT*I otherwise a dtftult
wilt be entered against you lur lha
ret wt demanded In lit# Petition
W IT N E S S my hand and ottidal
saal on this lh* Z)lh day ol May,
A G IF#I
Cltfk ol Circuit Court
Sem mot# County, Fta-ide
By. Juno I, Curtis
Deputy Clerk
(S E A L )
CAR R OLL BU R K E
Attorney lo r Peliltoner
i l l Sanford Atlantic Bank Bl
Sentord Florida 17771
Phono O O l) m i m
Publish M ay 7F A June A II. IF.
tett
D E I 111

J iim

�m t-

SPORTS
»A—EvtningHtraM, SanfsnLFI.

Friday, Jw ntll, I»I1

ALL STARS
Poppa Jay's

Atlantic Bank, Triple 1.1.1.

Serves Six
National
|Poster Stars

Trucking Place Four Players

Poppa J a y 'i finished second during
the regular season but pared the
balloting for the Sanford Uttle National
League all-star team with six players
on the squad.
league champion First FwWwl jmt
five players on the all-star team, while
the Railroaders had three players
elected to the 18-player team. Orm
fjeonard Shell had two players picked,
Sunni land Corporation and Cardinal
Industries had one each and D.A.V.
didn't have anyone named to the team.

Mi

Mtraie PIMWI »T T*m VlM tnl

Poppa Jay's All Star pitcher Willie .McCloud cuts loose with fasthall in action earlier this year. McCloud did pretty well with the
b a t to o . b a tt in g . 510 for th e s e a s o n w ith tw o h o m e runs.

The Sanford Nationals drew an
upetiing round bye and will play their
first game Tuesday, July 7.
One of the top selections to the allstar team U First Federsl's Craig
Dixon. He led the league In wins as a
pitcher with a 8-1 record and also led
the team In home runs with eight. He
had the second highest hatting average,
hitting at a .819 d ip
J.D, Paul of the Railroaders was topi
in the league In batting average with a
Ik' .109 mark and In hits with 23.
Joining Dixon on the team from First
Federal a re Kalvln Davis, Andy
Griffin, Shane Lee and Tim McMulIan.

Jell Blake, Ronald Blake, Dexter
D sboie, S tew art Gordon, Willi*
McCloud ond Joey Sheehan were
pjeked from Poppa Jay'i.
Jeff Black, the only 10-year-old on the
team, hit .448, while Ronald Blake
baited .451 while posting a Ml record as
a pitcher.

■*■■■ * . y m&lt;

The team will represent the league In
the five-team Florida IJttle Major '
League sub-dutiici tournament which
will be held at Sanford's Fort Mellon
Park the week of July C.

Davis recorded a perfect 59 record
as a pitcher and hit at a healthy .468
dip, Griffin balled an even 500, while
McMulInn finished at .415 alter hitting
about .700 for the first hall of the
season.

9-

PLAYER

TEAM

ABH.AVG.HR

J.D. Paul
Craig Dixon
Oscar Merthie
Willie McCloud
Andy Griffin
Ronald Blak*
Kalvln Davis
Dwayne Willis
Jell Blake
Dexter Debose
Stewart Gordon
U onard Lucas
Tim MrMullan
Terrance Can
Shane I-re
Walter Hopson
Joey Sheehan
Mike Gross

Railroaders
First Federal
SunnUand Corporation
Popps Jay 's
First Federal
Poppa Jay 's
First Federal
Cardinal Industries
Poppa Ja y 's
Popps Jay's
Poppa Jay 's
Clem leonard Shell
First Federal
Railroaders
First Federal
Railroaders
Poppa Ja y ’s
Clem l&gt;eonard Shell

58 33 569
52 27 .519
60 31 .517
49 25 .510
58 29 500
52 25 .481
47 22 468
37 17 .459
58 25 .448
47 20 .428
55 23 .418
41 17 .415
41 17 .415
61 24 .393
36 14 .369
53 20 385
51 17 .333
U S ,’Xl

Willie McCloud had the highest
batting average on the Poppa Jay’s
team with n .519 mark. Dexter Debase
hit .476 and Stewart Gordon hit .418 with
six home runs.
Terrance Carr batted .Ml tor Ute
Railroaders and hit six home runs.
Carr awl Paul, who tut five home runs,
were both on last year's all-star learn,
as was Dixon. The other Railroaders
player on the team is Walter Hopson,
who batted .385 and hit three homers.

•riefly
Woodward's 66 Forges
ead For PGA Qualifiers
LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. (UPlI - Tom Woodward is
ylng U make hts fifth Uy fur w PGA lout tu rd a charm,
llith two rounds to play, he has a three-shot lead In the PGA
our Qualifying School tournament *t Disney World
Woodard, a 1977 University of Colorado graduate, fired a
(under-par 6AThursday that gave htin an 11-under-par 133
l&gt;4al for t vo rounds.

wins' Tryout Camp Saturday
Tlie 9th Annual Minnesota Twins Free Agent Try Out
ip ts set for Saturdsy, June 13th, 1981, (our days sfter
1381 June Free Agent Draft.
Registration for the one day camp begins at 9:00 A.M. tn
lobby of Tinker Field In Orlando, Florida. The stadium
next door to the Tangerine Bowl, on the comer of Tainpa
emit and West Church Street.
A morning session, starting st 1:30 A M. will comprise
alualion of each candidate's 60 yard sprint time, fielding
throwing ability, hitting skill and pitching promise. An
ioon session, under the watchful eye of a hand-full of
ins' scouts, will entail an exhibition game being played
the lop 40 candidates as determined in the morning tests.
The camp is open to all unsigned, undrafted young men
ho have graduated or who are graduating from high
Ihool In June, who are not enrolled in a college or Junior
dirge, who have not reached their 23rd birthday amt who
not come under the restrictions of Baseball's college
ment.
All candidates should bring their own glove and shoes,
ats and ball and catching aqulpment will be provided. No
uminum bats will be permitted.
Boys showing promise as baseball players trill be invited
&gt;participate In the training camp of the EUsabethlon Twin
Appalachian League) at the Twins' minor league training
tn Melbourne, FI.

3
8
7
2
0
3
3
3
»
2
8
5
2
6
4
3
5
0

I^onard l-ucas and Mike Grow were
picked from Clein Icanard Shell. Luc~:
hit .415 and pounded five home runs.
Oscar Merthie, the league's number
threw hitter with a .517 average,
represents Sunniland Corporation. He
was fecund In the league with seven
circuit clouts.
Hounding out the team ts Cardinal
Industries' Dwayne Willis who hit at a
.459 clip with three homers.

League champ Atlantic Bank and
Triple I.IJ. Trucking each placed four
players on (he Sanford U ttle American
le a g u e all-star team which will
represent the league tn post-season
tournament competition.
The Sanford Americana are the
defending subdistrict champs and
finished second In District IV last year.
Sanford will again host the subdistrict tournament, beginning July 6
when the Sanford Americans host an
Orlando team.
Atlantic Hunk m anager Edward
Korgan Jr. will manage the Sanford
Americans, He will be assisted by his
regular season assistant coach, Doug
Atlkinson, and by Bill Johnson, who
managed Seminole Petroleum during
the regular icaion.
AU II players selected to the all-star
squad are hitting over .300. Fifteen are
hitting over .400 and su are hitting .500
or belter.
The team has a composite batting
average of .487 with a total of 85 home
runs.
F.ddle Korgan of Atlantic Bans comes
to the team leading the league In almost
every statistic. He finished tlie season

It's Just
A Game...
— A Father Coach
The boy stood there at the plate, he
had never felt so alone
He tapped his deals, and knew that
fate, had put him on his own
With one out left there In the game,
and his team one run down
The pitcher glared, and took dead
1atm, as the crowd made not a sound
The bail streaked by, his bat swung
‘Round, the catchers mlt popped loud
He stepped sway, with head hung
down, as boos came from the crowd
He swallowed hard, and stepped back
In. as (he cowhide sphere R flew
He swung but missed the ball again,
us the umpire yelled, “Strike two."
The once warm facta of friends he
knew, bed suddenly turned colder
The frowns, the Jeers, the hisses and
boos, were too much for his small
shoulders
The young lad turned to face the
crowd, his bat drug tn the sand
And as the tears streamed down his

with a .05 batting average and led the
league with 33 hits. He also was tops in
the league with 13 home runs.
Korgan, with a 9-2 pitching record,
posted more wins than any other pit­
cher in the league.
Joining Korgan on the team are
Atlantic Bank teammates Clay Hick­
man, David Rape and I-eslie Thomas
Hickman, whose 8-0 pitching record
was the besty in the league, was second
tn home runs with 10 and fifth tn hitting
with a .509 average. Rape, like Korgan,
was on tne Sanlord American league
all-star team last year.
Mike Edwards of T riple I.LI.
Trucking also made the All-star team
for the second straight year. He had an
Imprsslve .609 batting average and was
second In hits with 28, including a halfdozen circuit clouts. He was 7-2 on the
mound this season.
Mike's 19-year-old brother, Sammy,
was also picked to represent Tripple
I.LI. Trucking, as were Keith Denton
and Reginald Rellamy
Second place Semlnolt Petroleum
and Flagship Bank both placed three
players on the team . Marvin
KllUngrworth, Tommy Mitchell and

Patrick Williams were picked from
Seminole P etroleum , while Jack
Jackson, Darris Littles and Johnny
Wright were selected from Flagship
Bank.
Utiles and Mitchell were both on last
year's team.
The three players selected from
Seminole Petroleum all had winning
records as pitchers. Killingsworth was
39, Williams was 7-3 and Mitchell was
32. Mitchell batted .489 for the highest
batting average of the three and
slammed seven home runs.
Jack Jackson, with a .480 average,
was the hottest hitler among the three
Flagship Bank players.
Butch's Chevron had two of the
league’s top four hitters and they both
made the all-atar team. Steve Warren
finished third in hitting with a .556
average and was also third in home
runs with nine. Gary Derr, a newcomer to the Sanford league this year,
compiled an tmpresslve.512 average.
chn*t Smith of Krsjrola Kollesr, who
batted .444 and hit seven home runs,
and Gregg Pond of Jack Prosser Ford,
who hit at a .415 clip, round out the allstar team.

TEAM
AB H.AVG..1HR
NAMF.
52 33 .635 u
Atlantic Bank
Eddie Korgan
46 28 609 6
Triple 1.1.1. Trucking
Mike Edwards
45 25 .558 •
Butch's Chevron
Steve Warren
Butch's Chevron
41 n .512 3
Gary Derr
Atlantic Bank
53 27 .509 10
Clay Hickman
44 22 .500 a
Atlantic Bank
Leslie Thomas
Seminole Petroleum
47 23 .489 7
Tommy Mitchell
Flagship Bank
50 24 .480 4
Jack Jackson
51 24 .471 2
Atlantic Bank
Davtd Rape
Seminole Petroleum
51 13 .451 1
Marvin Klllingsworth
Krayola Kollege
54 21 .144 7
Clu Li Smith
Flagship Bank
54 23 .426 2
Durr is Utiles
Flagship Bank
50 21 .420 5
Johnny Wright
Jack Prosser Ford
41 17 .415 3
Gregg Pond
Seminole Petroleum
41 17 .415 4
Patrick Williams
Triple 1.1.1. Trucking
52 20 .385 2
Keith Denton
Triple I.I.I. Trucking
47 18 .383 1
Sammy Edwards
52 17 .327 6
Triple I.I.I. Trucking
Reginald Bellamy
face, he said, "I'm not a man,
Strike three brought things to an end,
and this Is not a battlefield, this ts a and the umpire said, “That's all."
game, not war.
The boy walked off, the noise had
And win or lose, we should be proud quelled, but the crowd (hen cheered and
no matter what Uw score..
stood
Because we live free, and have the
Fur they knew, even though he'd
right, to play the-game and love It
(ailed, he'd done the best he could
But if you want It to be a fight, then 1
And Isn't that baseballs fame? To fill
want no part of it."
young hearts with Joy?
With those few words, he stood back
For after all. It's Just s game, and
in, and tried to hit the ball
he's Just a little boy.

No Major League Baseball Today...
And Maybe Not For Some Time
NEW YORK (UPI) - There wlU be
no major-league baseball played
today —and maybe not for some time
The players, stym ied in their
negotiations with owners over the
tree-agent compensation Issue, have
called a mid-season strike for the first
time In history and wtU not report to
work today. They were ordered to
return to their homes by Marvin
Miller, executive director of the
Players Association, shortly after
midnight Thursday following a 14‘xhwr collective bargaining session
with the Player Relations Committee
(hat produced no results.
The Uo sides were scheduled to

meet again this morning, beginning at
10:15 a m. EDT, but Miller did not
plan tn attend (he meeting and his
assistant, Don Fehr, was not op­
timistic that any further progress
would be made today.
"Unless they come up with
something better than they did today,
the meeting will be over In about 29
minutes," warned Fehr. “Maybe they
think they can starve the players Into
giving m. Let's see how they (eel tn a
year or a year and a half. Everyone
shouldn't b* under the Impression that
the players' stand ts going to get
softer They a rt going to get harder
with every passing day."

Although the strike deadline does
not officially go Into effect until 2 p.m.
EDT today, the time of the first
scheduled game at Chicago, Fehr said
there was no way that any games
would be played since the teams had
returned to their home cities.
He said he would, however,
represent the Players Association at
today's negotiations along with
players Bob Boone, Don Sutton, Joe
Ntekro and attorney Peter Rose.
Ray Grebcy, chief negotiator for the
Player Relations Ccmmlttee, ad­
mitted the two sides were st an Im­
passe but refused to say that there
was oo Immediate hope for a sett­

lement.
“We have a bargaining session
scheduled for this morning, and wt
take our bargaining sessions very
seriously,” said Grebey. “It's un­
fortunate that we haven't beer, able to
reach an agreement."
Grebey said there are two basic
areas tn which the two sides are far
apart on the compensation issue. The
sides agree on a compensation pool,
but the owners want players for that
pool to come from the club's 25-man
rosters while the Players Association
is wilting to pul only players from the
spring 40-man rosters Into the pool.
The Players Assoctston has agreed.

however, thut as many os four players
from each of the 40-man rosters would
be available for the pool
The owners also don't think that
every team should have to contribute
players to the pool, only those clubs
who sign free agents. The Players
Association wants every team that
drafts a free agent to put players into
the pool.
"We m ade our fifth proposal
today,” said Fehr, “and we made
sum* concessions. They i the owners I
told us It was worse than anything
they've had since the (Andy)
MessenmiUi decision."

Holmes Puts Credentials (37-0) On Spinks Tonight
DETROIT (U P I) - Unbeaten
I an y Holmes, who feels he has
everything but recognition, puts his
credentials for fame on national
television tonight when he defends his
World Boxing Council heavyweight
title against ex-cham pion Leon
Spinks.
"No one in boxing has more ability
than I do," u td Holmes, who takes a
379 record, 27 reach advantage and a
12-pound weight edge into Joe IMils
Arena against Spinks.
Holmes weighed In at 212l « Thur­
sday at the official weigh tn while
Spinks checked In at 200U. The fight

will be nationally televised as part of a
package offered by ABC from 9-11
pm . EDT.
“I hate to say it. I hate to boast. 1
hate to brag — but I'm bad,” Holmes
said.
Trouble ts, he doesn't think anyone
else knows It or agrees.
The Easton, Pa., resident has been
lamenting his lack of national
recognition ever sinew he arrived last
month to begin hlx training.
He ts making hts 10th title defense at
the belated official dedication of twoyear-old Joe l-outs Arena, named
after the
legendary
former

heavyweight champion who spent hts
formative years tn Detroit,
One of those defenses was against
an aging Muhammad All, whom
Spinks shocked by defeating foe the
hearywelghl crown in February of
1971, two years aRer he winning the
Gold Medal in the Olympics.
less than nine months after losing
the title, All won It back again and
storied Spinks on a downward slide he
has only recently reversed. Spinks
gained his title shot by stopping topranked B ernardo M ercado of
Colombia last October.
Holmes, mouthing ■ public dislike

of Spinks that may or may not be real,
hopes for a quick knockout of the
widely known challenger and his
handlers ire already talking of the big
money to be made if Gerry Cooney
can defeat Mike Weaver for the WBA
version of the heavyweight crown.
Cooney and W eaver are both
scheduled to be among the 11,000 to
15,000 expected to show up In 20,000seal Joe louts Arena. The widow of
the late Units will participate In
dedication ceremonies.
Also on the card Is a WBC super
lightweight title fight in which Saoul
Mamby, 29-12-5, of the Bronx, N.Y.,

will defend hts championship sgsinst
lop ranked challenger Jo Kimpuani,
56-2, a native of Zaire now living in
France.
Two undefeated heavyweight
hopefuls also look for recognition at
part of the package. Michael Dokes,
ranked th ird , faces European
champion John L. Gardner of Britain
and No. 4 Greg Page, takes on Alfredo
Evangelista of Spain.
Holmes, a 4-1 favorite, will also
have a three-inch height advantage in
hts 11.5 million payday. Spinks’ share
ts 1500,030.

nights O f Columbus-Kiwanis Clash Closes Season
fourth and final regular season
The second half race has been a dif­
aUhup between the top two teams in ferent story. Kiwanis beat Knights of
I Harford Junior 1-eague ts scheduled Coliunbus the first time the two teams
15 p.m. today at Chase Park.
played tn the second half and Is now 89.
[ First half champ Knights of Columbus
Knights of Columbus, however, Is right
second half leader Klwanls square
on the heels of the leaders with a 7-1
In that key game, while Elks and
record.
tangle at 7 p.m.
Kiwanis, the defending league champ,
| Knights of Columbus beat Khpnti
i in the first half etuuule to a perfect could win the second half with a victory
today. That would force a best of three
I record. Kiwanis finished 7-3.

*

playoff with Knights of Columbus,
ilowever, if Knights of Cotumbua wins
today, the second half rare will be tied
and each team will lave one game
remaining. If the second half finishes in a
Ue, a one-game playoff will be held
Knights of Columbus pitchers Glenn
lan d less (79) and Fred Miller (8-1)
boast two of tlie best records tn the
league. Top pitchers on the Kin warns
staff are Brace Franklin ($-}), Alvin

Jones (39) and Orton Waklo i4-J).
The two trams are almost even tn the
hitting department. Knights of Columbus
has s .285 team batting average, while
theK Inw snlsteam tshtttlngata 2*0 clip.
Those are the two highest team b#tuig
averages in the league.
Bruce Franklin leads Kiwanis with a
.440 average, wfole Bryan Debose is
hitting .354, Mike Wright .315 and Kevin

Smith .133.
cm an Kiwanis has more than one home
Lee Fredrick ts the top hitter (or run.
Knights of Columbus with a .410 average.
The Junior league regular season is
Therun Llggons is hitting .390. Miller slated to end Monday. However, Knights
.30, William Cart .333 and lan d less J1J. of Columbus had one second half game
Knights of Columbus has an edge in the rained out and if they win today that
long ball department with seven home game will be rescheduled for next
runs (or the season to three for Kiwsnis. Thursday. It Is agsinst Rotary.
Kiwaius closes out its regular season
lo n d m s leads the Knights with three Monday against Masters Cove Apart
homers and Jo Jo McCloud has two, No ments.

�Cruz Ties Theft
Record In Finale

Mi)or League Standing!
By United P ress International
National League
Fust
W L Pci. GB
Phils
34 21 .615 _
St. Lou
30 20 .604 14
Mtl
30 25 .545 4
25 23 .521 5 4
Ptsbgh
N.Y.
17 34 .333 15
Chi
15 37 .268 174
U s Ang
Clnci
llous
Atl
San F ran
San Dgo

West
36
35
28
25
27
23

2t
21
2)
29
32
33

.832 —
.625
4
.491 8
463 9 4
.458 10
.411 124

Thursday'a R esult!
Chicago 6, S in F rancisco 1
Montreal 7, Atlanta 0
Cincinnati S. New York 2
St. I jju Is 2, Loa Angeles 1
JU L IO C H I!/.
. . . 32 s tr a ig h t s te a ls

I

JK F F BURROUGHS
. . . fo u r ru n s b a tte d in

By United Press International
Mark It down. II the strike turns out to
• be a long one, the answer to one of
; baseball's more historic trivia questions
: will be ‘•Seattle."
| That's where the final major league
I game took place before the players
! declared only the second strike ever to
I disrupt the regular baseball season and
• the first ever to occur after opening day.
■ The Mariners made it a night for their
• fans to remember, beating the Baltimore
1 Orioles 6-2 Thursday night on the pit*
I dting of Mike Parrott and the speed of
| Julio Crus.
! Cruz tied an Al. stoletvbase record and
J Jeff Burroughs drove in four runs with a
! pair of bases-ktaded singles.
Cruz began a four-run first with a
! single off Dennis Martinez, then stole his
• 28th base of the season and 32nd straight
• without being caught to tie the AL record
J set last je a r by Kansas City's Willie
j Wilson.
; Koyals 10, Blue Jays 5
j At Toronto, pinch hitter Jamie Quirk
! delivered a three-run double in the eighth
j to hand the Blue Jays their 11th straight
J loss. Hal McRae went J-foc*3. Reliever
! Renie Martin, 20, earned the victory,
with Dan Qutsenberry notching his ninth
! save. Reliever Mike Willis, (H. look the
| loss.
Brewers I. Hanzen 1
At Milwaukee. Roy Howell drilled a

two-out hoiner to snap a 3-3 lie in the
sevenin and Pete Vuckovtch notched his
eighth straight victory. Howell smashed
his third homer of the season off
Ferguson Jenkins, Li, to give the
Brewers a 13 lead. German Thomas hit
hts league-leading 15th homer In the
second and Ted Simmons homered in the
sixth. Rollie Fingers earned his 12th
save.
White Sox J, Yankees I
Al Chicago, Jim Morrison singled in
the go-ahead run in the second and
Carlton Fisk scored two runs, enabling
the White Sox to snap Doug Bird's 12game winning streak. Bird, 5*1, had not
ju.il a gome since Aug. 18,19/8, when he
was with Kansas City. Steve Trout, W,
worked 6 2-3 innings for the victory.
1j*marr ftoyt, the fourth Chicago pitcher,
went the final 2-3 inning to earn his
seventh save, lam Pintctla homered for
the Yankees in the first.
Angrls 7, Rrd Sox 2
At Anaheim, Calif., Ken Forsch, W,
tossed an eight hitter and Fred PateV.
singled in three runs. In the first meeting
between the teams that swapped nine
players in the offseason.
Tigers 7, Twins 2
At Bloomington, Minn., Tom Brookera
hit a three-run homer and Steve Kemp
drove !n two runs. Winner Dan Petry, 4-J,
the first of three Tigers pitchers, allowed
seven hits and two runs tn six innings.

Evening Hera Id, Sanford, FL.

Standings

Sunday, Juna 14. H l l— FA
- - - ..............r ~ '

American League
Fast
W L Pci.
N.Y.
34 22 .607
Balt
31 23 .574
31 2i .554
Milw
Detroit
31 26 .544
Boston
30 26 .536
Cleve
28 24 .521
16 42 .266
Toronto
West
Osklnd
37 23 .617
33 U .600
Texas
Chi
31 22 .585
Calif
31 29 ,517
Kan City
20 30 .400
Seattle
21 36 .368
Minn
17 39 .304
T hursday's Games
Kansas CUy 10, Toronto 5
Milwaukee 6, Texas 3
Chicago 3. New York 2
Detroit 7, Minnesota 2
Californio 7, Boston 2
Seattle 8, Baltimore 2

GB
—
2
3
34
4
5
19
—

14
24
6
12
144
18

Special O lym pics
Starts Friday
Nineteen Seminole County athletes will
compete tn the 1981 Florida Special
Olympics Summ er Games Fridaythrough Sunday at the University of
South Florida at Tampa.
Tonight the troop will partake in
opening ceremonies at the USF track at 7
before competing in the standing long
Jump, tug-of-»ar and the high jump.
Attending from the county are Richard
OatV, Todd Condrey, Tony Gaines,
Tommy Jones, Jeffery Kinnaird, Steven
Stopera, Scott Vihlcn, Homer Dennis
Walker, Linda Mae Arent, Eunice

Raraes, lis a Beckman, Tina Coffins
Joanne Councils, B arbara Osgood
Tuwanna Redding, l .aura Sylvester am
Jeraldlnc Walker.
Saturday the events kick off with tlv
mile run at 7:30a,m. followed by the res
of the events until 4:30 p.m.
Closing ceremonies will lake place a
Tam pa Stadium beginning at 6:3i
Saturday night. After the ceremonies
the athletes will be guests for the Tamp;
Bay-Monlreal soeccr game.
Sunday the delegates conduce theii
weekend with a tour of Busch Gardens

Rogers Blanks Braves,
Raines Steals
MONTREAL OJPIi - If Steve Rogers
had something else on his mind, he
certainly didn't show It Thursday night.
Rogers, Montreal's ace right-hander,
tossed a seven-hitter as the Expos
blanked the Atlanta Braves 7-0, giving
Montreal ■ three-game sweep of a series
In which they outscored the Braves 30-2.
"For the past two weeks, with all the
strike talk gotng cn, It was Just a pleasure
to get out on the mound and pitch," said
Rogers, who doubled as the Expos’
players representative and who realized
Friday's strike deadline was less than 24
hours away.
" It doesn't make any difference
whether you pitch a 14-hitter or a nohitter, you can still get a shutout," said
Rogers, who lias not been beaten by the
Braves since Aug. 18. 1877.
Andre Dawson. Gary Carter and
Warren Crornariie each drove in two
Montreal runs, while rookie Tim Raines,
with two stolen bases, reached the 50plateau mark in that department and
also drove in a run.

Cardinals t, Dodgers 1
At St. touts, George Hendrick knocked
in two runs with an Inside-the-park
homer as the Cardinals handed Dodgers

50
rookie Fernando Valenzuela, 3-8, his
fourth loss In his last five decisions.
Following the game, it was learned
Valenzuela had received a death threat.
Although Valenzuela refused to confirm
the threat, St. Louis Police Chief Eugene
J . Camp was standing Just outside die
interview room. Valenzuela then started
to talk about "the safety of my family tn
Mexico," when he was cut short by a
Dodgers' spokesman.
St. Louis starter Silvio Martinez, 2-4,
allowed five hits and walked one before
leaving with one out in the eighth In favor
of Bruce Sutter. Sutter got the final five
outs to pick up hts 11th save.
Red! 5, Mels 2
At New York, George Foster's tiireerun homer, his 14th, broke a tie in the
sixth inning to lift Tom Seaver
Ctncinnatl. With the victory,
sevrnth straight, the Reds moved to
within a half-game of the West-leading
Dodgers. Seaver, 7-1, collected his
seventh straight victory by scattering sis
hits and striking out seven. The victory
was the 252nd of his career, enabling him
to pass Bob Gibson and move into 30th
place on the alllime victory list. Dave
Kingman cracked his 14Ui home nin for
the Mels.

Peto Roio still noods ono hit for NL rocord.

Linescores
' If

M*|pr L »* ? vt R tw ill
UfMtttf P r t n ln !trn «!«iu l
National L«a«oo

Alt

000 000 CM

m

no

00901

0 73

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co
441*
Motuia
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and
Banadict; Roger* and Carter
* W -R o o a r* (7 4) L — £09471 ||

! 10).

Lot Ang
OOOOOIOOO- 110
♦ St Low
TOO 000 00« - 2 1 0
Vatenturta, Mo** til
and
Sooacta. Martinet. Suiter (It
and fanace W — Martinet 17 4)
L - Valentvrla
(14)
HR St
Loun. H«ndrkfc (10)

Cine I
NY

000 70)000 5 D O
Oil 000 004- i 4 I

S tiv e r and Nolan. Zathrir,
Saar age ( ! ) and Trevino W
Seaver (7 1). L -Z a c h r* (S I )
MR 4
N r * Yoffc, Klnyman
( t i l l Cincinnati, Patter 114 ),

te rry II ) and Grota. Stub,
WMH» 111, JacM en (•), Garvin
(f ), McLaughlin (f ) and Mar
t.net
At— M artin
(7)1
L Willie 1041 HR a - K a n u t City,
Me Ha# 14 ), Toronto. Martinet

San f r.tri
000 00 ) 000- 1 5 0
CM
400 001 01a a t I
Or iff tn, draining ft). Holland
(St. Moffitf
(I)
and May
M arti. Capita ( I ) and Davit
W M arti O S )
l-G r i f f i n (4
Si. HR 4 —
Sen
Morgan (11; CMC ago. Davit
11). Crux (71.

(II.

Mater Leafa* Result*
By United P r ttt international
American League
Kan Cty
110411 013— 10 U 0
Tor onf
O il 100 OOO- ) I 1
Splittortf, Martin (4). Quilt*

T r ill
000 TOO 004- ) 3 I
M .l*
0(0 003 31*— 4 17 0
Jen itms. Comer (7 ), Johnson
111* Babcock ( I ) and Sundberg,
Vucfcovith.
rimgeri
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and
Sirnmon*
W Vuckovfth LI 7)
L J m k tn i
(4 51
H R t-M U
*#u4tir Tnornui 11$), $«fnmoni
(t ). Howell ( J )
NY
100 010 000- 7 7 )
Chi
111000 0 0 1 -7 1 0
Bird Da via II ) and Ctfone.;
Trout. Parm er (I ). Mickey (II,
Hoyt (91 and Fisk W - Trout IS

l getter
(7)
and
D fm p ity i
Parrott. Dfaoo (9) and Narron
W Parrott (I S )
L -D
Mar
Detroit
001 044 704- 7 11 0 tmet (t 3) HR — Saattle. Pacl
Minn
TOO QOO 004—.3 1 9 orek ($1
Petry. C a p o u t t e 110 171,
Rotema (7) and Fahey; Red
fern. O Carmor (7), Cooper (9)
and W»negar W -P e tr y 141)
I , um ird Er*s» i m w m I i w i I
L Redfern (3 7)
H R -D e fro d ,
a*te**n
Brook ms (3)
C.nr.nneti Signed catchers
Sieve* Pad,a ,nd John Groninger,
Boston
070 000 000 - 7 1 }
Second tesemen G e e s , D iy
Calif
400 007 01 &gt; - 1 9 I
pitcher Richard Johns, fleet
Ramey, fivrgmetef (7) and basemen Charles Celctougn.
Gedman. Alien ion (5 ); Fcneti WutridSdd, Ton, ltj* * ll and tr..rd
and Off W -r o r s c h (43) L baseman Thome. Pillev lo tree
Rainey (0 1 )
N n I contracts
B .ik .ib e ll
Detroit - Acquired center
Balt
000 000 074- 7 9 1
torward Edge, Jones from H ,*
Seattle
4)0 000 7 0 a - • 17 7
a i w r lor lu*ur, cons id ,,* , ions
D
Martinet.
Ford
(I ),
31
L- B r d
(S I )
Yorn. P.metia (7)

HR — N r*

Deals

SALE STffl

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Aimon. Chi
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Heme Rent
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Foeiev.
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end
Schmidt. Ehi U
Dewson Mil
U . C rul. Hog It
American Leegue
Thomel.
Mil IS
Event. Rot, A,met
O c t, end Gray. See 11 Bore
Cel 17
Runt Betted In
National League
Beeler.

NetUnel Leegu* Certten.
C-n IT. Concfpc.on. Cm ec,
fchm-dl. Eh* ci Buc liner. Chi Phil H i Vaieniueta. LA ye.
Ruihvrn. Ehl | ) Seaver. cm T
M. Garvey. L A I )
Amencen
Leegue —
Bell. ll Hoot on. L A &gt;7. Rogert, M il
Tec
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American League — Bortth,
W nil rut, N Y CO. Event, Bel
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Cel
end M o ,m .
Del T 1 ;
Sletin Betet
VuchOvHh, M il 11. N o rm . Oek
Neiionel Leegue
Nemev 1 1 ; fight pilcnork lied w in 7.
Mil M Nerlti. SB M . Seen. Mil
la m e d Wen Average
Ik .le d en 47 inmngil
71, Moreno. E ll IT. L*&lt; t . Ell.
Sth.tn. SD
Euhl, How
end
Neiionel Leegue - xnepper,
Collint. Cm U
Mou I I I .
Wren.
Hou H i
American Leegue
Hander Rrukt. LA I l f , Seaver, (in
ton. Oek ) )
C u t . See 71, i d ) . Sindrr ton. Mil 1 I )
O ion*. Cl* l i t L I , lore. Chi I ) ;
Amencen Leegue
Sienerl.
BumBry. Bel and Lentlord. Bot Bel
IK .
D avit.
NY IM .
Betker.
CM
7
Of.
Fortch.
Cel
II.
Eitchieg
&gt;17. McCettf. Oek 1 ) 0
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Strlkeowli

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Veien
tuele. L A IB). CerHon. E N Tc,
Solo. Cat U . P ien . Hsu 7).
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American Leegu* — Barker.
Cie
70.
Blyteverv
Cle
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40. Leonard. XC )*
le ve l
Netonei Leegue —
Sutter.
H i II. Lucet. I D M. Mmlon.
IF t Rome, Eil, end Camp.
At I |
Amencen Leegu* — Goitegt.
N Y 17; Binge,t. M il 17. 7.
M erlm tl. Bel end Oultenberry.
KC f . Saucier. D rr
Corhett
Mm. end farm er and Hoyt. Chi

7

STATE W OM EN BO W LIN G RESULTS
W OM EN
S
B O W L IN G
A S S O C IA T IO N
If ll
CHAM
E lO H S H IE
TEA M EV EN T
CLASS A. Wilton t Ere Shew.
. Tampa. 7*77. lit Net I Bent
Mometleed. Greater Miami. 7*01.
Boo White'! Ero Shop. Greeter
M.em!. lies
CLASS B. lohn'* Ehetmecy,
O r Lend 141* Suntti.ne lo n g e r i.
Cleerweter. 74)0 WMOE Country
CtuB. Ocele 7447
CLASS C. Rale Sseret. Semmal*
County, 14*4 All4y Rollert.
Greeter Miami. 1)M C,turne d t
Five. SI Ettertburg. 1170
C L A S S D.
7*t H elicepUr
L cat*ng. Gtealer Mi*mi. 1741
M -k tt Carper Cleaning. Metethon.
lie). Johnton 4 Baku. Eelm
Beech C o . 7717
CLASS E , E e l* Elec*. Eetco.
1171 Mergerett. Lake W i M . lid )

Greyhounds
A T S EM IN O LE
H U R S D a y N IO H T RESULTS
1st rare — S 14.0 71X7
mAtoo
II a0 7 40 4 40
io b H a yi«(h
l i l t 740
I S TU I
4M
01411 I t 4*. T i t * 71 H I M
Ind r a t i - ) I4.D 7 M )
loy-on tDcamorM
I M 140 S 4*
4 Jo* K Irby
4 40 1 M
roi G mo
•K
OttOI I* 14. E ( M ) H I M ; T lS
I IM M
l r d r e c t - S I I M 11 71
hirttyChiel
*40 J ® 744

Ac*

JOTI

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Control,

Cleenaettr.

d o ubles

CLAD
fc. M ickey Engle
Bertiera Zglmicki. locator*. I II I
jean
A v e ry Carolyn
L illy.
OeLend. H IT Ot WruoleMyie
Wtcier. Hollywood, 1171
CLASS B. Arlene applehee
M ery Ann Woolley, St Lucie Co.
11)1 Sybil Tucker M ery Bred,,
Cleerweter. t lM Merino Bail
Jean E riyb yl* . Orlando, lie )
CLASS C. Nell'* Renton Conn,*
Spitek, Bredenten It*' Lorre.n*
Flurien Dot Eeerct. Brodenton.
110)
Karin* Norm an Coreen
Fieidi. Temp*. 1100.
C L A D D. Sally Bieke Jane
Eurb-t. E*tm Beerh Co ■ I0SC
Shirley
O ulnn E ltle
Naylor,
CI*arA*ler. WV) Marmn SUm
m*er teenn* Fortberg. Browerd
) Musmdirtit
I M &gt;M
I M dwer Autumn
7H
O il II l l M . E l l &gt;. )* M r l i l t
II II 44
l i h r e c t — *t.D )• •*
4 Unique Chit
47 70 1 10 4*0
) tie r Occasion
IS 40 e *0
5 Spotlight Pl«#t*
7M
O l l l l 111.**; El I ell) II M;
W H II 1710 1 1 1 M l I Jig SB
H h re c t - I II. B H I S
IH iR t r w
7*4 4 00 4 70
4 Kentet Snow
*»
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5 Parley O n I
^!&gt;r
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Ole l l M M ; FI A 41 144 M . T U
a l l 111 M
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7 00 &lt; M
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0(1 l i If M ; EI4 Ii H I 14. I t

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Co. K U Corelyn Tomlinson Ool
thorn,vcm. W inter Haven, I0M
C L A S S E . Norm a W tbtler
Dorothy Slouch. Cleerweter, M0
Dorothy Merkt# Marilyn Morrow.
Jacksonville. PSJ la th y Ingram
Brrrsde Win*. South Brevard, fee
A .1 S C O R E II U B J E C T TO
V E R IF IC A T IO N
SINGLES
C L A S S A . Wendy Cotm en.
Seminole Co . »** Lila Coleman.
Orlando. 4*0 Attorn lum p*m l.
Greeter M iam i. U c
C L A D B. Noeti* Van Butk,rh,
Eelm Beech C o . *c) Doroth/
Bryant. SeminoM C* 470 Berm**
Hewn. Eentecol*. *M
C L A D C. Diene Robertson.
Lakeland. 101 M ery McNeb.
Greater M iam i. SI* Eel Lyle.
Winter Haven, M4
CLAD
O.
Jen AAarriton,
i Si tie m
llh re ca — S -M .I; J4 M
7 Spur On
17 70 1 40 7 M
IC om ulG e ne ra l
1140 144
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Lakeland. S4) Janet Beder. South
Brevard. Me
C L A S S E , M ery F ra dttt*.
Panama city. SSI Dot Thom*son.
Wmler Heven. ScO Eel Shumwey,
Seretola. SO*
A im * Crew.
Oscroll, 349
A LL E V E N TS teller |tn weekend!
CLASS A.
C a rolyn L illy .
D e l end. Ill*
CLASS
B.
Peggy
Amos.
Broward C o , l i l t
CLASS C. Mar y McNao. Greater
Miami. 11)0
C L A S S O.
Jan M orrison,
Lakeland. ISSr
C L A S S E . M ary F re d e llt.
Panama CIIV. W it
o v e r a l l h ig h g a m e , u ij
Coleman. Orlando. 71)
O VER ALL
H IG H
S IR l E S ,
W ired,Germ an. SeminoM Co ■40*
tint r i c e - i l l , C N I )
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ll t h r e e e -S l e . A i I L M
4 Cool Enieio
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IT *0 4 70
) Dusty Prince
7*1
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IBB rec* — *s.C. It 41
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L e t t w e lt t . I I )
C h trlg ttt
Tevert*ugh, Nepiet, I I I
T R IP L IC A T E . Dotll Rutkert.
Del and IM
•M PINS O VER A V E R A G E ,
Corel J Beltm. South Brevard.
Tie Debra Sue SI Clair, Citruk
C o , 77)

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41 99
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Oem ei rhrevgn J«*e II
M ,| ,r L ,,| w , Leiden
B , United Pres. l , l n , i i « i , i

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With old tire
off your car.

SUf

Price

1)0
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47 M
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Our Best Mileage Tire On Sale
S IB IL
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41.99

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44.99

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All ericoi plus U i and old tin*.

50,000 Mile Untied

'

1 3 , 0 0 0 M JU W A tlA K T T

WHITEWALLS
Polyester Now Tuts
• FHEE Mounting

Ml *00 S E R IE S E V E R . Eetncl*
E Agnew. Chenone C o . MO
Suten Eloillgr, Eelm Beech Co.
*04
A L L SCORES SUB7CCT TO
V E R IF IC A TIO N

1 A7Sa1t aeons
ersais SKTstl

F O R JTH E B E S T

TV SfRVICE

C7S.1I 7Q01II
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OLD TIRE OFF CAR

In A ir Condition,*!
Com fort —

Wo Do Not toll Factory Inch Or Btomishod Tirol
Wa Accapt Checks

General

7 BIG L O C A TIO N S
2050 S. ORLANDO DR. (17-92) SANFORD 3234644

SIC
JM
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IA — Evtnlng H*r»kJ. Sanford, FI

Friday, Ju n ttl. I N I

CtoGtoOOO.tM PROMOTING
MX) TOSecO NO

by Chic Young
FIGURE TMAT5
SETTER TcUN
Mas/iNG M x i
THERE'

Antwer to Prtnout Puryte

41 SufTn
42
tht
I former
Tambla'
Spanish
45 Actress
colony
Maittl
$ Quettonabia 46 Popuiai
9 Fly
dattan
12 Dull M ow
49 Deadly
I I Italian
52 Faimti
g u ttin g
53 Compel!
14 Indwdull
point
a c ro ss

Love Your Body
Get Rid O f Flab

DEAR DR. LAMB - When
my husband and I had our
y»*rly phy«ic?lt» few months
l | tog I n't _
M Mr
ago we found out that my
16 Bisque
55 Applies
implication
(rotting
husband's cholesterol and
16 Racant |pitin) 56 Catpian
blood sugar are elevated a
19 Spread to dry 57 Collection o(
11 Spanith
36 lilt of foodt
little.
facta
20 Inait gat
American la­ 39 Feather tcarf
All we were told was that he
21 laugh
51 Sown (Fr)
borer
bouwoutl*
41 IntHfe of
should cut back on sugar and
17
Seth
t
ton
DOWN
23 Park lor wild
(profit)
saturated fats. He has lost
19 label
emmelt
47 lawyer!
about 10 pounds since then.
27
Onet
(Fr)
25 Glowing old
1 Holy imtga
patron tamt
23 Author Grey
Will the weight loss help lower
27 Good withtt 2 Chimney
24 CIA
43 liana
pattagt
31 Miktt mad
the cholesterol and blood
forerunner
3 Publicity
32 Chargad
44 Section
sugar? I would appreciate
4 Identification! 25 Cooperate!
pertidtt
45 Whole
any
Information you can give
21
Grono
(poet)
33 Compau
HU
47 Bit of newt
27 lilt
me or any diet suggestions.
point
5 More frigid
46
Abttract
26 Of mittile
6 Obtam by
34 Short taiaDEAR READER - In
indittry
being
inarching
giaph'C dick
many
people a significant loss
7 Air circulator 29 Otinl' wife
35 6'ing to bay
50 lyMrgic acd
of excess body fat will help to
30 In cate that
6 Pronoun
36 eiua Hag
diethylamide
lower
both
elevated
32 Angered
9 Region
37 Foilt
35 Plating metal 51 Graek tartar
39 Puth up
10 Of India
cholesterol
levels
and
blood
36 Debtor t note 57 On tame tide
(prefn)
40 Conclude
sugar levels. It will help in
some esses to lower elevated
4
9
10 11
7
6
1
5
6
2
3
blood pressure. The one thing
almost all authorities agree
14
12
13
on, regarding diet, ia that il a
17
person has excess body fat II
15
16
is Important to eliminate IL
20
19
There has been a lot of
discussion this past year
7 i 77
about whether a diet was
Important in preventing heart
77
76 29 30
25 26
disease.
The
recom­
mendations of the National
31
Academy of Sciences have
”
_
been widely misunderstood,
36
34
35
in my opinion. There appears
_ _
to be no real disagreement
36
about what should be done If
"
40
there are abnormal findings,
as apparently was true In
"
4) 46
42 43 44
your husband's case. The
•*
*
argument Is about whether
52
46
50 51
everyone needs to go on
special diets.
54
55
53
As
every
practicing
physician knows, the only
56
46
57
12
statistic that la Important Is
the statistic of the patient
being treated , which is
another way of saying,
" In d iv id u a lis e ,
d o n 't
generalise." Your husband
should do w hatever Is
By BERNICE BEDE OSO I.
necessary to correct his
For Saturday, Jun e 13, 1981
abnorm al biochem istry. II
losing 10 pounds is enough to
not
be
targe,
but
it
will
be
YOUR BIRTHDAY
normalize his values, that Is
meaningful.
June 13,1161
wonderful. If It Is not. he may
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
This
coming
year
need to lose more body fat and
something which you've Your artfu l, creative ap­ may need to make other
enjoyed doing as a sideline proach to things makes your modifications in both eserciee
could be pul to more ideas or plans quite salable and diet.
profitable uses. It wit] be a today. If you have anything on
I really pointed out the
type of Involvement where the drawing board, propose U
you can express your now.
creativity.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23
n rM W t
Dec. 21) Things romantic
Think ot things which you'd should appeal to you today.
like to have U the funds were Soft lights, aweet music and a
available. This will Inspire secluded nook with thst
you today to work with more special someone may be Just
NORTH
s u it
purpose. Roma nee, travel, what Cuptd has in mind for
♦ KB
V
A
4
luck, resources, possible you.
♦ K S7411
pitfalls and career (or the
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
♦ J I0S
coming months are all 19) Members of the opposite
EAST
WEST
discussed In your Astro* sex are likely to find you more
• A74J
♦ 14 V
Graph which begins with yuur attractive than usual today.
f J 1041
»«)
birthday. Mail It (or each to
♦ IS
eoJi
You, in turn, make them feel
*74411
*Kgi&gt;
Astro-Graph, Box 469. Radio Important and special.
City Station, N.Y. 10019. Be
SOUTH
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
♦Q lttl
sure to specify birth date.
19) The secret to your success
f KQS71
CANCER (June 21-July 22) today ta to try to enjoy what
S All
Cuptd could single you out far you're doing, whether it be a
♦A
special attention today. small task or a goal of
Vulnerable Both
Someone who is secretly fond significance. Smile and
Dealer: North
of you may reveal their produce.
Wrtl
Narth East
Seelk
feelings, which should make
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
IS
Pau
If
you very happy.
You could be In for a pleasant
I’ats
IS
Pau
1 NT
LEO t July O-Aug. 22) Your surprise today when you team
Pax
Pau
Pau
com passionate concern la someone you've been thinking
easily aroused today, making a great deal about lately has
you extra-willing to ihare also had you In his or her
Opening lead *1
by Stoffel l Heimdahl
your time and do whatever thoughts.
you can to help alleviate
ARIES (March 21-April If)
others' stress.
Today you could be both lucky
By Oswald Jacoby
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) In love and also rather for­
and Alaa Soatag
Circulating with friends is one tunate materially. One doee
of the contributing factors to your heart will act as the
Contract bridge was invent­
which makes this a happy day catalyst
ed by Harold &amp; (Mike) Van­
(or you. Your spirits soar by
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
derbilt tn 1925 He thought ol
sharing good fellowship.
the vulnerable feature and
Focus yuur energies today on
invented a scoring table that
LIRRA (Sept. ZJOct. 23) situations which will be
with a few unimportant
Today, someone very fond of beneficial, collectively, to you
changes u still ia effect Hu
you could be instrumental in and your m ate. Pulling
notrump score wss 35 per
helping
you
acquire together, you make a winning
trick. Today it is 40 (or the
something quite nice. It may team.
first trick and 30 lor each

■

■

a

S
1
m

■

■

■

■

■

HOROSCOPE

vviiv

BUGS BUNNY

ANNIE___________________
FRANK AND E R N E S T

by Bob T h a v e s

&amp; £ T TH E LBAkD

O U T — T H E WHOLE
K in g d o m i f
DI 5E N C H A M TK D .
u s iim iin

T U M B LEW EED S

b K IU G E
additional trick. Ilu ilim
bonuses are unchanged from
the original and hu penalties
have been reduced to the cur­
rent llgures
Mike wat ahead ol hit lime
He invented the Vanderbilt
Club ronvratto-i and all tuccesslul modern club ronvrn
lions have drawn largely Irom
It.
He gave Ibe Vanderbilt Cup
which is still the most impor
tant American tournament
and won it in 1932 with von
Zrdtwtli, his favorite p»rln»r
He won the whut league
team In 1935 with Oswald
Jacoby Here Is one o( hit
plays thi*. helped produced
•ha win

.

We don't Ihmk much ol
South's Jump In three notrump
with that singleton ace. but
the bid almost worked
Oswald Jacoby opened his
fourth best rlub The nine v

played Irom dummy and
Mike, who Is normally a slow
player, outdid himself. Fortyfive years later. Jacoby still
rem em bers th at huddle
Finally. Mike produced the
eight of clubs and when Jaco­
by got In with tus diamond
stopper be led a second club
and the defense cashed tour
club tricks and the ace ol
spades
Mike's play had everything
to gain and little to lose Sooth
needed the ice ot clubs lor hit
no trump bid. so If South held
ace-deuce he would be sure of
two rlub tricks on any play
'NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE U T 1 )

by Ltonard Starr

£ l - l \ L K FittJCP KFXC FINE.
YOU SET BACH FROM 1DML PhN £/
ANdELA/ I U uET TUB
JU5T ?IAA
STUFF BACK WTO TH’
THECVXK
CELLA3 SEFfflE I 6 0 / WEN MJU
iE * E /

Tn»»*t i-il

by T. K . Ryan

F L E T C H E R 'S L A N D IN G

by Douglas C

HUSBANO HUNTERS'HANDBOOK
Most m e n p re fe r a sensible girl
for (heir bride: a girl o f high principle*

M l

importance of doing what
needs to be done for the In­
dividual case In The Health
Letter number 15-4, Diet to
Prevent Heart Attacks and
Strokes, which I am sending
you. Others who want this
issue can send 75 cents with a
long, stamped, sell-addressed
envelope (or It to me. In care
ol this newspaper. P.O. Box
1551, Radio City Station, New
York. NY 10019. Special diets
will help many people who do
have abnormal findings but
they are of little use In people
who do not have any ab­
normalities.
It Is Important for everyone
tn know what Ihelr rhnlejteml
levels
and
other
measurements are. It is that
individual basis which applies
to you that really determines
what needs to be done. How
you personally, not a group,
respond to a program
determ ines w hat program
you should follow.
DEAR DR IA M B —Pleas*
tell me what vitamins 1 can
use to gain weight. 1 weigh 111
pounds but 1 would like to
weigh more. I gain then lose. I
Just can't keep It. I was 120
pounds but I lost a lot. I eat
vegetables every day and
drink hall and half milk.
DEAR
READER
Vitamins do not contain any
significant or usable calories
They help your enxyme
system break down your food
Into carbon dioxide and water
to realease energy. So If you
are getting a normal amount
ol vttamlns, as you should
from a balanced diet, taking
additional vitamins will not
enable or cause you to gain
weight. Weight loss Is not
always innocuous. It can be
from medical problems such
as an overactive thyroid.
Better see your doctor.

, U l h,m know &gt;'(’u ,
,a ltr ,n a m n lf&lt;* »«nousl&gt;

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�OURSELVES
Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Friday, June 11, l t l l —*A

Tom

G o ld e n

Davis

W e d d in g

A n n iv e r s a r y

Urban

Horticulturist

m -n n

Reception Honors Mr. And Mrs. R.U. Hutchison

G a r d e n in g

Chinch Bugs
M ost
Lawn Pest
Chinch bugs rank as our state's most serious lawn pest,
because St. Augustine plantings ore so extensive.
Other Uwngrasses arc seldom bothered by chinch bugs.
So it you have a St. Augustine lawn, learn to recognize signs
ot chinch bug attacks and take control measures early.
Early detection and prompt treatment are essentia) for
' good control. As they feed, sucking cut vital Juices, chinch
bugs cause yellowish to brownish patches in St. Augustine
lawns.
Unfortunately, such symptoms may also be caused by
diseases, nematodes, and other problems. So, to be sure
appropriate control measures arc used, the true culprit
must be identified before treatment
Immature chinch bugs are tiny red insects with a white
band across the back. The adults are about one-fifth of an
Inch long and black, with white wings.
If you suspect chinch bug attack, part the grass In the
declining, yellowish areas and closely examine the thatch,
tf no chinch bugs are seen, thoroughly mix one ounce of
dishwashing soap in Iwo gallons of water, and apply the
solution to cbout two square feet of discolored turi.
If chinch bugs are present, they'll come to the surface
within about two minutes. If no chinch bugs appear, test the
borders of several other discolored patches Be sure to
check where the green and yellow grass meet, not in the
dead brown spots.
When chinch bugs are found, start control measures
immediately. Several chemicals are effective against
chinch bugs. Some can be applied as sprays, while others
are available In dry, granular forms applied with a fee• tilizer spreader. Sprays and granules are about equally
effective.
Just ask your garden center operator for a pesticide to
control rhlnrh hm&gt;« *od apply it at the rate recommended
on the label. When using sprays, the turf should be moist. If
it's dry, water the lawn thoroughly before spraying to in­
sure pesticide penetration.
Granulea may be applied when the lawn is dry, but they
should be washed down Into the turf immediately after
distribution.
Moae attachment sprayers Ithe type designed for lawns,
not ornamentals| art good tools for applying liquid
pesticide*. Use the kind that requires IS to at gallons Of
water passing through the hose to empty a quart Jar. Pour
In the amount of chemical recommended for S00 square
fret of lawn, and add enough water lo fill the Jar.
Mark off MO square feet, say a sp a n of 10 by 50, and
spray the contents evenly over that area. To insure even
coverage, spray half the material back and forth In one
direction. Then, turn al right angles and spray the
remaining solution over the same area.
After treating your lawn, continue to watch for chinch
bugs. A single application seldom prevents damage for
more than six to eight weeks. So, two or three treatments
. per year are usually required and even more under ex­
treme conditions.
Also, 11you're about to start a new lawn, or replace on old
one, you might want lo consider planting the Saint
Augustine variety known as “Flocatam". It's fairly
resistant lo chinch bug attack, and could save you a lot of
tune and money In the long run.
If you are having other problems with your lawn that you
can't seem to solve yourself, always feel free to contact the
Seminole County Agri-Center In Sanford *t 333-2500 ext. IT#
for assistance.
All Extension programs are open to anyone regardless of
race, color, sex or national origin.

CALENDAR
FRIDAY, JUNK 11
Sanford Chapter J a c k ! Jill ul America, lac. election
of officers, 5 p.m., St. Paul MB Church, 113 Pine Ave.,
Sanford.
Fifth Annual Arts Council Publicity Workshop, 9
a m. to 4 p.m., Hollins College Bush Auditorium,
Winter Park. Far nonprofit organizations.
Central Florida Louisiana State University Alumni
Chapter dinner banquet. House of Beef, John Young
Parkway, Orlando. Cocktails, 7 p.m., dinner I p.m. Far
reservations call #31-1171
SATURDAY, JUNK 13
University of Central Florida Alumni Association
Annual Spring Banquet and Reunion, 7 p.m., Royal
Plaza Hotel, Lake Buena Vista. Dance and en­
tertainment will follow banquet. Call 27V2233 for in­
formation.
Senior Citizens trip to Once Upon A Stage to see
“South Pacific". Leave Sanford II a.m, from Civic
Center, pick up at Leeds. Casselberry, 11:30 a.m.
Return 5 p.m. Call 322-0751 for reservations.
Men's Club Cora BoU, V7 p.m., Congregational
Christian Church, 2401 Park Ave., Sanford.
SUNDAY, JUNE 14
Cent boil,
Intheran Church of the Redeemer.
2525 Oak Ave., Sanford. Bring salad or dessert.
TUESDAY, JUNE 1#
th tr e a lm Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., Florida Power k
Light
Sanford Senior Ciliiras special meeting, noon, Civic
Center. Bag lunch and business followed by safety
program at 1:15 p.m. by Sheriffs deputy. M em bm of
Over 50 Club and Robinson's Swingers also invited.
Model Railroad Club. 1:10 p .m , Hobby Dept.
South Seminole MasonJr lodge, 7:30 p.m., Triple!
Drive, Casselberry.
Deltona Camera Club, 7:45 p m , social hall.
Lutheran Church of Providence.

Presiding over the guest registry were Teasie Cornell,
Martha Azzarello, Gladys Cooper and Pearl Bales.
Among the guests were two of Mrs. Hutchison's high school
classmates, Mrs. Jack Duncan. Charleston, Well Virginia, anil
Mrs. Chester Shackelford, Cliesapeake, Va.

By DORIS DIETRICH
OURSELVES Editor
Mr. and Mrs. R.U. (Bessie) Hutchison reached a golden
milestone — their 50th wedding anniversary' on May 22.
They were married on that day in 1931 at the First Baptist
Church of Sanford. The Rev. William Brock and the Rev. Karl
Varner were the officiating clergymen.
The Hutchisons have spent their entire married life in
Seminole County where he was a farmer.
On May 24, about 200 friends and relatives called at the First
United Methodist Church fellowship hall to honor Bessie and
Utrick on their golden wedding anniversary, Hosts were their
only son, and his wife, Mr. ami Mrs. Joe D. Hutchison of
Atlanta. The birth of a baby “nearly any minute" kept Mrs.
Hutchison from attending.
Bessie Hutchison received the guests attired in a soft yellow
gown enhanced with a gold bell and necklace lo match. Her
corsage was of yellow roses lied with yellow and shite ribbons.
Mr. Hutchison wore a boutonniere in the lapel of his gray suit.
Others forming the receiving lint with the honorees and their
son were the couple's grandson, David Hutchison, Atlanta;
Mary Nancy TerwiUeger. Mrs. Hutchison's niece. Sanford;
Mrs. R.F. Cooper. Mrs. Hutchison's sister, and Mr. Cooper,
Sanford; and Jam es H. Cooper, nephew, from Connecticut
Palms and a white ivy-covered screen served as a backdrop
for the serving table which was covered with a gold cloth
overlaid with white lace. The centerpiece featured gold mums,
gold-sprayed eucalyptus, fern and baby's breath uniquely
arranged on a handsome golden candelabrum.
One end of the table held the three-tiered wedding an­
niversary cake. Punch was poured from a crystal bowl
decorated with ivy and flowers at the opposite end of the table.
Arrangements of daisies and candles centered other gold
and lace-covered tables around the reception area. Fern,
palms and various floral arrangements enhanced the festive
anniversary setting.
Music during the afternoon was under live direction of Escar
Nader. Entertain ng the guests were Julia Steele, Katherine
Whelchel and Susan Reynolds.
The decorating was in charge of Mrs. Ico King and Mrs
TerwiUeger. Terri Adkins made the cake which was cut and
served by Mildred Bishop, Jean Sanford and Mrs. King
Greeting the guests as they arrived during the appointed
hours were: Mabel Chapman, Olive Hunt, I jou Raker and
Georgia Chorpening.

Other guests came from North Carolina, Connecticut,
Umatilla, Dade City, Orlando, Ocala, St. Cloud anil lakeland.
The Hutchisons live on ihelr farm in Cameron City east of
Sanford. Mr. Hutchison is a gardener who grows roses for a
hobby which he generously shares with others. They have
three grandsons, including the new heir born on June 4.
The couple have spent their married life working in the
church — giving a hand and heart where help was needed
M rs Hutchison taught Sunday School for many years and was
superintendent In the Children’s Division.
She will be quick lo tell you, though, that her first love is the
United Methodist Women. She Is past president, past District
Chairman of Missionary Education, past Global Mission#
Chairman and has served in varion* iither capacities.
!

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Mr. lfutchlsoi was chairman of the Board of Stewarts, a
charter member of the Wsre Bible Class, Charge 1ay Reader!
District la y Reader, Sunday School Superintendent, Secretary
of the Sunday Softool, and teacher of the Ware Bible Class.
Recently when the First United Methodist Church honored
the Hutchisons, Mrs. TerwiUeger said, “Unite Urkle Is a
farmer. He has always shared the bounty of his farm wilh
others. People who work with the land seem to have a certain
mystique. They feel the rhythm of ihe earth, know the order of
the seasons and it seems to set Ihe pare for their lives."
She concluded, "In their quiet and unassuming way, Bess
and Urkie have had a profound eflevt on many Uves."

MR. AND MRS. R.U. HUTCHISON
Floating hostesses were: linda Voltoline, Barbara Ray,
linda TerwiUeger. Mary Ailce Goodspeed, Bessie Harper and
Izmise Monlelth,
Pouring the punch were; Dorothy Thomas, Edwtna Stuart
and Betty Jo Insaing.
Coordinating the refreshments were: Freida Tyre, Ethel
Career, tia ra Swain. Toni Hobson and Mildred Carver. Others
assisting were: Marl Baker and Nancy TerwiUeger.

Fisher-Jones
Vows Spoken
Colorta Ann Fisher and Jerome Jones Jr. were united in
Holy Matrimony, May 30, at Second Shiloh Missionary Baptist
Church, al 1:30 p m.
The Rev. H.L Harris officiated at the double ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Mr and Mr? Melvin Fisher,
2109 West Uth St., Sanford. The bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Jerome Jones Sr. 24# Ave. C., Rochester, N.Y.
Given in marriage by her father, the bride chose fee her
vows a formal ivory lace over satin Empire-styled gown with a
scalloped neck line and wrist length sleeves. Her train was of
silk lace over satin.
Her headpiece was fashioned of Ivory organza wilh tiny
flowers and pearls with lace that flowed waist-length. She
carried a cascade of handmade blue silk roses.
Miss Patricia Annette Haynes attended the bride as maid of
honor. She wore a blue floor-length gown with a V-neckline and
shoulder Ue. She carried a cascade bouquet of yellow rosea.
Bridesmaids were Dale Fisher, Kmmalene Hopkins, Sheryl
Joshep and Eugenis Gainers. Their gowns and bouquets were
identical lo the honor attendant's.
Harry Brown served as best man. Groomsmen were Leroy
Flslicr. Mike Fuher, Carl Fisher end Steve Fisher, brothers of
the bride. Flower girl was Nikki Fisher.
Following a reception at the home of the bride's parents, the
newlyweds departed on a wedding trip to Daytona Beach.
They will make their home in Rochester, New York, —
MARYA HAWKINS

MR. AND MRS. JEKOMK JONES JR.

Birth
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Hutchison ot Atlanta, Ga.,
announce the birth of a son, Daniel Joseph, on June 4.
Maternal grandparenta are Mr. and Mrs. Janies
Shlruru of Io s Altos, Calif. Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. R.U. Hutchison of Sanford.

T h o l i n t col l e g e t o
woman
w ii
Obsrlin

c o n l a i d e g r e e s on
C o l l e g e , in
1841,

D O N 'T GAMBLE
w ith your Insurancol
-C A LL -

I 1
l| I f
I

TO N Y RUSSI
INSURANCE
322-0285

B O A T IN S U R A N C E

VID EO ELECTRON ICS R EN TA L AND
SALES CO. It Opening S Now Stores In
Central Florida In The Next 3 Years And Is
Looking For Man And Woman To Staff Hi
Stores. Store Managari, Rantal Managers
And Sales Persons Needed Now. Please Apply
In Parson lit Commercial Sf„ Sanford.
Collega Grads Prafarred.

If Invited, Ex-Wife Has
Right At Family Events
DEAR ABBY: BIU and I
have been divorced for nine
years and have three teenaged children who live with
me. Bill remarried five years
ago, and be and his wife, EUa.
live nearby with their 2-yearold daughter. (I am single.)
I have remained friendly
with BUl'a family and am
tnvtted lo all their family gettogethers. When BUI married
Ella, she made it clear that
she would not attend any
family gathering (hat in ­
cluded me.
Naturally. Bill refused to
attend those family affairs
without Ella, so they both
stayed away. Bill's parents
are very unhappy because
BUI and Ella no longer attend
the family Christmas Eve
celebration. I (eel that If I'm
invited, I muat be wanted.
There was a death In Pill's
family recently, and Bill
called and naked me to please
itay away from the funeral
because he and EUa were
going lo be there and EUa
would feel uncomfortable If I
was there. I stayed away.
Do you think I should
decline any fu rth er In­
vitations from BUI'S family in

i a i - j

Dear
Abby

order to sllow EUa to attend?
I don't like feeling that it's my
fault because BUI and EUa
mils his family gatherings.
IN THE MIDDLE
DEAR IN: If you are Intiled, that means yon are
wasted, m go If you wish. If
EUa stays away because your
presence makes h e r un­
comfortable, th a t's her
problem, nri yours.
DEAR ABBY- Now that
football training has nearly
begun, 1 would like to bring up
something that has bothered
me (or a long time. The boys
love the sport and they love to
win, but year after year they
are told to “hit hard."As one
coach told his team of A-yearolds, “Youll know you’ve hit
hard enough when you leave
the other guy b leed in g !"
(This is building character?)
As a mother I want to speak

k ’- 4 a 4 to \ v

out against this kind of would ritfarr ill than stand,
brutality. My son'i coach (ells but only one with a tender
the boys that they have lo be conscience would ask that
mean to play good football. question. When yon are truly
The "m eanest" boys are tired, defer only to the truly
praised, and tl« gentle ones needy.
You’re never toe young or
are subjected to verbal
too old to lean how to make
degradation.
Many of the boys say they people Uke yon. Gel Abby’i
don’t hit hard because they aew booklet af practical
don't really want to hurt the advice. Seadtl and a stamped
other boy. Now maybe I’vw l i t tt a l e i , eelf-addreiied
let
Abby,
missed something somewhere envelope
along li« Une, but 1 think the Popularity, 122 Lasky Dr.,
child who doesn't want to hurt Beverly Hills, Calif. 91212.
anybody seems to have the
right Idea.
Abby, Isn't there enough
meanness In this world
without encouraging our
young men to be meaner?
The Herald welcomes
ONE LAD'S MOTHER
suggestion far look Of
DEAR MOTHER: I’d isy
The Week. Da era blow
you made a winning point
someone yea would like to
DEAR ABBY: I am an 15see featured la this spot?
year-old student who travels
There Is somctklag for
to and from the city every
everyone In the Use of
day. I always get a seat both
cooking.
to and from work. My
Novice conks, as wvQ as
quesUon is whether 1 should
m
ailer ebris, add a dif­
give up my teat to an older
ferent dimension ts dining.
person. I also put in a long day
Please contact OUR­
and would rather alt than
SELVES Editor Doris Die­
stand. What do you suggest?
trich atom jour news sad
PAVUl
views on cosking.
DEAR DAVID: Everyone

g rlfi a - a « «

"Me - M y Birthday ? "
Y«s Dobble Robinson

H A P P Y B IR T H D A Y
To You In Spain From

Who's
Cooking?

A. V v

V i

All ot Your Family And Friends
In S a n fo rd , Florida

.JU.

rrre

for tin UTILE ADS
Hiit MEASURE UP...
h Safas and Prefift,
’■

BUSINESS REVIEW!
Don’t delay, Hart yeur sd
in the nest issue...

Coll: 322-2411

'—
■a

• »*** -*
'
" - -

^

�10*—Earning HanM. Unlord. FI.

Legal Notice

Friday, Juno I), Itll

Legal Notice

n o t ic e

n o t ic c o f s h e r if f s s a ie

of Avaslatslity of F md&lt;nf t« No

NOT ICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N

^§Ari^»»iM^r|F*cT'Tru»nrT*~~

»«a» uf f.iiut ur imT*Cfrr»*cwr.r
4* f m u i&gt; w «uurO out rH w i

The

F »d »r* i

Aviation

Ad

mimttr«t»on (FA A I, Miami Air
port! O itr id Office, on Jvrtq 4
•Ml. 'ftftUOtJ e F.ryjnQ of No
SrRnifkent impact I f OHS** »o*
»hq approval rA *ha laata of 10 0

C*uft Of minut atreft 9* a r port
prop»rty to Scotty's. Inc . et
Unford Airport. Sentord. Monde
Cop es of the FONSI ere availably
for review by tn# public et the
following fcxeftom
F A A Airports Ostrict Offke
Bu.ld-ng JOW
Miami internetiOA*l A.rport
Per.meter Rood end N W 10th
Street
Miami. Monde
Office of the Director of
Aviefmn
Building t
Sentord Airport Authority
77)5 Mellon*.lie Avenue
Senford. F lor me
Publish June 17, 14, IS. IH I
O f J 74
F IC T IT IO U S N A M I

Notice •%hereby «»v#n fhet I em
fvtQeoed *n husuwse et trlt Siete
Rood 4)4. longnmod. Sem.nole
County. Florida under the lie
M*ufc &lt;&gt;a«i.a uf 01 D O N A TO )
P tliA 4 SUBS, end thet I intend
to register te»d neme with the
Clerk of the Circuit Court.
Seminole County. Mor.de in ec
cordence with the provtsions of the
Fktifious Nome Stotufes. to w.t
Section 64)09. r lor me Stetutes
1957
Ton* ft lleirnn Pevilmn. Inc
Bv Antonio O* Doneto,
President
Publish Mev 77. I t 4 June S. II.
Itll

er the veei ut tne County Court
cy Semmote County. Monde upon
e finel iurtn#m*nt rendered *n the
etoresem court on the ?4»h der bt
v ,.r A D 10/1 . m thet tart an
rese entitled Allan!* National
Bens of Sentord Plentiff
vft
Jemes IN Glenn end Evelyn
G enn, Detendent. which eforesem
A ril of E.ecutm n weft delivered to
me es Sheriff ol Seminole County.
Monde, end rheve lev-ed upon the
following described properly
owned by Evelyn Glenn, sem
property being toco ted m Seminole
County. F lo rid a , more per
tkulerly described es follows
Gold Wedding Bend 4 Diamond
Ring
end I he undersigned as Sheriff of
Wrnmoie County. F forme, will et
II 00 e m on the 791h day of June.
A D lf it . offer for sale end sell to
the highest bidder, lor cash,
w h e ii ol any end ell eviftlmg
liens, et me Front (Westi Door of
the Semmoie County Courthouse in
Senford. F lo rid a , the above
described personal property
That sem sale t« ba ng mode to
safety m# tMn*i nt
Wrtf of
Eiecufion
John E Polk

D C 1*164

Sheriff
Seminole County.
F lor me
Publish June S. IT, I*. I k w.tn the
sale on June 79. »tH
DC J U
N O T IC E
OF
A
P U B L IC
H EA R IN G t o c o n s i d e r t h e
A D O P TIO N OF A N ORDINANCE
BY TH E C IT Y O F SANFORD.
FLO R ID A
N o tiit ts hereby given that a
Public Hearing will be held at the
Commission Ruom &gt;n the City Hall
&gt;n the City of Sanford. Florida, at

f W rc*?t* P v on )•ima 11 . tegi

to consider me adoption of an
ordinance by the City of Sanford.
Ftorma. as follows
N O T IC E
OF
A
P U B L IC
O R D IN A N C E NO H4«
H E A R IN O TO CON1IOSR TH E
A N O R D IN A N C F OP IN F c i t y
A D O P TIO N OF AN O R DINANCE OF SANFORO. F LO R ID A . TO
BV TH E C IT Y OF SANFORD. A N N E X W IT H IN TH E COR
FLO R ID A .
P O R ATE A R E A OF THE C ITY
Notice ■$ hereby given met a OF SAN FO R D . FLO R ID A . UPON
Public Hearing will be held et fhe A D O P TIO N OF SAID ORDIN
Commission Room .n the City Hell ANCC. A P O R TIO N OF TH A T
n the City of Sentord. Ftorme. et C E R T A IN P R O P E R TY L Y IN G
7 00 O'clock P M on June 27. IH I. EAST OF A N O A B U T T IN G UP
to consider the adoption ol an SALA R O AD A N D B E TW E E N
ordinance by the City Of Sentord. C O U N TR Y C L U B ROAO ROAD
F H^ide. es follows
(C 44 A I A N D B R iE R W O O D
O R D IN A N CE NO |SSI
D R IV E .
S A ID
P R O P E R TY
AN O R D IN A N CE OF T H E C IT V b e i n g S IT U A T E O i n s e m i
OF SANFORD. F LO R ID A. TO NOl E C O U N IY . FLO R ID A . IN
A N N E X W IT H IN TH E COR
ACCORDANCE
W IT H
TH E
P O R A TE A R E A OF TH E C IT Y V O L U N T A R Y
A N N E X A T IO N
OF SAN FO R O . FLO R ID A . UPON P R O V IS IO N S
OF
S E C T IO N
A O O P T IO N
OF
SAID OR
171 044. F L O R IO A S TA TU T E S .
O IN A N C E .A P O R T IO N O F TH A T PR O V ID IN G FOR S E v E R A B ILI
C E R T A IN P R O P E R TY WEST OF T Y . C O N F L IC T S
A N D EF
AND A B U T T IN G E L CA PITA N F E C T IV E D A T E
D R IV E AND B E TW E E N SANTA
W H E R E A S , mero has been Med
BAR B AR A D R IV E ANO MOW
wiih the City Clerk of the City ol
tDA S T R E E T SAID P R O P ER TY
Sanford. Ftorma. a petition con
B E IN G S IT U A T E D IN SEMI
tiirvng the name of the properly
NOI E CO U N T f, F LO R ID A. IN
owner in the area described
A CCO R D AN C E W ITH I h E VOL
hereinafter requesting annexation
iiN T A R Y A N N E X A TIO N PROVI
♦o me corporate area of the City of
SIONS OF S E C T IO N 171 044.
Sanlord. Florida, and requesting
F L O R ID A S T A T U T E S
PRO
to be included therein, and
V ID IN G FOR S E V E R A B IL IT Y .
W H ER EA S , me Property Ap
C O N F L IC TS ANO E F F E C T IV E
pra istr of Somtnola County.
D A TE
Florida , h aving certified that
W H ER EA S , there has been filed
with the CRy Clerk of the O ty of there is one property owner m the
area to bo annexed, end mot %em
U n h r l , Pier me. e petNten ctn
the
tewtkng the neme et me preperlv (voetfly iM»nxf rwx«
petition tor annexationi end
owner in the area described
W
H
ER
EA
S
,
if
has
been
deter
he«|tdeftef requesting enneiefion
to the corporef e area at fhe City of mined that tha property described
Sentord. Ftorme. end requesting hereinafter •% reasonably compact
end contiguous to the corporate
to be included mere*!, end
area of tho CMy of Sanford.
W H ER EA S , the Property Ap
Ftorma. and it has further been
preiser of Som lnolt County,
F lo rida , having certified met determined thet fhe annexation of
M
i l pfuvet ty will nut r n v t in the
mere »s one property owner m the
area to bo enneird. end that sem creation of t n enclave end
W H ER EA S . t h e C .I.u ! laniard.
pro»w#1 y owner hes signed the
Flood*, i* m * petition to proved*
petition tor annexation, end
municipal
service* to Ih# prop .fi,
W H ER EA S , it has been deter
mined that the property descried drier .bed hrrr«n. and tti. City
hereinafter is reasonably compact Commit lion of tho C it, ol Sanlord.
end contiguous to the corporate Florid*, dr* m i It in |h* M i l In
area of the City of Sentord. l i r n l *1 IK* City lo Itetpt u&gt;d
Florida, end it hes further been p.tltion «n d Id * n n ,i %*.d
determined that the annexation of property
NOW T H E R E F O R E . BE IT EN
sem property will not reiuil m the
A C TE O BY TH E P F o n t t OF
creation ol an enclave, end
TH E C IT Y OF S AN FO BO . FLOR
W H ER E AS. fhe C ity of Sentord.
Florida, is tn o position to provide IDA
S EC TIO N I That in* tolianing
municipal services to the property
described herein, and me City described property Situated m
Seminole County. Florid*. b« and
Commission of the City of Sanford.
i,
i»e+mi it tn the best •merest o4 the tn* u m * it m rib y tn n t
made
a r r r t of in* City 01 lanlord.
City to accept cam petition end to
Florid*. pursuant lo in* voluntary
annee Sam proper!*
*nn«i*imn prevision* ol Sacllen
NOW. TH E R E F O R E . BE IT
III 011. Florid* llatut.*
I N M T I D BY TH E P EO PLE OF
Tn* Norm .oo i » i ol in*
TH E
C IT Y
OF
S A N FO R D .
•allowing
described
tm d
FLO R ID A
S EC TIO N I That th# following H,g nn.ng *1 • tlaka Handing 1
in
*
'»t
W
til
and
I
cn.m
t
Norm
ol
described property situated in
Sem.noi# County. F .gride, be end the 5 E ( o r w ol t o d « i II
the same is hereby annexed to end Tow nth.p It t . Rang* M E. run
mode e pert of the City el Senford. Norm • cnami. w n i t &lt;n*&gt;nt.
South • tnam i. E n l ! tnamt,
F lor me pursuant to the voluntary
enneietmn provisions of Section L E l l a t l r i p l l i t . l mid* along th#
W*tl I hI . o I 14id l«n d o l ro«d R W.
171044. Florida Statutes
Ih« u m * bring drier.brd * i a prrl
lu t S. Block I t ORCAM W OLO.
ah Sectmn. Plot Book 4. Pege ft. ol Lot 41 o» N EW IJ P IA IA . Plat
Booh I. P*gr *1
Semmoie County , f igf.de
Tho « boir* drier .b .d proprri, II
T h t above described property is
further described es e portion of la.*fh*r drierIbrd *1 * portion *1
mat certain property lyinfe west of I ha* crrlam property lying Bail ol
end abutting I t Cep *an Drive and and abutting Upiai* Hoad and
between Sente Berbere Drive end Brlnran Country Club Boad 1C f*
A l and Brt*y«ood O rirr u d
M ortde Street, seid property
bemg situated m Semmoie County,
p ro p .rly
Bamg titualad in
lam m ol. County. Fiord*
no rm a
S EC TIO N I
That upon thi*
S EC TIO N 9 That upon mis
Ordinance becommg effective the OrdmatKt breommg .N m I iv* in*
properly
owner*
and
any raiidtnl
property owners end eny resident
on mo property described herein an l hr properly drier 'ted herein
shall be entitled to ell the tights mall b t entitled hi all Iha rigM*
end privileges and immumtios as and priyiltget and immumtlt* a*
are from time to time gremed to are from l ime to lima granted lo
resments end property owners of re a d m it and property owner* ol
tn# City of Sanford. Florida, and as me City 0« im lo rd . Fiord* and
are further provided m Chapter a* art KutTitr p r «,d * d In Chaplae
111. Florida Slater*a*, and ihall
I I I t tor me Stetutes. end snail
lurmar b r tubieei to I ha rrtpon
further be suOiect t# the res pen
Sibiiifies of residence or ownership tibiiilie*al r ttd e n c t or ownartnip
es may trom time *o t.me be a* may Irom lim a it lime be
determined bv the governing deleim ined by tha govern ng
author it y of th* City of Sanford. authority ol mg l i l y ol Sanlord.
F torme. and fhe provisions of sa d Fio rd *, and m* p r o ,‘non* ol u d
Chop!or II I , F io rd * Slatultt
( nepter 171, Florida S*e*v*M
SECTION ] II an, teelem cr
S E C TIO N ). it any secimn or
portion ol a taction ol IM* Or
portion of a section of mis Or
d*nance proves to be mveim. dmaneo provtt to be m,*ld.
unlawful. Of unconstitutional. If eaiiawlwl or uncontlitutonat. il
snail not be held to invalidate or tnoii nol be held m mvalidaie or
impau He* ealdity. lore* or yHoel
mpeir me vettdity. force or effect
si any ttellon or part ol mi* or
of r r m rto rt or part cf this cr
dueanct
dinbnee
S E C TIO N ! Thai all ordmanea*
S E C TIO N 4 Thet ail Ordinances
er p*,i* cl Ortfinaneat m egnllitl
res e4 Ordinances m conflict
herewith
bo and Ilea um * art
•m be end the same are
hereby repealed
hereby repeated
S E C TIO N !
Thai HU* Or
S E C TIO N S That this Or
dmaned shall become effective dnanee *h*n become effective
immediately
upon
if* patuse and
immediately upon 1ft passage and
adoption
adoption
A copy thail be avt.labit at He*
A copy snail be available at the
Office of the City Clerk for eR Oilic* ol Ih* Cily Clark lor ail
per
ton* del .rng to tiamme I he
persons de w ing tg axam.no fhe
um e
same

Att pifttes In interest and
c if liens shaft have an opportunity
to be neerd a* ta d hearing
By order ol *&gt;e City Commission
of the City of Sentord. Florida
B D m N Tamm. Jr
City Clerk
Publish M ar I t 4 Jung 1 I). It.

Alt paflie* In inltfetl and
ciHiana than hay* an oppariunit,
Ig be heard d u d haarmg
By order c* He* City Comm.tieon
d the CUy ol Sanlord. Fitrida
H N Tamm. Jr
C*fy CWfk
Pwbi Sh Moy I t 4 Jung %. II. It.

tegt

It ll
O C I 124

D U 197

10—HtipW xnSBd

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AVOH
nEH R ES EN TA TlV fS
S.nt.rd T .n iW rM i araiiabm
m i m celled m u u * t

Furnished apartment* tor Senior
Cintent 111 Palmetto Ay*. J
T-rewBH NX r.FwWSM r«'l«

Hotp WsnttA
Wortrsouftorntn.
haavy Outr xxork Ability to
Itarn Tull fitnoMft Apply m
ptffton Unitod Solvcrfft 1797
Airport BUtf

if ft tofty fo pioc» a C lofttif tod k a
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4-Personals

Needitsratiert tarn &lt;r vsey
with yauf habby
Call A h n tM ID S

WHY BE L O N E L Y 7 Write Get
A Male Dating Service All
ages. P O Boa 6071. Clear
woter. FI T H U
Lonely’ Wr »t hr nging people
together Dating Servico!" All
ages 4 Server Citifens P O
Till.printer H even, rta Http,

Lonely Christian Single*
Meet Christian smglet ui your
art* Wr.te Southern Christ tan
Singles Club. P O Bo* lt&gt;!
Summerville. SC T tiU or call
I M )e i H S 4 II hr*

Will SOCiAl Socurtly pay * h «n
YSV'Tt 4!’ 3upp»om#*if ywur

1 rood a babyftitttr iff my bom#
hm Iwu tifiaii ih'Wito U 1*4r

r«firvm tnl
172 a)) 1 lor
Ui.e.1.1*______________________
COM PAT A D A TE
Tah, I mlnul* lo litlrn to
rtcoroed m n u g e I MT W I
H IT MSI or w ,n * Compel A
O . l . P O BO* i n ) Sum
fflgTIIIt.
(*«•&gt;__________

Legal Notice
H IA R IN O
FC O C R A L R E V E N U E SHARINO
P IO P O S E O U IC H IA R IN O FOR
l l l l I I I ) R E V E N U E SHARINO
B U D O ET FO B TH B C ITY OF
LONOWOOO. F LO R IO A
He* City Adminittrcior ol Ih*
City ol longwood. Fiord* will
hod public proposed u u hearing*
lor the IH I I1U Fedrrai Rtvenue
Snoring Budget on Monday. Jure*
n . III! a l l l O p . i Th* hearing*
w II b* held *1 Longwood Cety Hall.
ITS W eil
W arren
Avenue.
Longwood. Flo ,d a
The public will be given the
opportunity lo make oral and
written tuaaetcon* rc 5 .1 rd.na
polt.ble uu * ol Federal Bevened
Sharing Fundi

ftPUK Of- TH E M O M E N T
B A B Y S IT TIN G
771 tU4

S U FIS M
IS) F)SM

F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Notice i* hereby oiven that I am
engaged in busmen al Rt I. Bo.
Ilf A. Sanlord. Florida. Seminoio
Count,. F lo ,da undo, Ih* lie
lil&gt;o*a name ol S A J Carpantvy,
and Heal I Inland to reg.sivr u d
ream, men the Clark al m* Cercuet
feufl. Um inoe. C o u rt,. Flereda In
arcovdanr* wnn tree provision* 0*
ltd FICMIOU* Noma S td u tn . To
n il
Section It s 01 F io rd *
Statutes I1SF
Sd O ann, P Simpton

Publitn June I). I*. » 4 July I,
Itll
O E JM
IN THB C IB C U IT C O U B T FOR
S IM IN O L t C O U N T Y . FLO R ID A
PR O BATE D IVISION
File Number II 111 CP
Desman. Prabala
IN R l i E S T A T E O F
L A U R IE A N N E H E B E L
Deceased
NOTICB OF A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
TO ALL PERSONS H A V IN G
C L A IM S
OR
OEM ANOS
AGAINST TH E A B O V E E S T A T E
AND A LL O TH E R
PERSONS
IN T E R E S T E D IN T H E E S TA TE
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IC O
lhai
Ih*
ad
m m itlra lla n at the re n t* ol
L A U R IE
ANNE
H EBEL.
dec gated. File Number I I I I I CP.
itpendino &gt;n the Circuit Court tor
Semmoie Count, Florida. Probate
Oivitdn. the address ol which it
Stminolo County Courlhouso.
Par* Avenue. Sanlord. FL Th*
per tonal representative ol tho
rtla'e it JO H N F H E B E L whose
address it ISI Shadow Lata O r.,
Longwood. F L )IFSO The name
and a d d re it *1 the personal
representatives .H o rn e , are sal
lorlh below
All persons having claim* or
demand* agamtt m* aval* art
required.
W IT H IN
TH R EE
MONTHS FRO M T H E D A TE OF
THE F IR S T P U B L IC A TIO N OF
T h u n o t i c e , lo Hie w,m in*
clerk ol the above court a written
si.iemen* ol a n , claim or demand
the, m e, have E a rn claim must
be in writing and n u l l ndc , l r Ih*
batltfgr m* claim. IM earn# and
address .1 the creditor or M* agent
or anorrsev, and IM .mount
claimed II IM claim it nol vet
due, Ih* dale when, il will become
due shell be title d II Ih* claim .*
contingent or unliquidated. IM
nature 0* IM uncertain!, than be
titled I) IM claim 1* secured. IM
security than be described Th*
claimant than deliver tuiHcienl
copiet ol i M claim to i m Clark to
enable IM Clark lo m all on* copy
to each personal raprotanlaiiv*
All parson* intereslrd In IM
m a le to whom * copy el this
N0I 1CI ol Adm im tlrallon hat bean
mailed are required. W IT H IN
TH R E E AtONTHS FR O M TH E
O ATE
OF
TH E
F IR S T
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
T H IS
N O TIC E , Is 111* any oCnaction*
they may hast IM I challenge Ih*
val dily Ol IM decadent’s will. IM
BualiHcallon* al H it personal
repretanlaliy*. or I M vvnue or
IvntdNIion *1 Iha court
ALL CLA IM S. D EM A N D S . A N O
O B JE C TIO N S NOT SO F IL E D
w i l l RE F O B X V E R B A R R E D
Data ol IM Itrtl pubncoHort al
•h.t Notice ol Adm iniU ftlion.
Jim* I t I N I
John F Hebei
A* Personal Representative
d i m Estate et
L A U R IE A N N E H E B E L
Oh eased
A T T O R N E Y FO B PER S O N A L
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E .

N EC N JULIAN. JU . E .Q
ol S IE N S TR O M . M CINTOSH.
JU LIA N .
C O IV S R T
WHICHAM. P A
P 0 Boa l)J 0
Sentord. F l )IT )I
Telephone )0S ) » ) • ) !
Publitn Jure I t 1». IN I
O E JM

ftkating.

and

moc»rft 277 444S

74 Hr Babyftiltirg
Me

Mom# | a «
2719414

★

★

★

★

★

U*t#«

4A- Health &amp; Beauty

4 ★

★

★

277 7H1. 1)19997

'J I A -D u p l e x e s
la rg e New 1 Bdrm. Aw Heel.
Carpeted, apohance* No pet*
U M m o. 1110 dtp n i i f l i
Eve
Looting For a New HamaT —
Check ih* Want Adi tot houat*
ol rvary t u t and p rk t

27) 7412
Spring Fovor Salt
Motkmft Produdt
n i sot

( Good Things to Eat
B U TTER B EA N S
You pick
272 047)

Full lim t Coftmofsoon Local
Sfora Good company bmrf'tft
'&gt; J i i i wi No nigM t ur Sun
aay Good »aiary and com
m lift ion All rrpitot hold in
fttnet confijrnca S m d rtp ly lo
Box No 97 c O EvOhing Mvra&gt;d
P O Box I4S?. Sonford. Fla

Far m m Marktf. US0 French
Avf . Sanford 27)7741
11— In s tru ctio n s
Ttnnift Imlruclion U S P T A
Cerdied Group or Prtvafo
leftftom Children a ftpeoalfy
Ooqg M*l»cfowftkl 27)2X7*

I ud•II tutor fttudentt t
math or reading Call 172 2121
Mon Fri • W am 4 00 pm
!•— 44eip Ws&gt;n t « d
Manfed L F N II 7 Shift Full or
part time Apply Lakeview
Nufftmg Center 919 E 2nd St
N E E O A SECOND IN C O M E ? S
Hr ft or lett per «»eek. could
earn IJOO • per mo m i X I

L 4ia M.a Pijjiora
Ma Ireftfteft Manfed
Apply in peffton 2)1 2004
Need Extra Income DDhilo you
are al home? FS may be tho
anftarer Free detailft Cncloie
fttamped envelope French
V»»e. Boft 4114). Nilet. iiimoit
TYPIST - Fail and accurate
Mendie phono order % Medical
and retirement benefit!
United Solventft 2711400
*

*

*

*

*

*

*

★

★

★

★

★

★

Rrftp^nfttbia young lady avail
abtr at ftitfrr. Frl thru Sun
afttf noon )))7 IS I, Kim
E V E R Y OAY IS BA R G A IN
D AY IN TH E W A N T AOS 277
7011 or 4)1 m i
Companion Aidr lo Lady, ftrokt
pari Itmr poftdton Sanford
Exp . matvrt. rtf 22)91)4

24-Business
Opportunities
Would you likt o M n n i of
rour own&gt; You doYI need on
offka to ftfart Bogin al homo
Full or P4rf lima* laaaf for
hutband and wifo«f#am
obiioalion
C o ll lor
po nim m l 171 9117.

For Sak LOWfl mowing ftorv»co
equ p and account! S74 )041
offer ftix
Plumping OfY. Hargwaro ana
E k c frk o l rafoH and rtpair
Buftinrftft w WO R«ai Eftfat*
Butt Ttrm t, 1143,000 Wm

VaiKiowftki REALTOR
799) Evrft 277 )M7

★

tiouftehofd Help I 04v per week,
ref a mufti f4 per hour
7914)4)
Scropmefai buyer — mufti bo
exp Reply Box f ) C O Evening
Herald. P O Box 14)7. San
ford. Fl
Interfttetlar Photography need!
Model! All lypet. »nc oclort.
Rfa% Portfolio ))7 7J9I
Vaieftlady Experienced *n taoirv
ready lo wear
A pply
in
perftan No phone coil! Ro Jay.
711 C 111 S t . Sanford. Fla
Experienced heating 4 air
c o n d itio n in g
g e rv lc o
mechanic Old eftfablifthed
Sanford company Good pay 4
hinge benefit! Apply Mall

Plumbing 4 Meeting Inc 1007
Sanford Ave

177

21—Apll. &amp; Houses
To Share
Willfthoro my houftt
Si7) Mo pay! oil

177 9410
f emoit

wanfft to fthart my homo
with ftamr Rt far meat
772 9)14

*

RN SANOLPN S
Be a pert ef eor loccofti Jom a
learn that ift moving m ne«v
direction! «ith new concert!
and new perspective! Med ea.
Concept! 141 01)1
★

CONVENIENCE s t o r e c a s h
lERS Good talary hospital
uaiton, I (Dark pad vacation
rvrry a month! Now looking
lor rxprr^nerd paopio raady
to (Dork For mforviow phono
Iha managtmanf of
Airport Bled
27)02)1
Caftttfbarry
))9 177S
Crier y Aw
227 02JJ
LokrMary
277 1)0)
J l — Situations W o n te d

ZELLW OOD CORN,
14.50 Bu.

29— Rooms
Room lor rani
Frivtlt antrarK*

ni uu

SANFOwO - Rat* Wkly A
monthly tales Util Rk . Kit IOC
Oak Adult* t i l 7MJ

30-Apartments

Unfurnlshad
vur ner'i Village on LaAt Aua
11 Bedroom Apt* I ram U N
Located II f l lull South *1
Airport B'vd in lanlord All
Adult* UIMJB.
) bdrm. 2 b lendt»wood, ap
plianct* mclwdirV washer and
dryer, swimming pool l *41*
U O • aep BMITTT. x .
I Bdrm Apt* trom t i l l &gt; 4 1
Bdrm * iu avail Fool. I*nn.*
court m sO O
LAkS j LN N i L A P t l 1.11,4 1
Bdrm on Last Jem * m
laniard Peal, t h
roam,
outdoor B B O. U m i court* 4
ditpualt Walk la shopping
Adult* oni, lorry na pat*
H I 041

Video Electronics
Rental and Sales Co.
■t opening S new sieve* as Cen
fral Florida Mi IM «*•* three
year* and is leaking l*f man
and women lo staff it* floras
Start Manager*.
Rental
Manager* and Sties person*
needed now Fleas* apply '*»
PHten II* Cammaetial S i .
Sanlord. Fla College Grad*
PrelHred
Want mart aul el Ldaf A lltll*
n l r r manay c an mean a let ol
esir* hying tarn aitra rs
soma at neighbor hood Amway
d'tlribuior *1 Nationally
known product* For Ap
poailment Call M) 111).
Help Warned Day *I«H Fane*
auem bar* Saw aotratort.
Gmeral Labor Apply be'ween
hour* ) 1 p m Amar ran yroad
Product* M ill aHICt IBB
Marvin A v t . L k g tce d
Flay BariendHi A Cocklail
w .ilr .tir * Mckdinty* now
under new mgl Call or com*
by MS Sanford Avt Q 1 M M

HtusaRBBfiRB iMBarylMir.

fmi
Hmg da, Sh'ft Stnd rasum, Ig
P O B g i I M . Sanford. I I

Super area 111 TWO

De lon* Dug'** 7 Bdrm. I Bath

u :s . o.p
nifan

LONGWOOD Lktrl. ) Rm*. tld*
*100 an . WOO mo IH TWO

22- H o u m s U n fw -n i»h x d

* Ar -k

Senior* L e .f i, I Barm. » Dan
A*. rw a m K balk, lu m
*,••1 U U Adult* M l ra n

Winf tf Spring! ytar old. ) 2. 2
car gar ago. tarn rm . util rm
469 0077. 469 0597
Brkk. 3 Booruom. U ■Bath
1773 Ral
C4II 37) 714)
Lakt Mary Sanford Lika now. 2
BR. 7 8 . CMA. kif aqufppad.
d ra p t!
211 Juftlifi W ay
GrovfViqo. U ? ) 77) t m

LANDLORDS
Oualif iad tanantt wan mg
Nofaa 279 7)00
SAV ON B lN TA L ft. R E A L TO R

Oid Tabby hava a iiftar of kif
lona? Sail fhqm «Difh a* faftf
action Ci*u.fiad Ad Can 777
7411 or 1)1 Vtr)
St John! Rivar Efttairt ) bdrm.
7 b . CHA. U00 mo. Ilf. laftf.
fta&lt; 27)714) Inland Rtoffy.

me,

4 Bdrm with poof.
Avatiobit July 1

Apli. OI|wpi« tt. Pati
lh.ntnd.tk Village Opew I L
m in i
LUXUR Y
A FA R IM S N TSF a m ily 4 Adult* taclldn
Fooitide I Bdrm* MbMar *
Cava Apt* H I TUB Open on

weekenoi
1ANFO R O I Bdrm « d l Pet*.
S in S1SO Down I N TWO

SAVON B I N T A H R IA LTO R
Nice I Bdrm. I block from
mopping, senior citilens only
SIM month »&gt; * !* &gt;
F ROM l l l l 4 UP
CllK ierxiev I 4 I Bdrm Apt*
Shown By appl Call H I I1M

Maiionyillt
Tract
Apt*
Spec oui. modern I Bdrm, I
Beth api Carpeted, i l l
equipped
CH4A
Near
hospital 4 &gt;«ta Adult*, no

pel* t» t in m i

!• Y 9 I* f

R O B B IE 'S
R K A LT Y
R EALTO R . MLS
T ill I Fleet*

Seif* 1
Saalerd

24 HOUlJ3 M 2-92l 3
No qualifying ) bdrm. h i bath,
lam rm. C IA. Imcad «*rd. tt
i* IK err down » » w «
IU.500 I Sloan t ill mo pay*
all Owner Ml UTS

Garaga fto full tharrft no room
for tha cor? Cit an it tut with a
Want Ad in tho HoraU PH
272 2411 or 111 9991.
CaiiHM rry 1 Bdrm. 1 Bath,
lanced, tett OK. U00 U l TWO
IAV ON r e n t a l i . b e a l t o r

34-Mobile Homes
Ninter Spring* ) Bdrm. I Acra*
Kid*, pen U00H1TT0B
IAV ON B lN TA L S B IA L TO B
Mobile Ham* lor rent USB Me
Itl last 4 U00 I k H I SON No
children or pel*
It you dan t believe mat want ad*
bring retail*, try an*, and
listen la year phen* ring Dial
H I &gt;411 or U l FNl
Catstiberry. Kid*, pat*. I Rm*.
Farn Alt UIS IM TIM
SAV ON B lN TA L S B IA L TO B

34—Resort Properly
Hafchitan Octanlrant apt* H*
S Atlantic. Da, Ion* Bch . Ft
MitS B U. Hufchiun H I I0SI

Efront
lot
NIC*
wooded 1*1 m euluSNf trie
Owner financing available.
II1S00

77D-1nit si rU.'
for Rent

Large IB B , 11 cenda Eguippad
Kit. LB. u p DB. CHA. pool
UIS me Btl Bag It* W
AirporfB Sake*ID WOO. D*v*
H I HOI
V
Sanlord Naw, Farnlthtd. I
Bdrm 4 Bath
Kllchan
equipped, washer, dryer In
eluded Peat, near thappeq.
no pel* Security. I Yr. I Ml*
lla s n s

REALTY - REALTORS

SyXM PBBAO INCY
B E A L T O B tlllffl
Eve* H I MM. IM IMI. IIIM T I
Mettlpl* Lillies tefric*
Sanford — Niar 1 1 acre*!. 1
hrtrm T b fully anum O 'r t
mis* Ns ttcaialion Owner
financing with IW.000 down on
ramamder A n n* IU )* C
Owner at IOC III, m n s i

W l LIST ANO SELL
MOBB HOM E! THAN
ANYONE IN THE
SANFOROABEA
REDUCED ) Bdrm. 1 Baffft xDiffi
Coaf H A. Wall Wall carpal,
pal’d, pjafry. dacor favekat
Larxdicapadf 129.909
JUST ll f T B O ) Bdrm. 2 Bath
hamt m fha cavalryf Split
(aval. Cant HA. Florida Rm .
la f mi Kttcho*. Bara. pood, all
tx ) l* x (N Acrtft ftH 064

B A TEM A N R EA LTY
Lie raalEtiafe Broker
)U 0 Sanford Ave

121-073!
LOCATION LOCATION LOCA
TION Spu and tpen.) Bdrm.
I' I Bath, primer Ime* GrMf
a*Sumption Call today lo tt*
100 F T W l D i CANAL FR O N T
L O T leading to St John!
Rivar Caduftiva oraa i n 500

A LL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
&gt;S*4S FranchAv*.
M Jb U I
Aff Of Naur* H I « n i or I I I WOO

Harold Hall Realty
R EA LT O R S, MLS
323-5774

Day or Night

G R E A T ASSUM PTION Low
dawn pivft mxnar linaacing
Lovaly. larga S Bdrm. tvpar
lacatian. ftparkllng paal.
family rm wifh kvgt brick
ftrapiaco. amaa.tit* U l . m
' c m T ir rq T ’ a u v m p t i o n i f . K
e u .iii.ie g lew dew*. At­
tractive I Bdrm
Like
Markham vnw Dttackad
•aragt. warkikap I ftatk
Acrg. t.nced IM M*

JUST

LISTEO.

Attractlyi

V iM rrn f a rt. Neat I Berm
Large yard. KiHht* aavippad.
tkapamg and tckaalt FHA VA
linaacing Ml.ft*

COZY ) Bdrm. 1 Bath Kama on
tread lot with m « roof, now
Wall fa wall carpal, firopiaco
aad lanced yard' 1)1.9N
JUST FOB YOU S Bdrm. ) balk
ham# an targ* corner tat
Great room. Dam* ceilings,
itene Hteglace. Muipped M l
la kitchen, term,I Dining rm
and baavlilul pan and pifiat.
Lais marat Sit.Ml
BIDOE WOOD ACBESI Dvpltk
tall laatd. *11 efilitiat. paved
rta d l. Near SHSt Witt
wbordinat* lor builden Bv,
now, Build naw or laleel Jetl
It I#Hi From III till

ASSOCIATES NEEDED! New
er etpenenced Call Harb
Stanitram or Lee Albright la
day A ditcavtr lucctfil

. CALL ANYTIME
TU I
Park

322-2420^

C A LLA N Y T IM E
im
French
IT U
I h Mary
Blvd

323-2222
323-6363

R EA LTO R S
Multiple Listing Servlcx

C A L L 127-5774

42—Mobile Homes

SUPEBIOB MAYFAIB
LOCATION
Highatl qualify, reamy. gracious
living ler matt who ipprtciaf a
ih* im**) This 1 BR. IM B.
evecutiv. ham* it prlctd right
al SM.SOO Call now tw appf

Cal IBart
R IA L ESTATE
REALTOR. 227 7W«

S
£
N
§

MAYFAIR VILLAS! I B 1 Bdrm.
I Bath Condo Villa*. M il t*
M.vtair Country Club tiled
veur tel. Hear plan B Intartar
aocarl Oealify cantlredM by
Shatmaktr far t1t.HI A upt
Open Saturday I l i H I M A
Sun Noon f

L O y l l V Cevnlry H .m o i
Bdrm. IV* Balk. Attorn,bit
m trtg.B *. Large a ta llt
ilia® yard. U*.m.

Obl Wtda H its . ) Bdr m. S Bamip
al l » s Inttreil
Down ’,
paymynf and taka 0« f r
pAymanfft Call aff 4 20 771
0610
la* our beautiful nave BBOi
MORE. Iro n 4 rear SR’i
GREGORY MOBILE HOMI
JM I Orlando Or
u jj
VA 4 F HA Financing
U OM On. tlsJB. I acre Her***
Need* cleaning tavranm. H I
W® AM Eva

HAL COLBERT REALTY
lac.

43-Loti A A cta gt

m u l t i p l e l i i t i n o s e r v ic e

S Acra*. Longwood Markham
Rd A r t* Nicaly woe-dad
M M HI M U
v

123-7172
Eva* StlOatl
ISJE &gt;smst

Oaitana lakefronl M acre* an
paved Rd tlSOOO Wm
Malic low tkl Realtor SHIMS
47— R e e l Estate W anted

i v e i m m ww
NiCt Neighborhood 1 Bdrm, I
Bam Hama, Fruit Trtat. .utl
110.000 Dawn 111.W0
N E E D A SEBVICEMANT You’ll
find him listed m our But net*
Service Dlrtcltry.

Kjsil
HI \ l

I V IV II

MLS

Pfll VACY PLUS I Bdrm. I Bam
Spin pua. Pamuy am Back.
SSLSM.

Msdarmimg your HamaT Sail no
longer na.a.d but uwiul Ham*
with a Ctai* mad Ad.

FAM ILY HOME « Bdrm, | Bam
Family im . Fwaplaca. Nil
rhen Iqetpped U1.SM

O S TE IN Small I Bdrm ham*
Heady rt modeled, new ap
pftancu Fencod. L® TtalW S
IIASM H )0 .IT

•• ST OB XOTN W0BLDS
Charming OI* I Slaty I Barm.
1 Bam Ham. with sparbliaa
Paal tad Hub* Cam* tad
Screened Rm tad Fined
Bach Yard U l.m

PBBSTIOIOUS ABBA I Bdrm. I
Bam. Panallad Family Rm
BetcB FlreplKt IIILN S

MANS OBFEB S Bdrm. I Bam
Now X lic it* AppiitRcat.
A*Rlaf SO.EM.

Oaa-t wwl -a BUY Beat I h ® ,
BUY I Ml I Iialf aad ■adiu
LAWANA KISH . RIALTO*

321-0041

Invtstor
Buying
Inc*.
P-oper' , Principal* enl,
brotart Aigr.an. Bo. .
Wedae Park. Fl H i l l
W t buy equity In Heuleew.
apartment*, vacant land and
Acraag.
LU CKY
IN
VESTM ENTS. P. O Boa ISM^.
. Santacd. Fla. am. H I UAL,
Paspi* who lik t money u u lewcetl destined adi I* buy. sell,
or Itada

D E l TO NA Like Atw. real
barge n by owner 1 l* m . I T.
4am, tcreen perch, family
r m . lie. dm. k.1, garaga
Sal MO H Xmlg or rant Lias
(M u rn a ju

IT JOHNS RIVIR (Canal)-)
bdrm. | bam. canfrai heat *.,.
matt to wan carpal. &gt; car
Bar*f* immacuiatt car.
Urtmn SM.ISB PrmctpaN tnfy.
us im or HS IWA

STENSTROM
Sanford's Sales Leader

321-0041

Hay « * ! Looking for an ttfrt
dollar* Akk Mam 4 Dad I* Id
you h a rt t c ltitilltd ad
garaga u l*

LAKE MARY Duple* I Bdrm. I
bath. (II.OOO Gmr R.Hty H I
1S*| Atf hr* i n DJI

Duple, lor Rwe T Bdrm. I 'l
Bain U U P w M o ♦ USOSh
Dap

NEW WAREHOUSES I I Hr
Sacur ity. I I Hr accttt t«overhead doer*. JO.®' al U ®
ms Longwood area Calf
Sharon I } } Mil

40—Condominiums

th e ter r a c e

2 J » Ridgewood Ay*
Model Open Tuel
Thru Sun 10 )0lot
I Bdrm, 1'1 bath Cenrral air 4
neat, fully equ pped lichen
with microwave FHA. VA 4
Con* Law down payment, low
monthly
payment
with
graduated mortgage MI HOI
or )!1 KIT. I I ) IISO

S A CR E PA R C ELS starting al
111.500 lor cleared 1st

37—Business Property
Commercial Building. Bant or
L**t* M I Frtnch Ay* .
Sanford. I TOO Sq Ft Carpal.
Cant air and h*al H I ISM

OfEN HOUSE

lak

^ a -H D U s c s F u ^ U k ,!
CASSELBERRY lohefronf 6
rm«. aif. » d( 1760 239 7)00
SAV ON R IN T A L I R IALTO R

fo. appointmmi Pleat* no
Friday ev* or Saturday call*.

CLOSE TO la J Bdrm. I bath,
lurmthad mobile home with I
bdrm guest collage all on S
ion t u r n

17) 0711

J bdrm. ) Bath. Gar ago
tn Dottono
174102

1ANFORO 1 Rm* k « Fat*.
H U Down BIAS U l 7JD0
1AV ON R I N T A U RXALTORS
• «l*y CteMry Rylagt I Bdrm

Lake Mary 't *rr» 1 Bdrm I
Bam with Rod i.r,piece Wall
lo wail carpel fern H A.
A Hum* Die |i, \ Mortage by
Owner m i n i

tha paop«a about if with a
C t a t f t ' f A d *n iha Hargid

IA V ON R I N T A L I R IA L T O R

nrr\
shaklee h er b ta b le ts
m e o e l iv E r

Sanford — Midden Lake 1
bedroom I bb'h. ‘am.ly room. ,
llt.soo Hare I i \ attumabl*
mtge Owner dimioH help
with Imancmg l *h i i l i S J

Garaga Mitft ara in taaftan I H i

IA V ON R EN TA LS, R IA L T O R

Your fvfvro our conctrn

★

Sentord Its Fl on L*kt Onoro
Atlractiv*
a'der
hem*
Property can t t split MM00
Of UWIDI . I « U i«l

194 94)4

UU

★

CORNER OP 19th
A N D F R IN C H

Sptcial Swmmor Proqram for 4
12 yr . old including »f «x ty

%(Dimming,

★

AAA EMPLOYMENT
1917 FRENCH AVE.
CALL 323-5176

M r l Mufti ha»0 oxxm frjn tp
727 4M« iftfr 4

f e d e r a l r e v e n u e s h a r in g
buoget

hual year
Total Fund*
O L Terry
City Clerk
Publish June I), leai
OE J if

F ull ae P*M T im*
Cat tg*. drama stuaehti. haul*
wives Taltphan* Salt*. No
e.pefienrt nuissarj Staff
.mmwj.aJai, Harba, Lighting
Inc Ml Cornwall Rd D ) t a t
★

41— House*

Larga 2 Bdrm Fwrrvihad
Apf Aduttftonfy |70Waak

L A R I M A R T 1 bdrm. air. kid*

^Child Care

n o t ic b o f p u b e ic

Unused lundt available
ArelicipalteJ amownl ol Fwiaral
Revenue
Stearin, montv lo bo received in
the coming

Partly hirnnhtd. adultft. ho pafft
si SO a mohfh. 1100 dapoftit IIS
Franch Avt 377 6117 or 474
44)7

E iv n in f; Herald

4-Persona Is

41—Houses

31— A p a rtm e n ts Furnishe s

Eichanga S Bedreom. IH ) Eim*City. Norm Carolina Moult |
lirip ia ctt. pecan Irttt, a
beauty MS 1 U W U
m
M AVl CASH
POB YOU* FARM
OB BUILOINO LOTS.
Sale* Cavparalia* lac U l (SOI
or U l-M ll.
Don't vsanltr* What n*v« youT
Need I ) Bdrm Hpm* prK&lt;«
and &gt;tr mi ntgoli*Bit H I tatI

An s

47 A—Mortgages Bought.
__________ A Sold
w t pay catn tor iti * im j"
m orig.jei P a, i*gg.
&gt;
Morlgag* Brakw TH n o t

56—MttctIUnm/s for Sxl#
Ballon Cam* Set ctai
table 4 4 chain. So n
Mail unit, u p . Rp
Moan U l. s a a*, an

ONE PHONE CALL SIAR
C L A S S IF IE D AO ON
resultful

end

NUMBER IS H I M U

�iscellaneous for S a k

51-A—Furniture

H&gt;— M is c e lla n e o u s lo r Sale

W ILSO N M A iE R F U R N IT U R E

S»r*«&gt; Combo Consent AM F M
F r\i't wood tihiih L 'he nrw rxtf
ertiog Silverware. o&gt;d m#%ttr
by Towle S r v X f for I 1100
Call 131 MU

Potto F urmfwrt G U u to p p e j
» « N f wtfh tour cfcoiri twivtf
po(K&gt; chair. Hvm m um gi-der
S74 M l ofttr %n

wwtnotronoi Pit - 10 p k m
t o r tM o n t natural fabric
ScotchQuordtd It so i ; i it t f
i «4 v*CK

evwing Mechine
Heavy duty. walrsut cob net
Complete
price 10) or
p e ym er.ti arranged Free
heme trial 32) a m

&gt;&lt;• 6»a *Ot.d rn .p l, t u l K . M
* »'r* ra ry. m.o&lt;« mrt '. h i .
D a p rm g u u m i w
*
quatyrrium IS g .l aquarium
ttt into ttrr.riw m . inclwdrt
p i .n it , g r . . . l , I 13M 1 and
cuttom built t l.n d
tiso
U r o i t inq on*. Oann, or
Darlfn* SSI 12.S ilong.ood)

V H K T IF 1
TH U E N ft \
5 ANPW CH

Washer repo G E deluie model
Sow tr ig S C I 11 . , m vnotl
*»»• Boi t i l t 10 « r I l f 1 } me
Aqtnl M t IM t

Wooden interior A eaferior
doon Double hung, casement
l curved glass bow * ^ t
Claw foot bathtubs, toilets,
basins, porch ratlings A
stairways Other antiques 0&lt;d
red warehouse Southt.de N
No 44 1101 W 1st Street I
Santord A t p m Friday, t i
p m Sat . a • p m Sun

54— C a m p in g E q u ip m e n t
Camp»ng&gt; Nearly nev* 10 ft a 14
ft f amily tent ond screen
hovtecombo Pa*r. heavy duty
o»r moltreties Gate/ boo*
trailer for U ti boot )2) O lU

C o t' &lt;nd Bi ond W M lr T v t .
couch. CtiO'ft m j t t r r u r t
\ff-nqs pcR'C ta b le t ond
bene**s *ew cor top carrier
tempi** both tub %*nk ond
tpttf P«u» o tot of m itt \moil
j*vt large end new .terns Ca%h
P w P flift

D e ll's A u c t io n C e n t e r
MW* 44 Wftt, Sanford

57 G u n s &amp; A m m o

13) U70
To r f c tl.lt . lo m m .r r&gt; a i or
R n trn '1 .1
t Ap
p r .it.it C M UtM t Auction
nisajo

75— R ecreational V e h ic le s

w e s t ln g h o u s t f ro s t free
refrigerator. 117} Fr.g.dare
refrigerator. ftlAS IS4 774)

. T T E R 5 T i O * T«0

■rand N r* , puth button control
hat prod* Originally Saif
ba i.n e t D R , II* monthly
•LSIJJIo

S3— T V R adio-S tereo
T E L E V IS IO N
RCA. I f television X L 100 Solid
State
Color
Variable
Warranty Pay fla t or SU
Monthly Financing Ne Down
Payment
• AKS 1104 N. Mills A y«. tIf 01)
OrtanPa» aee.sa*a

S O A -Ja w a lry
Ditmond Ring. L t d -n Sdli.irt
&gt;&gt;* A p p rin td . UOO Mutt
let! 1!!? C tll t V ttJ«

iV repo IP* ieniin Sold ortg
I 4f 3 7S i a l ft1S3 U or Ilf mo
Agent M U M * _________
Gone Irtw l I W Y . I t i l ' M IL L E R S
M lt Orlando Dr
Ph )}&gt; 0U &gt;

Classified Ads are the smallest
b*g news items you pill find

TV 's POE R E N T
Color A Black i whit# Free
delivery A pickup Jimmy t
T V Rental Phone Anytime
m 9770

I f 71 Singer Future Fully auto,
repossessed, used very short
time Original I5T3. at*. S K I or
U1 mo Agent 3)f I ) 14

3NE P H O N E CA LL STARTS A
C L A S S I F I E D A D ON ITS
R C S U L TF U L END
TH E
N U M B E R JS 373 2411

Carnar Willow 1 SSlh Sal Sun t
S Tooit. tir t t. lampt 0'lurr
mrdatt. hogtftio'd ’ f m t
C L A S S IF IE D AOS AR E FUN
AOS M E A D A OSE I h E m
O F T E N Y O U 'L L L IK E THE
R E S U LTS

fa Ford Granada « Cyl Air If f
Mo No money Down 701 S
French ) 2 ) 71)4

C .'p a r . Sal.
S .'u rd a y. I )
I0S P b C t. Or
Saturday end Sunday f 4 Baby
ileme. furniture. loU u4 miM.
143 Wildwood Dr Rambiewood
Subdivision
Yard S i»t - T o n . d s iU rg n i
clothing, tu rn . household
goods, misc 740) S Orange
Ave (off 2Sfh Sf &gt; Set f )
) family garage sale
Sat Boat, motor,
outboard motor,
lots ot misc 7410
Santord

f S F rl and
trader, sm
glassware,
Cedar A ve.

Yard Sait — Saturday. June
1 )th . f a m 4 p m Eatra nice
things 24th and Santord Ave

C b nt will tw vlca A C t. rttrlf,
tra a iK i. wM w raattn. mile
caii m a m
* n q u a l it y o p e r a t io n
» » r » . . p p»l.&lt;n O ti.fw .y t,
W a .n t n » .i 321 iw n

m

Carport Sale crocheted Barb*
Doll Clothes teapot set end
clothes 7Stf S Senford A »r
Set t S. Sun 1 S

law nm ow er

1 Slai

i g Y . r d S a l.
G ia itw a r.
lu rn ituc. b o c .i, n m n i l and
emu Thurydav and Friday
t i t W l« l SI

NO M ONEY DOWN Payments
»7S month Monff Carlo. PS
PB Aulo. AN4 F M stereo air A
many other r stray )f t ftOO or
1)4 4eOS Dealer
iff I Olds Cuiiass
two door. |400
m 7 »)

78 M otorcycle

f)Lincoln 4 dr Town car E «tra
titan. fAvbOO miles new bat
ter i new tihautt. a*r shotSs.
tracer hitch |UfS 371 Oaff

C m &gt; ' rd »d\ y r r v . Ih .tvy2 n6 I
selling community every dev

Poodle Peps AKC Show Quality
Small min.ature Black Male
lacrtfKt ftfs Shots, ijif a a i

tig 3 family Yard Sale Elec
Supplies. Toots. Clothes. Elec
Guitars Amp . etc F r i . Sat
Sun f S. 177) Randolph

S O U TH ER N
P .b e r g la ts
Products specialist m boat A
corvette repairs ♦ all other
types of fiberglass work
lowest prices in Central
Fiorxfa ♦ guaranteed work
Estimates on the spot, that will
not change when the (Ob is
finished
Call at )7 ) 1I3S
or )27 41fl Santord. anytime
tor on appointment "Usually
24 hr service "

BiWit IlltS i u 19)6
BUY JUNK CARS A f RUCKS
From |10 to ISO or more
Call 777 1474 177 4A40

65— Pets S upplies

Appliance. Furniture, Clothing
Garage sale. Sat and Sun only
14 Ilf W Crystal. Dr
Garage Saia
Sal and Sun
Trundle Bed frame, stereo
stand, misc . adult, maternity
and childrens clothes Many
other items a ll Beth Dr .
Ravenna Park

itf i Chevy P'Cb Up Auiomeitc.
Smell V# Runv good
**PWfs

77— Ju n k Cars R e m o v e d

79-Trucfcs &amp; T railer*
64- H o r s ts
USE &gt; OUR HORSE SENSE
Complete coupon from Horse
Country or Horse A Pony tor
Vk o*t per bag on all Vitality
(FOdUCtS
Otter good June If f l
W .lcaSaltS-Hwy 44 W 4 Mi
w o il 4 Santerd 222 l i f t

68— W a n te d to B u y

Dumpfrucks HO' tf7S Dodge a
vArdt swb tlfigtf |||| g«\
S*2 transmission )4 OOP lbs.
gross choice ot to IS 77ft eac •
Daytona Auto Auct»on
Mwy t i Daytona Beach
f04 7SS l ) H

, *bAV tb N A A U TO A U C TIO N
J«* y f J. 1 mile west of Speed
way. Daytona Beach, will hole
a pubi*c A U TO A U CTIO N
every Wrdnesday at I p m If f
the only one in Florida You set
ire reserved price Call fOaf
2i* l 2 n tor further .w U .lt

TRANSMISSION SERVICE
• Adiwii Bands A Linkage
• (hang# Fluid. Filter A Gasket
• Chech Operehea A Cert*tie*

JIM LASH'S

Antiques
Diam onds
Pemtings Oriental Rugs
Bridges Antiques
37)

BLUE BOOK SERVICE CENTER
1114 Hwy If f) Between Sanlerd A Longweed Phone 1)11741

Atum*num. cans, copper, lead
brass. Silver, gold Weekdays
1 4 )0 . Sal «1 KoKoMo Toot
CO f l l W 1st St 37) 1100

Ironworks
Window Guard*. Door Guard*.
SJtdinq G ia tt Door tfKlmurat.
P a lls .n d P«ol n llln q * .
F m i v Gait*. F i r . E »(a »«L
U N I tta ir v O ris a m rr.i irgn
Furrulur*. Etc C .m a m aur
a * p H r. tool E tillsriqM hart
M Santord* Ability Ironware*.
S U M

r a d d l. Itobln.on "PlunstiRq
It.p a ir* , la u ca tt. w
C
lp f .n k J .il 32} *110, 2330/0*.
FO N S E C A P L U M B IN G
Can
Itrucllon. R .p r rt E i n i f j w
CY U ' ItnndnJ. In* 33) M il

IN A QUIET ATMOSPHERE

R IG H T

Prtnuro ClMning'

C y p r v n M u lc h

Landioping
Aluminum Siding A
Screen Rooms

sale

Spcc«al A va ilab le nowhen
bu* Western Auto Santord

55— B oats &amp; A cce s s o rie s

To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993
Concrvtv Wbrk

62—Lawn Garden

Garage Sale Friday
and Saturday t 4
)0a Tam m y Dr

AVlD LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

i

S O U TH ER N
F ib e r g la t i
Products specialist .n boot A
corvette repairs • an oth#»
types of t bergioss work
lowest prices it» Control
El • guar work Estates on
the spot that will not change
when icb is finished Call 12J
ID S or )77 0111 Sanford
anytime for an appom ment
Usually J* hr service '•

1171 Dodge TravCOCamper
S'ffpv 4 Loaded w e«tra%
n t oaf) or ) 2) a 4a«

6 M T IN A . N 1 5 K T N L V ^ ’
U M U I* .

CONSULT OUR

Air Conditioning

8 0 -A u t o s (o r Sale

t o . oon, but tnr t w in . t r. m
in* back yard &gt;tn .? Son it with
a want ad Can 122 Sail

ASSOCIATIS. IN C. RCFLTOBS*
17Offices Throughout
Central Florida

U I trd Otngff u f
I Owner 11tOO

* A u c t io n S a le ★

61 - B u i l d u x j f A i t e n a l s
'•cling
StrauSbourg
by Gorham l ^ v i c t tor I Like
new with boa I TOO m 1454

Searv Renmore Classic Propane
Gas Range Upper end Lower
Broker Self Oean.ng Oven
Eicetient Condition. 177 3fiS

I n M t i * . M . r y bird
IN n a i f TWOOO V ILLAGE

TV— Tru c k s T r a ile r s

F r i d a y N it* 7 P . M .

L m m o r . part*. ttfv ic t ut«d
w a tn m
m oonEt
* p p ti
ANC ES JJJO tf.

M ICROW AVE

m itto

7J A ucllo ns

J

52— A p p lia n c e s
Miracle Concrete Co
» » Elm A»e
H

Evening H t r t ld . S anford. F I

55—Boats &amp; A ccessories

I L L JP IA 5 M M Y Y U M YA* AFTER
M A JC R . 1 U
a t o m i c u r n c N k y c u m a k e t k e ) c v a s w t a &lt;j e t m y
OS t f l K C H IN ' / f u u O F TH E &lt; 5 F E E 0 H R EAPY.' O R
A U D I T * L IK E 'j P A M P A S MOO. \ MAC/ &amp; € I 5 H 0 U L P
K iR t iw K : o j p T - ; i l l o c T r o o ) i w e *
T h i n K f t t W T N E ) O N NATIONAL &lt; ONE F N S H TE R TM R E W
w o u a H Ta a n d &lt; t e l e v is io n :
a r u b b e r c h ic k e n
A L L IS K A R M A ' i - H E H H EH ! J A T H I S C T O P N E N T '

Won't stvrtt S .I.I 2 W E ,
A R M Y N A V Y SURPLUS
SIS S A nW rdA .t
S JJ!

LAKE MARY

with Major Hoopla

OUR BOARDINGHOUSE

Spring Y .r d Cla.n Up Mawmq.
twdt mulctiad. U r J b pruning,
waadmg. batK ytrd c ir t
M onthly r t t . t
Call tar
ttt John M t t o p Am Pm

Moo-it Hornet. Houses. Roofs.
Trucks. Tra .ie r. Etc Portable
Unit Harold Ranhm 17) 77SS

^ " T H E BEST DEALS YOU EVER SAW i

Rgmodellng
C a m p l.l* Ham * R a p a l r t . i
R .m o d.ling. Painting, roam
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no
n fll1nng
n
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Boarding A Grooming

Home Improvtmant

A n im .i M *,«n taaramg .nd
Gy arm in g K pn ntii Shady,
•rwuiatad. K r i ll ', f t proat.
mawr. out* 4 . run*. ANP AC
cagti. W . n i p your p«ti 323

Writ* W*| ft poling a^J PaJn
ting G w v .n t a M w n
t in
E tlim a ttt Pit 3&gt;laTI3

M iniU-Lock

am
3npwA.ll KwvL.lt prtud It an
nou&gt;Kt tnt addition at Larry t
Patty, tdrmarty with Animal
H a u n t 34 Hour C*r* Full
iauvN* 3*1 3212

Sandblasting

Nursing Canter

Brush Cutting
CUSTOM WORK
■a ttaR a bla
Rata*
F t* .
Cttirnatq Can Earty a m or
r » a &gt;13E3M OF (3031 3M 13*4

Sawing Machina

Q U A L IT Y A T A FAIR PRICE I
Gan R r p jir t 1 Im prm IT yr*.
locally San la. D i m 131 * » «

StruK* any n u n or m*d*t
M wmg m athm a m your hgma
By la d a rv trainad pwtdrvwl
Frag pu*up 4 dal m t l 3 l

Tax 4 Accounting
S a rv lm
Gr

Pul matt and ind i.id u.lt.
E m a b a th A GnndiaC P A
m fits

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P A IN T IN G
intarwr a it .n a r IS % diWaunl
an com plata in ia n tr a.
rompiata a iia rw r tabs. Faa
trta atiimaT* call 323 ItlS.

r a il Ability Ironwork*
lar R . W w A Door Cwwtfl
F r w i U 323 2*00

Interior Oacorating

Includat Lita mtur
12*1 APR
Total Paymantt
im i n
F mane a Char ga*
K
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lha wtathar * ptrtact lor a
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tat*
tall
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G W A L T N E Y j E w E l ER
30*S P a r .A .a

m t mo

e

t

— e

�1JA—Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI

Friday, June II. Itlt

Suspect May Sue

Doctors Wash Least, Siudy Shows

Another Missing Atlanta Youth
AT1ANTA (L'Pli — Atlanta police,
keeping close watch on a 23-&gt;ear-old
photographer after he was questioned
about the slayings of 2* young blacks,
today Issued a general alarm for yet
another missing black youth
Willie James Walker, 18, was
reported missing from his y.uthwesl
A tlanta home Thursday by his
grandmother. He had no history of
being a runaway, police said. His
name has been turned over to the
special police task force investigating
the slayings
Meanwhile, attorney* he Wayne
Williams, the man questioned for 12
hours last week by the Kill and police,
sought a a federal injunction to stop

"prejudicial publicity."
Attorneys Jim White and Mary
Welcome said Thursday tfiat US.
District Judge Marvin Shoob had
scheduled a hearing on their request
for 9:30 a m Monday
White said the Injunction request
names 50 police officials and news
organizations, Including United Press
International. He said it seeks to stop
"c e rta in types of p reju d icial
jsAiiCily.” lie would nut elaborate.
Williams has been questioned twice
in comedian with the 2* slayings —
once in the predawn hours of May 22
near a Chattahoochee Fiver bridge
and again for 12 hours at FBI
heailquarters beginning the afternoon

of June 3.
The free-lance photographer was
stopped near the bridge May 22 when
officers on a stakeout heard a loud
splash In the water. Two days later,
the body of Nathaniel Cater, 27, was
found in the river near the bridge.
Since the interrogation at FBI
headquarters, police and dozens of
reporters have staked out the nor­
thwest Atlanta home where Williams
lives with his parents.
A highly-placed source Thursday
told UPI that fibers taken from
Williams' home la st week were
matching up with those found on the
bodies of several victims, confirming
earlier reports Be said authorities

are "doing a whole lot" to gather
more evidence.
"It would be good evidence li you
had something else,” said the source,
who works with the city's in­
vestigative team and asked that his
name not be used.
Fulton County District Attorney
Lewis Slaton, meanwhile, confirmed
investigators are studying the
Chattahoochee River's temperature
and flow characteristics near the
bridge where
W illiams
was
questioned May 22.
They are trying to determine how
long it might lake a body to sink to the
river bottom and then rise to the
surface as it decomposed.

BOSTON (UPI) — Patients in intensive
care units risk contracting new diseases
because hospital personnel often fail to
wash their hands researcher* said lortav
"We found that, on the average, hospital
personnel washed their hands after contact
with patients less than half the time."
wrote Dr Blchard K Albert in the New
England Journal of Medicine. "Physicians
were among the worst offenders "
Patients in Intensive care units are
particularly susceptible to infections
transmitted by hand because of the
frequent use of catheters, wires, tubes and
other "Invasive" procedures, wrote Albert,
head of the Intensive care unit at the
University of Washington Veterans
Administration Medical Center in Seattle.
He said such infections are common
They could come from hands carrying an
Infection or from another patient.
"You might even liken it to seatbelts." he
said. "It's very difficult to say after an

Twins, 16, Shoot Selves
In Baffling Dual Suicide
COLUMBIA, S C &lt;UP! i - Elliott and Lewis
Bow land, 16-yearold “all-American" twin
sons of a well-to-do family, showed up at their
sununer jobs as usual with no Indication
anything was wrong on the day they chose to
die.
"They came to work Tuesday nnd acted
pretty normal —Just the same as they always
did." said a co-worker at Burwell Manning
Farm.
But when they got home from work the twins
killed themselves in a baffling simultaneous
suicide.
Tlie sons of Columbia gynecologist Dr.
Thomas Rowland were found dead In a
bedroom of their parents’ house in the Heathwood section of the city, said coroner Frank E.
Ilarron III.
He said the twins wtre each shut once in the
head.
Elliott Rowland shot himself with a 30 Ofi-

accident. If that person had been wearing a
seatbelt, would that Injury have been
prevented. And yet how many people don't
wear seatbelts1"

Albert said he doesn't believe physicians
are consciously Ignoring the need for hand
washing — they probably just don't realize
it is important even after contact with a
patient where infection isn't obvious.
Infections contracted in hospitals are a
common problem caused by all kinds of
bacteria, said Albert and a research
assistant, Frances Condie. These Infections
can be fatal
The Centers foe Disease Control in
A tlanta and the American Hospital
A&amp;sociatlo'i have said hand washing is the
single most important step in preventing
hospital infections, the study reported
Albert and Ms. Condie secretly watched
hand-washing habits at an unidentified
university-affiliated teaching hospital and
a private hospital.

DREDGING
CONTINUES

raliber rtfle and Ms twin used a .357 magnum
pistol, Ramm said.

D red g in g in l.a k r l.ix h
l-ow in southw est S a n ­
ford by o w n er Jo h n
D ickey is e x p e c te d (o
co n tin u e fo r Ih r n e x t
y e a r , acco rd in g to th e
S e m in o le
C o u n ty
B uilding D e p a rtm e n t.
A build in g official sa id
D ic k e y 's county p e r ­
m it fo r the o p rr a tio n
w ill p e rm it re s to ra tio n
of th e lake by re m o v ­
ing se ttle d m a tte r .

"The only explanation I can think of is
depression," the coroner said. '"Why' Is
another question. They had a lot going for
them. Being as close as these boys were,
evidently they discussed (heir depression and
decided uii ll:e same thing."
The bodies were discovered by the boys'
mother after she heard the gunshots around
5:45 p m.. saul l.l. John Keefe of the Columbia
Police Department.
They left no note, Barron said.
"Our investigation Isn't complete yet, but
we can say that each of them did shoot himself
almost simultaneously," Barron said. "I've
seen a lot of terrible things, but this is the
worst tragedy I've ever seen happen to a
family."

High Court Will

E L E C T R O fy g

Untangle Iran Claims
WASHINGTON iL'Pli — The Supreme Court has agreed to
untangle the legal confusion over the financial deal Dial freed
the 52 American hostages in Iran
The Justices announced Thursday tticy would immediately
review presidential orders suspending American claims
against Iranian assets and authorizing a funds transfer out of
the country.
In a brief order, the Justices suid they would hear arguments

RENTAL &amp; SALES CO.
N o . 7 L a k e v ie w

TwoUS appeals courts have upheld Carter's power to enter
Into the financial arrangements with Iran But other lower
courts have ruled the agreements unconstitutional, including a
New York federal Judge who issued a ruling Thursday

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Duffy ruled specifically on a case brought by the Marschalk
l o . a New York-hosed advertising company that promoted
the interests of Iran Airlines. The firm argued in part that the
president s action constituted a taking of private property
without Just compensation.
The high court w111 resolve a case brought by Dumes and
Moore, a I o s Angeles engineering and consulting firm, which
is seeking to defend a |3.7 million award against Iran that it
won in lower courts for consulting tt did for Iran * Atomic
Energy Organiratmn

T

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U S District Judge Kevin T Duffy said Carter had no
authority under the Constitution or live International
Emergency Economic Puwers ActTiPiuspend damage claims
against Iran.

P O

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'

S a n f o r d , F lo rid a 32771

In tlie case June 14, Only Justice William Itehnqukst opposed
the court's action but he did not explain why. ,
The action rmphasues the Uuporlance of the case since the
court has not Liken up anything this late in its trnii since July
1974, when It heard arguments involving President Richard
Nison's release nf the Watergate tape*.
The US. and Iranian gmernmrnLs asked the high court to
consider the case quickly in order to have a decision by the
July 19 deadline for iransfrrring Iranian assets out of the
United States.
At stake are hundreds ol cases in which American com­
panies are seeking torecover money owed by Iran or lost when
the revolutionary government uf Ayatollah Huliollah Khomeini
came into power.
Under agreements signed by President Jimmy t arter Just
before he left office, claims against Iranian ussets frozen after
the hostages were seized were suspended. The accords provide
for settlement of all (Minis by an international tribunal.
low er courts liave split over whether Carter had the
authority to take such action.

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Comploto Woek's TV Listings
Sanford. Florida — Friday. Juno II, H i t

t'lownology grafts pose for a class portrait just before graduation exercises. AM 41 who registered

C lo w ning
A r o u n d

I v r r n a D e J a r l a l s , au to
s m i l e s a t th e c a m e r a a t g r a d u a t i o n .

By SYBIL MITCHELL GANDY
llrra ld Stall Writer
Make ’em laugh, someone said. So they learned liow to
be clowns.
They cam e from all walks of life, nurses, computer
technicians, teachers, students, housewives, retirees, and
salesmen. The only thing many of them had in common
was the desire to take up "clownology.” They are the 44
recent graduates of Central Florida’s Fun World Alley, a
clown school located In Sanford.
The area chapter of Clowns of America (COA) sponsors
this zany school of loveable mayhem and laughable tricks.
Dedicated to “ preserving and perpetuating the American
clown, the national, non-profit organization takes or­
dinary people of all ages and tom s them Into clowning
perform ers In a m a tte r of 6 weeks. E ver w onder where all
of those am using painted-up Jugglers come from who add
color and comedy to Christmas parades and kiddie parties
y ear after year? Many are OOA graduates.
I l l and M artin Sul ton, a husband and wife clown team,
from O rlando, completed the course with flying colors.
See CLOWNING, P a g e t
h « i w r i w u i ay T t m v i m m i

�) —Evsnlng H traId, tanfoed, FI.______Frldoy, Ju tu n , I tll

... Clowning Around
I Continued (ram P age 1)
She’* "M elody" ami Ills name la 1'Happy."

“ We’ve alw ays Just loved to a c t silly and n u k e people
laugh so we decided to register tor the class," Melody
sold.
Happy Is an electronics technician at McDonnell
Douglas who now goes around shopping centers and parks
with Melody.
“ And we just have a ball. In the course we were shown
basic routines in magic and Juggling and things like that,"
Melody said.
"B ut we had to devise our own individual routine,
le a rn in g all the little secret! of m agic w as our favorite
p a rt," she adds.
Donna Plain, a theatre education student a t Valencia
Community College, finished this clownology session with
a little m ore confidence in her perform ing ability
"W hen I told my friends I was taking the course, they
thought I w as craxy. But it ready helps you get over your
shyness," she said. Donna will be graduating from college
nest week.
"I know It’s going to help me when 1 go out for auditions,
when they ask far any other talents, I can use clowning."
"B esides," she added, "I’m really looking forward to the
parades and things we're going to do."
lin d a Swartz, a speech and d ram a teac h er at Lyman
High School always did have an interest In the a rt of
clowning, but there never seem ed to be nny Ume (or
pursuing it, she said.
“ When 1 was told the course w as being offered locally, I
thought, ‘h ere’s my big chance'.
“ As a theater and drama teacher, I found that make-up
application w as one of the most interesting aspects of
clowning. It takes a lot of time and it's very different from
theatrical make-up,” she said.
“ Learning the various routines w as fun too. I’m looking
forw ard to the charity shows and p arades th at are coming
up," site said.
Since she took the course, some of h e r students have
expressed their Intent to enter the clownology class when
Fun World Alley offers it again in the fall.
According to Foreman H eard, COA area president,
clownology classes run every lew months with about SO
student! each session.
"T here's really nothing to it. We teach people how to put
on make-up, the a rt of costuming, tricks in juggling, and a
variety c( basic antics that have historically been a part of
clowning," he said.
These sessions can serve as refresh er courses for COA
m em bers or beginning Instructions for anyone who wants
to take up clowning as a hobby.
Many of the activities and engagem ents take place on
the weekends since mosl of our m em bers work In full-time

M axine McCall, at
right, character lies a
demure charmer call­
ed Stringbean. Com­
plete with flower-stud­
ded umbirlla and Inchlong eyelashes, Htringbean gives a coy ex­
pression for all her ad­
m irer* .
Although
clownology
students
are Instructed in char­
acter creation us a
general principle, each
Individual clown uses
tils or her own Imagin­
ation In developing the
nature of the character
they portray.

professions," H eard said. "We encourage'm em bers to
work hardest on those things they are mast Interested In
during the course of instruction.
"Som e are b etter at mime or juggling than they are at
creating anim al figures out of ballons.”
Audiences are especially delighted with m agic stunts
and skillful mime. But faces and costume m ay be used to
capture a sim ilar effect of am usem ent, he said.
But ju st like anything else, you can ’t expect to m aster
the clowning a r t right away. Alter the 8 weeks of basic
skills training, he explained, the process Is constantly
Improved upon with each make-up application and antics
session.
Fainting a clown (ace can Lake Itout a, depending on the
desired effect, he said.
Three basic make-up designs are used in the modem
American a rt: the white face, the auguite face, and the
tram p face.
A while face uses the solid white make-up layer with red
and blue or red and black features painted in. The auguste
face is red with white features painted in.
And the ever-popular tram p face Is the hobo make-up
which can Involve a variety of differing techniques In
d e sig n

The « recent graduates of the COA school were given
diplomas in a delightfully amusing exercise In the Sears
Activity Room at the Altamonte Mall.
The May 30lh celebration took on quite a different air
from other graduation ceremonies. Putting aside the
mom entrsunes* and dignity usually attributed to such
occasions, the graduates tilled the open space In the Sears
store n ear the escalators.
As P resident Heard called each nam e, a figure com­
plete In full clown make-up and costume rode up the
escalator and got his diploma, to the am usem ent of
countless shoppers who were passing through the store.
Many of them halted their spree altogether to watch the
fun.
At the conclusion of each class session, students are
Invited to Join the Clowns of America, H eard explained.
The organization frequently arran g es engagem ents for
clown school graduates who are m em bers.
The organization Is kept going for the most port by
yearly donations from its Individual mem bers, he said.
Fun World Alley meetings a re held the first and third
Monday evenings of each month at Ita 101 E . 7lh Street
headquarters In Sanford.
More Pictures, Page 12

Photos By Tom Vincent

Applying clown make-up requires skill, time
and many hours of practice as Scott Lang
(Sponge-O) demonstrates. The white lace is
created with layer upon layer of white ppwder
make-up which Isn’t quite as easy to apply as
It sounds. Each layer has to be given a chance
to set before the next layer is applied. A
smooth .'.ad flawless finish Is essential since
the wMIa background will be the base for
painting on the additional color designs.
Special care is always taken about the mouth
and eyes when applying the different sub­
stances. Working with tiny brushes makes the
Job a cinch, giving the fingers more control In
stroking to prqvide the desired effects.

�EwrUno H tf ild , Sanford. FI.

FrM i|t, Jw w II, IW1—3

She'd Like A Few M o re Like 'Cousin B ette '
M argaret Tyxack hopes
that no one will misun­
derstand her when she says
sh e’s " p la y e d too few
v O ln t e "

Margaret Tyxack
as Cousin Bette.

SH ELLEY H ACK
P LA Y S REPORTER

T h ese poem s a re by
Seminole County stodeats
kindergarten through 12th
grade. They resulted from
the Florida Poetry la the
Schools program taught by
poet Bob Wlaboif of Oviedo
an d E v e ly a M a a ti of
D eL aad.
pupils
a re
provided with a general
them e, but are not told
wtutf they should write.

" It's not that 1 have a
great desire to play bad­
dies,” she says, "because I
do love playing good people.
But I w«[M like a few. mere
parts like ‘Cousin Bette.' "
No wonder. She performed
beautifully a s Cousin Bette,
th a t
re v e n g e - o b s e s s e d
sp in ste r,
in
the
dram atisation of B abac's
novel by the sam e nam e, to
be
re b r o a d c a s t
on
"M a ste rp ie c e
T h e a te r's
Festival of F av o rites," Sun­
day an PBS. (Local times
may vary; check listing* )
Critics w ere well enough
pleased: "S he shoots out
sparks of perverse passion
so strongly you can almost
feel them on your skin," said
one ertlie. ' T ow ering ly able
... splendid ... the show is

S h e lle y

H ack

crowned by the title per­
formance," another said.
"P m b etter known for
playing goodies than b ad ­
dies," reflects Ms. Tyxack,
who n o n th e le ss won an
Em m y n o m in a tio n
for
Cousin Bette, whom she
describes a s "a n outrageous
villain... w hat she w ants, she
gets."
What Bette w ants — and
gets — ia the annihilation of
her w e a lth y , a v a ric io u s
family, whose c a m a l and
greedy appetites she plays
upon to achieve revenge.

F irs t C h u rc h ills "
Winifred DarUe in
Forsyte S aga."

and
"The

Has th e ev er played a
co m p arab le v illa in ? Ms.
Tyxack, trying to answ er the
question, ticks off b ar most
recent roles — the adm irable
P au lin a in "A W in te r’*
Tale,” the London w artim e
school tead&lt;er she portrayed

in a TV play in B ritain, “The
Reason of T hings," with Alec
MrCowen; the middle-aged
sticky-fingered tedy in a
BBC te le n U v "A N asty
Habit," who steals out of
compulsion, not from lack of
honesty. Nothing very evil
about any of them .

1 must have played som e
baddies, but
I
c a n ’t
re m e m b e r,"
»ay*
M*
Tyxack, regretfully. Then,
triumphantly, she com es up
with Queen M argaret in
"Richard in."
But don't m isunderstand.
M anure! Tyxack still love*

“I suppose, over the years,

When la s t
seen
on
"M asterpiece T h e a te r," Ms,
Tyxack was Antonia, mother
of Claudius, a very good
apple in th e ro tte n " I ,
Claudius" b arre l. She was
also Queen Anne In "The

(rig h t) s ta r s

as

a

te l e v i s i o n

reporter on the trail or a manaical driver who
's pushing cars off the road, and Dinah Shore
stars as one of his intended victims, in the
motion picture-for-televislon "Death Car on
the Freeway," to be rebroadcast Saturday,
0:00 11:00 PM. ET) on CBS.
This is a new world:
Everything is giant
Especially roses
The roses Just started to
live in houses
People w ent outside to live
in the ground
The m o th e r-g ia n t roses
w ater the people to grow
And stay healthy
The roses turn into rosy
stars
The rose fam ilies throw
them into the air
Giant rosy sta rs
In the drug stores and gro­
cery stores
The rose clerks m ade rosy
carts
and baskets
nose fam ilies hug and kiss
the carta
Beth Yanks
Casselberry Elem entary

Power of F e a r
The airplane feeling of
enormous power
like being P resid en t of the
world or
a g reat so rcerer who has
the universe
Power
A giant b ird of prey
takes off
and swoops down
on me
Todd Dunn
Jackson H eights
School

Middle

My h a n d lo o k s lik e a
sunrise
with five beam s of light
coming out of it
Susanna Gordon
Casselberry
E lem entary

D O C U M E N T A R Y O N DEFENSE

CBS Reports: "The Defense of the United States" is an unprecedented
five-part documentary series examining the most Important issue facing the United States — survival in the nuclear age. The series will be
broadcast on five consecutive nights, Sunday through Thursday, 10-11
p.m. ET. Center, Correspondent Dan Rather (right) anchor of the series,
interviews Secretary of Defense Casper Weinberger; at top, the F-A 18,
on its way to becoming the most expensive war plane ever built; and at
bottom, how a nuclear explosion might look over an American city.

�4—Evening Here Id, Sanford, FI.

Ftid.y, Juno U . 1*St

Athletic
Tests
A lhlrllr frits

R unning through th e
s tre e ts ol New Y ork,
kayaking down the U ttle
Tennessee River ami flying a
b alloon over the Rocky
M ountains,
th re e
ad­
venturers cover 5,000 miles
from one end of America to
the other In search of Die
"A m erican Odyssey."
The exploits of Melody
Mayer, a schoolteacher from
Gig Harbor, Wash., Leon
Henderson, a farm er from
Kugene, Ore. and Todd Gay
of Olympia, Wush. will be the
focus of the program, airing
Wednesday on PBS. (l/xral
tim e s may v a ry ; ch eck
listings.)

Bv I M M H M MARVIN
42Un*i oi com Tt Aclrtjy*. Bjif'
bit# —■
43 Ctl'b1# luber

A CROSS

i TV vfrf*#*

Bleier
Broadcasts

16 SlOf.Vj*
txui**

30 PfTPr »o Svnl-

.Kto* 0*n — 47 Com£fl«4n
9 Pub drvh
D-lsd —
50 Eil Asn#t &gt;\
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21 QtQ and Rot)

3® Motbci

13 — Turner

23 Ltnrulec)

f I tfTHftqo —
5 UteCOflUC

14 Hojd (l*p

"W ultrr Cronkite's Universe.’' the award*
winning ( IIS News science m uguiinr series,
returns to the CHS K p.ni. Sunday. Anchored
by CHS News Special Correspondent W alter
Cronkite, the serirs will assume its regular
day untl lim e period, Tuesdays (K;0O-K:.10
p.nt., KT&gt; beginning Tuesday, June 23 and
, continuing throughout the summer.

CRO N KITES
UNIVERSE

35 Movie tribe
Genii —

46 Cameroon*

lMb#

—

n ir lrr broadcast*
15 Sl«*te»Y Spun
Pittsburgh football fans
rJ l tlatvOt
w on't be seeing S te e lc r 17 — V‘qoo .1
running back Rocky Bleier *1® Snr.tk f
churning for extra yardage 19 DDE
20
—
anymore, but they will be 22 C o m p j 1
able to turn into the 12-year 23 /odoc i
v e te r a n 's evening sp o rt- 24 Tom —
iBoUdn
scast.
Bleier has signed a con­
21
4firm
tract with NBC Sports as an 31 Ev« 09H.«|
NFL commentator for llw
— Motiff Ik
1M1 season. He will also 32
— Squ.id
work a s a sportscaster for
33 Pmo .vI P«H«h
WIIC-TV, the NBC affiliate
in Pittsburgh. His prim ary 34 fl|ng| lion «
responsibilities will consist -1€ Concur
of sports anchorman duties 3? N r * High
Gwmdn
on th e daily evening
lab be 1
n e w sc a st and
" S p o rts M C o ilrg e rir
Week,” a 45-minute sports 39 Henry or
wrap-up show.

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lljltuni

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22 Brill —

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(jtfrfrr)

51

39

— W.lt
Cotumbo

40 W.nd ttfiru.

24 School U4MC© flKHIf
41 Part of
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53 —
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54 Ruiinio miiVf
12 European
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52 Coot foil

20 G*“fm an .»tb* 43 — Sbaril

55 DoiMiCo#*

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29 EkMiHr
30 lovofScof-

DOWN

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1 PlChJuCfi —
HuAfer
2 Furpi#
JE th c m il
4 Budding

44 l»#*jtt
45 Ag*m
40 p/iwf i qod-

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32 Dr.fik jkj cup 49 — Bui tom

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5 Actor Rot*'*!

6 5mrj**r At.t^a

7 And
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9 Due h genuf

10 Claude Akin*
role

Every Wednesday

3 Piece Individual

Chicken Dinner
COLD
DRINK

INCLUDES CHOICE OF ANY 2

★ Glasses Duplicated ★
* Your Doctor'! Prescription Filled ★
_★ Eye Examination Arronged A
★ Free Adjustments and Repairs *

•French F rits Washed Potatoes
• ColeSlaw »B aked Beans
And Hot Roll
Regular &gt;1.11

S A N FO R D

WE USE ONLY
T O P Q U A L ITY CHICKEN

All Foods Cooked hi
Pure Peanut Oil

2544 FRENCH AVE.
(ACROSS FROM SAMBO'S)

Doubles and Mini Subs Available
OMNI M A M M tej*

m m IW»Ut.-UA.M
O AT IN 00 T A N I OUT

*•&gt;..» it»

P H O N E A H E A D FO R F A S T P IC K U P

3 2 3 -8 0 8 0
Mon. Thru Fri.
t a.m.-S p.m.

Saturday
t A.M.-1 P.M.

(c C

S o u th e rn
HMD CHICKIN

322-9442
2100 S. French Ave
H w y .1 7 .fi. Sanford

Al Constantine-Owner

�I

Evantng

Sanford, FL

Frklgy, Jiin* 1», IN I— I

TELEVISION
J u n e 12 thru 18
C «b f« Ch

C « M « Ch.

CDO
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(A S C I Orlande
I C I I I Orlando
(N SC1 D a,Iona Batch
Orlande

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Of lxnd«

(Q) (35)
® &gt; ( 17)
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Orland* Public
Braadcatllng i y t la m

Id additlan 1* lb* channala luted, cabia via Ian tu b tc rlb a rt may tuna In t* indapandant channel 44.
i t . P e ta n b u r* . by tuning t* thannal 1; tuning 1* channel 11, which ca rrltt ipartt and tb* C h rlitla n
B ro a d tittln g Natvmrb (C E*H

Specials O f The W eek
SATURDAY
tfn m o o N

X) O
C M R EPO R TS "Th e
Dalan** Of The Untied Slate*"

1:30
(D O

MONDAY

M M . AMERICA PAG EAN T
EVENING

AFTERNOON

8-00

too

(X) O U M l u a c VantrdoqMal
Chrti Kirby end U K i m Gdbart
Introduce i#v*ral « * » i magic

f f l J I O ) MISTER ROGERS TA LKS
PARENTS ABOUT CO M P ET VW ITH PA
DON
EVTMNO

ad*

9:00
7:30

i l l (3 S ) EDWARD T1IS W HO

O
Q1 YOUNG PEOPLE'S SPE­
CIAL, "The Fonermana Son"

SUNDAY
AFTERNOON

( £ O PARADISE LOST

2:00

9:00
tE

S t f ) CANNONBALL C M I U A
bMund ,h»*c*n*a loo* la taken al
the making ol "TIM Cannonball
FVm" aiming Port Reynold*. Far*
rah f awcatl and Dam 0*1 me*
EVENMO

(10)

THE BAYOU LEGCNO

act opart laat the atory id a young
idaaAtl who M In lova with a apml.

10:00
X) O
CSS R EPO R TS
The
Oaten** O l Tha United Stale* In a
five-part aariaa. Dan Rathar. Waltar
Cronfca* and other corraagondania
taarrun* the United State*' chanca*
ol datanaa and aurvtral In tha event
ol a nuclear aar (Part 7)

700
(7 ) o m o m t h e n e x t g c n c r ATTON8 WE Palmar a daughter
Garth* become* tfie Ural of Kunla
lunta'a daacandant* it) go lo corlaga. *a*r* ah* maata the young
and ambrlm* Bamon Malay IParl 3|

10:30

imo

SB (1 0 ) A RAINY DAY Mai latte
Hartley atara aa an unhappy TV alar
aho lata* a Goa* loo* at her peat

B (1 0 ) TO G ETH ER .. W ITH LEO
BUBCAOUA

8:00

Aral In kva yaari. -tin hat mothar
(Coam wacoi)

0 (1 0 ) PMMAL UA H Bant* For
Dommanc*' What ma*aa aoma

DmHnm Of IhB United StfttM b&gt; •
m h m , D*n R «ih«r. Walter

TUESDAY

10:00

8:00
(J-) O LOVEY: A CIRCLE OF CHtLDREN. PA RT TW O
O l (1 0 ) THE WORLD OP THE BEA­
VER

Ctonktt* and crtThar nrrM pond*nti
• ■•mimv tfm Umtad StsiM ’ thane**
of d*f«n*« and ftunHva! Id It* •vwit
of ■ nuefoar war (Pari 4)
0 (1 0 ) VARMTTONS FROM V * N MA

9:00

THURSDAY

1 OP O P R TLAN D M ONT OP
(IT AR8 AMO FUTURES TARE Moat
Gan* KaPy i* »oin*d by Ohm Campbed. Tarty* Tucker. Ban Varaan.
Mickey Otdey and atghl aapbtng
young parlor m arl tor a night oI
country muatc
f B (1 0 ) WORLD'S LARGEST
EtOOOR COUNTRY MUSIC SHOW

OB (1 0 ) W O R LD O ATHERM O THE
F IN A L O A T
EVENING

10:00
X) O
CM
REPORTS "th a
Datanaa O l Tha Untied BUI**" In a
five part •*'«*. Dan Rather. Walter
Cron* Me and other corraagondanta
a ia rn ra the Unttad Slat**' chancaa
ot dalan** and Burvrval at Ih* r a i l
ol a nuctaar ear (Part 3)

WEDNESDAY

AFTERNOON

1:00

8:00
a
®
NATIO NAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL "Aleaka" tipm ta Aman
c a t laat Iton bat. all* undeveloped
and untamed
(1 ) O AMERICA'S AJM OR I M S
P A O E A N T High tchool MtUort
rnpraaantmg ih* SO alalaa compete
lot a int*. cr ow i and tendering)
money m the Jtih adman nl trvi
pageant lo b* t ilic a ll b a bom tha
Municipal Auddonuti In Mob**.
A la . Lorn* Graan* hoala

EVENMO

9:00

BOO

8 ) (1 0 ) BAXOBURG'E UNCOLN

( D (1 0 ) TO G E TH E R WTTH LEO
B U B C A O U A Speaking balor* an
auduno* kt Sacaamanlo. CaWorma.
Or Lao Buacagaa urge* Katanar* to
pay horn tha *me ganaraand toto Ih* loving iea*ty of

10:00
X)

O

CM

ACPOATS

Tha

10:00
®
O
C B S R EPORTS "Tha
Helena* O l Tha umtad Slataa" In a
Hva part aatiea. Dan Rathar. Wanat
Cronkit* and other cortaapondanti
aramtn* tha Unttad Slat**' chanca*
01 drtinaa and a n b i l in the erant
oI * nuclear ear (Pad t)

Sports On The Air
SATURDAY

5:00

S

8:30
O ( D 2-COUNTRY nStMNQ
® a
THE b a s e b a l l b u n c h
Hot I Johnny Bench
Ou**1
Sad char* Oh

7:30
a

(17) THE BASEBALL BUNCH

Moat Johnny Bench Ouaal Chet
lemon
AFTERNOON

GO LF Third round ctwataga ol Ih*
1 150.000 LPGA Champtonahtp |*v»
bom Pit Jack Mcklau* Oort Center
in King* Mend. Onto)
® o s n o t WORLD OP SPORTB
U B Grand Pita Uotoooa* Motorcycia
Cham plonahip
(lio n
Car labad. CaM L Ngl-agM* ol tha
Larry Hobnaa I leon Sputaa W BC
llaaiyeatghl chamgionahip hght. a
prenee ol the U 8 Open
( D (1 0 ) SOCCER MADE M GER ­
U

(17) W R U T U N O

1:00

IYENMG

B 3 ) W R EITLM Q

7:00
a
(1 7 ) BASEBALL Atlanta
Brava* al PMaMpM* PTuMaa

2:00
B

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baseball

-

AN

kJO

M S
B X ) BASEBALL Regional c m t ega ol LM Angola* Dodger* al
r-tUaburgh PaMa*. Ran*** City
Royata at Detroit T lg e t

O (17) T»ES WEEK M BASEBALL

3:30

a
( 1 7 ) BASEBALL Atlenlt
Brave* al rrvladalptva I

® O PROFESSIONAL BOW LERS
SPRING TOUR

11:30
O O S IW R E S T U N S

j-05

SUNDAY

4:00
X)

0

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WESTCHESTER

OOLP

4:3 0
(10) V C BRADEN'S TENNIS

FOR TH E FUTURE Playing Dou­
ble*" VIC Bradan damonttrala* tha
bay pomlt al tttatagy and movamam that make doubt** * r*U
advantura Q
ax (1 7 ) PUTT
GOLF

pun

Bravwa si PftfsMpfri Pmm—

11:00
B
(10) V K BRADENS TENNIS
FO R THE FUTURE
AFTERNOON

1:30
0 WREBTUNQ
( T 7 ) BASEBALL Allant*

8

TUESDAY

2:00

X) LFuA CnAieniOreortoP
B

(10) TENNN "faalar &gt;■ —

Junior Indoor Tournament"

Adam Kendall (Llnwood Boomer) regains his
sight and sees his wife, Mary (Melissa Sue
Anderson), for the first time in a special
rpibude of "LiUle House on the P rairie/' Part
11* airing Monday on NBC.

8:00

2:30

&lt;n

B
( I ) LPGA CHAMPaONSHiP
O O LP Final-round cover ega ol the
I 1 M 000 LPOA Chamgionahip

4.00
X) O
WESTCHESTER GOLF
CLASSIC Final-round coverage ol
IN* 1400.000 PGA T o m

Susan Swill and John lin k play members of a
New York family whose lives are touched by
the phenomenon of reincarnation in "Audrey
Rose,** lo air Sunday on NBC.

m m

(17 )

BASEBALL Atlanta

Brava* al Nara York Mala

2:00
&lt;D

(171

BASEBALL
B A S IE
Atlanta

Mala
Brava* al Naani York
T

WEDNESDAY

(bva

bom Ih* Waatchealar Country Club
InRyo. N V |

®o

5.00
AMEWCAN SPORTSMAN

7:30
OX ( 1 7 ) BASEBALL Uont.aaj
Eapoe dl Atlanta Brava*

Hank Wakama Jr hunt! lor edd
turkey in Alabama. Earl Hodman
maria the fungi* habitat ol tha
mountain gonda In Ruanda. Central
A b u * . Gregory Hantaan aurta

10:30
3X (1 7 ) MARL SOCCER AMnla
Chief* ve San Joae Earthquake*

0* Java

OX ( 1 7 ) BASEBALL Montreal
Eapoe at Allant* Brava*

2:35
5:30
0 (1 7 )

THURSDAY

7:30
0 ( 3 5 ) SPORTS AFIELD

MONDAY
EVENMO

5:30
® Q EABEBAL
eg* ol Cincinnati Rod* al Phdadaiphto Phddad. Chicago Whit# So* al
Kanaa* City RoyaN

7J0

OX ( 1 7 ) BASEBALL Mormaal
Eapo* al Atlanta Brava*
11:30
® O U.S. OPEN H-ghaghli ot the
Brat round ol play (bom Marlon God
C M In Ardmore, Pa I
1:30
( 1 7 ) BASEBALL Manlreel
Eapo* M Atlanta Brava*

ax

Charles Bronson Is a Russian agent and Lee
Itemlck works for the CIA in “Telefon/* a
suspense
thriller to air Wednesday
on ABC.
t S S E l # * * 0’B EWOB-S SWSVS BVP^WsW A * S«»
» Ri A« iMRlEll A W

�S—Evening Marald. Sanford, FI.

F riday, Juna II, III)

J u n e 12

F R ID A Y

Who# working m a powar plant
David ra tubyaclad to a maaaiva
sue Inc thocb that anabiaa him to
loiaaaa upcoming avanta |R)
7 0 BENSON A govgaoua a m
an
a mad about Banaon tnaa
lo a n tut laror whda tia la trying lo
run a cordarsnea tof mnwalatt,
pussla anu iai&gt;mi ,fi,
(I f (3 5 ) MOVIE
Papa t DaOcata
Comb non |C) | IM S ) Jackia (Raaaon. Giymt Jobna
A noman
bacomaa upaat wdh Hat hutband
ahaf ha buya a diugaiofa and a
circus
0 (1 0 ) W A 8 H M Q T 0 N W EEK IN
REVIEW
It
1 17 ) B A S E B A L L Atlanta
I PhAadarptua I

E V tN M Q

6:00
g iJ )&lt; S ;0 7 &gt; 0 N E W S
i ip (3 5 j AHOY O K T M IH
( I ) (1 0 ) VIC B R A D EN S TENNIS
FOB TH E FUTURE Playing Oouim
vie K h m h H i r a w i t a Ins
aay pomit of ahatagy and mo**i w l Thai man* Oi u U m * &gt;ni
adrsnlura I J
1* ( 17) FATH ER KNOWS BEST
630
a I I ) NBC NEWS
&gt; I t l CBS NEWS
7 ) O *B C NEWS
(II) ( M l CA R TED COUNTRY
t o t iG iC O G K IN C A JU H
1 X ( 17) T H A T GIRL
7 :0 0
0

II)

(41

new s

O

FU.

MAQAZINE 10*

world a tnggaal baaabaa and bat
lactory, * Louisiana acliool a t * .
Uodanla mayor m urwyvla. Jany
llaSar on Burrunaling houaa ptanli
Cap) Carrot on psanul butlat and
choking. Joan Embsry mlroducat a
gtraMa
f?) O JO K ER 'S WILD
8 6 (3 0 ) BARNEY MILLER
ED (1 0 ) M AC NEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
I t (1 7 ) ALL IN THE FAMILY
7 .3 0
O f E l T I C T A C OOUOM
1 H O M O . 000 PYRAMID
7 ) 0 f a m il y f e u o
i1f [3 5 IR M O O A
0
(1 0 ) D C * C A V C TT Gustl
Iw h a id Thumss
I X (1 7 ) O C T SM ART
800
®
HARPER VALLEY PTA
Diana poaaa aa a baa srpart lo gat
levanga on tha RsMya Iof (sang
har an alcoholic IN)
H) O
t h e in c r e d ib l e h u lk
o

6 '3 0
0
I f SANFORD Frad laada a
march on city had to ptolamt plana
lo buAd a traanay through Iha
rwaghborhood
7 J U r M A (HQ QJRl NO W Diana
raiigna rathar than aubmit lo Tha
company aaacurityiaal |R)
03 (1 0 ) W A IL STR EET WEEK
Tha Tachrwal Outkjo* Ouaal
Nanton 0 7indnr aamot nca praai.
danl. lachmcal anafyaia. E F Mutton
A Company. Inc

0:00
Q (.I i MOVIE
Cotton Candy "
1 IP rat Clmt Howard. Ghana. Manm
Snath A group of htgn achool mratitt lorni a rock band lo compata
mth tha tenon! k aalabkanad band
|Rl
( I I O THE D UK ES O F HAZZARO
Luka and Bo at a huad to guard an
hnloric w o rd (El)
7) O
W BC WORLD HEAVY.
W EIGH T C H A M P IO N S H IP WBC
haavywaigtit cham pion Larty
Hoanaa dalanda hr* titla agamal
Laon Spmka tha lormar WBA
champion m a IS to u n d bowl to ba
Macaat kvatrom tha Joa Louta Arara m Davod, m addition. W BC No

3 rantad haavynaighl Mtchaal
Dokaa late* on Eurypaan haavynaight champion John Oardnar m
lha opsrung bout
CD ( (0 ) M AR TY ROBBINS
0 :3 0
CD (10) SUNSHINE M USIC HALL
W y ttO ilt

10:00
( J ) o D ALLA S Bobir? * K O v «r »
that an o 1 tank* that t*jrtk 1*11 not
rourad and could cost turn tha
fidMirturif v rtf Fw*rtrt fV* l«?»
(1!) (35) IN DCPf NO C N T NETW ORK

HEWS

CD (10) A U S TIN C ITY LIMITS
S*ng#r and h « m o n &lt; i wtui kid
Nofton Buffalo and h*s band Tha
Stampada perform pop rock, coun­
try. fwi and btuaa m thta routmg
concart fB)
1 0 :3 0
I f (35) CA R CARL C E N TR A L
j 17) NEW S

11:00

g '4 H l)C S 7 JD

new s

T l 135) BENN Y m ill
ffl 110) P O S TS C R IP TS
1 1 :3 0
O
CfJ T M Q H T Moat Johnny
Carton Ouaatt Slava Landatbafgi.
Pata fountain, Shaday Long
J i O M T S 'M
(7) Q ABC NEW S N IQ H TU N E
(ft (351 W A N TE D D EAD O B ALIVE
IX 117) MOVIE
Tha Man Without
A Body |19S 7) fta-orga Coutouna,
Robarf Hutton A aurgaon igraa* to
Iranipiani tha haad of a tfiih can
tury fvtytlic onto tha body of a man
curtad wth a Oram tumor

12:00

BO

sta r b k y a n d h u tc h

O MOVIE
R a m . C ry
(1 t i l l Van n-h.ri Aide Rky
I f (351 JIM BAKHFR

tC|

to m o r r o w

1 00
( D O MEWS
1:1 5
(IX |17)
B A S E B A L L A II » n U
Brtvm tt Philadelphia Phama

2:00

MADAME KATHERINE
I'A I M

Fa t) -

Praaanl — futuia

• L IF E -L O V E • M A R R IA G E • S U M N E R S

(3 0 5 )
8 3 1 -4 4 0 5

BEEN IN BUSINESS FOR 50 YEARS
IN PRIVACY OF M Y HOME
H O U R S 8 A M - 9 P .M . O t n r d S u n d a y
1 l l t H M NORTH OF D O G TM A t M BO .
im mk*m« a i 1 1 f ««a at

d e v o t io n a l

2 :4 5

C A K D •C H Y S T A I I1A1I R E A D IN G

t i l l f i t II AIIVH I OS All Al l AIHS

COHO WFOOP

0 (4 ) d a il y
0 )0

MORNM O
5 :0 0
7 i O MARCUS WELBY. M 0
5 :3 0
i ) i O SUMMER SEM ESTER
1t (1 7 ) RAT PATROL
5 :5 5
(fj O DAtlY WORD

6 00
111 O *&gt; MINUTES
m O H O TFU C O E
I t (1 7 ) IT’S YOUR BUSINESS

6:20
Q ® DAILY DEVOTIONAL
6 :3 0
E ) i i J-COUNTRY FISHINO
(Y) O MIGHTY M OUSE / HECKLE
t JECKLE
7) □
t h e BASEBALL BUNCH
Ha«t Johnny Banch
Guait
*&gt;ad ahara Oh
I t (1 7 ) ROMPER ROOM
7 .0 0
Q 1C NEW Z O O REVUE
:])
O
TH R EE
R O B O N IC
STOOQES
If - O PLASTIC MAN / BABY PLAS
rtf ( I ' l l JIM BAKKER
I I ( 17) VEdETABLE SOUP
7 :3 0
Q i 4’&gt;ORLIOAN'S ISLAND
( f O STAR TREK
7) O ANIMALS ANIMALS ANI­
MALS thaZahra |R|
11 (1 7 ) THE 3ASEBALL BUNCH
Moat Johnny Banch Ouaal Chat
laman

8:00

1 2 :3 0
0 (1 *

SATURDAY

O 'T it h e f u n ib io n e s
1} O TOM AND JERRY
(7) O SUPERERJENOS
rtf[ (3 5 ) PR
PRAISE
(D (1 0 ) H E R E 'S T O YO UR
HEALTH Drug Inlarachon |R|:J
IX (1 7 ) THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY
8 '3 0
BUGS SUNNY / ROAD

(I) O
BUNMEB
CD (1 0 ) a O M O A HOM E OBOW H
(1 7 ) MOVIE
Sword Of Shw-

wood

For*«l

( tftB t| BichifiJ

Qr««n«HNildw Cuthtng Tkm Shurilt

new s

3 :1 5
(7 ) O MOVIE
Tha la-1 Day* Ol
Pompaa (Q/WH193M Pieslonfoslar Saak Rathbona
3 :4 5
,1X (17) M O V *
Day* OF Glory
(l»*4| Tamara Toumannva. Otagory Pack.

1(MMMMINI II DUKa

ot NolHngh*m and h»« wnl *ar1 *ra
chMangad by Hobm Hood ond hm

man

9 :0 0
O (4 )Q 0 0 Z T L L A
(T) O FOHZ AMO TH E HAPPY
DAYS G A M
rtf (3 5 ) AMAZING GR AC E BIBLE

9 :3 0
g ( I ) BATMAN ANO TH E SUPER
7
7 ) O RICHIE RICH / SCOOBY

000
(It (3 5 ) U E I BEGINS A T CAL­

VARY

Dining...

V o u u a i, a ta n g u a o s in tha
Pars ita ta In B r s z i r , c o n t i t l i
t o lt ly
ol
M ia n
v o w a li.

4:30
New

f DAYS A W E E K
Spsclals Dally

BANQUET FACILITIES
AVAILABLE

Csn See) Up To MO
Soclsl And BulIiwm Part la*

’e r r y 's

■ay l i f t t t U M
A ll SH O W S

PLATA I 1 i &gt;at

PH. 3 2 3 -3 2 0 4

12.30
Q II I AMERICA S TO P TEN
1 )
0 0RAK PACK
(7.11 ) AMERICAN BANDSTAND
(D (1 0 ) THIS OLD H O U S E Bob
Vila odart u m a tokitiont whan
work on lha houaa uncovara unloraaaan probumt hom lha roof to tha

swr

MOVIE
M arnn (1064)
Trtppa K4#cj»*n S#«n Cora^ry A mon
•iruoqilot to br m A Ihfl tfuiwnq h »b
it* ot N « Hoplonumac m t« and
rMtero harmony to th«if marnaga

1:00
g H i WRESTLING
JASON OF S TA R C O M ­
MAND
(I t (3 5 ) MOVIE M yila tw fO l Tha
Mmd Narratari By Hobart W Mof-

( PIAIA II 1

M ( I ) DAFFY DUCK
1 13 THUNOARR TH 1 BARBARI­
AN
r t t (3 5 ISA AC S: It t S
a (1 0 ) THS O O O O NEtOHBORS

M il ■

11:00

HAN 11IO N FOBO m

® THE JETS O N S
0(4)1

LO ST A R K

&gt; O J

n

lit
11*
N«v tl
H SIS
«)t 1
111
»!«•

P®

KILLANDKILL AGAIN
GRIZZLY

630
g 1 4 ) NBC NEWS
1 D O CBS NEWS
7 1 O NEWS
700
g ® IN SEARCH OF...
(1 ) O REE RAW
7 . a U A H thok W ELn
rt t) (351 W AD, WILD w e s t
0 ( 10) FLORIDA HOME GR O W N
Tom MacCubm aipraini lha prop­
er mamtananca ol lru.1 traa*
1X
(1 7 ) BA SEB ALL Atlanta
Bra-ss al Phaadaiphra Phdbaa
7:30
g
®
FLORIDA'S W ATCHING
HOtt John E Evana
0 (1 0 ) THIS OLD HOUSE Bob
VWa
flu fin f f w -h mii kiirhen cabkxrti in th# barn and th«
piutaring «ofk uptlaut. Ia n d ape
aicMIact Tom Wsrth grv*x a Igtaon
in brick paving g

&amp; ) (10) MASTERPIECE TH EA TR E
FESTIVAL OF FAVORITES Tha
Goidan Bowl ' Baaad on a noval by
Hanry Jamat Magg-a taba Amango
that tha fnoara ol I n allair and tnaa
lo convtnca bar lalhar to raturn to
Amanca mllr Chartorla (Part 61 &lt;R|

Q
1:30
(J ) Q MOVIE
Kay Watt ’ (C )
|1t72) Siaphan Boyd, Woody
Stioda A tormat D A agan f opa» •
ting a Florida boat marina bacomaa
tha tif 3*1 ol a madman who 4« a m .
•out to M tia a grudga
(7) O MBS AMtRICA PAGEANT
Bari Park! and V*ki Carr boat thta
ftptual from tha Lai V a g it Hid on.

on tt w paraonakty. porta, baauly.
lamdy ht# and community nvohrw
mant

2-00
®
LOOK

g

ID

-

an

ttsio c

EVENING

AT

PO PS

baseball

(10)

Pramat Jowr a Jon#* |o4ni tha BoaIon Popa Orchaatra lor a partormanca &lt;A ' flhapaody On A Thama Ol
Pagarunt For Piano And Orchatira"
by Rachmamnoft |R)
2:1 5
g ' 4 •BASEBALL Ragionil covaraga ol Lot Angaiaa Oodgara al
Pitttburgh Pualaa. Kanaaa CHy
Roy ala at Datroil Tigarl
3:0 0
(3 5 ) MOVIE
Tha Bounty
knar" (C) (IM4| Dan Durywa. Rod
Camaron A gantta Eatlarna.
bacomaa a ruthtata bounty hunlar
altar accidanlaty capluring a bandrt

at

ID (1 0 ) PRESENTE
3:3 0

( I ) O PROFESSIONAL BOWLERS
SPRING TO U R Fmaia ol lha
SI7S.000 Panruod Opsn (tva bom
Houaa Bawl m Ton anca
CaM )
CD ( ItOl HOY EN LA LEG4SLATURA
IX (1 7 ) MISSION IMPOSSIBLE

4:00
(I) O
W ESTCHESTER G O L F
CLASSIC Third round conwraga ol
INS 4*00 000 POA Tour aywnl |*va
ham ths WasKhoalar Country Club
M Ry# N Y )
ID (1 0 ) QUE PASA7
g (1 0 ) WC BA U JEN S TENNIS
FOR THS FUTURE Playing Oou
b*aa' Ve BraPan oamontlralsa tha
ksy pomla ol atrilagy and n w a m ail that maka doubisi a raal
advanuaa □
I X (1 7 ) PUTT PUTT G O L F

8.00
g ' 41 BARBARA MANDRELL ANO
THE MANORELL SISTERS Guaatt
T G Shappard. Par* Anka |R)
(2 ) a LIKE MAGIC VantrUoqur.l
Chna Kirby and Mabtaa Gitbart
mlroduca tayaral unutual magic
acta
7 ) O EIGHT IS ENOUGH
111 (3 5 ) AGAINST TH E WIND
0
(1 0 ) MEETING OF MINDS
Slava ABsn uaa — in Emprsat
t b#od or a Thom* l Jsttarton Bar
lrand RuaaaU and Sami Augusims
(Pari t|(R|

6:30
11) O
MOVIE
Tha Oraak
Tycoon'' (t »J (| Anthony Oumn
Jacgusana B.aaat
900
g
®
BJ ANO THE BEAR
( I f (3 5 ) EDWARD TH E KING
0 (1 0 ) MYSTERY Rumpota Ol
Tha Baiiay Rumpow And tha Ms.
&gt;#d Lady
930
I X (1 7 ) THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL

10:00
g ® WALKING TALL
7 ) Q FANTASY ISLAND
r t f j 3 5 ) in o e p e n d e n t n e t w o r k
0 ( 1 0 ) MOVIE
Jacgua* B&gt;ai la
Akva And Wad And Lnnng In Pa.it
Ltorsi (ay Stona. Moil Shuman
Thraa dwpa.ata charactara amg lha
tonga ol Baigian irunttral Jacquaa
Ilia* agamat a haRtdoscops ol aur.aal baca ground.
OX (1 7 ) NEWS
10.30
OJ) (3 5 ) THE BAXTERS

11:00
f f ) (1 10 7 1 0 NEWS
(351 BE NHY HILL
H I (1 7 ) TUSH Hoal Brb Tuth

S

11.30
® SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE
Hoal buc* Hanry Muarcal guaat
Laon Radbona (R|
(1 ) o
M O V*
"Coma Back.
Cbartaaton S U N ' |CI ( IS/JI Godltay
Cambndga. Raymond St Jacgusc
Two Nagro datsethaa miaaligala a
narcotic oparabon In HarMm lhal
it caught m a powar atruggW
batwasn brack a aid tha Maha
® O M OV*
Body And Soul
(C l IIS4T) John Oarhatd. L B Palm­
ar A bo.st fokowa a ciookad kna
horn lha tturnt to tha top ol lha
lighting racks! onfy l o . ajar.I lua old
g

(U O S IW R C S T IJN O

127X1

OX (17) M O V *
IraaauraOl San
Gannaro |1»U| Harry Guardmo.
Santa Bargar

12:30
a n (3 5 ) TO BE ANNOUNCED

5:00
H EATH C U FF A NO 0 M G -

O (1 0 | ROM AGNOLTS TA B LE

jl M O v itlA J p Im

6:00
g t j ii: o n e w s
rtf ( 3 5) BIONIC WOMAN
0 (1 0 ) ALL CREATURES GR EAT
ANO SMALL N

1)1 a

10:30

T H E N IG H T
T H E L IG H T S W E N T
O U T IN O E O R O IA

a te re rs
SANFORD AIRPORT TERMINAL
BUILDIN0 NO. 1E4
SANFORD

'lha factory aha*a If w ai mad# q
( I ) Q LONS RANGER / TARZAM
S (T O ) MAGIC MET MOO O F 0B.
FAJNT1NQ
11 (1 7 ) MOVIE
CXal M For Mur
dar lia s il Ray MAam). Or ara Kal
•y Du ad ad by Altrad Hitchcock
Altar laarnmg ol tut wHa a mbdaaity
a man dacadas to ha*a bar aAmmaiad

R A ID E R S o f ttw

BREAKFAST A LUNCH SERVED? DAYS
LUNCHEON SPECIALS MON. THRU FRI.
LOUNOE OPEN 1DAYS. 11 S.m. T i l . ..

(0 (1 0 ) TH M O LD MOUSE Bob
Via mapacta tha cutiom-m*da
hardwood aptral tlatrcata in tha
bam and takaa vwwar • on a tour ol

10:00

ML

OPEN

FOR BREAKFAST

7 j O WEEKEND SPECIAL Tha
Mdrfa that tnayad Cantarhald
Animal ad A Warn o l hopataa*
IO H .I ffo u n t a talari tar* hwaa to
play oulbaM lor lham (Pari t||R)
0 ) (10| H E R E S T O Y O U R
HEALTH Growing Up Tha Early
Yaart CJ

CD (1 0 ) THE FLOW ER SHOW

............................. .. IkaAK II^aalMad
i i i « i « s a i k t it aa »*«i tu . t *4

Pleasurable

J u n e 13

1 1 :3 0
B iT i Hoaaa k o n g p h o o c y
m nouAGAM a
rtf (351 MOVIE
Tha B orrow * .
(Cl (IS / ll E d d * A ltw t. Tammy
Gnmaa A Imy lamdy kwng undar
lha h o c board, ol a country houaa
borrow odda and snda bom roar
paupla to karuah lhau horns
U ) (1 0 ) JULIA C H A D AN O C O M -

FAME
AFTERNOON

12:00
0 141JOM4Y QUEST
Y l O FAT ALBERT

O
®
LPOA CHAMPIONSHIP
GOLF Tturd round covaraga ol lha
1 110 000 LPGA Championthip (kva
horn ma Jack Nrctlaua OoM Can lar
m Kinga laland. Ohu)
g &gt; f lf lO U O O O L D
( D a WKJS WORLD O F S P O R TS

U S Grand Pna Motor, cat Motorcycla Ckampionahip |ltom
Carlsbad CaM k Nghbghla o4 lha
larty Houma / Laon Spmka WCC
Haarywaghi championahip hghr a
pranaw ol lha U S Opan

0

1O0
® FORTILWT O F A LEGEND

1:30
O

®

CAROL BURNETT

ANO

7 ) 0 NEWS

too

g ® DAM.Y DEVOTIONAL
r o O MOVIE Out 0* Tha Past
(C ) ( IM F ) Kak Douglaa. Jana Oraar

205

Il| (3 5 ) GRIZZLY ADAMS
0 110) SOCCER M ADE M O C R -

a
(1 7 ) BASEBALL Atlanta
Brsvas at Phaadarpma Phtbaa
3 50

&lt;a(17)WRESTUNQ

CD O

iA i,i.r .U L k * y r

MOVIE
Ths Brava BuB*
(C l &lt;t»SI| MW Farrar. Anthony

■. ^ m

,v .v .

�Evening Hdrild, Sanford. FI.

J u n o 14

SUN DAY
m o r n in g

5:05
« ( 1 7 ) WORLD A T LARGE

5:30
1X|17&gt;SUNOAV MASS

5:55

(ti O DAJLV WORD
6 00

[ ) j O AGRICUL TUHE U S A
i t | &gt;7) BETW EEN THE LINES

6:30
fJ O FAITH FOR TO O AY
I O VIEWPOINT O N NUTR ITIO N

6:50
0 (3) DAILY D EV O TIO NA L

7:00
0 1 */ OPPORTUNITY LINE
S O h u k H I &amp;CMU4.LER
i l l O PICTURE O f HEALTH
iT U (351 CHANOED LIVES
I t 117) JAMES ROBISON

7:30
a 14) OOOO NEW S. fLORJOA
I Q TODAY'S BLACK W OM AN
U (3 5 ) E J DANIELS
1 1 117) IT IS W RITTEN

6:00
a ( ( I VOCE Of VICTORY
1 Q REX HUMBARO
(7) U SHOW MY PEOPLE
11,1.15) JONNY 0*JEST
to 110) SESAME STREET |R|g
1t (17) THREE STOOOES ANO

8*30
SUNDAY M ASS
DAY O f DISCOVERY
ORAL ROBERTS

JO SE ANO THE PUSSY­
CATS

9:00
Q (I IJJ'S CLUBHOUSE
iT O SUNOAYMORNING
(fc O KIOS ARE PEOPLE TOO
(ft (35) THEFLINT8TONES
® 101MISTER ROGERS |R)
I t (17) LO ST IN SPACE

9:15
Off) OUTLOOK
9:30
a 141GOSPEL SINOINQ JUBILEE
1)1) (35) THEJFTBONS
(0 (10) WORLDOf THE SEA
10:00
O XIO«W ORLD

t (35) MOV*
HA Tn. le a '
|B(W) (1M1) Abbott an d Cotlkko.
Qmnr 5*wn» Bud and Lou gal mlo

IfOuM* WINbank fabbot 1
(I) (10) NOVA "Mwtaga in I ha
Rout' Uung (ophnncalad dalmg
Mnuwfuaa m l iwtNyh o* aipNv
rslion. modarn goctogittt ha»a
unconwad tonva new inlaall
about lha ongm ol Our (Karan and
boo ManoNad upon « (R| Q
1t|17|HAm
10:30
0

( £ MOVIE

My la»orna S py

(B/W) (1SS1) Bob Hopa. Hods
Lamarr An Amancan antarUlnar
mpartanaiaa a tpy m Oroar lo
obiwn tacrai plana for tbo U S
C J I O TOR OUR TH A IS
~ H FIRST B A PTIS T CHUR CH

l i f t 7)
/ MOVIE Dual In Tha Sun
11*47) Janndar Jonaa Orogoty
Pack A baaulttul halt brawl Indian
gal louthaa on an aipwarva tom#y
laud aban aba comaa lo Iba n lha
homa ol a amanhy calllaman and
Na lao aona
11:00

iQTNSLAWANOVOU
10) VIC BRADEN'S TENNIS
FOR THE FUTURE Conditioning
Vie Bradan damonatralaa hva
anporlanl aaarctaaa guaranlaad lo
1 aka you bom bull and pud lo
“wn and gnn “ Q
V . 11:30
Q FACS TH E NATION
O TONY BROW N'S JO U R N AL
(35) MOWS m u n d w m Soct-

0t» IB/WMIMII Panny SwgiWon
Arthur Laka A champion Graal
Dana craataa problama lor lha
id

T

toT f a e t f o r w a r d

AFTER N O O N

12:00

m

MSUCS ANO ANSWERS
FLO R O A REPORT

12:30

C f MEET T I E PRESS
(1 0 ) n j R K M FO CU S Hoat
Cbna OudNy i g d a M run mroaugaban n o tha M agadirkj^ahbl tundt

by lha Vtarlmg Nuraoa Aaaociaiion

1:00
| ) (1) HBC MAGAZINE WITH
DAVID BRINKLEY B*1«y Aaroo
iiim m a f lha Alghannlaff «# r tort#
onm f*«r af1«r lha tnvA*4on b f S on
at In*cat Douq I** K * o* Jook» at
in « bujarra return ol tcm h itlt
-tody ol kjfvy t#tA*ial*d lw*nt, Jack
Perkin* aaplorM lha •♦fort* ol King
T yoga lo lur# investort to h*t Sooth
S a it ktngOofn
( 5 ) 0 STAR TREK
J j Q MOAAL ISSUES
(3 5 ) M O W l
l if cany. Inc
1194?) Edwtrd G Robmton Jan*
Wyihih An tH-con buys i kjggaga
ii&lt;v&lt; at i ntttftR ot accatt to lha
bank hail doo»„ but discover* ha
doaahi'l has a lo tiaal to make mon-

*y

IQ ( ID ) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW (R)

6:3 0
O ' * ' THE MOPPETS
i . O THIRTY MINUTES
11O ABC NEWS
)Q I 101AQRONSKY AND C O M PA ­
NY
IX (1 7 ) NICE PEOPLE Hotl Dan id

(10) WALL STR EET WEEK
The Tachnteal OuftookT Guest
N awl on D Zndaf. tertto* v«ca presi­
dent tacftnicai anafyt** E F Hutton
A Company, tn&lt; |R|
II
(1 7 ) B A S EB A LL Atlanta
Brava* at Phiiadalphia Ptu#ie*

7:00
O
(l&gt; DISNEY'S W O N O E R F lt
W ORLD T*m i W
MMvnti)
A
frontmw firmly
to Wyoming m
M irch of i w s him (Part I|(R)Lp
I I 1 O «0 MINUTES
17 O ROOTS THE NEXT G E N E R ­
ATIONS W « PNrmtr t diug h tir
Rnrthi bncrwn#* tha fittl dl K unti
Kmt« t discaodinl* lo go to COllog*, whare *h« rn*at» lh* young
and ambilkout Simon Htiflry (Pdf 1 3)

f«KJ

a r (3 5 ) WILD KINGDOM
ED (1 0 ) T O O n H E R
WITH LEO
SuSCAGLkA b tw tm g c««or* an
•ucfcancd m Sacramanto. Cahforma
11 (1 7 ) TUSH Hotl flJl Tuih

0 00

03

2:00
C l (H CANNONBALL CRAZIES A
bahind lha tcanat look tt tita n at
tha making of 'Th a Cannonball
Run it arc mg Burl Reynolds, Ferrah Fawcatl and Dom DaLuita
i f ) O MOVIE
H yn g High |C|
j 19FB| Pit Klout, Conn-Mi SaMacca
Thraa iftractwa young women s u n
thaw wing* to become ,i*tl*n-a
aiaw'if (Jatta*.
CD O MOVIE
Action m Tha
North Atlantic &lt;B'W HtB43) Mum
phray Bogart. Raymond Mataary
Mar chant mar mat tight deeper alefy
to kaap thtppmg tanat opan during
World War 11
( D (1 0 ) TENNIS Eattar Bowt
Junior indoor Tournament' Cover­
age of tha naiton't m oil praahgiout
tarvu* bout tor funaor playart. haid
at tha Bmghampton Ckib In F»*w
Jartay

2:30
d
®
LPGA CHAMPIONSHIP
GOLF f nal round coMrago ol lha
1 ISO 000 LPGA ChampionMup {m*
bom tha Jack Nickiaua OoK Caniar
In Kmga laiand, Ohiol

3:00

o

4) CHIPS

Cl) o ARCHIE BUNKER'S PULCC
tU (3 5 ) DAY OF DISCOVERY
ED (1 0 ) PRIMAL MAN BitfM For
Dommanea'' Whtl mat a* torn#
man laadart and ofhart loflowart?
U (1 7 ) MOVIE
Gantla Giant
ftftST) Dannit Wiavaf. Vara Mriat
8 ‘30
( J ) O ONE DAY A T A TIME Ann
Imclt a naw job
maatt ha* com*
pat itinn, am tnfufiat'fig man who
may tand har o w lha wdga (Part

3:30
00 (1 0 ) THE ORIGINALB TH E
WRITER IN AMERICA "TonJM orrtaon" To n Uornaon raada hat own
malarial and providaa an maighl
into bar UyH and lilaaly»a |R)

1)|n)
9:00
0

(4) MOVIE
'Audrey R o m
| HIT) L U rllu Ukkon Anthony
Hepkmd
(11 O ALICE
CD O MOVIE
Shkdow O l Th*
Hiak | l» lt| Jen Uichddt Vincent.
Menlyn H lt u ll
(D ( 10) MASTERPIECE TH E A TR E
F E S T IV A L
OF
F A V O R IT E S
Couem Belle Belle Fiechae •
herth epmkler emo reeenlk her
weeiiby lerelrvok [10 (1 la dM Iroy
■he romance between her young
mece end • Pobtb kcutplor (Perl I)
(R IO

9:30
®

□

THE JEFFERSONS

4:30

1000
(!) a
CSS R EPO R TS
The
OeienM Ot The Untied Slete* m e
bye perl ter&gt;«. Oen Relher Wetter
Cronktte end ether correepundwnlt
■ ■ a n te the Uneed Slate! chencee
01 detente end aurvt.et m the event
ot a nuclear war (Pari 1)
ffl (1 0 ) TO THE MANOR BORN
1 1 (1 7 ) NEWS

10:30

O

W ESTCHESTER O O LF
CLASSIC m al-round countaga ol
ttwa liu u uuu PGA Tun* am*.I -a
bom lha Waalthaaiar Country Ckit
( D n O ) FREE TO CHOOBE lh a
Tyranny Ot ConlroT* Dr Mill on
Friadman aiammaa how Graal Brilam and Japan proaporad undar baa
Irada and how. by contraal. India
cendamnwd ,mdbona Is pouorty
whan lha gorarnmanl luok control
otaconotmc actlytly |H|tJ
(U6( 17) LAST O f THE W ILD

4:30
a
® MOVIE ■Adrianturn* O l
SnarVxk Homwa' (B/W| (I S M )

( 7 3 0 «A L OGL*
( I I (1 7 ) MlSStON IMPOSSIBLE

(I t (3 5 ) JMJ BARKER
0 ( 1 3 ! THE GOOD M tlQ HSO fW

11.-00
o ® ® a j)O N E w t
I t (1 7 ) OPEN UP

11:30
O ( f COMEDY TH EA TER A trio
ot comedwa - - ' Lrvmg In ParadiM. ’
r iiher men i Wbert. " end "H iu o n er " ••end be preaenied (RJ
I f Q THE HKtHT S TA LK ER An
mrealisation mlo a eenea ot
alrange murdara leeda Kolchak to
Ink ere that Clue ago la beang narled
by unearthly bemga (RI
. I &gt;Q MONTE CARLO SHOW
iff (35) I T t YOUR BUSINESS

12:00

5:00
(2 ) O AMERICAN SPORTSM AN
Hank Wdrama M hunta Mr wad
turkay m Alabama. Earl Hodman
viailt lha |ungM hatutnt el lha
mountam goraia m Rwanda. Canlral
A Ittea Oragory Harnaon aurta m
tha aaiari oil tha tndonaaian laiand
ot Ja«a
d j (3 5 ) GRIZZLY ADAM S
Q3 (1 0 ) F1RM0 LPtt "Tha Pmaa
And Tha I n ' Ouatla author Frad
FrwnrPy. allot nay C Oclarm an

02 (1 7 ) MOViE
The Only W a y '
|l•7}|JaneSeymaae Mena Poller

12:30
(7 ) O MOWS A Perfect Couple '
(S 'W ) 11314) Paul Dooley. Matte

12:40
(S ) O
MOW
Sorrworm n
Watching Ud" (1*7(1 Lduran HulIon, Dav*d Btmvy

1:00

a (1) OAKY d ev o tio n a l
a .J j )

1:55
J 1 ( 1 7) M O W
AMkkkmdllon '
|1M7| Henry Sdki, Fred Her

1X ( 17) WRESTLING
EVENING

(1(3) MSJOE STO R Y Modrbng
Carter lortnar preee apokeeanen lor
. jbeSlateOapat’ r'ki'L
. ewe ike raeaaa tcataumer N ae»y«*d

10ed A tbouawd

Timed ' 1C) (l*SS| Jeck Pelence.

It, I luiven't Uk‘ foggiest.
Kip Taylor — who tipped
into New York and then out
the next night after Sammy
Davis SOS'd him to open in a
nightclub gig in the MidWest — handed ine his card
It says, "Tills is a Hip Taylur
free licket. It Isn’t good for
anything. It's just free."
From Christopher Reeve:
"Superman LsnTliip There s
no cool about Superman at
all"... From Andy Gibb: "A
wife can usually live within
her husband's Income
provided he lias another one
for himself"... From Cher:
“ I may not be Audrey
Hepburn but I know I can be
Just as good.” Well, at least
she's as skinny.
Kris Kriilolfem oii Is
vacuuming up acres of
Honolulu beachfront...Dolly
Carton about her wigs:
"When I want lo spray 'em I
use a cropdustcr and when I

KODSTKIfiKIt
&amp; THE

Holocaust
Reunited
Survivors

K H IS T O F F K ItS O N

want to blowdry 'em I hire a
helicopter"... Tam Dawbrr
says she doesn't think she'll
marry. Not only is she not in
love but she isn't even in like.
Anyhow,
the
longest
relationship she's ever had
was a year and a half. "Guys
love my independence. Then
Ihey Iry to m ake me
dependent." sighs the future
Miss Daw her.

ReA tou'uud

“ F L O R I D A *

I

ARRIVE AIM
„ SLFISHHK Shr.T; _

; c k

d

LOUNGE

LUNCH MENU
............... v - " -—-

D A II.V L U N C H S P E C IA L I v . uk * , « . k. ik u j.

H o lo c a u s t m e m o rie s

From all over tlie world,
thousands of survivors of the
Holocaust will be reunited in
Jerusalem for ceremony and
so lem n
re m e m b e ra n c e .
Many will be seeing each
other for the first time since
their Imprisonment in Nazi
c o n c e n tra tio n c a m p s 35
years earlier.
T h is four-day "W o rld
G a th e rin g
of
Je w is h
Holocaust Survivors,” will
be covered by PBS with halfhour wrap-up broadcasts of
each day'* events and with a
90-mtnule live broadcast of
th e closing c erem o n ies,
beginning June 14-10. (l/ocal
tim e s m ay v a ry ; ch eck
listings.)
The program will include a
p ro file of a " s u rv iv o r "
village, Indepth interviews
with four American fam ilies
attending the conference and
an interview with P rim e
Minster Menaihcm Begin.

3:0 0

(73 O M OW

m a d e a n d w h n w i n f in * re

l

®ONEW B
____

go«1 show," but why it was

(tana
v n rz

2:30

6:00

® o ( r &gt; ® New*
2 ®
(451 m o n k : W OM AN

NKW YORK - IMahann
C arroll showed at Lena
Horne's party in a white
pleated Mary M cFadden
outfit.
Looked
smashlnK ..(inre Vidal's K°t
a real Itrh to run for senator
from
California...Cindy
Williams is heavy into
&gt; ok » ... There’s a film out
tilled, "Tlie lion of the
Desert." It stars Oliver Reed
;|iiiI Rod SlelRtr. For some
reason there’s a shori
docum entary mnkinK the
rounds of inovie theaters
titled "Tlie Makir;; of 'Tlie
Uon of the Desert.*" Hod
Steiger and Oliver Heed, who
saw it, pronounced It a “jolly

1 1 (3 5 ) JERRY FAL W ELL

ll X (3 5 ) JIMMY SW AOGART

a c (3 5 ) MOVIE
Nora Pranhaa '
|C) (111 11 Ann Shat(dan Hobart
Alda

Reeve: Superman Isn't H ip;
G ore V id a l For Senator?

A K*n J iD M n

7 30
11’ (3 5 ) SPORTS AFIELD

1 30

’ O WRESTLING

III

Friday, June ti, | ? | | —;

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FOR AD D ITIO N A L SELECTIONS
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UM.M1AJIA BU M Bf **1W i t iU AMU

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; DRINK of Your Choice
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O ffe r G o o d I I A M -2 :3 0 P.M.

1144 P A R K D R I V E S O U T H
SAN FO R D

322-9460

i

�Friday, J j w 11, m i

S—Evsnl»S H tfltd , lin f o n i FI.

Talk Shows Lose In Snubbing M cCam bridge
By DICK KLEINER
HOU.YWOOD (NEA) There Is a m utual distrust
between the p rint and the
television m edia, and I don't
want to sound p artisan , but
those guys in IV should have
their heads esam lned.
What angers m e — and
Mercedes M cCambridge —
la the way TV has been

a l l The others — Griffin,
Douglas, Davidson, Collins,
Donahue, Carson — have
turned her down.
The reason? She thinks It's
because “ they don’t c are
a Gout me any mure.
if
th at's true. It's a sham e and
she should be angry. So
should the rest of us.
She is phllosophlcs.1 about
IL And, she says, some of the
NOAD
re c e n t honors th a t h a v e
00 (1 0 ) A HAMY DAY Manana
HartWy alas as an unnappy TV atar
come her way — nwan
who ia*aa a tuna loo* at hot paat
m are to her than an a p ­
whan lha Ipatois ar aharnoon. tha
pearance on a talk show.
hral M Irva yaara arth has mothar
(CoSm w w o i)
She rarely acta these days. MERCEDES
1100
An
episode
of
CBS'
McCa m b r id g e
0 ( 4 H I ) 0 ' 7 OHCW 3
"M agnum P.I." was tier
H I 3 M BENNY HB.L
( t o p o s t s c r ip t s
most recent and she has no recovered alcoholic herself,
{17) MIGHT GALLERY
future acting plans. But she sh e knows w hereof she
11:30
does go to colleges to work speakes on that grim sub­
a ® t h e BEST OP CARBON
ject.
Uuaatl DoHy Parton. Paine* C*rl- with the drama studenta, and
So there are a tot of things
Youngman |R)
rh e says that Is exciting and
5 lManny
O M 'L T H
she could talk to talk show
stimulating.
Her
m
ain
oc­
j u ABC NBWS H U H T U t *
c u p atio n ,
how ever,
Is hosts about. But they don't
w ant her. It's their loss.
president
of
the
U
vengrin
5 (3 5 ) W A NTED DEAD O R ALIVE
Foundation, in Bensalem,
) (1 7 ) MOVtfl Coppar Canyon
(IM O ) Ray U stand. Mady Lamarr
P a., a place where alcoholics
If Joe Cslda Uvea long
Conladaata ratalna aaafcng a
can by go
for help. As a enough, he will have w ritten
naa Marl at lha WaM ara salad
a

tre a tin g
M erced ea
M cC am bridge la te ly . To
begin with, she la a fine
actress, worthy of respect
for her track record, which
includes an O scar and a
bunch ol outer pcrluruuuicca
that should have won O scars
but didn't.
Now she has w ritten a
sp ark lin g ,
a n g ry .
In­

trospective autobiography,
"The Quality of M ercy." 11 la
a book that Is so alive It
alm o st Jumps in to y o u r
hands on its own. But she
says that, except for one, the
Is Is snows will not have her
on to discuss 11
She did do Ute “ T oday"
show, where she chatted
with Jane Pauley, b u t th a t's

June 15

M ONDAY

w M l n f w w i oamtop* s pas­
sion tot hot iltp to n

TO (tO)

600

ossat pcr for uan ces

tr»aa C l a m Slortaa O Youth
Amt lU a u V Kalhryn Walt*. an0
UcAaal luhjrpXy m/m laatur*d M
C W m i i ticry about a mOdtoagad n s d i l M t lliugglf to racaplur* iho glory ol hit coSaga yaara

0 (4 )1 3 1 0 0 )0
rm j5)A *ovonw m H
0D n o INCA

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0 :3 0

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mi
J sa c

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(1 7 ) MOVIE
IndMcrsat"
11SSI) Cary Giant, ingrkt Cargman
A Itch Arosncan and a Eiaopaan
actraaa laa m lovs although ha
daana to ba marrtad

MEWS

35) c a f o i r c o u n t r y
(10 ( H O W T O SHOW
17 TH A T I
7 :0 0
® new s
o
7 U MAGAZINE A laa
Vagai tn u n g contaal. a loo* at ma
Marcadaa Banr factory in Waal
Ositnany. Chat Ta i roSa an omalat.
Or waten on dubstaa aymptoota.
l*&gt;da Hama loura ttis Capitol
BuSdmg m Washington. D C
17) O JO K E R S WS.O
II ( T ‘)| BA/IMEY U t l l l A
I E (1 0 ) MACMEN. / LEHRER
O f SORT
TX (1 7 ) A U S a T H i f A M I lT

S

7 :3 0

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(I ) v o u m q p e o p l e ' s s e t
C U I. TSa Ftaharman'a Bon" A
bery l taar of lha asa &lt;s pul to lha
tail during a atofanl alorm
( J ) P PAAAOaSE LOST
U FA U X V FEUD
[, (3 5 ) RFtOOA
(1 0 ) O C K C A v r r t Ouaal
Oanta Nmatta da Vatora
’l l (1 7 ) GET SMART

6 :3 0
(3 ) O THE TIM CONW AY SNOW
(7 ) o BASEBALL Ragional covar
aga of Cincinnati Itaoi al Ptutadalphia PMbaa. CN ragn W NIa Soa at
Kansaa City hoy ala

0:00
B (4) F IA U M Q O ROAD A » wr­
ing mottwr Isama tha facia bahmd
lha daalh ol tar daughtsr m a nua
Bra. and raiding Cartyta has a big
light suh Conalancs lull balora an
importanl apsach (It)
(i) O
U*A ’ B*H Hsaasy# bats
B J ha can go an antra day atmoot
taamg a lota (R|
( D (1 0 ) THE BAYOU LEOENO
Baaad on a fob tagsnd. tNa utraaa d opsra tala tha alory ot a young
kdaa*al who la In tors wtlh a apart,
but puiausd by a connMng woman
who aW alop at nothing lo anara
him as a husband

gunfighlar

S' 12:00
|O I T ARSKY AMO H U TC H

HOUBB CALLS A law n won

6.00
a (1 ) U TTU B H O USE O N TUB
P f U l M HaHng ragamad Na light.
Adam ma*aa plana lo tsava WaFnul
O h m and rstum lo la v achool
IPart r){A &gt;IJ

(D O WKRP M CMCMNAT1 Hath
auManiady pamla hta ftv* yaar 0*1
daughtar'i pat bog pm*, than I*
gws nddan whan tha ammal diaa

I ALL M TH E FAMK.Y
35) M O VE
Daaua
lha Lima ' |C) (!•**) SopNa l Oran.
Anthony P atina Baaad On Fugans
O h a d i play On a Naa England
tarn at tha IM Os. a Laa-tiAA

pis e* typrear day* al Karwmgton
Oanatal (hi

(D

10:00

O

CBS A l PORTS

FANTASY S I A M ) F e u
yowtg woman raturn lo a tuna whan
Ma was Am and gamas. and a marrwd coupw ra craata lha aacitamanl ot thau aartwr yaara |R)
I t (3 5 ) J M BANKER

12:30
• ( £ TOMORROW

1:00
CDONCwa
1:10
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|1M7| Jae* Wabb. Don Oubbma

1:19
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a fictlonaUied history of
show business, from the
early 19th Century to —
whenever he finishes.
Joe Is an old friend. F o r a
long tim e he was editor of
Billboard, Ute m usk trad e
publication. Then he turned
personal m anager, handUng
such stars as Eddy Arnold
and John Gary.
Always, however, Joe naa
w ritte n . T here w as a
m ystery novel back In '47
and a serious study of show
b li In America, "A m erican
E n te rta in m e n t," w ritte n
with hta wife, June Bundy
But his current project is
his most ambitious by far.
Now out vta Pocket Books Is
"The Magic Ground," the
first In a lengthy series of
Caldas projects.
I t's
E v ery th in g
You
Always Wanted to Know
About Show Biz, In a neat,
p a la ta b le pack ag e. (P lu s
enough sex to keep the
pubUxher happy).

12:30

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J

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THE YOUNG ANO THS

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�Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Friday. Juna II, 1*11—t

'City Kid' Story O f A Boy Saved By Loving Attention
By CAROL FELSENT11AL
American Library Assn.
When Mary MacCracken m et l.uke he had a record of 24
arrests for arson, theft and truancy. He was 7 years old.
On the rare occasions when he went to class, he sat
slumped In an autlstic-llke trance.
"City Kid" (Little, Brown, 2B0 panes. $12.95) is Maccracken’s story of how attention — consistent, loving
attention — turned laike from a budding criminal into the
bright little boy he really w as.
It is also the story of how colleges of education can crusti

a teacher's spirit. MacCrackcn's emergence with tier
teaching talents intact was due to her relatively advanced

"City Kid" is Mary M acCrackcn’s story of
how attention — consistent, loving attention —
turned a 7-year-old budding crim inal Into the
bright little boy he really was.

June 16

TUESDAY
EVENING

8 00
new s
i| |3Si a n o y a n i m i H
ID (1 0 ) SOUTH BOONO Hamcwr
McB«* Dm M u li T N I m w m i m
meonkhmar and l a g m l i i ) huibrky
laconlaur and bkRkdrw lip ro lJk tt

32(17) FATHER KNOWS BEST
030

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new s

( D O ABC NEWS
(351

ID

c a r ter c o u n tr y

(10)

6POLETO 'l l

Hm&gt;

Oiand fl u A took la lakan al aorta
of Bpckaio a ooaia onannga wMcii
mckxJ* Otan Carlo Manom a Tha
laal Savaga' and a trilogy ol anaacl faniaty oparaa by Slantay Hod•ngaaaorth
TH A T GIRL
32 ((1
1 77)) TH
TA W
B H i ncw s
CIj O p m MAGAZINE A T aromaaaa man who broa m a tapaa. a Wad
to ma anrom al Lourdaa. Franca.
Jarry Batar on haaping roaaa m
bajom. Capl Carrot on tntamrnt
and manlal haaim. Unda H arm triain ina Smitnaontan AH I Spaca
(7) O JO K IR 'Q WILD
5) b a r n e y m i l l e r
&lt;d (1
t 0 ) MACNCIL / LEHRER

p

12117) A L IB I THE FAMILY

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(] ' Q FAMILY FID O
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CD

(1 0 )

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8:00
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baby aniara uaa than lot)a lo aat up
robbariaa al ma Komaa ol than
aaamiy amployara |R|

(DO

COVEY A CIRCLE OP CHIL­
DREN. PART TW O Jana Ataiarotar
portray* Mary McCracaan. a w i t
an davutjd 'o taachrng amoironaPy

dsturtad cMtfran M o tt tom
b t t H M i hoi own naoii and i s o m
ol hat apariN charga*. Ronny Co«
andKrti M&lt; Kaon co-liar |R)
fj U
HAPPY DAYS roftjm*
vnigiaalion lr a n * » llt llo gang
Hilo a a v U a lw a a mad wwnliit
ri trying lo dram Via Iona ol Ink
coot IRJ
(I® (3 5 ) MOVIE
Mo Tima For
cem adr
ItbWI (10*01 Jamaa
hum an Koaaund HuawM A |rl*Ywngfil r»u, m Iona ailh Ilia atar o&lt;
lua 111 oadway production
0 0 110) THE WORLD O f TH E BEA­
VER Onanulograobar O at llanlaM
capluraa in# Wa ;yrla ol ona ol
naluta* moat induatriou* bukdark.
tha baarar Nanalad by Hanry Fon­
da
3 1 ( 1 7 ) B A S EB A L L Atlanta
Brarwa at Naa York Mala
6 :3 0
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Itvorna and Shatay lata |ob*
wrapping g.ha at a daparlma.il
•loia (R|tJ
9 :0 0
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STARS ANO FUTOREBTARS Mott
Oana KaPy a (Otnad by Otan Campha*. Tanya Tucker Ban Varaan
U n a y Gatay and aight atpamg
young par lor mark lor a night d
country muarc
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citftaay movaa out and Jack and
Janat ara M l lo And a nan loommala |RICJ
(D
(1 0 ) W ORLDS LAROEST
INOOOR COUNTRY MUSIC SHOW
Kenny Rogara and Ootlia Waal
hoal i m gala auartt Maturing r o t
than 100 paMormar i and muarcrana
9 :3 0
TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT Hanry and lue nan boa* drag
taro thaalra patron* bom tha«
aaaik than arc uaa iham ol ktaaang
Bara'* pure* and oath N har Irk ara
|R1

CD Q

10:00
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BTREET

BLUES

Capl am fur no tndangara hr*
chanca lot promo non by (uahing
a i nvaatigalion Into ma camnactron
balaraan a oly councilman and a

ABOUT BOOKS
Reviews prepared by
the American Library Assn.

D

age and her experience — she hod taught emotionally
dlslrubed chltdren for six y ears When her school became
"state approved" she was forced to return to college lo get
certified.
Unlike her 20-&gt;ear-old classm ates, she knew one can’t
learn lo teach without children. She knew that six weeks of
atmtont lenehing wirtn’t enough. She knew th sl perfecting
printing in round, fat letters, practicing "Twinkle,
Tw inkle, tattle S tar" on the recorder, abstracting articles
on adapted jungle gyms had nothing to do with teaching.
She w as beginning to doubt she'd survive the state
teachers' college when a professor asked tier to p a r­
ticipate in a pilot program in a ghetto school. The children
chosen for the program w ere not seriously disturbed
enough (or special schools. Yet llicy were llie real
tragedies because they w ere slipping through the crurks
of die system Into a Life of utmost certain desperation.
"W hen we lose kids like l-uke," w rites MacCracken, "we
end up filling our jails." These kills were impoverished,
literally and figuratively. T hey were starving for love, for
praise, for plain old attention. MacCracken gave Hint to
Luke in large doses.
But the cure was not quick, and relapses were frequent
When Mary was sick and m issed a session, Luke set a fire.
"H e must have Oiought I just hadn't bothered to show up.

One m ore person in his life he couldn't count on." Then In
Septem ber, when Luke arrived a t school, quivering with
excitem ent at being u third grader, he w as told he had to
repeal second grade. A team of the system 's psychologists
had looked at lu k e 's absences, his crim inal record, his
test scores and decided lo keep him back. No one hud told
l.uke or Mary. Mary rushed to his second grade room
There sal a humiliated I uk e — Ids little broUier was also
in the second grade — with his head on his arm s staring
out tin’ window. So Mary had to s ta rt aft over, rekindle his
trust and curiosity,
I-uke, tiie "street-wise, savvy arsonist," is an enor­
mously likeable little boy. In trying to cure Ids ludiitual
tardiness, Mary lectured, "You could louk at the dock.
M aybe set the alarm . You could get up when It says eightforty."
"D on’t have a d o ck ," I-uke mumbled
Excuses. He’d never get anyw here till he got through
with excuses.
“ Well, look at die clock in the kitchen."
"Luke shook his head ‘Don't have one. We got a TV.
though. They say whnl lime it is som etim es,"
ll w as 1970 when Mary M acCracken worked with l ake
Now she says, “ f was warned when 1 Went on tour (to
prom ote the Ixtokl that I woutd lx1 asked wlial l.uke is
doing now, People will want lo h ear that lie's entering
Yale " Actually, MacCracken h as lust touch with l.uke,
although she knows he did well tlirough the sixlti grade
and tlii'ii moved south.
He’s probably not guing to Yule, m aybe nol even to
college. But lie's probably nol going to jail cither And
before Mary MacCracken m et him . Jail, undoubtedly. was
precisely where he was headed.

If “ F L O R lO f
ARRIUf H
AlLmr
MnnlVt
1 _ SUNSMINf STATE IVt
protltlut* (Ft)
(J ) o
CBS R EPORTS
Tha
Datanea Of Tha UmlaO Stataa' In a
•iia parl aanaa. Dan Ralhar Wa&gt;lar
CronkAa and orhar corraapondanla
ai anuria tra IJrutad Stataa ciiancae
ol dalanaa and aruvnoJ in tha avanl
of a nuclaar arar IP artll
( f ) O MART TO HART Jonathan
and Janntlar ara caught up hi a
murder myatary mvolrtng an
ancranl karcophaguk and a mummy
mat aaama lo hard coma akv# (R1
(11 (351 INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
31

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32 (1 7 ) NEWS

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12(17)
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�19— Evening HaraId. U n fo rd . FI.

F rid a y , J « W 11, I N I

Loni Not Carol; Soap Washed Up
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M o u n t M a a .-F r i.
l» m .J p m
1*1. A Evening*

By Appointnunl

T hat U one of the beat numbers from the acore of the
Broadway ahow "E v lta ," and there are m any recordings.
I h a re an album on the MCA label, with Julia Covington
alnging the eon*, but there are o th er The lady who rang
an the G ram m y ahow waa P atti LuFonc, who atarred In
the Broadway ahow.
DEAR DICK: My buabaad feel* that P am Dawber of
"M ark A Mindy” la bavohred la a cbewtag gum cwnm e rclal I My ao. Give me the u tlslactio n of u y to g “ I
told yon to ." ALLEN AND BARBARA SEEVER, Oak
View, Calif.

z o =t&gt; cbU z m

You may now proceed to My It. No., Pam haa done no
chewing gum com m ercials.
DEAR DICX: We have a hassle going o n at the neigh­
borhood pub. I’ve b e ta trying to rem em ber who the Gman waa wbo chased Bonnie and Clyde all over the place
In the movie of th at name. I Mid I thought It waa Dale
Robertson and they cracked up! Could you please help us
a n t MRS, N.G. PETERSON, Vancouver, Wash.
It w asn't a G-man, It w as a Texas Hanger, and It w asn't
Dale Robertson, It was Denver Pyle, who la now on "The
Dukes of Ilazzard .”
DEAR DICK: Could you tell me L' Ism I Anderson of
“ WKRP In Cincinnati" ever went by the nam e of Carol
Wayne? [RENE MARTINEZ, Henderson, Ncv.
Yes, I could. No, site didn't. Carol Wayne la another
blonde actress.
DEAR DICK: I am a sixth grade student at AutheU
Middle School. I am doing a project and need help. I enjoy
the show, “ Soap.” I beard It went oil the air. Then I beard
It might come b ark on the atr. Will “ Soap" be back on the
ah? LIZ STRUGGEK, Trenton, M.J.
T hat's your project, to find out If a TV show Is on or off
the air? No, “Soap" is finished. To coin a Joke, "Soap" is
down the drain.
DEAR DICK: My family has been arguing about
something for alm ost a year. I hope you ra n d e a r It up.

0 y '

L^

^ ^

323-6174

PM*
I C O N tU
L TA TIO N ] 0f 323-6163

6

K1U

^ A

At one time I weighed 363
pounds and bicycling is just one
of many things I couldn't ao.
D o n 't lot fun a c tiv itie s p a s s you by
b e c a u s e of a w eig h t p ro b lem . W h e th e r
you n e e d to lose 10 or 310 p o u n d s,
A m e ric a n H ealth &amp; W eight C ontrol
C lin ic s c a n help you su c c e e d w ith a
p e rs o n a l w e ig h t lo ss p ro g ra m th a t Is
M fe , e ffe c tiv e a n d m e d ic a lly s u p e r ­
v ise d .
T a k e c o n tro l o v e r th e re s t of y o u r life
... C all us today.

Take confro/ over the rest of your
fife... Call us todayl
SANFORD
IT70ORLANDO DRIVE
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H O U R S : (A ll Offices)

Mon. thru Frl.fiW -liM A I iM-Si M
"W h e re

w eight

c o n t r o l Is m o r e i h a n | u s t a d i e t "

EVEWNO

ffMftATHJ
14*»UMI2I

By DICK KLEINER

My grandmother Insists that the m aa who p ro tn y ed the
father an the television series, " Family,” alas played on
the iulaFseries, "C entennial." The rest at the fam ily
disagrees with her. Who's right? KAREN GERVAIS,
Galesburg, Mich.
Granny, UiU uue lim e only, la wrung. Jam es Broderick
w as the actor on "F am ily,” and he was not among the
"Centennial” cast.
DEAR DICK: Would you kindly tell me what ever
became of the actress Donna Douglas wbo played Elly
May Clampett on “ The Beverly Hill billies?" NEIL ALAN
MARTIN, Moactoo. N.B, Can.
Donna ta Still acting. F or a while she quit the business
and was In real estate. You'll be seeing her next fall when
all the Beverly Hillbillies a re reunited In a rousing
special.
DEAR DICK: Could you please tell me II David Janssen
la living. If not, when did be die? RANDY MAYNARD,
Las Vegas, Nev.
DEAR DICK: Is Bruce l e t , star of “ Game of D eath,"
and some other movies, dead or alive? M. DETTRICK,
Williamsport, Pa.
Both of them are dead — Lee died In 73, Janssen in 'SO.
DEAR DICK: On the old series, “ Green Acre*," there
was a brother and slater carpenter duo. The slater’s nam e
was Ralph. What w as her brother’s name? T H E
GAUTHREAUXS, Plaquem tne, La.
The Monroes were Uie ones In question. Ralph w as
played by Mary G race Canfield and her brother, Alf, by
Sid Mellon.

WEDNESDAY

CA LL TO L L m c r

H i...I'm Nanci LeGros

A lia

Ask Dick
Kleiner

of

C H / t t F W * A W 1C -

z

~
OW

DEAR DICK: Oo the l*it Grammy Award *h*w, tome
lady M a i * beautiful io*g called, “ Don't Cry for Me,
Argentina.” Could you UIT me If thU om | hao been
recorded? JA NET CURTIS, Frm akam utk, Mich.

6:00
. J O ® O H IW «
151 A M O v o w rn iH
t i l ( 10) R O M AO NO LIS TABLE
“ An AtpAnm Tradition ' fWJ
1 2 ( 1 7 ) FAT NIFt KNOW S BEST

gfflffll

6:30
B m Mac N e w s
iliO C U M f w a
t jb B arc new s
lit) (3 5 1CARTER CO UN TR Y
U J 110) JULIA CHILD ANO C O U PAWY m
in g u n d Potiuca IW 111 17)

th a t

a im

7:00
M H )N c w a
( X O P M M A O A ZM f SarluptaU
In rural ItHf. * Phoarka man who
burn kM own caelta. CNN I n i
mmkm atuftkd tomato appofuare.
Dr W u c o on I nana O a m o g im l an
t k a n m l w i r ' C o i n . Uann at/ou,
down HoBywood a Warfc Of I a n . "
n q jo x m iw K O
! (35) BARNEY KILLER
(1 0 ) MACNCM. / LEHRSR
(11 (1 7 ) A U IN TH E FAMILY

7:30
0 IT ) T V TAC DOUQH
11J O $40,000 PYRAkHO
I O FAAKLY FEUO
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(11 (17) rB A S EB ALL Uontiaal
Erpoe at AllanU Bf tvaa

■

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CD REAL PEOPLE Fastursd

unuaual Naa fork City attiaia. a
■hop tnai aala Oak ad gooda In atof
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black man latur na u tha Sourbaaal
aRaf tha Cry. Wat and Il/uggaa

J u n e 17

NEWS

(I) O

CHARLIE S A NOELS T h .

Angait entar th. glamorous world
Of u n n t i l M DodytuMng
U (35) MOVIE "A Km Bator.
Dying" |C) (19*41 llobarl W agn.
Jaffaoy Huntar A ptychopamc
I d . mufdsra N t wsatthy. ptagnenl
gwttriand and nawly gait away m id

K
® &lt; 101 TOQETHER W ITH LEO
• uaCAOU A Spsakmg bafora an
audwnca m Sacr amanlo. CaM gnat
Of Lao Bute ago. urgaa katanart 10
n o n away bom tha "in t gsnare
Iion and mio in . kwmn
-a

0:00
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Ofr r RENT STROKES

Arnold uaaa Na barmday party in
txighisn up tha Ma of ■ sarMuafy ■
*fm orrl (R|tj
( D O UO VW "TaM on " |IS77)
Cbartaa Bronaon. laa Ramrck Tha
KOB'a lop aganl la aanl lo Amartca
to atop a vtaamoua dafaefor aom
Inggarmg SO human tana bomba
atucfl wart ptantad during Dm Cold
war and navar daacbvafad (R)

■ (10) THC FABULOUS PMILAOCLPMUNS: FROM OfWSANOV TO
Stun CaHCiraiad Spaman pramal
Akcut da larrocfia and lha PNfadafphw OrcKaafra parfor n M o n rt'l
Concarto No IS In C U l y a lor
Puno and Orcbaaua undaa tha
(kraction of Riccardo Uufi

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FACTS OF U F l A pnoIngrapnar oRart Tooba a )o b ln Nan
fork modaSng datigntr faarva |R|

10:00
B (3 ) OLSNCY Wftka tam ng on
pay Arty. Oumcy la laiapta la uaa
m a of a man am .tad of nxrrdar

!!!

of a nudaar war (P v t a)
(11 (3 5 ) WOE PENDENT NETW ORK

C B S R EPO R TS
Tha
Dafanaa Of Tha Unnad Siaiaa In a
fhwpan aarfaa. Dan Aaihar. Waltar
Cronkna ana other carraapondanfa
tiamma tha Unnad Stalaa' chancaa
afi

(D (1 0 ) VARIATIONS FROM VIEN­
NA Ertch Lamedort conduct, tha
Vtarwa Symphony In a concarf of
t»th- and karly join camury m a c
a i(1 7 )N C W 3

10:30
111 (3 5 ) NASHVILLE UtJSIC
(11 (1 ? ) N A S I SOCCER Allania
CNafa vt San J o m Earthquakaa

11:00
po)a (do
news

351 BENNY HILL
110) POBTBCRWTS

11:30
0
(T&gt; TOMOMT Mnyr
Carton Ouaala Gar aid Lawton.
Tarry Rich and Myrtla WNtchar ol
Coopar, Iowa
M ’A ' I ' H
r ABC NEW* NKWfTUNB
IS) W ANTED DEAD OR ALIVE

12.-00
( ( ) D BTARSKY ANO HUTCH
(71 O LOVE BOAT ~TR Oaatn Oo
Ua Part .. Maytoa" Ja n ty Waltar
Varnaa Walton. Chuba" Makar.
Sua Andaraon. "Lock ad Away"
Conrad Bam. Janaf la n k (R)
0 1 (3 5 ) JAJ BARKER

12:30
( B I T ) TOMORROW
3 1 ( I ? ) MOVIE ' Tha 0 1 ' ( ISS7)
Jack Wabb. Don OulAM*

t:00
(D O N c w a

1:10

CD O
M O V* - U r Biandmga
Road. Pfta Drawn Mouaa |BAV)
|1W «) Cary Or art. Uym a Lay

2:00

■ (D 0ma.Y devotional

£36
O
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Eapos at AllanU Braaaa

(TJOnews 2:60
320
CD O M O W
-Joan Ol Part*"
IE7WI (*B41| khchara Uorgan. P « d

�Friday, Jung u . I»I1—it

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Am erica's Ju n io r Miss N o t Ju s t A n o th e r Pretty Face
The very prclty New York sonable young women undvr
State title holder a t the the age of 19. does not have a
recent Miss U.S.A. pageant swimsuit category.
was disqualified when the
This competition evolved
Judges determ ined she was
padding the cups of tier from the Azalea F estiv al of
Mobile, Ala., and is still
bathing suit.
n u rtu re d
as
a
c iv ic
That couldn’t liapgien in responsibility there, though
the ann u al " A m e r ic a ’s commercial sponsors have
Junior Mias'" pageant, Lite been sought and welcomed to
finals of which a rc televised enhance the prize offerings.
as a CBS special Thursday.
There arc K raft, Ilu n tn a,
Why? T he " A m e r ic a ’s Kodak Photo, and Sim plicity
Junior Miss" event, though Sewing awards now and a
they a ttr a c t h ig h ly p e r- Clairol Ball, but none of the

THURSDAY

J u n o 18
("I

an (351 M OW "Plammgn Rnad"
(IM S ) Joan Cift«rfurd. Zaclury
Scott A baautiM and antlcmg car

6:00
f * l f | 1 0 C 7 J O HEWS
|J 5 ) AMOY OtBFTTTM
110) M M M

a t o n y Nodding

Caul*", to*frair priMI •po4«*m«n few
mo Slats D*p*rtm*nt, look* at how

prma covm»Qe
(1 7 ) f a t h e r k n o w

t

s best

6:30

01 NBC NEWS
CBS NEWS
(g Q A B C N E W S
SI CANTER C O U N TR Y

_ to

s u m c u s ik e

11( 10 THATOtRL

7:00

rwvaJ 6*ncm fa!*f1 hohiml tn • amafi
town whtra ih « rrMMta up mrith
romance, dirty pofctica and m urdw
(C
(10)
F L O R ID A F O C U S
Sagmanla mchrda danlura came*,
currant lagnlatnn ah acting gold
eod ailver buyers

8:30
CD O BOSOM BUOOES

Kip Qivea
Amy an offteei (neon In the power
of potwiiv# tfunking (R)
CD { 10) SNEAK PREVIEWS Roger
Chert m d G e e Shekel review
"Taka Ih*a Job Ajv J Shove If,”
‘ CXiUand and The Legend Of I he
Lone Ranger w

Q l i l NEWS
B00
J Q P U MAOAZ1NF A p r o N lo l .* O Cl) MOVIE
The Seven Perlu n r c iH CIMIOt Judi M iuvO 1 cent Solution 1(1976) Ntcoi WimamVitwnOuMi ■ gruakng wagon tram
aon. Alan Ark in Sherlock Mol met
tor (uvana* odandart. Chat ta ip ra and the young Sigmund Fraud four
para* cotd corn ulad. Jodi Mltaall
force* lo (heart the Unit lee ptana of
hat |a»aicHaa tor irugha. Joyc*
an evAprolataor
KutiawW tonka at a lu m a comput­
(1 ) O
KNOTS LANDING S*d.
er
aboul lo atand trial for attempted
O JO K ER S WILD
rape learnt hie attorney haa
(35) BARNEY MILLER
botched hie dafanae (Part ?)|R)
(1 0 ) UACNEIL t LEHRER
(7) O BARNEY MILLER Ramey
REPORT
afarl» an Ul oul campaign to g«t hit
S I ( 17) ALL N TH E FAMILY
aquad a aid dulnee back fParf 2) (R)

7:30

„ ' I ) T I C TAC DOUOH
(T) O 1*0000 PYRAMIO

U FAMILY FEUO
(35) RHOOA
I
CD (1 0 ) DICK C A V E T T Q u h i
CnanMOrodai
IX (1 7 ) BA S EB A LL Monlr*ftl
Erput ft! Attorn* brftvfta

8:00

O 0 ) NATIONAL aCO O RAPH IC
SPECIAL Atoftkft ' Erplor• AfTutrica'ft M l hontwr.
undeiftloped
ftndunlftmad
0 ) a AMERICA’S JUNIO R MISS
FAQ CANT High Bchool ftftmorft
rftprftftftnimg In* SO ftlftlM campwlft
to? t trSft, Llvwft ftini ftulivierUtv
morwy m irw J4Ul ftdiOOn ret thlft
pftgftftnl la b* tfttocftit Irrft from IN*
Munuptl Auditor him In MoMft.
A lt . Lorn* Or ftftnft hoftl*
® O MORN ANO MINDY Mork
pull • (Sthonftftl ftlorft o m r who i*
trying 10 rip Mindy ofl on trial
bfttorft • M y or brokftn ftppkftnc**

£&gt; (10) BANOBURG B LINCOLN

"Mr air Mi L n y « M A t a young Itw yer. Abraham Lincoln dealt with a
murdar trial, count Mary Owens
and maati Mary Todd

0:30

Cl) Q TAXI Boetry « acting (oh in
■n ouidoor commercial prompu
Iha CftMnwft to Iftftl oul • weak r.1
roughing MIn Ihft wftdft (R )r j

grow th has d ilu te d th e
Mobile
tra d itio n
of
responsible
h o s p ita lity .

m ozo/K
(ft (35) MOCFENOCNT NETWORK
NEWS
(D (10) THE DUCHESS OF DUKE
STREET "A N u CUM O l Pramwaft" L o u u . mien in damand aa ft
•oewry cook. h.j11.1 , a flourlfthmg

The young women a re
ra te d under the s u b tle r
h ead in g s of P o ise a n d
A ppearance and Y outh
Fitness with points in both
c a te g o rie s for p o s tu re ,
gowns of ilreir own selection. carrUgY, grave and agility.
No problem. Some of the
are
"One reason 1 got involved c o n t e s t a n t s
in this is because it's not a c h e e rle a d e rs, the c u r r e n t
beauty contest," aays 17- M iss C onnecticut, S andy
year-old Susie B eaucham p, Tyrol, Is an accomplished
the title holder from Rhode gymnast and most a re active
in many sports.
butmeea, *han iha Rantinck Motai
DR. JOYCE
Also, and this Is basic to
goal on tha marital, Louita buya it
(P art3J(R|
the "America’s Junior M iss"
BROTHERS
029(17) NCWB
competition, all the en tran ts
1 0 :30
Wc put the question to
are high school seniors of
dT (35) FCFt seen THE COUMhigh sch o lastic sta n d in g . psych o logist D r. J o y c e
They ail want the scholar­ Brothers, one of this y e a r's
11r00
Judges and r super-achiever
ships.
15) BENNY MILL
h e rs e lf. (She re g u la rly
10) P O S TB C R TTS
Young as they a re , the w rites for newspapers and
17) w o rn o a l l e r y
finalists are already high magazines, does television
11:30
0
0 ) TOMKSMT Hoftl Johnny achievers. What m akes them
and radio segments, guest
Carton Quad Jan Fowlsr
interviews on national talk
th a t way?
O M 'A 'I 'H

"High achievers usually
have m ore energy," ihO
says. “ But they have also
le a rn e d to channel It
productively. And after they
reach one set of goals, they
set new ones."
Incidentally, by the time
they reach Mobile, most of
the finalists a r t already
assured of at least one
scholarship, provided by a
college In their home states.
But as the current Miss
Vermont, Deb Donlan, ex­
plains, "W hat’s really good
is that if any of us decides
against the first scholarship
offered, it passes to the
runner-up."

s

8

O U S. OPEN Mlghaghlft ol Iha
hrftl round ol play (horn Marlon OoM
Club In Ardmor*. Pa I
a t (35) WANTED: OEAO O R A U V E
11 (t 7 ) MOVIE ' rwiftllon Walk '
(l » }l)0 » c k Powftd. Ruby KaaUr An
Army prhrftlft *ft ftppomlftd lo Wftftl
Pomt ahar ft catftftlrophlc romanca
with Iha gsrwrN'l dftughtar

11:45
C71 O ABC NEWS M O H TU N E

FRIDAY SeafDDd BUFFET
ALL YOU CAN EAT

(D
O
C H A R L IE'S A N Q E L B
Sabrina. Kafty and Kna go undarcovftr lo hnd oul who Ift nturdsrmg
lop Nmai* Hnrwft playart (H|

12:30
S &lt;41TOMORROW

1O0
( D O NEWS

1:25
(7 ) O MOVIE
Hudson • Bay
(B/W) ( 1940| PftkA Mum. Oan* Twr
nay

1:30
0 1 (1 7 ) BASEBALL Moniraal
Eapoft ftl Allan!* Brftoa*

20 0
O 01 OAR.Y OEVOTIONAL

305
CD O

MOVIE ‘ Powder Hirer" (Cl
11911) Rory CNhoun. Cortona Cal
v*l

4:00
0 2 (1 7 ) RAT PATROL

V

FRIED SHRIMP a FRIED PERCH
BAKED NSH a SHRIMP CREOLE
CLAM CHOWDER • CRAB CAKES
FRIED CLAMS
CRAB ROLLS • HUSH PUPPIES
CORN-ON THE COB a FRENCH FRIES
S PM

T ill

II

PM

C h ild r e n U n d o r

1 2 -'/ i

iCatfiilicr

ENJOY YOUR FAVORITE

motor inn

COCKTAIL

P R IC E

IN THE

( 7 ) 0 NEWS

3A5

M

Ocean Gems ----- -— s

t i l O ST ARSKY ANO H U TC H
(JII135) JIM BARKER

12:15

$CQ C

APPETIZER-SOUP AND SALAD BAR

12.00

BUCCANEER LOUNGE
NITELY
11001. ORLANDO DR.

I l l 0400

SAN FO RO

4 :3 0
0 2 (1 7 )

KAZARIAN BEATS THE PRICE I
By STACI BIENVENU
" I F Y O U 'R E U N D E R 75; If you own a van or a pick.up, or if you |utf need Immediate
minimum Auto or Tru ck Insurance coverage— you need locall me."
Yes. according to Ralph Kazarian, "You m ay b « paying loo much for your Auto In
s u r a n c B ..."

Mr. Karailan is fully aware that we. as drivers, ara
tired of reading deceptive ads about how we can beat Ihe
high cost of our auto Insurance, but there is something
definite that sets him apart— spec la Ilia I Ion. He’s an
unusual men in his line ol business, tor he is willing lo give
herd luck Y O U N G D R I V E R S a more then fair chance on
their aulo or truck Insurance.
“ I feel that young people, in many cases, ere un
justifiably charged high rales, and I know that m any m ey
be short on cash. Th at's why monthly payments are our
specialty. Furtherm ore, there ara a large num ber of
drivers under 15 that are paying high ratas due lim p ly to
their age; others are penal Iled because of their personal
R A LP H K A Z A R IA N

sliows — Johnny Carson,
Merv Griffin — and is one of
the experts called on for her
insights during fast-breaking
new s sto rie s , as in Ihe
assassination attem pt on the
life of President Beagan.)

Each of the state finalist*
stays in the home of a host
fam ily. The g la m o ro u s
m om ent com es in th e
debutante-like parading of
the 50 finalists in evening

10:00
®
Q
CBS REPORTS Tha
Datanaa Ol Th* (Jr.iad Slats* In a
Ova-pari ftftrt**. Dan Rftlhar. Waiter
Cron*ft* and sow corraftpondanli
ft i arruna Iha Urwtftd Slat**' Chftncw*
ol daimM and rurrival in Iha avam
o’ a nuctoar w*r (Pftrt 4|

Island, who could certainly
hold her own If beauty alone
were the criterion.

tastes in automobiles. F ina lly, customers who need m in im um insurance coverage are
turned away repeatedly. T o overcome these situations Is m y whole reason for being In
business."
Yes, this all sounds quite promising, but lull how can Ralph K atarlan afford to offer a
tru ly better price to you and m e 7
" I'v e shopped for years to find companies who offer the best possible rates tor m y
particular customers As a result. I broker business with 30 IS Auto, Truck. Motorcycle.
Motor Club. Mobil# Home A Motor Home Insurance companies that target their effort to
m y particular customers Th is allows me to give my customers the Insurance they need
at the price they want to p a y ."
And M r. Kararlan has proved himself to be quite successful In his approach Alter 15
years in the business, he’s established himself as an Initllullon within the auto and (ruck
Insurance business In Florida.
To prove his ambition and determination he's opened eleven offices In the last two
years In the Central F lor Ida area In addition io his Orlando office which Is located In the
Bright B L U E Building at the corner of Mills end Colonial (SfS 2454).
There are two additional Ralph Katarlan offices located In the O rland»S enford area:
Altamonte Springs (8141454) and Sanford (323 3454).
So ..If you're really Interested In finding oul how to get the insurance you need., al Ihe
price you want to pay— stop by one of Ralph Katarlan's offices
Pd Adv

�II—Evening Ht&gt; a Id. Sanford. FI.

Friday. Juna II. IVII

M ore Clowning Around
At left. Scott Kinsey, also
known, as Harlequin Harry,
concentrates as he tries his
liami at basic hall ju)&gt;|&gt;linK.
one ol the routines taught as
part of the art of clowning.
Tills was Scott's best antic.
Itelow, a delightful team of
kidilers come together for a
brief moment of picture-tak­
ing Although some basic
principles in costume design
and make-up were taught,
clown students created their
own images in clothes, facial
painting and props. When

G o G uide
It you're thinking ol getting out ol the house and
a rr looking lor something to do this weekend, here
are a lew suggestions:
Annual M em bers' Juried Art Exhibition, May 23July 12 a t Loch Haven Art Center, Orlando. F re e to the
public, 10 a .m . to 3 p nt.. Tuesday through F rid ay , noon
Fine C astle Center ol the Arts will feature u special
exhibition of work by blind art students entitled
"H eartstrings T w o," June I through July 3, 3903
Itandolph St., O rlando. Reception June 19, 7-9 p.ra.
Open to public.i
iV
Saturday Night Donee Club ol DeBary, I p .m ., each
Saturday, DeBary Community Center. F or senior
dtliens.

“ Y oung-at-lleart" Dance, every Sunday at I p.m.,
DeBary Community Center, Shell Road, DeBary
lnslruclton, 7:30 p.m . Open to public,
An exhibition ol a r t works by the National lea g u e ol
American Pen W omen, Winter Park Branch, June 20­
28, Cornell Fine A rts Center, Museum. Rolling College
Knapp Gallery, W inter P ark. Tuesday through Friday,
10 a.m. to 5 p.m .; S aturday, Sunday 1-5 p.m. Open to
public.
Florida High School Rodeo Finals, June 12-14, Silver
Spurs Arena, U.S. 441 and 192 between Kissimmee and
SL Uoud. P erform ances 7:30 p m . Friday and
Saturday; 2 p.m ., Sunday.
"Save the Animals D ay," June 20, 10 a.m. to 7:30
p m ., l.ym an High School, Umgwood, to benefit
Humane Society of Seminole County. Softball game
between WD1Z disc jockeys and Crossfire Band, an
auction, and concert by Crossfire Band and Middle
Digit. Refreshm ents available.
men's Club Corn Roll, 3-7 p.m., Congregational
Christian Church, 2401 P ark Ave., Sanford.

each course session is com­
pleted, students are invited
to join the Clowns of Ameri­
ca. an organization which ar­
ranges appearances and en­
gagements for graduates In
charity shows, children's
parties and various parades
and celebrations. Meetings,
which are held the first and
third Monday evenings of
each month, give members a
chance to gel together so­
cially as well us receive their
assignments to perform at
different functions.

Kissimmee Boat-A-Cade begins June 20 from
Melbourne. Registration at Jim R alhinann Marine.
North to St. Simon's Island, Ga. on Intercoastal and
south to Sanford on the St. Johns River ending June 27.
CaU 303-847-3662.
"Golden Fj h I Opera C om pany" under the direction
of William and Adele Ptrigyi will present a musical
program entitled "A M usical Ju n e" a t the Wcstmonte
Civic Center, Altamonte Springs, J m e 14 at 4 p.m.
Free to the public.
Sweet Adelines F ath er's Day Concert, 2:30 p.m.,
June 21. l,och Haven Art Center, Orlando. Free to
public.
G eneva G eaeoleglcal an d llla to r lr a l Society
Museum, First Avenue, Geneva. Open Sunday, 2-4
p jn . or by appointment by calling 349-5306
Central Florida Zoological P ark , open dally • a.m. tr
3 p.m. U.S. Highway 17-92 between 1-4 and Sanford
Picnic facilities.

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                    <text>73rd Y e a r. N o. 233—T h u rsd a y , M a y 2 1 .I H t — S a n fo rd . F lo rid a 32771

E v e n in g H erald ( U S P S 411-260) P r ic e 20 Cents

Senate Approves
Reagan's Budget
W ASHINGTON ( U P ll A com ­
p ro m ise
budget patterned a fte r
P re s id e n t R e aga n's blueprint fo r
austerity in government sailed through
the House, but hit some temporarily
rough seas in a stormy Senate.
C a lm returned today, how ever,
allowing final congressional passage of
the 1696 5 billion fiscal 1982 budget. A
vote by the Republican-dom inated
Senate came shortly after 11 a.m.
House Speaker Thomas O 'Neill of
Massachusetts has served notice that
House Democrats won't "ro ll over and
play dead" while the budget digs into
. ] social programs
But there was tittle fight Wednesday as
the House approved the measure on a
244-165 vote, with some conservative
Democrats again Jumping ship to Join the
Republican minority.
The Senate had been expected to Im­
m ediately follow suit, but Republican
leader Howard Baker of Tennessee
postponed a final vote until today.

The Senate then debated the budget
until late into the night, with tempers
flaring.
“ I have said it is cruel, unjust and
inhumane — and it is," laid Sen. Howard
M eUrnbaum . K-Ohio. "This budget is
dishonest, phony — a fiction."
Metzenbaum said it was fair neither to
the poor nor the middle class, shouting
they don't have "well-paid lobbyists.”
Sen Ernest F. Hollings, DS C., ranking
D e m o cra t on (he Senate Budget
Committee, charged the budget was
based on u n re a listic econom ic a s­
sumptions.
But Budget Committee Chairm an Pete
V. lA Jin a m i, iv-N.M., laced Hoiiinga ana
charged the real mutake occurred one
year earlier when the committee, con­
trolled at the time by Democrats with
Hollings Its chairman, claimed to have
come up with a balanced budget.
He said the deficit grew from zero to an
estimated 164 billion to 163 billion now.
"W e didn't accuse you of fraud and
chicanery becauae it came out w rong,"

Report Says
Condo Was
Substandard
COCOA BEACH , F la . (U P I) - A
report by the Southern B uilding Code
Congress says the collapsed Harbour
Cay condom inium w as designed
below standard In several areas,
including roof, balcony and wtndreststence criteria.
The five-*lory building collapsed
March 27, killing 11 w orkers and In­
juring 23 others.
Meanwhile, a consulting engineer,
developer and architect of the par­
tially completed building have denied
In court accusations of negligence In
lawsuits filed by v ictim s of the
collapse.
Engineers with the Congress are
awaiting word from the designers of
the project to see if acceptable
alternatives were used that would
mitigate what experts say were
urMgu mucakruiations mat could
have caused structural weakeness.
"The code allows for alternate
systems to be accepted If they can
prove they w ill provide adequate
safety,” said B ill T a n g y e , S B C
director of engineering services.
Cocoa Beach b u ild in g o ffic ia ls
requested the investigation after the
accident.

Domeniei said.
The compromise budget was drawn up
from target figures established by House
and Senate negotiators last week after
each chamber had approved slightly
different budget plans
Shortly before the House approved the
compromise, O'Neill said Democrats
would try to reverse some of the cuts,
e sp e c ia lly In food and education
programs. In later budget-related votes
House Budget Committee Chairm an
James Junes. D-OkU , complained the
package "does not meet the' test of
fairness to our society as a whole,” but
conceded It "represents thr w ill of (he
House."
A lthough the bluep rint approved
Wednesday mandates large spending
reductions, congressional committees
still must decide exactly what programs
w ill be cut.
That means House Democrats w ill
have another rturner to m odify the
proposals they find most offensive.

Water Crisis:
Casselberry
Gets Tough

H trtid etwf* *, Tcm v m m
S lx - v c a r - o ld C h r is I’ c x lr ir k , a s tu d e n t a t W o o d la n d s E le m e n t a r y
S c h o o l in l.o n g v io » d . is a p ic t u r r o f c o n c e n t r a t io n a s h r w o rk s
on a d r a w in g d u r in g A r t is t s D a y A t T h e Z o o " S a t u r d a y a t th e
C e n t r a l F l o r id a Z o o in S a n fo r d . O v r r HO s t u d e n t s v ie d f o r p r ir e s
b y s u b m it t in g t h e ir s k r t c h r s o f ro o a n im a ls . T h e r o m p l r t r s t o r y

An emergency ordinance, which the
Casselberry City Council is expected to
pass at a 1 p m. special meeting today,
w ill put teeth in enforcement of the d ty 's
outside water use ban in the fact of a
a n d m o r e p ic t u r e s fr o m th e e v e n t w ill a p p e a r in th e H e r a ld 's
c ru cia l water shortage.
l ^ l s u r r M a g a z in e F r id a y .
M a y o r Owen Sheppard said the
emergency meeting was called on the
advica of the city attorney, who (tit an
ordinance would b t more enforceable
than the emergency resolution passed at
ArUon Krports
Editorial
Monday night's meeting.
Around Thr Clack
tlo rld a
The resolution replaced a previous ban
Hrider
lloroaeope
tmpoacd in m id-April to Include the hours
Calendar
Hospital
from 12 noon to (: 00 a.m. and all weekend
U s stille d Ada
Natloa
hours. During these hours, the city's
Com lrs
Ourselves
water customers are not allowed to
Cr m i word
Sports
sprinkle lawns, wash cars, till swimming
Dear Abby
T rlr vlilon
pools or engage in other outside water
Death*
Weather
usages.
t)r. laim b
World
The ordinance wtU be effective as of
today. Sheppard said.
Violators w ill be subject to tines of up
to POO rather than receiving a warning
as was previously the case.
Sheppard expressed concern Monday
lor the thousands of dollars residents
have Invested in landscaping, but con­
tended that the city has no other choice
until ra in comes. City fire officials have
A promise by Seminole County school
As evidence that the district has expressed fear that the pressure In the
authorities to find suitable classroom fulfilled its pledge. Clements requested system is dangerously low.
space for handicapped students was that a report be submitted 30 days after
A lth o u g h there have been some
apparently good enough for the U S
the new school year begins UsUng tho- complaints about the restrictions mostly
Education Department which has agreed "schools with exceptional education from residents who have been watering
to end its investigation of charges local programs and a description o l the their yards before going lo work.
school officials discrim inated against classroom facilities for the special Sheppard said he does not expect op­
handicapped students.
education classes in each school."
position at today's meeting.
In a letter to Seminole School
"They know this ordinance Is tor the
Superintendent R obert Hughes, (be
The discrim ination complaint was safety and welfare of the public, he said.
E d u ca tio n
D e p a rtm e n t's
ta n u r
lodged by londa Goddard, mother of a "Besides wanting lo conserve water,
Clements, director of the Office for Civil
n o n - h a n d ic a p p e d
C a s s e lb e r r y they don't w art their homes to (all in a
Rights, said that the district's promise Elem entary School student, who claimed sinkhole.''
that handicapped students “ w ill be that 33 handicapped students at that
Adding to the water shortage problem,
housed in appropriate classroom space"
school were forced to attend classes in two of Casselberry's large storage tanks
by the beginning of the 196I42 school
the school auditorium due to over­ a rt presently under repair and w ill be out
year, "form s the basis for us to close this crowding. a situation she contended was of use until June 30, handicapping the
ritv 's nummnii ranan tv
complaint."
discrim inatory. — B RITT SMITH

TODAY

W ith Schools' Prom ise

Feds

DropBias Probe

REFLECTING
ON THE RAIN
G ro u n d e d

t e m p o r a r ily

W e d n e s d a y 's
d e rsto rm .

th rive

s t o p p in g

at

in

s e a g u lls
S a n f o r d 's

H o lid a y In n . r e f le c t o n th e
p u d d le le ft by th e w e lc o m e
r a in s . A lt h o u g h o n ly .IS
w as re c o rd e d

at th e

C a s s e lb e r r y 's
W e a th e r

S e r v ic e

in O r la n d o , 1.23 in c h e s . F o r
s to r y

on

F lo r i d a

r a in f a ll,

se e P a g e J A .
N itlM ZWU b* Tim V m onf

’

- I '
“ .‘ V

'

r

•

b o a r d o f s t a llin g a n d p r o m is e d to c o n t in u e h is e ffo r t s to In tro d u c e t h e B i b l i c a l
s t o r y o f c r e a t io n in to th e c la s s r o o m .

M u rd e re r Didn't K n o w It, But He K illed Both

How Minnie Died O f Lonely Heart
By BRITT SMITH
llr r a ld Stall Writer
The death certificate said a rte ria l
sclerosis — hardening of the arteries. But
don't you believe It. After her husband
died, possibly beaten to death In an alley
behind the couple's modest Sanford
home, Minnie Olley sim ply had nothing
let! to live for. So, s t r died.
Oh sure, she had been sick for quite
awhile. A lter 87 yea n, her body had
grown fra il, weighing a scant 70 pounds;
her mind was usually a little one side of
reality. But that only made the dying
easier.

After her husband's death, M innie
entered Sanford's Lakeview Nursing
Home. She seemed to like It at first,
regaling the nurses with stories about
Henry — how ha, like herself, had come

-

s

a d v is o r y c o m m it t e e , w h ic h is

r e s p o n s ib le fo r in v e s t ig a tin g th e c r e a t io n is m v s . e v o lu tio n c o n t r o v e r s y , w ill
n o t h a v e t im e t o a d d r e s s th e m a t t e r a t le a s t u n t il f a ll. H o o k a c c u s e d th e

And so, almost immediately after
Henry died January 23, Minnie started
her long slide to the bottom. On April 26.
exactly three months and three days
later, she Joined him Their earthly
rem ains, a couple pounds of grsy ash,
are together no*, staled la matching
crem ation urns in a Schenectady, N Y .
cemetery.

p la n t

r r c o r d r d I .OH in c h e s a n d th e
N a t io n a l

( o ld B o o k a n d h is g ro u p th a t th e c u r r i c u l u m

time, she
one without him .

S a n fo r d S e w a g e T r e a t m e n t
P la n t ,

T h e l l r v . J o h n i i u t l e r H ook, w e a r in g a n r w a n t no m o n k e y b u s in e s s f r o m
t h is b o a r d ' s ig n d e m o n s tra te d w it h a s m a l l b a n d o f p ic k e t e r s o u t s id e th e
S e m in o le C o u n t y S c h o o l H o a rd m e e t in g W e d n e s d a y . T h e g ro u p is d e m a n d in g
c r e a t io n is m h e ta u g h t in lo c a l c la s s r o o m s . I lo w e v r r , s c h o o l h o a r d m e m b e r s

M innie Olley could probably have lived
a while longer if she had wanted. Fo r a J
her ills, she was forever the quin­
tessential Irishwoman, feisty of sp irit
The problem was,
on. She had lost

th u n ­

s it u a t io n a s th e y w a d e in a

in c h

CREATING
A PROTEST

to Am erica around the turn of the cen­
tury on the "Baby B o aii" as sort of In­
dentured servants, how they met in New
Y o rk and married, how Henry had
worked in a locomotive factory for years,
then retired lo Sanfcrd in DM .
He was a dignified Englishman, M innie
would say, a tad eccentric perhaps, but a
good husband. Thinking about him made
her happy and she would lead nurses and
patients tn smg-a-longa of her native
Irish songs, conducting her 'ch o ir' with
bony arm s tucked into the Rapping
sleeves of floral print pajamas.
Perhaps If she had known how Henry
died she wouldn't hare been so gay. Son
Stephen and daughter Mary anna Sherry
never could bring themselves to tell her.
Minnie thought her husband died of
pneumonia. She kept telling him he was
going to come down with something if he
didn't quit working In the garden so
much.
it was a nobis lie. The truth m ight have
k ille d her quicker than the toneliness did.
“ You could see It happening." M rs
Sherry said. "She Just withdrew from
life. She wouldn't sing Sh? wouldn't talk.
She wouldn't even chew her food. The
doctors had to put her on a liquid d ie t
She slept more than usual. At night, she
would cry for my father She lite ra lly
w illed herself to die.
"W hen whoever it was who beat m y
father killed him, they killed my m other
too," Mrs. Sherry said. "They didn't
know U, but they did."
Since M rs. Olley's death the police
have review ed the c irc u m s ta n c e s

surrounding h tr husban d's p o s s ltle
slaying, but still have found no evidence
to warrant an srre tL The Investigation
continues.
U Henry and Minnie O lley had lived,
they would probably have been tn New
M exico now enjoying the w arm , dry
desert air. Stephen has a Uttle gold
m ining operation there, and when he
cam e down for Christmas last year, he
and his father were going to finalize
plans for moving Minnie out W est
They never made It, of course. On Dec.
I, on the way back from a trip to the store
(for socks and shaving cream ), Henry
O lley met Death in that alley behind his
house. Death, it appears, cam e tn the
form of a muggerfs) who stomped the old
m an's head into a puffy, blue-black mess.
Then again, says Seminole Qzunty
M edical Examiner Dr. O.V. G a ra y. Olley
could have died of a stroke and injured
him self when he (ell.
Stephen and Mrs. Sherry think not
They arc convinced that their father was
murdered by a gang of young toughs who
continually harassed him; threw rocks at
him , slashed his porch screen, and broke
the glass In his front door. But the police
have no proof.
We may never know exactly how
Henry OUcy died. Likewise, m any of us
w ill never know, the way M innie knew,
what it means to grow old and alone, to
slowly melt from within, then finaUy to
cu rl up in bed one night and quietly pull
the plug on a lonely heart.

�lA-EvtniinHiraM, lantord, PI.

Thuevdsy, May |1, t m

W O RLD
IN BRIEF
N e w Round O f Riots As

4th Hunger Striker Dying
B E L F A S T , Northern Ireland t U P I l - I HA hunger
striker Raymond M K W s h died today on the a1st day of h il
t u t and two more o( his fellow hunger strikers, Patrick
O'Hara and Brendan M cln u g h lu i. were reported In serious
condition.
Rioters showered police w ith gasoline bomba following
news of the death of McCreesh, 14, the third IRA man to
starve himself to death this month In Mare prison In a
campaign to obtain political prisoner status rather than
treatment a s common crim inals
O 'Hara. 14, who began his death fast on the same day as
McCreesh, w u thought to have "only a few hours to Uve"
by his supporters.
A statement by the Republican press office u l d O'Hara's
mother Peggy was telephoned by the chaplain at Mare
prison at 2: IS pm . today "to come quickly to the hospital."
"The priest believed that Patsy has only a few hours to
lire ,” the statement said.

Pope A lm o s t O u t O f D anger
RO M E (U P I) — Doctors today considered declaring
Pope John Paul II com pletely out of danger from his
gunshot wounds and a papal envoy optim istically u ld the
pontiff would be back at his work! travels by the tall.
A Vatican spokesman u ld official announcements about
travel would have to aw ait John Paul's release irom the
hospital but In
SpsL"., papal savoy Miam niwr
Antonio Innocent! told priests the pontiff would go ahead
with a scheduled visit to Spain In October.

Glseard Snubs Inauguration
P A R IS (U P I I — Francois Mitterrand look power today u
France’ s (tret leftist president In 21 years and proclaimed
" a new alliance of todallam and freedom” In • ceremony,
snubbed by the m an he defeated to enter the E ly tra Palace.
Mitterrand, 64, the veteran leader of the Soda list Party,
assumed office in a cer emony this m orning attended by
prominent leftist who gathered (or the Inauguration In the
ornate 16th-century ballroom of the presidential palace.
Departing President Valery Glseard d'Eataing broke
tradition by not attending the Inauguration and after bid­
ding farew ell to MUtrrTand on the palace steps be walked
unsmiling!)* through the Eiysee gates.
In his Inaugural address, Mitterrand expressed h is hopes
of using the presidency to move France toward a mere
socialised society.
"What higher demand for our country than to achieve ■
new alliance of sodalism and lib e rty?" asked Mitterrand,
who shunned form al attire (or a dark gray business suit sod
burgundy-colored necktie. "What more beautiful ambition
than to offer Ihe world of tomorrow?"

Dealers Stop Dollar's Rise
I jONDON (U P I) - The U J . dollar w as lower a t the
opening of European foreign eichanges today due to heavy
Intervention by central banks, dealen said. Gold picked up
as the currency markets became cautious.
In Zurich gold opened at 1411JO an ounce, op $2 from
1471130 Wednesday. In London it opened 61 higher at &gt;462.00
from 6476.00
"Gold picked up about 63 as caution developed In
currency m arkets," said a dealer for bullion broken
Samuel Montagu.
The pound opened at &lt;3.0920. up from 62.0610.
"The dollar seemed a little nervous and showed a mixed
pattern,” said a dealer for Barclay's Bank International.
Dealers said foreign dealers, mainly from Slneannre and
Hong Kong, and foreign banks actively sold dollars and
bought yen. Short covering pulled up the d o lla r from the
opening rate, traders said.

R estraints Lifted

Carter Arms Sales Policy Junked
W ASH ING TO N ( U P I ) The
Reagan administration raised the
curtain today cn its new policy mi
worldwide arm s sales — a M l of
principles that effectively Junk the
restraints U ld by Ihe Carter ad­
ministration
In a speech to the. board of gover­
nors of the aerospace Industries
Association, Undersecretary of State
James Buckley u id the new overrid­
ing principle w ill be that arm s u le s
"can supplement our own defense
efforts arid serve as a v ita l and con­
structive instrument of Am erican
foreign policy."
Where Ihe former adm inistration
healed arm s u le s as "something
evil," Buckley u ld the Heagan ad­

ministration believes they "can be an
important adjunct to our own security
by helping deter acta of aggression ...
and facilitating access by Am erican
forces to m ilitary facilities abroad."
He u i d detailed guidelines of the
arms u le s policy w tll.be published
soon, but laid out the general
framework.
This administration, unlike the last
one, "starts with no illusions as to
Soviet purposes," he said, and w ill use
u le s of weapons to other countries as
a means of "(icin g tp to the realities
of Soviet aggrandizement "
One of Ihe principles w ill be that the
U nited Stales w ill g iv e highest
priority to requests (or arm s from
"members of our m ajor alliances and

from those nations w ith whom we
have developed cooperative relation­
ships."
It w ill t ill thooe skies to th o u
countries, he said, " to revitalize
alliances ... and to buttress our own
defense production capabilities."
Thera w ill be some restraints,
Buckley said, Including whether the
arm s requested suit the needs of the
country Involved and whether the
proposed u le “ can be absorbed by the
recipient w ill out over-burdening Ita
m ilitary support system o r financial
resources."
On the m ailer of ab ility to pay, he
said Ihe administration w ill ask
Congress for low-interest loans for
some countries.

Congress Rebuffs Reagan
On Social Security Cuts
W ASH ING TO N (U P I) - In the face of
mounting opposition to proposed Social
Security benefit cuts for early retirees,
Health end Human t~****icw Secretary
Richard Schweikar told Congress today
the s in is t s t r a it e s is w illing to "en­
tertain other Ideas.”
The Republicandom lnated Senate, on
a unanimous 94-0 vote, Wednesday took a
stand against "precipitous or unfair"
reductions In e arly retirement benefits.
House Democrats — 63 of w han backed
President Reagan on the budget — ap­
proved ■ sim ila r resolution.
A t the Senate began debate early today
on a |21 billion supplemental funding bill.
Sen. Daniel M oynlhan, D-N.Y., proposed
an amendment th ri would keep funds far
the current fisc a l year from being used to
Implement a cut In Social Security
benefits.
A t the n m e time, Schwctker, whose
department oversees Social Security,
made his m aiden trip b&gt; Capitol Hitt to
defend the bailout package announced by
Ihe White House last week.
Schw dker appeared before the House
Committee on Aging, which in a report
predicted the Reagan plan would hurt re­
tirees m uch m ore than Ihe a d ­

m inistration acknowledges.
“ If strong actions are not taken, the
system faces financial Insolvency,” Schwalker warned.
B ut S chw dker, recognising the recent
congressional voles said, "We recognise
there are other possible ways to deal with
the financial problems in the Social
Security system, and we are willing to
entertain other id e a l.”
S d iw d k e r 's destination was the House
Com mittee on Aging, which in s report
projected the Reagan plan would hurt ret ir a e i m u ch m ore than the a d ­
m inistration admits.
Rep. Claude Pepper, D-Fla., chairman
of the House Select Committee on Aging
opened hearings today by calling the
magnitude of Reagan's proposed cuts
"staggering ... cold and outrageous."
He said under Reagan’s proposal no
age-63 retiree single or couple, "no
m atter how m uch he or she paid into the
foetal S ecurity system, would receive s
benefit above the poverty line."
T he unanim ous Senate resolution
expressed opposition to action that would
“ precipitously and unfairly penalize
e a rly r e t ir e e s ." A pleased Senate
D em ocratic f* a d e r Robert Byrd u ld ,

"T h a t's clearly ■ rejection of the ad­
m inistration's pro po ul."
E a rlie r in the day, Senate Republicans
barely averted an embarrassing rebuke
of Reagan with the 46-48. party-line
d e fea t o f a D em ocratic resolution
branding the Reagan plan a "breach of
fa ith " that would "precipitously and
u n f a ir ly ” deny people approaching
retirem ent the benefits on which they
have planned.
The version passed by the Senate,
offered by Senate Finance Committee
C hairm an Robert Dole, R-Kan., deleted
the accusatory language, but carried the
sam e basic message
The White House dearly was unhappy,
but had little of substance to u y . Acting
press secretary Larry Speakes called the
vote "an attempt by Ihe Democrats to
politicize an iasue that is too Important
for partyline politics.”
“ What's at stake," u ld Speakes, "la
the su rvival of Ihe Soda) Security
system ."
The Senate resolution u id Congress
sh o u ld not "su p p o rt reductions in
benefits which exceed those necesury to
achieve a financially sound system and
the well-being o l a ll retired Americans "

City Considers Charter Changes
By B R IT T SM ITH
H erald Staff W riter
If the voters go along, the Winter
Springs City Council w ill no longer be a
council; It w ill be a commission. And
commissioners w ill serve three - In­
stead d the present two-year t e r m
Those were Just two of the changes to
the city's charter adopted by the r ily
council Tuesday night.
However, perhaps the most sweeping
change suggested by Ihe d ty 's charter
revision commission — switching the
method of electing coundlm en from the
present at-large system to a series of five
single-m em ber d is t r ic t s
— was
discarded as unnecessary.
The council also retained Ihe council*
manager form of government, but gave
itself the option of not having a d ty
manager If for some reason council
wants to do aw ay with (he post
The recommended changes w ill be the
subject of a public hearing and will ihen
go lo the voters for approval in a special
election sometime before Sept. 16, Ihe

qualifying deadline far city coundl
candidates wishing to appear on the
November ballot. A specific referendum
date w ill be ret later.
The p rim a ry objection to the distric­
ting proposal w as that the dty isn't ready
(or It yet. As councilman Martin Tren­
cher pointed out, "W e are growing so
rapidly and the population Is constant!,
shifting, we could wind up with one
com m lasionera representing 4,000 people

and another representing only 1,000. We
must w a it for the d ty to lU b ltie ,'' he
said.
A lso , u nd er Ihe d is tric tin g plan,
although comm issioners would serve a
particular district, they would run atUrge, meaning they could be eleried by
citizens cityw ide, not Just from their
d lstrid .
Under that Mt-up, "you could lose your
district and still win the race,” said
council m em ber Maureen Boyd.
The existing a l-U rg e election method
has a sim ila r fault - theoretically, all
live coundlm en could be elected from
Ihe same neighborhood, Ihe same street,

or even the same block.
B u i that Is ao unlikely, coundlmen
u ld , they decided lo stick with the
present system.
In other business, the coundl voted to
retain the l* e d y Corp. of Orlando to
study the feasibility of purchasing the
North Orlando Water and Sewer C o rp ,
and then putting together a financing
package to buy the facility.
North Orlando U a private utility
serving residents prim arily on the d ty 's
west side.
A cquisition o l its own utility would
allow the d t y lo keep water and sewer
biUa down, according to Mayor Troy
Ptland.
"T h e d t y would qualify for federal
funds a private utility wouldn't. And
(here wouldn't be a profit motive for the
d ty , ao we could provide the best service
at the lowest cost," he u ld .
If the d ty decides to buy the plant, and
bonds are issued to raise the necesury
funds, Leedy would be paid one-half of
one percent per 61,000 of bonds issued for
ita p a ri In Ihe deal.

Appeal Planned In Pa. Lottery Scam Convictions

WEATHER
N A T IO N A L REPORT: Fie rce storms pounded ihe nation's
Northwest with hall, snow and ra in today, making trarel
hazardous, and heavy rain lashed sections of south and ctniral
Florida, bringing 1 4 inches of water to la k e Okeechobee
Wednesday, providing some relief to residents who have been
suffering through Ihe sta te'! w o n t drought In ID years.
Forecasts called for continued rain today. A small tornado
touched down near the southeast Florida town of D ivte
Wednesday, hurling a fire truck against a fire station w a ll No
Injuries were reported. Traveler advisories were Issued t a lly
for the mountains of Colorado and central Montana and
roadsides In Yellowstone. Mont., were covered by a 7-inch
layer of hail. In Michigan, wind-whipped fires Wednesday
burned more thin 2,000 acres of timber land In Ihe northern
lo w e r Peninsula, where no ra in h a i fallen in over two weeks
Tempers lures ringed In the 60s and 70s for the Great Plains
and the Midwest, while moat of tho nation had highs in the 40a
and 60s.

H A R R IS B U R G , P i. IU P I) - A
Pittsburgh T V celebrity and a state
lottery official were found guilty late
Wednesday of masterminding a $1.2
m illion Pennsylvania tottery team
using w eighted plngpong b ills .
Their attorneys Immediately vowed
to appeaL
"T h e game Isn’t over until the
final whistle blows,” said Ihe at­
torney for television celebrity Nick
Perry.
P e rry , 64, a form er announcer (or
W T AE-T V in Pittsburgh, which
broadcast the state tottery drawing,
and Edw ard Plevel, S3, who was
suspended from his state tottery

bureau post, were convicted o l
fixing the A p ril 24. 1960, Dally
Num ber drawing.
The w inning number 666 produced
a record payout of 616 million,
arousing the suspicions of law en­
forcement officials. A grand Jury
later charged P e rry, Plevel and six
others trie d lo w in 61.2 million by
betting on Ihe rigged number
In the trial, one witness said
Plevel and P e rry planned to fix the
lottery every six months if their
o rig in a l aclw u ie auetteoed.

A Dauphin County Court Jury of
six men and six women deliberated
6 4 hours before reaching their

verdict.
P e rry stared straight ahead when
the verdict was announced, showing
no em otion. However, Plevel
teemed stunned.
" I didn't expect it,” he u id .
P e rry was convicted of atl charges
against him — two counts of rigging
s publicly exhibited contest, five
counts of perjury and one count each
of c rim in a l conspiracy, crim inal
m ischief and theft by deception.
P tc rc l w as convicted of on* count
each of the same charges, but w u
acquitted of one count of unsworn
falsification. He had been charged
with signing false statements sub­

m itte d to the stale Revenue
D epartm ent
P e rry facet a maximum M y e a n
in Jail and 6140,000 tn fines, while
P le vel faces 31 years in prison and
167,000 In fines.
Four others, who pleaded guilty to
fix charges, agreed to testify for the
p ro se cu tio n . Tw o received five
y e a rs ' probation and two are
aw aiting sentencing. Charges were
dism issed against two other co co n­
spirators.
T t* im ist damaging lesUmany of
the 23 prosecution witnesses came
from W T A E stagehands Joseph
B ock and Fred Luman. They ad­
m itted to weighting and twitching

plngpong bolls used In vacuumselection lottery machines in which
the winning numbers are randomly
chosen by being atrbtown into
selection spouts. They both testified
they were recruited for the Job by
Pe rry.
Peter M a n g a s, s business partner
of P e rry ’s in Forbes Vending Inc.,
admitted lo the court he arranged
the other end of the scheme, betting
114.000 on the numbers (lied to win
lie also testified he paid Persy
633.000 tn winnings.
M a n g o s ' brother, Jack, testified
he also had placed heavy beta on the
w inning combination.

A R E A R E A D IN G S (I a .m .u temperature: 74; overnight
low: 69; Wednesday’s high; 90; barometric pressure: 29.92 and
rising: relative humidityt 73 percent; winds: Northwest at 10
mph.; rain, 1,23 Inches.

Man Confesses In Sanford To 1972 Georgia Slaying

F R ID A Y 'S TIDES: D A Y T O N A R E A C H : highs, 11:07 s m ,
11:21 p m.; tows, 4:48 a m , 4:37 p.m.; PO RT CAN A V E RA L:
highs, 10:66 a.m., 11:13 p.m .; tows. 4.39 a.m., 4:46 pm .;
IIAYPUHT: highs,4:46 s.m., 3 :14 p.m.; tows, 9:41 a.in., 10:62
p.m.

Action Reports

BOATING FORECAST: SI. Augustine to Joplter Inlet, Out
60 Miles: Wes' to southwest 10 to 16 knots shifting to northwest
winds this morning. Winds becoming northerly 10 to 16 knots
tonight and northeast Friday. Seas 2 feet increasing to 3 to 6
feet w ell offshore
A R E A FO RECAST: Mostly sunny this afternoon and
Friday. F air and cooler tonight. Highs in the m id 60s today and
upper 80s Friday. Lows in the low 60s. Winds west to northwest
10 to IS mph.
E X T E N D E D FORECAST: F a ir weather with seasonal
temperature* through period Low* in the 60s except 70s
southeast coast and Keys. Highs (rqm the m id 80s to around 90.

M aking a m urder arrest is rarely a i easy u the way Sanford
police detective Donnie Anderson did it early this morning. A
suspect in a nine-year-old shotgun slaying practically ftU Into
his tap.
According to police reports, this is the way it happened:
Shortly before midnight, an unidentified man telephoned the
Seminole County sh e riffs office and u id he wanted to confeu
to a crim e. Deputies were willing to oblige, but sin ce the caller
u id be w u tn Sanford, waiting at 1st Street and Sanford
Avenue, Ihe case was turned over to city officers.
So, Anderson drove to Ihe given addreu, and sure enough,
there stood 34-ytar-old Alvin W illiam McCord, a lso known u
Robert Jones and Donald Iam b, of Ft. Lauderdale, who
claim ed he killed a man In Jefferson County, G a. nearly nine
years ago In June 1971
Anderson called Ihe Jefferson County aulhcriU es to verify
M cCord's story and found that It checked o u t
"H e gave Information that no ore else could have known
except someone Involved in the crim e," Anderson said.

* Fire t
* Courts
* Police
The dead m an's identity Is unknown. Georgia police Just
recently found hia rem ains.
McCord told police that he shot the man three tim es with a
shotgun after he picked up McCord hitchhiking. M cCord u i d
he dumped the body In some woods and stole the m an's n r .
Why McCord chose to co n fe u to !bv crime ntna years after
the fact w u unclear this more "jp Georgia authorities were
scheduled to be tn Sanford some time today to Interview
McCord and begin extradition proceedings. McCord has been
charged with m urder and is being held without bond.

GROCERY STO RE ROBBED
Saniord police were continuing their Investigation today in
Wednesday's robbery of Bob’ s Grocery store, 130 Cypress Av
The store w u broken Into between 4:30 a jn . and 6 a.m. t
thieves who scaled ■ ladder to a window 16 feet off the g ra in
smashed Ihe g lt u and craw led through.
Taken w u 6290 87 worth of cigarettes, sauuge, lunch mea
and cash.
E V E R Y T H IN G B U T K IT C H E N SINK
Thieves who burglarised n home a l 1307 Williams Ave
Saniord, this week took Just about everything but the kitebe
sink.
The theft w u discovered about 10 p.m. Wednesday by In
Bevins who w u In the proccra of selling (he house ar
everything in l l Today, there it a tittle fe u in It
Bandits stole approximately 62,000 worth of furniture ar
appliances including a sofa, chair, double bed, chest i
drawers, night table, lamp, washing machine, and electn
m ow er— BR m SMITH

AREA DEATHS
MRS.
BERTA
BERKSB A l'Q U
Mrs. Berta Redmbaugh, 66,
a l 1361 S I’ alinello Ave.,
S a n io rd , died Wednesday
m orning
at
Seminole
M em orial H ospital She w u
born tn Am erirus, Ga., and
had lived In Sanford for 33
years. She w u a Baptist
S u rv iv o rs in clu de (our
daughters, Mrs. Ann G racty
and M rs. Flora Whitten, both
of San ford, M rs. A n n a '

E ir iiiZ iij ; I lc m lc l

Albrituan, of Wachula and
Mrs. Ruth Fender, Apopka;
four sons, Charles C.. Monroe,
La., Jam es E., Saniord, Richford, P a d u ca h , Ky. and
F r a n k lin . E r ie , F a .; 21
g ra n d c h ild re n ; 23 great­
grandchildren; three sisters,
Mrs. A Ule Beck, Columbus,
G s .. M rs . F lo r a Webb,
D e c a tu r. G a ., and M rs.
B t n n lt
H a rriso n ,
M on­
tgomery, Ala.
B riu o n Funeral Home-FA
i u »m mi

mi

Thursday, M ay 31. I N I - V o l. 71 No 133
r t t iiu w e p»&gt;if
W M n . n e t s ) u i* re « T * r Th« u i w e
M in t s , i m , He N. F n * r k S m , la n to rd . F la u r n
V etM d C la n Paitoge Paid at la n ia rd . Ftorida i n n
Heme D i i - r i ' r Week. II M , M e a t" M i l l e W enm i lie M i
Veer. | i | N I , Matt W ire I I .I l l M tn tk. I I M i a Me.Wii,
h i m , vear. u&gt; n

la in charge of arrangements.
MILS. E L S IE C O O P E R
Mrs. E ls ie R. Cooper, 64. of
Route I Bos 194-A, Sanford,
died e a r ly W ednesday at
Seminole M em orial Hospital
A native of Horse Branch,
K y , ihe moved to Sanford 10
y e a n ago Irom W hiling, bid.
She w u a homemaker and a
bowling enthusiast.
She is survived by i son,
Lynn Cooper, Sanford; three
g ra n d ch ild re n ; a m other,
Mrs. M aggie Cummings, and
a sister M rs. Sue Funk, both
of Sanford.
Funeral services and burial
w ill be tn Hartford, Ky.
G ra m k o w F u n e ra l Home,
Sanford, is tn charge of local
arrangements.
MRS. O .L S T IN E
Mrs. D L LaVannsc Stine.

39, D e e rfie ld , III., d ie d
Tuesday night a t Highland
P a rk H o sp ita l, H ighlan d
Park, 111. S h e
was
a
Presbyterian.
S u rv iv o rs
in c lu d e her
husband, Alfred L Stine,
Deerfield (fo rm e rly of San­
ford); mother, M rs . George
Jackson, F t W alton Beach;
two s is te rs, M r s . F r a n k
Campbell. Ft. W alton Beach,
and Mrs. F re d H olt, M em ­
phis, Te«&lt;n.; one bro ther,
George Jackson, Franklin,
V a .j
fa th e r-in -la w
an d
mother^t-Uw, M rs. and M r s
George Stine, Sanford.
Brisson Funeral H cm e-PA
is in charge of arrangements.

funtrai Notices_
a io iw a a u o M .
m r s.
•■its - runseat m m h ear

M u ■•eta tadsnUaugn. a l. Sf
a n S Patm stto A**.. Vantord.
» n o died
W M n t iilo
al
Ism m *lt M s m a e la l H s t p iia l,
■Mil b* al It M * m Mondae s i
Reman f v n e t l l H am s mlt* m s
»r* Paul Mur pHy aftxLaruiQ
a x ilit f d be ihe R s v
D K
O uM ar Ouetal In O a a ia a m
M am m al P a rk telaaon F unseal
horns P a in m arge.
K U P I C t . M R . I C lO w 10 M e m o ria l a s e v ic s t lor M r .
Iwkptg k u p e ti. M or L a te v ie w
Nurvng Hams. Vantu rd w ho
died Mono a r m il M lo d a r a l 7
p m . a l D avid Lang Fun eral
Horn* (tiapsT. im ie sd of F rid s e
a l o r r v W ilr announced

S T IN I. M R S . D .L. L A VON MSR - fu n e ra l k o rv k e t toe bars
D L L iv o rn o * V im s, It, se
O tS rlltid. Ill . ■nod-od Tuoadtr
* Higntand Park. I ll , *111 b s
nsid M 4 . JO a m Saturday a l
lb s g r t v t t ld s In O a k ls a m
Msm onal P a rk w in De. V le fN

L. Rfr-ui m.seiklseing Renas*
Funs'al Homs PA m marge

FLORENCE
DENTURE CLINICS, Inc.

«

N o w in
ORLANDO, FLA.

(305) 644-1753
Dr. John R. Parry, D.D.S. &amp;A ssociates

�Evarying Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Legisloture Rapped

NATION
IN BRIEF
Safety Council: 5S0
May Die This Holiday
CHICAGO (UP1)— Same 420 to 250 people could be
killed end mother 22,000 to 20,000 could tuffrr disabling
Injuries In traffic accidents during the long Memorial
Day weekend, the National Safety Council tayi.
Traffic accident* during last year’i three-day
Memorial Day weekend killed 447 people and left 21,000
with disabling injuries.
Council official* projecting the death loll for the
weekend, which begins at 6 p.m. local time Friday and
ends at midnight Monday, said the holiday u srn in the
deallett driving period of the year.

Doctors Probed In Deaths
RIVERSIDE, C a lif l U P D - Fo u r docto n are being
investigated (or possible negligence and incompetence
in the deaths of more than two dozen elderly patients at
two rural hospital*, state health officials say.
Art Kanady, senior special investigator at the state
Board of Medical Q uality Assurance's San Bernardino
office, H id Wednesday the physicians were on the staff
at San Gorgonio Pass H ospital in Banning and Com­
munity Hospital of the Vaileya in P e n is, which was
closed last week as a public haxarri.
Twenty-seven people died under suspicious cir­
cumstances last M arch and A p ril at the two hospitals

Bomb Threat Disrupts Play
NEW YOHK (D P I)— The audience at a hit Broad­
way musical performance and scores of shoppers and
commuters were evacuated onto Manhattan streets is
the rash of bomb threats reached a new high.
The phony bomb threat blitz that has harried bombsquad members for five days numbered 202 calls on
Wednesday, and police today continued to check out
Ups and threats.
A ll of the threats proved false, police said. The only
authentic report of explosives occurred as workers
dredged the East R iv e r under the Brooklyn Bridge and
found two live, World W ar If a rtillery shells sboul to
s.m.
Among the evacuations caused by the bomb scares,
the standing-room-only audience of the Broadway
show, "42nd Street," and Us scantily-clad cast were
forced onto the street. No device was found s i the
Majestic Theater, and after about 22 minutes the show
went on.

A Piece O f Art?
LOS A N G E LE S {UPI&gt;— An artist upset over an
unflattering review by a Los Angeles Times art critic
sa y i he considers the truckload of horse manure he
dumped in front of the newspaper "a piece of art."
About Ihe only people who didn't know Lee Waisler
was planning to dump the m anure were the police, who
arrived after the artist drove his red dump truck up to
the Times, unloaded it In the street and left.
Waisler had sent announcements to the press he
planned to dump the m anure M ay 11 "to dear the air”
over a review by c ritic Suzanne Muchnlc, but he had
the good taste to postpone the event when Ihe pope waa
shot that day.
Scores of people, including several Times em­
ployers, cheered as W aisler emptied his truck. Jumped
on the running board and gave the thumbs up sign. A
large sign on black canvaa bearing the worda "The
C ritic’s Choice" was on top of the pile.

Jobs Tough For Liberal Arts
EVANSTON, 111. ( U P I ) — College graduates should
find it &gt; bit easier to land Jobs this year overall tut
students with a traditional lib e ral arts degree will find
It harder, Northwestern U niversity sava.
On the whole, employers surveyed by the university
said they planned to h ire IS percent more bachelors*
degree candidates and 10 percent rowe master's
degree candidates than they hired from the pool of 1960
graduates.
But Ihe demand for graduate* in liberal arts and
other non-technical field s had decreased 22 percent,
the university said Wednesday.

Schmidt To M eet Reagan
WASHINGTON ( U P ! ) - West German Chancellor
Helmut Schmidt, leaving some of his political
problems i t home, w ill try to persuade the United
States to hasten negotiation with the Soviet Union on
reducing nuclear m issile* slatterned in Europe.
Schmidt a n i hi* wife, Hannelore, were to be of­
ficially greeted on the South Law n of White House
today by President and M rs. Reagan.
The German leader went im m ediately to a meeting
with Secretary of State Alexander Haig after arriving
Wednesday at Andrews A ir Force Base.

Close Call For Pianos
A T L A N T A ( U P I ) — The F e d e ra l A vlailon
Administration s i id an Atlanta-bound Eastern Airlines
flight tnd a private Jet cam e within a few hundred feet
of each other near Orm ond Beach. Fla., Wednesday.
F A A spokesman Ja ck B arke r said a twinengine,
turbo-prop Piper Cheyenne made a lb-degree turn to
avoid the E aiie ra 727, flig h t M2 from Daytona Beach,
Fla. to Atlanta.
P m incident took place about 20 miles north of
Ormond Beach at an altitude of 12.200 feet.

Marine Held In Shooting
FO R EST V ILLE , Mo. ( U P I ) - State police Inlay
held a 21-year-old M arine corporal for the shooting
death of &gt; young woman du ring a series of sniper at­
tacks in the suburbs of Washington. D.C.
Four sniper attacks were reported Wednesday, three
tn northen Virginia and one in suburban Maryland.
M ary Montecalvo, 24. waa killed and two men were
Injured, one seriously. P h illip Joseph Sleeve* of
Bandm, Ore., was held In the JforestvtUe barracks
awaiting eztradition proceedings in Prince George's
County O m it Court and m urder charges in Virginia.

Truman Sidekick Dead
WASHINGTON (U PI)— MaJ. Gen. H arry H.
Vaugham, who as President H a rry Trum an's m ilitary
sidekick and close personal friend survived influencepeddling charges and some unsavory associates, la
dead at age 17.
Vaughan died Wednesday at DeW itt Arm y Hospital
m nearby Fart Belvotr, V*. The cause of dealth was not

Violent Crime Up 14%
T A L L A H A S S E E , Fla (U P I) - Violent
crim e has Jumped 14 percent so ta r this
y e a r over the same period of I960 and yet
the Legislature still rtfuaes to provide
additional money for ihe crim e fight.
Attorney General Jim Sm ith and
F lo rid a Department of Law E n fo r­
cement Director Jim York said Wed­
nesday they find Ihe Legislature's un­
w illingness to desl adequately with
crim e hard to believe.
“ Somehow they have tost sight of
funding those crudsl, basic needs lik e
law enforcement, education and tra n ­
sportation," Smith said.
Sm ith and York held a newi conference
to comment on, among other things, a
report showing a 14.4 perceit increase in
violent crim e In the first quarter of 1961
compered to the first quarter of 1960,
w ith robbery Jumping 12.7 percent and
m urders increasing 28 percent

B re a k in g and entering, b u rg la ry ,
larceny and motor vehicle theft In­
creased 7.2 percent over first-quarter
1960 figures. Of the nonviolent crimes,
breaking and entering and burglary
showed the greatest Increase w ith 12.2
percent.
The value of property stolen in Flo rid a

O v erall crim e rose 6.1 percent, w hile
arrests decreased l.J percent, compared
to crim e report figure* for January
through M arch, 1960.
The repott shows a continuation of the

XGffi
D

trend that resulted In sn 18 percent in­
crease In total m sjor crim es for I960 over
197*.
Under-equipped police agencies and a
crim in al Justice system "th a t c a n t
handle Ihe load” contributed to the dra­
m atic Increase, York said, but the
le g isla tu re Is unwilling to deal w ith the
problem.
"V iolent crim inals are not taking our
system seriously because we don't have a
system .. We have a bastardised version
of the system and that* another area
where we're fiscally conserving our­
selves Into big trouble.”
Handguns were the major weapons
used to com m it m urder, s t a l l i t i r i
showed. PUtoLrvlated killings ro te from
169 to 222— a Jump of 21.4 percent for the
quarter.

in the first three months of 1981 was
11(2,206,179, an Increase of 30.4 percent
la w enforcement agencies recovered
11.9 percent of the loei, or (26,019.127.
Crim e increased 10.3 percent in the
cities, 9 4 percent In suburban arra s, 7.1
percent in non-suburban areas, 6.1
percent in metropolitan areas and 1.6
percent in rural areas.
"F ro m the figures, crim e appears to be
still increasing, but looking back a lew
years, we see that the Increase la leveling
off,” said Alan Knudson, F D L E bureau
chief charged with compiling (he figures
from city, county and state law en­
forcement agencies.
York u td drugs were a major cause of
violent street crime. He said the increase
would probably continue because of "an
underfunded crim inal Justice system ."
"In Dade County, we estimate that 20
percent of the murder rate tn term s of
either the 'cocaine cowboys' k illin g each
other, tra ffick e rs fig h tin g am ong
themselves or people venturing out into
parts of the county or-city that they are
unfam iliar with in searrh of drugs,''
Y ork said.

Thursday, May 11.19H-IA

AND NOW
A FEW WORDS
FROM OUR
LOAN
DEPARTMENT...

dept.

It Came, But is It Enough ?
record wildfire year and at least nine
large sinkholes.
“ About two days under that hot sun and
low hum idity and we'll be right back
where we itarted. As far as our muck
fires, it won't help us a bit," he said. "B ut
we're thankful. We're 12 inches of rain
below normal (for the year) and .every
month since May of last year has been
low ."
A blustery line of storms moved into
Centra) Florida Wednesday afternoon,
and h it the tip of the peninsula before
dark. Wednesday night, heavy ra in was
s t ill fa llin g on Lake O keechobee,
reservoir for South Florida.
That brought i t least a week's post­
ponement to the district's decision on
whether to raise to 20 percent Ihe weekold 22 percent water-use cutback order

M IA M I (U P I) - Rain, virtually un­
seen in Central and South Florida for
months, finally fell. It fell with hail,
spawned at least one sm all tornado,
flooded streets. It fell in windstorms that
blew off awnings and roofs. But It a lio
brought lem prrary relief from the
drought.
"M o s t Important of a il," said t a r r y
Nunn, spokesman (or the South Florid a
W a te r M anagem ent D istric t, w h ic h
controls the water supplies of half of
F lo rid a 's nine million people, " is one to
one and a half inches of rain have fallen
on ta k e Okeechobee, and it * s till
ra in in g ."
B ut B ill Bell, state Division of Forestry
director in central Florida, said the rains
wlU only "help us for the next day or
tw o" w ith the drought that has caused a

4.2 m illion South Floridians h a w been
living with, district officials said.
However, the Southwest Florida Water
Management District board, meeting at
B rookiville, ordered the firs t mandatory
water-use cutback for the 1( counties,
with 12 million people, around Tampa
Bay
Starting June I, Lite general population
must reduce water use 20 percent; in­
dustry — including ihe phosphate indus­
try, a major user of the d istric t's 1.6
billion gallons daily — m ust cut back 10
percent.
By 6 p .m . the National Weather
•Service in Miami reported 2.02 inches
had fallen in Hollywood, in southern
Broward County; 1.13 inches in Orlando;
1.30 Inches In West Palm Beach,

Florida Orange Juice: Less Sweet
I A K E I A N D , Fla. I UPI) - Flo rid a ’s sugar content stand­
ard for frozen concentrated orange Juice w ill drop to the lower
federal level Dec. 1 unless an Industry push far a higher
federal standard Is successful.
Flo rid a processors now pack F C O J at a 41.2 degree Brix
sugar content, or the sweetness of natural fresh oranges.
. The federal k r a i currently is 41.8 degree B rio , which at on*
tim e waa the natural fruit Juice level but which Florid a citrusmen c o n tcn l la too low. They claim natural fru it now has a
higher sugar content as a result of Improved fru it quality.
Flo rid a processor* have alwaya packed a sweeter con­
centrate than the federal regulations called for, using a 44.1
degree B rix standard, « about the equivalent of an extra
orange In each can of concentrate.
Bu&gt; last year the commission adopted a processor-supported
move to lower the Florida standard.
It settled on a t i l degree pack for this season, with the
standard to go to whatever the federal requirem ent la on Dec.
1.
At the tam e lim e, the commission and other Florid a citrus
groups petitioned the Food and Drug Adm inistation to raise its
standard from 41.1 degrees to 0 .2 degvre*
Wednesday, (he commission listened to nearly eight hours of
discussion before rejecting i move to delay going to the federal
level until Dec. 1, 1962, and to keep the Flo rid a standard at 43 2
degrees until the FD A sets upon the petition.
Another proposal to have Florida go back to the 44.6 degree
standard was withdrawn.
The proposal to keep the Florida standard at the current
level until the F D A acta was supported by F lo rid a Citrus
M utual and the Indian River Citrus le ag ue, two m ajor grower
organizations.

Florida processors have supported the bid to go to the lower
federal standard, contending Increasing amounts of orange
Juice are being sold throughout the nation by out-of-slate
packers who can conform to the lower federal requirement.

At Flagship we've got all kinds ol money to
lend for all kinds of reasons. So we re say ing
'yes' on all kinds o l Irwins Com e in and
see one of our Flagship loan officers soon.

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Mi N. F H E N C H A V E ., SANFORD, F L A . 31771
Area Code JOWa-2811 or H I- M U

Thursday, May 71, 1?|1—*A

Around

Warn* D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovanbury, Advertising end Circulation D irector
Home D elivery: Wrek, |)
Month, H Z , S W u .liia,lis.u u ;
Y ear. W OO B y M ail: Week,91.2S; Month, 9S.2S; I Months.
CO 00: Y ea r. C
7 . 0 0 , ___________

How To Curb
Food Stamp Use
TTiere was recently another of those sensible
developments taking place in Washington these
days which American taxpayers can applaud. The
agriculture committees in both House and Senate
approved President Reagan's plan to curb the
runaway food stamp program.
Food stamps have become a casebook example
of how a modest, well-intentioned welfare
program can become a rampant rogue. Initially,
15 years ago, an estimated 442,000 impoverished
persons were receiving food stamps at an annual
cost of $31 m illion. Now, 23 million persons — one
out of every 10 Americans — receive food stamps
at an annual cost of about $11.5 billion, not
counting another $1.2 billion in administrative
costs for the states and federal government.
Benefits are obviously no longer confined to the
very poor. Roughly one-third of the fam ilies on
food stamps own a home and a car. College
students and striking workers may qualify. Food
stamps are, in fact, so far from poverty today that
families with Incomes of $14,000 or more a year
are eligible. Indeed, unless Congress approves its
committee actions, food stamps w ill soon con­
stitute the largest, most costly of all welfare
programs, excelling Medicaid and Aid to
Families with Dependent Children.
Both agriculture committees voted a food
stamp ceiling for 1982 of under $11 billion, which,
while still unacceptably high, is a step at long last
in the right direction. Also, a ban on food stamps
for striking workers was approved by the House
committee. And, moreover, Senate action went
significantly further by allowing stales the
authority, heretofore denied them of requiring
able-bodied food stamp recipients — estimated at
more than 2 million persons — to work in public
service Jobs.
Thanks to some commendable pioneering in
San Diego. Calif., that community’s pilot workfare program, largest in the nation, played a
significant role in the food stamp reform now
working its way through Congress. Workfare
there proved how worthwliile and practical it can
be in operation. Of those eligible to participate in
workfare in San Diego County, two of three gave
up their stamps rather than go to work.
The difficulty is that federal restrictions about
who can participate in workfare are so broad and
generous that a ll too many are ruled out, in­
cluding for example persons receiving unem­
ployment compensation, students enrolled half­
time, and those participating in drug or alcoholic
rehabilitation. Even so. enough of the 12,000 food
stamp recipients in San Diego County surren­
dered their stamps in preference to work that
almost a quarter million dollars was lopped off
the program. Although the initial costs of setting
up workfare there were high, they were much
lower than studies had forecast and are now at
about the breakeven point.
Workfare has had even more spectacular
results in general relief cases, which, thereby,
have been cut by 42 percent in that county. As a
consequence of what is being accomplished, the
general relief rolls in San Diego County are 200
percent sm aller than those, for example, in
Sacramento, Calif., with less than half the
comparative population.
The need for reform and reorganization of the
multitude of federal welfare progamB has been
recognized for a long time and much debated to
little avail. No one can believe that it w ill be easy
to correct the accumulated abuses and chaos of
nearly half century of welfarism, but it is getting
no sooner and no easier to undertake that enor­
mous task. The Reagan administration is right on
trock, therefore, in addressing this necessary
reform so early arid so vigorously.

BERRY'S WORLD

The Clock
By BRITT SMITH

Dear President R e ta in :
This w ill be the first of m any letters I w ill w rite
to you In the next four years (alm ost) telling you
how to n in the country. Y o u ’l l be m y happy to
know that there la no charge fo r this service,
since I feel it la my duty aa a lo y a l Am erican to
help the president solve the m any problems of
the day.
Now, the first thing, I think you're going to
have to do, M r. Reagan, is stop crying. I recall
that post-election speed) to your cam paign
workers in which you g u t«U d w k e d up because
you had won. On television a little earlier, M r.
Carter got choked up because he lo s t 1 got
choked up both times.
! wasn’t gettg to mention that teary episode
until I read a recent Interview in the Washington
Post in which you said the brotherhood and
esprit de corps you experienced on the gridiron
during your football-playing college days was so
emotional it used to b r in g je a n to your eyes.
There you w e n admitting in one of the moot
prestigious new^iapers In the country to being
little more than ■ drippy Jocks ■ pathetic preppy
in pads. I couldn’t believe it, p a rticu larly after
watching you take that slug In the chest without
so much ss a whimper Why. I half expected you

to lake a shot of redeye and dig the thing out with
a red-hot knife lik e you used to do In all those old

It's a atrain to come up with good lo bs every
day. and while there is no doubt in my m ind you
could do It, 1 don't want you to feel obligated.
W a rm ) Harding and Calvin Coolldge did
tremendous Jobs as president and I doubt if
you’ll find a record c f a single tear they shed.
I must admit I was really shook by that in­
terview in the P o s t How you had developed such
a loving respect for jo u r opponent on the
gridiron. How you could empslhlxe with those
players the T V camera picks up on the bench
sometimes, their faces In their hands sobbing
lik e children. How you had done that yourself.
The only time I didn’t know how to react was
when vou said you would play the same hardnoae
game In the While House you learned between
the hash marks.

But if, as I w spect, your macho constraint
m a m in ts Itself only In connection with things
physical, I'm afraid, M r. President, you’re In a
heap of trouble. 1 mean, if you break down every
time you have to do something emotional like
declare w ar o r throw a couple m illion people out
of work, you’re going to cry yourself into a manic
depressive blue funk before the Concessional
summer recess.
The trouble with being President and crying a
lot Is that by the third or fourth time you've done
It, everybody In the country i f an sobbed out.
I'm not saying you shouldn’t have emotion and
tears in your adm inistration, because heaven
knows the country cculd use a little humanity.
But I think you should turn this problem over to
your vice president, M r. Bush, or if worse comes
to * o « e , your w ile Nancy.
As a matter of fact, there are many people in
Warhlngton, Including Congress, the Supreme
Court, HHS, and the Pentagon, which could
provide some good reasons far the nation to cry
without you having to shoulder the responsibility

D id you want me to cry then?
It must seem aw fully gratuitous for m e to
discuss crying with you. But I thought I'd
mention it now and save you some headaches
later on. No one can keep up a steady weeping
pace far long, especially four y ea n .
Besides, we taxpayers would be stuck with the
b ill for a ll those handkerchiefs.
And that would (sniff) be a crying shame.

ROBERT WALTERS

ROBERT W AGM AN

Start Of
A Bitter
Campaign
WASHINGTON &lt; N EA&gt; - "T e rry Dolan,
you're a lia r." That not-so-sublle message is
at the heart of a series of campaign ad­
vertisements being aim ed at voters in
Maryland, Oklahoma and Massachusetts.
The appearance of these ads a fu ll year and a
half M o re the 1982 congressional elections
may well be a harbinger of (he most vicious
campaign in recent political history.
Who is Terry Dolan? And who is saying
such nasty things about him ?
Dolan Is the chairm an of the S-year-old
N ational C onservative P o lit ic a l A ction
Com m ittee, the p r in c ip a l New R ight
organisation dedicated to defeating liberal
members of the House and Senate.
N CPAC (pronounced "n ik -p a k") was ex­
tremely effective in 1M0, largely as s result of
i l l massive advertising campaigns against
certain liberal senator*. Many of the con­
servative Republicans elected to (he Senate
last year were beneficiaries of campaigns
financed and directed by N C PA C .
N C PAC l i already at w ork on 190, having
so far targeted three D em ocratic legislators
for detest and launched advertising efforts
sgitnst them. The three are Sen. Paul Sar­
banes ol Maryland, Sen. E dw ard Kennedy of
Massachusetts and Hep. J im Jones of
Oklahoma. The ha rd h ittin g ada reflect the
proven strategy of allow ing Republican
candidates to take the high road while the
"independent” N C PAC does the inudslinglng.
In 1971 and 1980, N C P A C * vidouaneu
caught III opponents by surprise. But this
time the Democrats say they are prepared to
fight fire with (Ire. Among the new group*
that have already come out swinging are
Democrat* for the '90s, w hich was launched
by establishment Democrats such as former
p a rty Chairm an R o b e rt S tra u ss, and
PRO PAC, in effort by m em bers of liberal
and labor group*.
It sppesrs that part of tha strategy of these
group* Is to make N C P A C and its chairman
tha issue. In radio spot* and newspaper a d s,.
both orginiiation* have emphasised Dolan's
statement that "a group ilka ours can lie
through its teeth and the candidate it helps
stayi clean. The message to voters Is clear:
Don’t believe what N C P A C aays.
Taka, lor Instance, the spot that Democrats
for the '90s Is running on radio stations all
over Maryland. (The ad was intended to
counter a N CPAC spot labeling Sarbanes as
the biggest spender in the Senate.)
" in the summer of 1979," begins the
com m ercial, " a e x tre m ist rig ht-w in g
organisation calling Itself N C P A C accused a
United State* senator of voting to Increase his
own salary. In fact, he voted against I t ” The
spot ends with the statement: “ So, Terry
Dolan, If you’re listening.. . . we’re going to
tight your lies and distortions with a political
tactic that you w ill find amazing. It's railed
the truth."
Dolan m ys he la not concerned about the
Democratic ads. Tha early campaigns in
Maryland and Oklahoma, he explains, are
designed “ to send ■ shiver down the spines of
every liberal in the House and Senate; they
know that they cannot oppose the Reagan
economic plans it we are going to hold them
responsible, which we are ."

EDUCATION WORLD

1981 Teacher Of The Year
By l nlted Press International
" A teacher must give extra time to those
students who need it ," says Ja y Sommer, the
nation's “ teacher of the y e a r" for 1981.
He believes "kindness and undemanding”
are the moat potent farces in learning.
He might have added that "extra tim e" by
a teacher also eitend s to extra-curricular ac­
tivities. In addition to teaching Spanish,
Russian and Hebrew at New Rochelle High in
New Rochelle, N .Y., Som m er heads the SU
Club and is (acuity adviser to the French club.
Finding estra lim e for the boya and girts
who need It In a one-to-one relationship with
the teacher Is difficult, Sommer allows.
But he Insists that without such sessions
and an opportunity to discuss problems that
Interfere w ith le a rn in g , m any students
flounder,
"I have alw ays fe ll being a teacher Is a
unique and challenging experience," he said.
‘ T o work with young people and lo influence
them is a reponsibility and a privilege."
Sommer la a foreign language teacher. He
speaks 10 languages, w as bom in Germany in
1917 and raised in Czechoslovakia. H u father
died when he was In the fourth grade. He
dropped out of school to earn money the
family needed.
When he was 13, he w u pu*. In a Nazi labor
camp for the duration of World War It. In
1948, he came to A m erica, resuming his
education at night.
Sommer knows — probably better than
most — what it i i to be a student, having
attended classes at night for 21 y e a n in a row.
‘T he (low of w arm th and affection between
teacher and student as w ell as between
student and student creates an atmosphere of
mutual accpUnce in which leaching and
learning flourish,” he said
“ t have learned that lo create such an
environment is one of the most Important
goats s teacher can pursue."
The announcement of Sommer's selection
was made at a W hile House ceremony In
which the first lady, Nancy Reagan,
presented him w ith the traditional symbol oi
teaching — an apple.
The non-edible apple Is crystal and the
symbol of the "teacher of the year" award.
Sommer w u selected from more than

150,000 teachers In the annual awards
program that focuses on excellence In
teaching. The competition Is sponsored by the
Encyclopedia Britannic* Companies, the
Council of Chief Stale School Officers and
Good Housekeeping msgatine.
Sem lflna lists In this year's competition
—P a tricia Oyeshlki, an English teacher at
Samuel F . B . Morae High in San Diego, CaUf.
- S h ir le y J . GUlis, a kindergarten teacher
at Horton School, New lin d txt. Conn.
-Shoshana Herzig, an economics teacher
at Moanalua High in Honolulu, Hawaii.
F.xcerpts from Sommer's "philosophy of
leeching:"
—"The teacher's kind disposition, aside
from being a good educational loot, has an
Importance beyond the mere teaching of
subject matter. The demonstration of love,
un^ V tauuing, and forgiveness is s human
lesson profoundly vital to the education of
each pupil in growth toward maturity and
human! tv ."
— "The interaction between the teecher,
students, and community members is of
paramount importance in teaching and
learning. A teacher who knows the com­
munity in w hich he works p o se u e s a better
understanding of hia Job and of his students. It
is, therefore, very Important that the teacher
becomes involved In the life of the com­
m unity."
- " M o s t im portant In the teaching process
Is the relationship a leather eatabllshes with
hla p up ils. A responsive,
supportive
relationship between teacher and student
establishes the best kind of atmosphere for
learning . Not persistent punitive measures,
but kindness and understanding are the most
potent force* in learning."
- " S tra in e d relationship* in the claswoom
make learning unpleasant, and may, In fact,
produce in student* an intense and lu tin g
dislike for education. On the other hand, in­
spiring students with a sense of their own
worth gives them the c w fid c n c t to express
thmaehre* more freely, lo explore and learn
through their m istakes and lo regard learning
as an adventure.”

numerous deficiencies in President Reagan's
tax-cut proposal are two potentially fatal
fla w i: It is inequitable and unfocused.
Notwithstanding the president's persistent
claim that “ we have tried to be as fa ir and
even-handed ... as w u humanly pouibte,”
the White House package Is unmistakably
skewed in favor of the nation's wealthiest
taxpayers.
There is, in fact, no way to avoid that bias
as long u Reagan persists in embracing the
untested “ supply-side" economic theory,
which holds that Increased capital formation
is the key to the country’ajeconomlc renewal.
Because many low- end middle-income
fam ilies either are In debt or barely able lo
meet their current eipenses, the most logical
source of fresh Investment capital is the
wealthy, for whom a tax cut would provide
additional discretionary income presumably
not susceptible to being diverted into
acquisition of consumer goods o r payments
on earlier purchases.
But Reagan's approach — drastically
slashing m arginal ta t rite s at the upper end
of the Income scale while reducing these rales
only modestly for those who aren't rich —
goes a long way toward destroying the
egalitarian tradition of a progressive u a
system under which the wealthy bear a U rg e
part of the country's personal income-Ux
burden.
Despite the president s personal popularity
and his dazzling niece** In gaining initial
congressional approval for hi* package of
reductions In the federal budget, (he nation's
p o p u list p ro c liv itie s provide co ntinuing
re sista n c e to R eagan’s unbalanced tax
package.
A nationwide public-opinion poll com­
missioned earlier this year by the !x&gt;s
Angeles Times, for example, found that 48
percent of those surveyed believed a tax cut
should be designed to help those earning leas
than 110,000 annually.
Another 40 percent favored relief for
middle-in come taxpayers — those earning
910,000 to 930,000 yearly — while only 3 per­
cent preferred a plan that would help (hose
earning more than 930.000 per year.
But when asked which Income group they
believed would. In fact, benefit most from the
Reagan le x program, 92 percent of those
Interviewed Identified the wealthy (over
930,000), 33 percent said the middle class
(910,000 to 910,000) and only 4 percent said the
poor (leas than 910,000).
A ltho ugh the Reagan ad m in istra tio n
repeatedly has bemoaned the relatively low
rate of personal savings In the United States
compared with other Industrialized nations,
(he W hile Rouse has displayed virtually no
Interest In promoting a carefully targeted
tax-reform package that would be Ukely to
assist middle-income families to increase
their personal savings, thus providing new
investment capital.
There ere. for Instance, scores of bills
pending In Congress that would eliminate or
defer the tax liab ility on interest or dividends
earned on money invested by fam ilies to pay
for their children's college education or
purchase a new home.

JACK ANDERSON

Senator s Coporate Links Cloud Position
WASHINGTON - Profits .r« i pditic* .r e
old bedfellows, and U'a not easy to dtscern the
motives behind an elected o fficia l who acts in
w a y i that benefit hla friends and campaign
contributors. It could be a m atter of principle,
a coincidence or ■ conflict of interest.
Such an official is freshm an Sen. Robert
Hasten, R-Wta,, a 39-year-old m ember of the
New Right who has been enthusiastically
trying to clip the wings of the controversial
Consum er Product S a ftty C om m ission.
Without making a Judgment on the senator's
motive*, I think the public la entitled to know
about Lajten's links to corporations that ha v*
reason to want the commission weakened or
eliminated.

’ This is realty a tense time ol year for colleges
— waiting to see how many high school seniors
have accepted them!”

F a r eiam ple, the commission has ordered
Installation of certain saftty equipment on
power mowers by nest year. Fred erick

Stratum, pceaaaem at B riggs and Stratton, a
giant in the mower engine industry, Is an old
friend of the senator. H asten'• father sits on
the company's board of directors.
Furthermore, Hasten received th o u u n ls of
dcflara in campaign contributions from
executives and po litical action committees of
Briggs and Stratton, John Deere, Tore and
other manufacturers. Hasten insists be hasn't
made up his m ind an the safety equipment
issue.
Another example: The product safety
copuniasian has proposed a ban oo the use of
formaldehyde In home insulation because the
chemical is a suspected cancer-causing
agent Lastea received thousands of dollars
from companies that produce either for­
maldehyde or dependent products. F iv e of the
biggest contributed generously b Hasten'*
campaign: G eorgia-Pacific Carp., 11,100:

T cm cco Inc., 93,300; Hercules, Inc., 9900;
Getty OU, 91.000, end International Minerals
and Chem ical Carp., 91.000.
Wisconsin firm s that have had products
rec slice by the product safety commission
Include John Deere, Briggs and Stratton,
Alien* and the Kohler Carp. Kohler, whose
executives gave Hasten 94,004 last year, w u
(he subject of a commission order recalling
l,iS 2 whirlpool tuba for safety re a m s.
In all, Hasten received at least 934,200 from
executives and P A C s of corporation] that
would stand to benefit directly if the CPSC is
killed or crippled.
There Is another source of pressure that
could be brought to bear on Hasten In his role
u chairm an of the Senate Commerce
C o m m itte e's C o nsum e r Subcom m ittee:
W isconsin R e p u b lic a n N a tio n al Com ­
mitteeman Ody F is h owns a company that

m aw factu res cellulose insulation. At one
point, his product not o d y flunked the com­
mission'* flam m ability testa, but 14,000 bags
of the product were sailed lo prevent its
continued tale.
A s I noted earlier, it isn't easy to tell what
motivates a politician's activities. And in ­
deed, Hasten has made no secret of his
hostility to the Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
Footnote: Asked specifically about bis
father's presence on the board of a company
that has hod trouble with the commission.
Hasten trid 'm y associate Tony Capsccio: " It
doesn’t make any difference at a l l It won't
affect m y vote. The problem Isn't tn haring
the relationship. The problem occurs when I
use m.y Influence In some way to im properly
influence legislation that would be to my
benefit or the benefit of others."

�H«r«&lt;d, la.-iford, FI

Adoption, Abortion, Keeping The Baby

Thursday. May It, I96T-4A

Parents Help Pregnant Teens With Difficult Decision
E d lt o r i Note: T h r r t ie In
pregnanrlrt among the immarrled
A m erica n te en a g e rs has bees
d r t f r lb r d in tn m r su rveys a t
"epidem ic." Among the people moot
roerrrnrd, bat BtaaQjr em lo aked ,
are the parents at the teenager* a bo
produce tbeae prrgaanetea. The
following stery la baaed on in ­
terview s w ith aome abont-ta-be
graadp am iU Involved la a program
far turh raaea to Ohio.
HTille the raaea dearrlbed are
real, the aam ei have been changed,
except far that o l the doctor la
charge ol the program.
By S A N D R A L L A T IM E R
L ast (HTw a Parts
When a teenager gels pregnant, many
parenta Immediately wonder If they did
aomething wrong.
A b ig a il feats she had a good
relationship w ith her daughter, although
the hat had to work to keep the fam ily
going financially, and feels the had
successfully handled sex education at
home.
“ I told her that. If she didn't think the
could live without sex, to let me know and
I’d take her to the doctor and get her pul
on birth control," the said, wiping away
a tear from her ryes.
She doesn't blame her daughter for
getting pregnant, and thinks the problem
lies wtlh the man. But she still puts s
tittle blame on herself.
"I blame m yself somewhat. I didn't
devote the time to M a rily n that I should
have when the needed me,” she said.
"But I'm glad It happened while I'm
alive. I thank God the didn't get hooked

on drugs."
She aald M a rily n la a ll wrapned up in
being a mother, but says she'll graduate
first and become the first woman in the
fam ily to get a high school diploma.
Abigail's husband has calmed down,
too.
"The other night M arilyn said there
was a little bit of money In the house and
asked him tf he wanted a beer. Me said
'No, we’U probably need that money for
gas to take you to the hospital.' That's the
first time he's ever refused a beer."
Abigail l i looking forward to the baby
— her first grandchild — and promises
not to try to Interfere with raising the
child
M arilyn opted to keep her baby and not
m arry the father.
Rose, pregnant at IS, made the same
derision
“ Abortion Is murder. You give puppies

Waff/ng for the baby

to be bom Is often a
period almost as
eventful for tfio feen's
parents as It was when
they themselves were
___________ ‘c g p g c f / n g . '
and kittens away. You keep babies,"
Rose's mother F ra n recalls her saying
On the other hand, Vicky, pregnant
between her Junior and senior year in
high school, derided lo place her baby for
adoption.

"I made m y derision. I could keep it,
but not when so many people out there
want them," her mother Helen quoted
her.
Peg and Stewart’s decision was to get
married.
• We didn't bury our heads in the
sand." said Peg's mother, Eleanor.
"W ithin a few days after learning my
daughter was pregnant, we had gotten
her to a doctor for the first time, fixed up
a couple of rooms In our basemen! for
them to live while Stewart finished high
school, and got them m arried."
Dr. Jam es Bozzoli, who has run a
program for adolescent pregnant girls In
M arion County, Ohio, fur the p u t five
yea n, says 96 percent o! the cates In
Marion County deride to have and keep
the babies. But there are some who
deride on abortions.
OUvla. as mentioned, was one of thoae.
Her mother Catherine, who "had been
raised that abortion la a sin - you're
killing ■ life ", said that "since she made
that decision, 1 would stand by her. If she
was going to the abortion clinic, I was
going lo go with her."
Catherine said O livia wasn't mature
enough to have the baby, and the father,
even younger, wasn’t in any position to
raise the child.
Now that Catherine has seen Olivia
through the abortion, the highly nervous
woman Just throws her hands in the air
and say*. "I don't think about It now. 1
have no feelings. I don't what I feel"
about abortion.
Moat parents Interviewed don't want to
accept the fact that their daughters were
sexually active. They tend to put the

blame on the boy, xay it was a "one-time
deal" or that the girl was forced into
relations.
Helen, divorced from V ick y ’s father,
Isaac, blames herself and raises some
questions.

'How do you tell a

15-Year-Old how
to bring up a baby?'
"H adn't 1 taught her enough? Had 1
failed? Was It because there was no man
In the house?"
Eleanor (eels she was thorough In her
sex education In the home.
"I did everything except crush them
1birth control pills) and pul them in Iheir
orange Juice." she said.
Bertha, the wife of a m inister whoM
d a ughte r N ancy w a i their second
teenage daughter lo become pregnant,
felt Nancy got " in the wrong crowd at the
wrong time and the wrong place.’
C a th e rin e repeated an oftheard
phrase, "B oys get by, it ’* the girl who
gets the problem s."
Bertha said she talked to her children
so much "m y husband says I should hang
out a sign that says 'counselor'."
"M y mother didn't talk lo me, and 1
decided when I had khls I would talk to
them," she said.
Judy said her daughler Yvonne once
told her she "didn't want to get in that
siuation" when she learned her brother's
girlfriend was pregnant. When Yvonne
herself became pregnant, Judy cried and
screamed.

What about the boy's parents?
Ix irr) msi Karen, parents of a boy
whore girlfriend became pregnant before
they finished high school, Insist they
weren't blind lo the possible problem
"I didn't feel It couldn't happen to us.

a night school in another d istrict," she
said. "The school systems don't m ik e
education easy, but they should m ake II
easy to g e t "
She said P tg would probably have gone
back to school, "but the timing was
wrong." The baby w ai bom shortly after
There's the possibility it could happen,"
the new school year began
Karen said.
"S he'll probably wind up with a G E D ,"
Husband U r e y says, "When you gel a
Eleanor said.
boy and g irl together, you know what
(A GF.D la a General Educational
they're going to do.” Ilia wife added, “ It
Development test high school dropouts
takes two."
lake after their d a is has graduated from
Karen said If you have a daughter
high school. A passing grade gives the
discussions about what happens if she
dropout a Certificate of High School
becomes pregnanl Include marriage,
Equivalence which takes the place of a
keeping the baby, giving it up for
high school diploma and is accepted by
adoption, or abortion, but with boys, il's
many colleges and employers.)
different
But H ele n, from another school
"Y ou can't get them on birth control,"
district, said she couldn't praise V ic k y ’s
said Karen, who added that when they
school system enough
talked options to their son Walter, “ 1 told
"The guidance counselor told V ic k y
him he'd support the baby."
she w anted her to finish her M nior y ea r,"
she said.
What's ahead for pregnanl teenagers?
Waiting for the baby to be bom often Is
Fran said Roae has a friend over every
a period almost r j eventful for parents as
weekend "so she won't feel left out."
It was when they themselves were
Bertha said Nancy refuses to let her
"especting.”
pregnancy slop her plans.
"Y ou're never through the anxiety
"She knows she's hurt me and wants to
until the baby la bom ," said Helm, who
make It up," she said. "She sees this
went through natural childbirth classes
pregnancy as a lesson and won't let it
with her daughter Vicky and was in the
stop her in w lial she wants to do. S h e ll
probably think twice now aboul things. II delivery room when the baby was bom.
"V ick y doesn’t talk about the baby. She
has helped her the hard way."
Eleanor
it u cau Lr fer the Leys to wanird In know If It was all right, and the
next day she asked whelher it was a boy
continue with their education, noting her
nr g irl," said Helen. "Is she blocking It
son-in-law Stew jr t finished his last year
out and wiU It some day hit her? I hope
in school, but daughter Peg didn't.
"She could be tutored only in Iwo not,"
"I'm looking forward to the classes."
classes, but she needed four lo graduate.
See TAIIENTS, Page (B
She couldn't even get those two classes at

SAN FO RD

1100 S. FRENCH AVE.

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Worst Tourist Season

festival

Reported In Miami Beach
M IAM I B E A C H , (UP1) - Retort tax revenues fur
M iam i Beach were down II percent during the
December-to-March winter season, a drop that reflects
!H m illion in lost business and makes this the w ont
tourist season in more than 30 ye a n , officials reported
Wednesday.
In M arch alone — when Imirtst-related business was
off 13 percent at the Beach — the revenues plunged
more than 13 percent.
"T his Mason has been off as much as a third,” said
I canard Baker, executive vice president of the M iam i
Beach Chamber of Commerce, who added business
had not been so bad since "the big freeie in 1954."
Officials blamed high Interest rates and a decline in
the number of domestic tourists for the dropoff.

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Theodis Beckwith. » . of Tampa, was arrested in
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Dentist Jailed For Smuggling
IJUCE P L A C ID . (U P I) - Dr. John J. Morgan, a 51year-old dentist, has been Jailed on marijuana
smuggling charges.
Morgan was arrested by federal Drug Enforcement
Administration agents at h it office Wednesday mor­
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Morgan w as indicted by a federal grand Jury in
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plane that was abandoned in a Reid In Volusia Jounty
Iasi February.

R eturn O f Alligator Shoes?
T A LL A H A S S E E . (U P I) - The Florida alligator,
protected from hunters through the 1970a, proliferated
to the point that legislators are now thinking of lifting
the ban on Mlling alligator shoes, bags and other
products,
"I know there's a ton of alligators everywhere," said
Sen. Dempsey Barton, D-Panam a City, who sponsored
the bill.

Jack Homer Named
SSDC Vice President
Jack Horner, executive manager of the Greater Sanford
Chamber of Commerce, has been named executive vice
president of (he Sanford-Semlnole Development Co., (SSDC)
fllhng the position left vacant since the death of d&lt;dc leader
John K rid tr.
P rio r lo his appointment by the board of directors of SSDC,
Homer had been a director of the organization
The SSDC, organized in 1961, Is composed of business and
a vie leaders and provides financing, assistance, site selection
and general ezpertlM to light manufacturing companies
wishing to locate In the area.
Homer, who fits been eaecutive manager of the chamber
since 1973, wav with M artin-M arietta Corp for 13 yea n
previously. He retired from the U S . Navy in 1960. At the time
of his retirement he was public information officer at the
former N a n i A ir Station in Sanford.
Ham er said today the SSD C w ill be using the Sanford
chamber of commerce building as its headquarters again. The
SSDC was originally founded under the auspices of the
chamber of commerce to provide Jobe and to assist in the
economic well-being of the community, he said.

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Thursday, May ||, iff 1

Hamburgers Precede Intro-Squad

Seminole (s) Clash Friday
87 SAM COOK
H rrs ld Sports Editor
Seminole High School'* yearly foot
and food festival kicks off Frid a y i
hamburger* at 3:30 p.m. followed by
Orange-While Intra-squad daah at 7 j
The Seminole Athletic Boosters &lt;
w ill be playing gourment and for t&gt;
can partake of the ground beef. To g
view of the “ IN I Fighting Semi
B ee f," It cost you II. The food-fool
package comes for $3.
Im pressive thus far in early m i
d rills far Je rry Posey's Seminole
been l-foot-10, 110-pound lln e b a i
Antonio Davis. "Antonio has looked
good defensively," mused Poaey *
putting the evenly split squad toge
Wednesday.
D avis' Impress!v* showing—plus
s o lid w o rk of co-lln eb ackers (
Register and Byron Washingtonallowed Posey to move seniorspeedster U n ity Sutton to fullback
"W e'd like to utilise Lenny jus
fu llback," Posey said about the must
Sutton's 10.1100-yarddash speed. "I
we have to, we’ll work him some
w a y s .1
"f
The T rib e has always been t
defensively the past few years, util
moat of Its best athletes on defense, uui
Posey's coordinator of the defense—
Roger Bee t h ird —moved to the heed Job
at Lake M ary this year.
"Pote ntially we should be all right on
defense,”
predicted the lik e a b le
Seminole coach. "B u i we re hurting
number wise. We Just don't have the
bodies we've had In (he p e s t"
Another move to offset the depth
problem w as sprinter Vince Edwards
going to defensive back. Edwards, one of
the top 444 men In centra! Florida, was ■
running back Iasi year.
Poaey Is looking to B ill Painter to
anchor the defensive line from his lackle
position.
Offensively, Woot-0, 170-pound Jeff
U tlo n Is the number one quarterback.
U tton received a baptism under fire last
year when Clarance Slppio was sidelined
- by Injury lo r part of the year.
Joinging Litton In the backfleld w ill be
; two Vfoot-a, tao-poundert-Jorailn U ttU a
t and V icto r W illia m s—at the running
; backs. Up front two returning blockers
£ are guard Don CToalyn and tackle Isaac
; W illiam s.
'
They will be Joined by Jay H iu c k at
' center, Fra nk Rowe at light end and
■ B rian C u rtis or Frank
"Quarter"
Pounder* at wide receiver. Rowe w ill see
- some duty as side receiver too.
D avid W illiam s or Doug Sanderi w ill
- fight for the other tackle spot.
:
'
|

W

defense.
E lse w h e re in the county, U k e
Brantley and U k e Howell w ill have their
lntra-equad games Friday too.
At Howell, M ike BlscegUa makes his
f la t showing before the home crowd.
BisceglU was a successful high school
coach at Hialeah before coming to the
Silver Hawks lo replace Sam Weir. Weir,
who led the Hawks to a district title last
year, took a co-head coaching position
with Don Jonas at Central Florida.
BlscegUa Is coming off two district
titles and a M iam i "Coach of the Y ear
(1979)" honor. The highly-organised
BlscegUa has suffered Just one losing
season (his first at Hialeah) In his
athletic carte r.
While the Silver Hawks return wans
quality playera In running back Bcotl
Grant, tackle Dan Rac and quarterback
M ark F ric k , the ioaaea were aubatantlal.

Cone are QB Bob Capobiinco, wideout
Chuck Scott (both lo V a n d e rb ilt
U niversity), tackles Jay Drlva* and
B rian Lepak, fullback Carl Carlson,
guard Chris Stone and Defensive back*
Charlie M ille r and Jerry Winterhalter.
Another major loss was tight end M ark
U y to n , who decided not lo play spring
"W e'U divide them evenly for Frid ay ," bell.
Friday, the number one olfenae wlU gu
said Posey. The Orange team w ill be
bolstered by the Junior varsity offense, against the number on* defense with a
while the White gets help from the JV point system sued to determine offensive

Sieve Warren and Jeff D err combined to pilch
an) hit Butch’s Chevron to a 9-7 win over Krayola
Kollege' Wednesday night for the team 's third
consecutive .Sanford U ttl* American le a g u e vic­
tory.
Seminole Petroleum topped Flagship Bank 14-9 In
other action Wednesday. Triple 1,1.1. Trucking won
by a fo rfe it
A fte r a leadoff walk, Warren, D err and Paul
t U r knees rapped consecutive orie-out singles In the
bottom of the first as Butch's Chevron took a VO
lead.
K rayola Kollega picked on a single run in the
second after Ranald Cox led off with a single and
then added three runs in (he third, using singles by
T im Cover and Shedrick Knight.
W arren belted ■ one-out, two-cun homer In the
bottom of the third lo tie the score Derr walked and
Ronnie Hayes stroked a two-out triple. lU yea

Middle linebacker Antonio Davis (right) fights off dreg Register
during a workout for Friday's fntersquad game.

basketball team.
He moved Into the Brantley area as a

IM V K T U 1 .U S
and deftn tlve thrusts. Game time Is 7
p.m.
A l Brantley, the Patriots w ill preview
the night's activities with a Junior varsity
slash at S followed by the Big Blue a l I.
Coach Dave Tullls Is having quar­
terback problems. He had the best one In
the county, and possibly the Five Star, in
Ja y Poag coming back, but the d a is y
Junior Is moving back to Georgia.
Poag moved to Florida the summer
before his freshman year and attended
Lym an where he was pari of the
G re yh o u n d s undefeated freshm an

sophomore and enjoyed success In
football, basketball and baseball for the
Pstriots the pari two years.
T u llls thought he b t d P o s g 's
replacement with A l RolUnson, but he
went down with sn injury.
Now, Tullls has turned. Ironically, to
Posg's good friend Fred Baber to run the
offense. Baber, like Poag came to
Brantley after his freshman year at
Lyman.
Norm ally a running back and defen­
sive back, Tullls says Baber has adapted
quickly to the signal caller position. He
better, since gone from the monstrous
offensive line Is R ick Campbell.
SPR IN G F U N G - On* week from
tonight, Oviedo win hoot Us* annual
Spring Football Jamboree involving the
IJona, Lyman, la k e Brantley, la k e
Howell, Seminole and Apopka.
Each learn w ill play two quarters of
football with action getting underway at
1:30 p.m. Prio r to the football, ■ dinner
w ill be served in the Oviedo Commons.
A bar-b-que dinner served by Uncle
Jones Btr-B-Que of Altamonte Springs
w ill be the picklns. The dinner is ac­
companied by a "Pop Concert" from the
Oviedo band and dance students.
Fo r tickets, contact any band member
or call M V 5(71 and ask for extension h .

scored on a pasted ball.
Butch's Chevron added three runs In the fourth,
with Warren and Derr both hitting doubles.
Krayola Kollege scored three nuts In (he lop of the
sixth, but s comeback effort fell short.
Warren finished the game with a home run,
double and single, while D err had a double and
single and lUyea had a double and triple.
Warren pitched the first four Innings and scat­
tered three hits while fanning nine. D err struck out
three and allowed one hit over the final two Innings.
Seminole Petroleum scored eight runs In the top
of the first and coajted to the win.
Scooter Leonard belted his first home run and
added a triple, both In the first Inning, for Seminole
Petroleum.
P a tric k Williams was the winning pitcher,
boosting his record to S-2. W illiam s was also the
leading hitter with a home run and trip le in a three

9nfaa-Squad Raiim
W H IT E
94 J im A they
39 lis a c William*
SO M arvin Pringle
6 B ria n Nulty
91 Greg Register
30 Donald Croslyn
25 Joe Whack
74 George Zim m er
36 Lenny Sutton
a E d Jones
43 Harold Gaines
17 T im Herring
44 Vince Edward*
31 W illie Carter
37 Ja y Hauck
38 Fra nk Pounders
— Tom M ille r
33 John U n le n
34 Aubrey Kendall
7 Joe Calloway
12 Dion Jackson
(3 Paul G riffin

ORANGE
33 Byron Washington
91 B rian Curtis
M Ed Rinkavage
70 D avid W illiam s
S3 Buck Landers
71 Doug Sanders
7t B ill Painter
99 Frank Rowe
7 Jeff Utton
— M ike F u tre ll
(3 M ike Apple
20 Victor William*
— D aryl Collin*
44 Donald Simmon*
M Alan Cahill
3 Johnnie U tile*
— Rendall Manley
II W illiam Wynn
34 Antonio D avis
32 John Rowsey
14 D yral Manley
11 Thurman Thompson
33 Anthony Donaldson
39 Tim Larence

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Just one run with one run in the fifth
and two In the sixth.
Kiwants put the game away with
four runs on two hits in the top of the
seventh. Bryan Debase and Kevin
Smith had the hits in the last-inning
rally.
Orion Waldo w as the winning pit­
cher w ith relief from Bruce Franklin.
Kevin Smith led Kiwanla with two
singles.

ghiu.

M*lt*rt C m

^double.
g5 U r e y Thom as had a pair of doubles
for M a ile r* Cove Apartments.
S : Kiwarus chalked up single runs In
j^the first, second, third and fourth
K frames, but Rotary cut the margin lo

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for three performance.
In today's action in the Sanford Little National
league, t in t place F irst Federal bailies Sunndand
Corporation at 3 p.m. at Fort Mellon Park, while
Poppa Ja y 's plays Sanford D.A.V. at the same time
a l Westslde F ie ld . The Railroaders pUy Clem
t errand Shell at 7 p.m. at Fort Mellon Park.
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KOC Clobbers Cove For 13th In A Row

K n ig h ts of C o lu m b u s defeated
M a ste rs Cove A p a rtm en ts 11-3
[v Wednesday for the team 's 13th win
g without a lo st In the Sanford Junior
S, League.
§
Knights o f Columbus Is VO In the
jf second h a lf, w hllr Klw ania Is 3-0 after
•j beating R otary W Wednesday.
4 . Glenn U n d r e s s was the winning
;5 pitcher, running h is record to VO as he
S lt r u c k out eight wldle scattering five

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Shell Tangles
With Adcock
The top two learns in Uw Sanford
Pee Wee League tangle for the second
Ume this season a l 6 p.m. today at
Chase Park.
Clem Leonard Shell carries a 34)
record Into today's game. Including a
S-2 win over Its opponent, Adcock
Roofing. Adcock is t-l.
Today’s game m arks the beginning
of the second half of the season.
Last year Clem Leonard Shell beat

Adcock V I the first time they played,
but Adcock won the second game 3-2
and then won two straight games In
the r liy playoffs for Its third con­
secutive city championship.
M ichael Merthle, 24, wtU be on the
mound for C lem Leonard Shell today,
while Anion Reid, VI, la expected to
start for Adcock Roofing. The number
two pitchers on each sU ff, B ill Shaw
of Clem Leonard Shell and John
B ryant of Adcock Roofing, are each V
0.
F irs t baseman Jeff D err leads Clem
Leonard Shell at the piste with a .771
average, while Merthle la hitting i t a
.769 d ip and Shaw la batting .613.
Bryant leads Adcock kt the plate
with an .100 batting average, while
Reid la hitting 300.
In today's t i n t game a l Chase Park,
B u tc h 's C h a vro n p la y s R in k tr
M aterials a l 4:30 p.m

W

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COMPLETE DUAL JOBS *133
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OR REAR
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» 3 » 5

v»' T h cron L lg g o n s rapp ed three
i s ingle* for Knights of Columbus, while
O T ony G ains blasted a triple snd

H

Wtr*W P M Iti I f T*m VhKM l

Quartrrback Jeff Utton starts to pul! away from center David Williams a s guard
Ed Hlnkavagr (right) and Buck Landers (left) move off the ball.

Warren, Derr Crack Krayola 9-7
For Chevron's 3rd Straight Win

1

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ALIGNMENTS
MOST CARS ....................*1 0 "

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Reardon
Snaps .

M a ja r
League
B y U n ite d P re ss

M et Skid
By United P r a t la tin u tio a a i
Je ff Heardon, who pitched two shutout
Innings to snap a nine-game losing streak
for the New Y o rk Meta with a 44, 10inning victory over the San Francisco
G ia n ts W edneday n ig h t, sounded
relieved by the outcome.
"It meant a lot to me to be able to finish
it and gel the victo ry," he said. ‘T h is
hasn't exactly been a dream year for me
x the d ub .”
It was alm ost another nightmare for
Reardon and the hapless Meta, who hare
the major leagues' second worst record,
9-24. The Giants put runners on first and
third with two outs in the 10th, but
Reardon got Je rry M artin to line out to
left to end the game.
Reardon, 1-0, said, ” M y shoulder
began to tighten u p ... but It was the first
d a n c e I've had this year to win a game,
and I wanted to win to badly they would

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. . . .t w o h o m e ru n s
have had to drag me off the mound."
The Meta won the game in the top of tix
HHh when they loaded the bases with one
out against Giants' ace reliever Greg
Minton, with a walk to Lee M a n illi and
singles by Joel Youngblood and Dave
Kingman. Alex Trevino followed with a
fly to center, and M a n illi beat Martin's
throw home for th» game-winner.
New Y o rk starter Greg Harris, making
his major-league debut, went the first six
Innings and yielded four hits and two
runs and M e ls' Manager Joe Torre said,
"I liked what 1 saw."
Oakland (Kingm an 3-2) at Boston
(Ecke rsle y J-S). 7:30 p m.

Today's Probable Pitchers
(AU Tim es EOT)
M inne so ta
iR e d fe rn
3-3)
at
Milwaukee (Vuckovlch 3-2), 2:30 p in.
California (Rau 0-1) at Baltimore
(Palm er 2-1), 7:30 p.m.

JCimum

ANDRE DAWSON

SI.
Louis
P h ila
M o n tre a l
P ltts b rg h
New
Y o rk
C h ica g o

East
W
20
23
20
14
9
3

Standings
la te ra a lio n a l

Seattle (Abbott (H I at Cleveland
(G arland 2-3), 7:33 p.m.

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M il

FOIOFOOOI-A A0

Houston. Starter Joe Nlekro, 5-3, pitched
10 Innings for the victory and Joe Sambito picked up his third save.
Expos 6, Padres 2
Andre Dawson belted two solo homers
to back the eight-hit pitching of Steve
Rogers and spark Montreal. Rogers, 4-3,
went the distance for the first time In
nine starts.
Dodgrrs 1, Phillies 2
Pinch-hitter Rick Monday, batting for
winner Steve llowe, 4-1, led off the 10th
Inning with his second homer of the
season, off reliever Tug M cG raw , 1-4.
(M a rti 1-1), 2:35 p.m.

Baltim ore at Detroit, night
Chicago at California, night
Toronto at Oakland, night
Texas at Seattle, night
Thursday's Games
Houston (Ryan 3-1) at St. Inula
(M a rtin 00), 1:33 pm .
Cincinnati (Pastors M l at Chicago

F rid a y ’s Games
Cleveland at New York, night
Boston at Milwaukee, night
Minnesota at Kan City, night

&gt;00 001 000 1 - 4 t l
001 1001000- J 0 0

Reds 10, Cabs T
R ay Knight Uned a solo homer and
added a baaes-loaded walk In the seventh
inning and pitcher Doug B air hit a threerun homer in the ninth to hand the Cuba,
now 5-27, their eighth loss In a row.
Ptratrs 6, Braves 1
M ike E asier slammed two homers,
driving In four runs in s 3-for-4 per­
formance, to lead tha Pirates Starter
R ick Rhoden. 50, earned the victory.
Astros 4, Cardinals 2
Rafael landestoy tripled in Alan Ash­
by with two out In the U th inning to lift

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Frid ay's Games
Montreal at Chicago
Phila at Pittsburgh, night
San Diego at Atlanta, night
lass Angeles at Cinci, nighl
New York at SL lands, night
San F ra n »t !|«i!to8, night
galas.

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T hursdey.M ay H . I t l l - F A

Although the Oakland A ’s haven't quite
been shot down from first place tn the
Western Division, they have dropped 14
of their last 22 games.
A two-run, tw tK u f single by Boston's
R ick M ille r In the seventh inning snapped
a 3-3 tie in Fenway P a rk Wednesday
night and dealt the angry A 's their
seventh straight loss, a 53 defeat
“ It’s the manager's credit when you
win and it's Ms fault when you lcae, to I'll
take all the blame," said Oakland
M a n a g e r B illy M a rtin , w ho then
proceeded to give homeplale um pire
T erry Cooney a needle.
" lie was even worse than we w ere,"
cracked Martin,
The Red Sot were n o h it for five of the
eight innings (hey batted and managed
Just seven hits, a ll off loser Steve
McCatty, 4-4
M cCatty, who disagreed with m any of
Cooney's ball-strike calls, proved M artin
doesn’t have the only barbed tongue on
the A ’l.
" I want everything 1 can get and the
hitter wanta everything he can get. I
understand that," McCatty said. "B ut I'll
be darned if I'm going to get burned
every tune."

drove in two runs each to lift the Orioles
to their eighth straight trium ph. Dennis
Mariinex, 5-1, notched his fifth xtraight
win.
White Sox 6, Blue Ja y s 1
Cariton f t u went 4 - to r i and singled in
Ron le F lo re In the eighth inning to break
a 55 lie for Chicago. Damaao G a rd a
dubbed his first home run of the season
tor the Blue Jays.
Mariners 3. Indians 1
Brian Allard combined with Shane
Rawley on a five-hitter and Tom
P a d o rtk doubled home the go-ahead run
to lead Seattle to victory. Je ff Burroughs
homered for Seattle.
Tigers 6, Rangers 4
A two-run single by A1 Cowens in the
sixth Inning and two-run doubles by
Richie Hebner and Lance P a rrish lx. the
seventh rallied the Tigers.
B re w m 6, Twins 1
E d Romero lofted a seventh-inning
sacrifice fly to snap a 1-1 tie at home and
Jim Gantner had four hits to spark the
Brewers to their fifth straight win. The
loss was the Twins’ aevenlh straight.
Yankees 5, Royals 4
Graig Nettles' one-out single off the
right center-field w all drove in Dave
Winfield from third in the bottom of the
iU li and lined New Y o rk tn a sweep of
their three-game series.

O rioln S. AnfrU 1

G a ry Roenlcke and M ark Belanger
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_________ I

North Stars Look To Boggle Minds
U N IO N D A LE , N .Y. &lt;UP1) - After
dropping the first three games of the
Stanley Cup finals, the Minnesota North
Stars surprised a lot of people Tuesday
night by wtnning Game 4 In Bloomington
to stay alive in the best-of-aeven playoff
series with the New Y ork Islanders.
The North Stars may be lim ply
delaying the Inevitable, but they plan to
do that three more tiroes, beginning
tonight at the Nassau Coliseum.
"We didn't think about winning four tn
a row. Thai would be mind-boggling,"
said Coach Glen Sonmor after the North
Stars' 4-2 victory. "W e Just said, ‘Not
tonight,' and Thursday night we'll say,
'Not tonight' again, and *ee what hap­
pens. T h is team d o e sn 't concede
anything."

If the North Stars can say, "Not
tonight," three more times, they will pull
off a rare feat; but the heavily favored
Islanders, defending champions as well
u this year's regular season champs,
aren't about to let them.
" I t's history," said the islanders' Bob
Bourne of Gam e 4, "Just like our three
wins are. We've go' to concern ourselves
with winning the next one."
The Islanden, who can become tho
11th team since i n t to win two ot more
consecutive Stanley Cups, won their first
one at home last year, when they went
the fu ll seven games before conquering
Philadelphia.
The North Stars became the first team
sinew 1967 to deny a team a sweep after it
had won the first three games of the final

series.
"Y o u hate to admit it and you realty
want to talk about it, but with a VO lead,
you tend to get a bit lax ," said defen­
seman M ike McEwen. "We were ready
physically, but we might not have put
every effort into the game."
N aturally, the North Stars don't agree.
"The way we played Is the way we
played to get here,” aaid Brad Maxwell,
a 2Vyear old defenseman. "It's no fluke
that we'ra here."
One of the best things about the Stars
Tuesday night wa* rookie goaitender Don
Beaupre, who turned aside 33 shots.
"Don Beaupre gave us in absolutely
superb game, snd the rest of the team
really gave It everything," Sonmor said.
They w ill have to do that again tonight.

M k iA f L*4fw4 L i a M m
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N 104
A ikant. KC
Ml
L e flo re . Chi III Burner*. Del.
Alm on. Chi
S4 IIS
H6 and Len t lord. Dot t
U l i t 41 111
PAClorek. See
P ile Blag
Heme Rem
Vktgrtgi
N tH enel Leeftie — Schmidt.
Natianal League — V ile n

(— SpOtfe H&lt;#0ttKgd—| Brewer ’Igniter' Molitor
B a n ta m Tum ln Rolls 515,
S ta te T o u rn a m en t Bound
S a rfc rd 'i K tn Tumin, a 12-year-old Bowl Am erica
Bantam League competitor, rolled an outstanding 313
series in h is Saturday Morning League.
Tumln, who is the son of A.F. Tumln Sr., lin in g
together games of 190, 173 and 152. Just two weeks
earlier, Tum in sandwiched a 195 game among a 483
series.
The sixth grade " A ” honor rod student at U k e v ie w
Middle School has been selected to represent Bowl
Am erica in the State Bowling Tournament M ay 30 at F.
Lauderdale.

S trik e rs Trim R o w d ie s 3*2
FO R T L A U D E R D A L E , Fla. (UPI) - The Fo rt
Lauderdale Strikers have maintained their lead in the
North Am erican Soccer League Southern D ivision —
but they were hardpresaed to do IL
T railing the Tampa Bey Rowdies by a point with less
than seven minutes left, the Strikers got s goal from
Gerd M ueller to tend the game into overtime, then
pulled out a 3-2 victory with a goal by rookie Robert
Meschbach Wednesday.
Meschbach, of Indiana U nvenlty, crossed in front of
the goal, took a pass from Thomas Rongen and kicked
the winner from about 12 yards out In the foul-filled
game before 14,441 fans at Lockhart Stadium.
The victory kept the Strikers on teg) in the Southern
D ivision with a 7 4 record and 51 points.
The third-place Rowdies, who fell to 3-7, scored first
at 9:21 on a goal by Washington Olivers with an assist
by Peter Roe.
Fo rt Lauderdale didn't score until 23:OS, on a free
kick by Teofllo Cubillas, his fourth of the aeaaort But
Tamp* Bay took the lead again at 36:12 when Canadian
t^es McLeod took a pass from Oliver* and went oneonone with Striker goalkeeper Jan van Beveren, booting
In a six yarder from the left aide.
Tampa Bay had 15 fouls in the game and Fort
Lauderdale 19.

W h a t's M e a rs D o n e L a te ly ?
IN D IA N A PO LIS (U P I) -

What has raring done

lately for R ick M e a n '
One might be inclined to say. "not much," after the
Bakersfield, C alifornian's i960 season, in which he won
only one race and earned less than half the 6406,076 he
collected tn 1979 when he won three race* - Including
the Indianapolis 500.
"A ctually, ra rin g haa been good to m e," *ay» Mears,
79, who. ail) start from the eighth row in Sunday'*
c U is lc , the richest auto race in the world with a purse
reaching 11 m illion. "R a rin g has opened a lot of doors
for me, m ainly In appearance work. There’s also a lot
of N u m i opportunities when I get ready to take
them on."

Not Satisfied With Charcoal
NEW Y O R K l U PI) - Some guys have the
life. lik e Paul Molitor. lie alts in hia own
backyard soaking up the sun in peaceful
solitude, barbecuing a steak or lim p ly letting
the rest of the world go by. And he hales every
single minute of It.
That’s because he'd much rather be playing
baseball for the Milwaukee Brewers.
The Brewer* call their 24-year-old converted
center fielder "The Igniter'' and the
description fit* perfectly. Milwaukee h is any
number of extraordinarily talented players,
including Robin Yount, Ben Oglivte, Cecil
Cooper, Gorman Thomas, Ted Simmons,
L ir r y H ale and Roilie Fingers. Rut Molitor is
the heart that pumps the blood into the club.
He's the one that makes it go.
For the p u t three weeks, however, the
fourth-place Brewers haven't been going
particularly anywhere and It has to be more
than sheer coincidence this is exactly the same
period Molitor has been sidelined. He mapped
a ligament tn hia left ankle in a game with the
California Angela May 2 in Anaheim and
underwent surgery in Milwaukee two days
later.
Originally, the doctors reported Molitor
wouldn't be able to play again for a month
Then they revised that estimate and said il
would be more like 10 or 12 weeks. That w u an
especially severe Jolt (or someone like Molitor
who lives to play baseball but had to m iss t i
contests plus the All-Star game last year
because of a pulled ribcage muscle.

Milton
Rlchman
U PI Sports Editor

out P a rtly because of that, ne suffered the
injury he's recuperating from now.
"I Wt a ball up the middle and (Fred) Patek
mad* a helluva play on IL I could see it w u
going to be one of those hang-bang plays so I
kinds surged forward to give It a little extra as
I approached first base. Instead ol coining
down oo the front of the base ss I should've, I
hit the bag dead center with m y left foot. M y
cleats didn't catch and m y foot slid acro u the
base. Suddenly, I felt a pop and looking down, I
could see my ankle lite rally crumble ... and
knew it was a bad injury."
"They carried me off the field and I don't
think I was tn the clubhouse more than three
minutes when (Brew ers' President) Bud Selig
called from Milwaukee to atk about me. I
don't know how It is w ith other dubs, but on
this one, the players are mad* to feel more like
fam ily than like employees."
Molitor started out at shortstop with the
Brewers three y e a n ago, then w u moved to
second to make way for Yount and w u shitted
to center this spring, T h o m u moving over to
rtghL

He h u been getting around with the help of
crutches lately and Tuesday, M olitor, who h u
been wearing a walking cast since his
operation, got some heartening news from Dr.
Paul Jacobs, the Brewers' team physician. He
w u told he could discard cne of hia crutches.

“ 1 w u Just beginning to feel at home in
renter field . when this happened," said
Molitor, who also w u starting to come around
with the bat, having boosted hia average more
than 100 points In two weeks to .273 when be
w u hurt.

"B y Saturday of this week, I should be able
to get rid of the other one and put a il my weight
on the m ik in g cast,” M olitor said happily
from his home in Mequcn. Wt*.
"They're talking about rem oving the cast in
June," he added.

"One good thing about this injury compared
with last yea r’s is that I ’ve been able to do
soma sit-ups and some weight lifting,'' Molitor
explained. "1 couldn’ t do anything like that
when I w u hurt t u t y ea r."

"Soroetlmei, wher you have w much time
on your hands, you start thinking about these
back-to-back Injuries - you search for some
reason for them. M y first two y e a n with the
club I didn't have any serious injuries at all
and who knows, 1 may play the next 12 or 14
y e a n without ever having another one."
M olitor know* only one way to play — all

In the evenings when the Brewer* are at
home, he sometimes goes to County Stadium
w hen he watches them with Selig from the
owner's private bos.
“ Just sitting and not being able to do
anything is tough," M olitor said. " It w u more
enjoyable the l u t few days because we were
winning."

f Y « Y r. i

£eadm

luela. L A • I, Carlton. P h il 10.
Hoalcui. L A A0; Rullw an. Phil
A l; Rhoden. P ill JO, Saa.tr,
O n S I , A in a n d a r , I f
s i,
Niekro. Hou S I
A m erican Laagwa
trough
Oek, and
P a r ia i.
Cal
A ll
N o rm . O at A 1; B i.itu e n , Cla,
and D
M a rlin e !
Be) S t;
W ikea and M o r r ll. Dal. Plana
gan, Bai. and John N v SI.
la h n . Cal S 4
Earne d Run Average
(bated an 11 m ningtl
N elienel
League
Velen
luela. L A 0A I; Krtepper. How
I OF; R*an. Mow I OF; Alauan

der. SF I SO R tu st. L A I M
Am arlcan Laagwa - Barker
Cle I A!; Bl*ie*en. Cla IAF
ft rd, NV I t t . Kingm «n, Oak
F0A. Clark. Sea 1 II.
Sant
Nelienel Leegue — Sullar,
111, and M inion. SF A, Luc at.
SO A; Hume, Cln, and Rome.
P ill S
Am erican Laagwa — Gottava,
NV ||; Fingers. M il A. T
Martinet, Bel a. MgyT. Chi S
Burgmaiar. Boa, Comae. T n ,
Corbet). M im , and F a rm e r, Chi
4

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Ph: 323-4700
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Scoey i stores open at 7 30am
Monday thru Saturday
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OfOt A
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Ph 882-7254
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SPRUCE STUDS
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�OURSELVES
Evening Herald, Sanford. FL

Thursday, M ay II. INI— !•

Blame For Family's Ruin
T
r

O

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a

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f

li

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D

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.

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Htnid rnott »r J«t" MtditM

PANKHURST IN
SECOND YEAR

Pankhurnt. a women's organization in Seminole County named for the
founder of Britain's suffrage movement, is unique — so unique, in fact, that
this group of energetic womrn may be Ihe charter group of similar
organizations throughout Ihe United Slates. Now in its second year, a new
slate of officers was elected at the final luncheon meeting of the season at
Seminole Community College. Installing officer Seminole County Com­
missioner Robert Sturm and I'ankhurst president Marion fiiannini, led. of
IsmgwiMHl admire pen set given lo Ihe retiring president, Ann Neiswender,
right.

D E A R A B B Y : You said, in
defense c l divorce, “ I think
tt'a m orr Important to save
people than marriages. And
often, tn an effort to tare a
m arriage that tan't worth
saving, people have destroyed
th e m se lv e s and-or each
other."
I disagree. A fter a years
and three grown (and lefthom e) c h ild re n , m y w ife
walked out. H er reason: "I
want to do m y own thing in my
own w ay."
By your logic, Abby, she
saved one person (herself)
and ruined four (our three
sons and me).
One son stood In our home
and said, “ I am the product of
a broken home and 1 always
w ill b e ." Then riv e rs of tears
streamed down his face.
Need more be sa id ’
M IN OHIO
D E A R M .i Y es. Much
m orr. It's difficult to un­
derstand how your wile could
“ ru in " a husband and three
grow n
la n d
lell-hom e)
rh lld rrn by walking out alter
I I years.
E ve ry day thousands ol
people who are " t e ll" by
death and-or divorce manage

Take it from one who knows
15. ( B E E N A R O U N D )
D E A R IS.: A s m y lather
used to say, “ II a m an with
money tells the casino owners
In Yrgas that he's figured out
a way to brat the crap table,
they'll send a plane for him ."
to survlvr. It's not the rnd of
the world. And II your ion Is
going lo b ln m e w hatever
inadequacies h r has or may
have In the future on bring
“ the product ol a brokrn
homr." he w ill o r v r r be a
man — no m atter how tall hr
grows.
DEAR
ARBY:
A lte r
reading about the "genius"
who found a system to beat
the crap tables, I nearly died
laughing.
The g a m b lin g e sta b lis h ­
m ents have s p e c ia l red
carpets they ro ll out (or
"sy stem " players
The only ones who have the
edge on the house are "b lack­
jack counters." and once they
are known, they are barred
from playing blackjack.
Systems (or craps are as
good as system s (or horses
There aren't any that work.

D E A R A B B Y : T h u is in
response to the woman who
has had it with baby sitters. I
happen to be a ISh-year-old
baby u tter and 1 want her to
know that not a ll sitters go
through a ll the d ra w e rs,
smoke pot, try on clothes, talk
on the phone, entertain their
friends and eat everything
they get their hands on.
Here are a few of the things
some baby utters have to put
up with:
Kids who won't m ind.
Kids who scream and fight
w ith th e ir b ro th e rs and
liste n .
Pets who make a mess on
the rug
Parents who say they'll be
back by midnight and don't
get back until 1 a in
Adults who drive the sitter
home and are in no condition
to be d riv in g . ( T h e y 're

drunk.)
People who don't pay the
sitter and run b ills far a
couple of months. And by the
way, I'm paid II an hour and
I'm glad to get it.
Thanks for letting me tell
our side ol it. Sign this...
H AD IT WITH P A R E N T S
D E A R A B B Y : I am 13
years old and have a problem
Softball starts seen, and It
falls on the same day and time
as my clarinet lesson. M y
parents want me to continue
m y clarinet lesson, but my
softball coach can't change
the practice time.
My clarinet instructor can't
change my lesson time either.
I want to play softball. Your
reply w ill help us decide.
I. W A G N E R , E l.K H O R N ,
N EB .
D E A R I.: Appeal lo your
clarinet teacher again. Surely
there is one pupil who w ill
change the time ol his | or heri
IrMcn to accommodate you.
While sports is s i Important
as music, a town the site of
Elkhorn caa't afford to lose a
c la rin e tis t lo the so ftb a ll
team.

Lee Family

PRINTS
OR
SOLIDS

Gathers For
Reunion
Eighty-live descendants ol W iley and Mary McDonald Lee o l
the la k e City area gathered at the Charles S. Lee ranch near
Chulooti lor a fam ily reunion Saturday.
Charles Lee is the youngest son of James Hiram and (a u ra
B am ell Lee who moved by wagon from la k e City la pioneer tn
Oviedo in 1S7L They were the parenta of 10 children. 0 ol whom
were bom and reared In Oviedo
Mr. le e served 12 y ears on the Orange County Cotnm Uiion
(rom Oviedo prior to the formation of Seminole County.
The oldest fam ily m em ber preaent was Mrs. Charlotte le e
law ton ol Oviedo, widow ol the late Seminole County school
superintendent, T.W. law ton.
The youngest m ember present was Clay ton lee, 4-month-old
son of Robert E. la e J r ., and great grandson of Charles le e .
He Is o l the sixth generation to be bom tn Florida and the
fourth generation to be born in Seminole County.
Charles S. le e J r . o l C la rk sv ille , Tenn. traveled the longest
distance. Other m em ber* came (ra n Jacksonville, Orange
Park, Titusville, l-ongwood, Orlando. Plat City, M iam i and
Sanford.

Gamma Lambda
Elects Officers
Gamma Lambdu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi met al the
home of Donna Frank. Guests were Valerie Taylor. Suzon
laike and Suzle Beadles.
B A P City Council had a special meeting lo vote on the
following officers for the upcoming year: Donna Frank,
president; Carol l-aw, vice presdient; Carol Ann Smith,
recording secretary: Diane G a lL treasurer, and Vertis Sauls,
corresponding secretary.
Sendee and Sunshine Com m ittee reported that B E T A house
w ill be receiving item s collected by members. One of the
members ol Gamma U m b d a Is very til. Other members sent
her a card and a yellow rose. Also, members w ill supply dinner
once a week until she is on her feet again.
The social in M ay w ill be combined with the last scheduled
meeting ol the year. E a c h member w ill bring her "specialty"
food and dinner w ill be served w hile members find out who has
been their "Beta B u d d y " isecret p a ll all year.
Dnrna Frank gave the program lo r the evening. Members
were taught how to m ake a fruity tropical drink D srcy Bono
won the hostess g ift

CALENDAR
S A T U R D A Y , M A Y 22
Casselberry A A , closed, I p.m , Ascension Lutheran
Church.

Joseph Martin la Joined on hi» 93rd birthday
by one of his 43 grandchildren, Cynthia
Kendrick. He has 122 great grandchildren.
CASUAL
OR
DRESSY

th o o n g in a l

Joseph Martin celebrated his 93rd birthday May 10 with
a dinner at his home given by his children. Mr. Martin
was bom in U S l in Cam illa, M itchell County, G a lie is the
lather of 12 children, 41 grandchildren, 122 great grand­
children and II great great grandchildren.

conne
y«y#s

V flW llJ -fc A tlW lA

Attending the celebration were sons. Johnell. Sam
Theodore, C.W., Willie M artin , daughters, Mtndell
Kendrick, Nora Black, Alley Mae M artin and their
fam ilies.
A host of other fam ily members were also at the
celebration. - M AKV A H AW KIN S

'T a lh io n r c l/x ic i faa t (? te a tlv e P e o p le !

T H c R jv x t
I
T tfS T C j
The ability to title tweat loodt diminithat with ago.

SAN FO RD-2994 ORLANDO DR
ZAYRE PLAZA AT AIRPORT BLVD

TERrv pLOTt

COOL SUMMER

GAUZE

WOVEN

dM ble

FANCIES

1po i « s r £ n l J |

S U N D A Y , M A Y 24
Ballroom and round dancing, I p m , Tetnple
Shalom, Providence an d F.lkcam Boulevards, Deltona.
Semis ale AA. 3 p.m .. open, Croawoads, M l U k e
Minnie Drive, Sanford.
Sanford Big Book A A , 7 p . m , Florida Power and
Light, Sanford.
"Young-at-Heart" dance, • p.m., DcBary Com ­
munity Center, Shell Road, D eBary. Instruction. 7:20
p.m.. Open to public.
Memorial Day rerem onirs by Seminole County
Veterans ol Foreign W ars, 1 p.m., A ll Faiths Memorial
Park, Lake Drive, Casselberry. Open to public.
Central Florida Blood Bank m obile unit, 0:30a m . to
1:30 p.m., A ll Souls Church parking lot, 9th and Oak,
Sanford. Far inform ation call 323-3635

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by Chic Young

Thursday,May II, IW1

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12 Vises
13 Fortune
14 Dull routine
15 liblicil
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17 Oo
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Sleep Convulsions
Form O f Epilepsy

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42 Sooner thin
44 Bedouin

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HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OS47L

For Friday May 22, 1981

by Howit Sthneidei

E E K &amp; M EEK

W HAT D \ O U 3LP R 35E
THATS G a W G T D M E A lU
T O THE P O O R *&gt;

fT SAYS H U &amp; 1H A T "THE G O /T
IS TAfclUG US G K fc SO ‘ttAR S

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6CWAS H ELPH JG

"THE W EEDY

b y E d S u lliv a r

PRISCILLA'S POP
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-W IT H
G R E A T ‘ L vT E R O C I T V
c a r n is o r e s A
ANP

P D G 5\ rrs A REMNANT
L O V E o r THE F W A A L
M E A T ' / IN 5 T IN C T F O R

J.

SURVIVAL-

R ULEP THE
EARTH

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W HO K N O W S W HAT
B R U T IS H M E M O R I E S
R A C E THROUGH A
* T O G 'S B R A I N A S
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; BUGS BUNNY

•puce T H X T . M X l lO M G -EA I? ED S iL O O T . J

, ’ mE ’ c a n w n e v e c y T I M E
wrrw A W O O D E N (?AB 0 rf.

Y O U R B IR T H D A Y
M a y s . IN I
Your
p o s s ib ilitie s
(or
sucre** this c o m in i year ore
very good. However, your
progress m ight not come u
quickly u your Impatience
demand*. Be aatii(led with
steady growth.
G E M IN I (M ay 11-June t l|
Thla la not a good day to offer
unsolicited advice. Even If
other* aak for your cornmen t i. weigh what you have
to say with care. Romance,
tra v e l,
lu c k
reaourcet,
possible pitfall* and career
for the coming month* are all
discuaaed in yo u r AstroGraph which begins with your
birthday. M ail 11 far each to
Aslro-Grsph, Bax 149, Radio
CMy Station, N .Y. 10019. Be
sure to spectfy birth date.
C A N C E R (June 21-July III
F o r expeditious reasons you
m ay feel obligated to make
promises lo associates today.
Keep in mind: Commitments
you make now w ill have to be
kept later.
I.EO ( J u ly 23-Aug. 22)
There are certain tasks which
should be attended to today
and, even though you're
aware of their Importance,
you might look for rtaaona to
postpone doing them.
VIR G O | Aug. 8 - Sept. 8 )
At a social gathering today
one m ay be present who has a
tendency to gossip. T ry to
avoid this person He or she
m ay attem p t to p ry in ­
formation from you.
L IB R A (S e pt 21-&lt;&gt;ct. 8 } Be
very c a rtfu l today regarding
with whom you discuss family
secrets. If you talk to the

II

D E A R DR. I A M B — In my
mid-30s I sta rte d having
periods of noisy breathing
during m y sleep. M ost
disturbing to m y wife was that
som etim es I w ould stop
breathing (or a while and then
gam for air.
A t about age 40 I would
wake In the m iddle of the
night with the feeling of
smothering. 1 could gain a ir
by rolling to a lace down
position. A l age S* I had a
grand roal seizure. 1 was put
on anticonvulsant drugs and
warned to lim it coffee and
liquor. I still had seizures
about every six months until
three y ears ago a fte r I
mastered the art of sleeping
face down. A ll of m y seizure*
have been at night and I can
start one by sleeping on my
back.
Recently I read about sleep
apnea. How can d octors
classify me as epileptic when
I have such a history?
DEAR
READER
When
you
were
fir s t
diagnosed, sleep apnea was
not described. I can't be sure
that Is your problem but your
story certainly sounds like 1L
Everyone who has con­
vulsions does not have
epilepay. A person with a very
muw

iw e llu u e i

u n t il

iw a li

block may have a seizure
from lack of oxygen zupply to
tl« brain. The treatment Is a
heart pacemaker, not an­
t ic o n v u ls a n t m e d ic in e s .
There are many other cause
of convulsions, too. If there Is
a failure to supply oxygen to
the brain for any reason, it
can cause convulsions.
1 would like to suggest that
you ask your doctors to send
you to the nearest sleep center
for studies. They m ay be very
interested in your unusual
case.

Sleep apnea has been
wrong person, it could be popularized in recent years
b ro a d c a it to the neigh­ because it Is new but It Is a
relatively infrequent cause
borhood.
SCO R PIO ( O c t 14-Nev. 8 ) (or problems in sleeping. I am
Someone who is a taker may lending you The Health Letter
try to appeal to your more num ber 19-9. S leep and
compassionate instincts today Insomnia, for more details.
in order to get you to pari with Others who want this tim e
something that he or she can send 7S cents with a long,
stamped,
se lf-add re sse d
wants.
S A G riT A R I L 'S I Nov. 23Dec. t l ) Should you be selling
a product o r service today,
don't be afraid to ask for what
you deem to be a fa ir price. If
it's worth It, they’ll pay.
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 8 -Ja n .
m u
NORTH
II) Today you may have to
♦ A Q 10 4
ct^e with negative Impulses
974
which could hamper your beat
♦ K J • 91
efforts. A ct first. Worry later.
♦ 04
A Q U A R IU S (Jaa. 29-Feb.
WEST
EAST
II) N o r m a lly , you enjoy
♦71
+ 49 1
9 U J 14 9
V A X IO Il
getting out and m ixing with
* 10 7 2
*4
others. Today, you could spoil
♦ K 114
♦ A 9 19
your fun by being a trifle too
SOUTH
withdrawn and reclusive. Go
* K J 94
where the action la.
▼2
P IS C E S ( Feb. M -M arrh 21)
♦ AU»4
♦ J T lt
Don't be afraid of competitive
involvements today. Above
Vulnerable Neither
all, don’t view yourself as the
Dealer North
underdog. Y o u r d u n ce s for
Wnl
Nwtk R ail
Sh i S
winning are Just as good as
I*
DM
1+
29
2*
49
4+
those of others.
Past
Psis
Pass
A R IE S (M a rch 21-Aprfl II)
Liste n c a r e fu lly to what
others have to say to you
Opening lead WQ
today. Y o u could read
meanings Into their words
which actually weren't In­
tended.
By Oswald Jacoby
sag Atsa Sontag
T A U R I3 ( A rpfl 29-May N |
Check a ll financial recetpta or
You don I have to redouble
business docum ents w ith
•hen you have a good hand
e xtra care
today. The
oppoiiie partner’s suit open­
p o s s ib ilitie s
fo r
sm a ll
ing which hat been doubled
mistakes In these sre a j a r t
Ilf re it a hand (rom an IM P
strong.
match to Illustrate this pomt

envelope for it to me, in care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551. Radio City Station. New
York, N Y IM S .
1 would like to ace anyone
who has a history of stopping
breathing during sleep have a
careful study. It m ay be one
factor that causes men to
have heart a tta c k s m ore
frequently than women. Men
seem to be more prone to the
problem. It is related to the
respiratory reflex center In
the brain
D E A R DR. L A M B - M y son
was extremely heavy but with
careful dieting he lost more
than 100 pounds. H is flesh has
firmed up very w ell except (or
fatty breaita. O u r fam ily
doctor has approved weight
lifting but w u a t a loss to
suggest s particular exercise
to reduce the breasts We
would appreciate any help or
exercise program you can
suggest.
D E A R R E A D E R - R arely
some medical problems can
cause this condition but I am
sorry to tell you that there Is
no such thing as spot
reducing. E x e rc is in g the
chest muscles alone w ill not
eliminate breast fat. It la still
the old story of a balance
between c a lo rle a In and
calorics used. As your son
continues to Increase his use
of c a lo rie s
throug h
a
generalized exercise program
and diet control, he w ill
eventually e lim in a te those
unwanted fat depoalta.
Many people know that
when you lost It tends to
disappear last from the places
where you want to elim inate it
the most
Fo r localized breast fat,
which some men are prone to
have, If a reasonable exercise
and diet program does not
work, one can consider sim ple
surgical removal of the fat
pad.

WIN AT BRIDGE
The bidding in the bos took
place at table one South
elected to respond one spade
He knew that East and West
held a lot ol hearts and taw no
reason lo give them a chance
to preempt before he could
show spades From then on
there was no trouble getting
to four spades It made easily
since all the defense could col­
lect were two du b s and a
heart Of course, East-West
could have tried five hearts
Thai contract would only be
dawn two and m inus 300 is
better thin minus 420
At the other table East and
West wound up with a plus
score. The bidding started the
same way. but South chose to
redouble
.
West bid the tam e two
hearts North passed East
lumped to four hearts and
South tried fisc diamonds
The delrnie collected three
trteks for a delightful SO point
plus
We don’t blame the redou­
ble entirely for this debacle
North might well have tried
two spades over two hearts
and South might also have bid
lour spades rather than five
diamonds, bul the redouble
got North-South o il to the bad
start that led to their Immer­
sion in the soup
ih».wsr*rnt i-n t k m ' m u i . w n &gt;

by L a o n a rd S ta rr

FRANK AND ERNEST

by B ob T h a v ta

0

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W E R E N 'T
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H&amp;S H E R E FRO M

Fl o r id a i d t a k e
O R D ERS FO R

COCONUTS!

tjS F -l/ ( M l

fex A S
P M

HOK, EXPLAIN
THE VAST
IMPORTANCE
OF THE
coconut;

SCUT THESE
N E ttP E ^
OVER, SAifB-

brace*

,« /
TIGHTENS D C
SKIN, MAKES
IT MICE AND

HEY/ FUST’S

THAT STIFF YOUTH:
POURINGONME,

SMOOTH-

S 'D

ARE YOUKC0IN6?-'
YOU'D HAVE TO
SANDBLAST TO
6ET THE RJD6E6
OUT OF THIS OLD
KISSER/

VERY 9(ELL,
SR-ER60ME

C0LO6HE? M E?/ YE GODS,1
NlAT’ S D C MATTER flTH
YOU TODAY, OTTO? NEXT
COLOGNE? THING I KNOW w u . k
l50 o GESTH5 A HAIRNET /

P B M tM S E f? T »
y t h

i n

g

1.

by T. K. Ryan
T H E S E M I N O L E , GANGrl

-JUST60MESKH

ALRODY7/J
“PROFESSOR'

by Douglas Coffin

F L E T C H E R 'S LANDING
1 HfcVEJL O 1 0 U
U H lLfc. I H

H 0U ID ACT
IH &amp; M C T H L R t A L

M fc IOAWTS I D S H O U T

•HM WK n ttb tD

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Thursday, May 11,1 » l- 4 t

TONIGHT'S TV
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11:00

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800
O 4 l JANE OOOOALL ANO THE
WORLD OT ANIUAL BEHAVIOR

i l l i P ro to typ e C om m urvty

oI Tomorrow

a (17) MOV* 0«w. data

a»w i itsri ft*i, p,Mi«v smu

(ollowed the death o( her
brother.
M is s F o u n ta in , 2S, was
booted from the competition
Tuesday a lt e r h e r fellow
contestants voted 29-21 In
favor of her ouster. Her at­
torney. Gerald Posner, said
that was "lik e having the
wolves decide if the rabbit
should live."
Posner said he would ask
for her reinstatement today at
a state S uprem e Court
hearing in Manhattan.

M iss Fountain Is the only
contestant to be booted out of
Ihe 10-year-old pageant,
which selects a winner to vie
lor the title of M iss Universe.
The M iss U S A. Pageant w ill
be nationally televised tonight
from the M ississippi Coast
Coliseum in Biloxi.
"I wanted to be famous, but
not like this," M iss Fountain
said.
She said she was suing Ihe
pageant " f o r the te rrib le
humiliation they have caused
m e." She said In court papers
that a beauty pageant official.
Upped by a contestant with
silicon e im p lan ts, rip p e d
down her swimsuit, exposing
her falsies backstage.
At least tour other women In
the contest had silicone im ­
plants to boost their bustlines.
Miss Fountain said. She said
she knew "from seeing the
scars” on their breasts when

Stacey's Cafe;

The Cash Drawer
Is Always Open
T R A V E R S E C IT Y . Mich. (U P I) — It Isn't because the
service is bad customers pour their own coffee at Stacey's
cafe. And the owners don’t fear a ripoff by patrons rifling
through the unattended cash drawer.
Whether it's tourists Irom Chicago or a lifelong customer
from Traverse City, nearly a ll the diners who eat at Chuck and
Julie Stathakis’ restaurant make their own change at the cash
register - Just as they have for more than 23 years.
• If they don't know how to work the cash register, we show
them bow," M rs. Stathakis said. "People have made a mistake
and then cam e in the nest dsy and said, ‘Hey Julie, I took a
dollar loo much out of the register yesterday.*
•'We've never had anything stolen. If they know you don't
bust them, then they'll Just see what they can get away w ith."
The open cash register isn't the only thing that mokes
Stscey’s a retreat from the outside world.
The waitresses sre always nearby and Ihe conversation Is
free flowing. E ach diner g t u dessert with dinner, even if it
wasn’ t ordered - Just part of the regular fare at Stacey's.
Coffee is there for the taking.
The neon sign out front and the display windows on each side
of the front door ir e rem iniscent of the 1950s Inside, ■ counter
runs Ihe length of the long, narrow restaurant on one side,
booths line the other w ill, and tables are sandwiched in bet­
ween.
Mrs. Stathakis comes in before sunup to prepare (or break­
fast and is usually there long after dinnertime, coffee pot in
hand, ready to offer a bit of advice to a friend or her opinion on
the evening's dinner conversation.
Her husfcwsd comes in about noon and sits In the last booth,
d ik in g to friends and Joking with the busboy and waitresses.
' He waxes nostalgic when a newcomer asks about his years as a
restaurateur in Traverse City.
"People ca ll you by your first name when you walk out the
door. You see people come In, maybe they came In when they
were kids and now they are bringing their kids in ... it's m ore
than a living or w a k in g , you're dealing with people,”
Stathakis say.*.
"The people who hve in big cities don't know what they're
missing. If 1 tried it (allowing customers to use Ihe cash
register) in Chicago I ’d be busted in a half an hour," he said
wilh a laugh.
Chuck and Ju lie bought the restaurant, then called Xeke's, in
1957. The only thing they changed was the name.
H arry Bradford, owner of a shoe store down the street, said
be has been eating lunch in Stacey's ever since the Stathakis
bought the s lic e .
"It’s the only place to come,” he said. "I come here so often
Julie Just fixes me up. I never order — it's bke a home away

the contestants changed in a
communal dressing room.
She also claimed 20 other
beauty contestants padded
their bras in the competition.
“ I t 's com m onplace. I'd
seen other girls doing It lor
two weeks during the evening
gown and sta le costum e
competitions,” M iss Fountain
told reporters at taG uardia
Airport after nylng in from
Biloxi
M iss Fountain said she
would not idenUIy the other
contestants who cheated,
unless II meant she could
return to the pageant
Court papers said the swim­
suit she was given to wear
would have fit her 25-23-35
figure of seven weeks ago, bul
did not cover her diminished ‘
curses; in (act, "exposed
parts of hrr breasts and
buttocks."
M iss Fountain said she
asked for another suit or
alterations, and even sewed
the front of the bathing suit
herself. Pageant o ffic ia ls
nude her remove the stit­
ching. she said.
Pageant President Harold
G U sser denied M iss Fountain
had asked for any alteration
of the sw im sull during the last
two weeks. He M id he had "no
idea" if any contestants had
breast implants.
"The Issue is not why she
inserted the fa ls ie s ” Glosser
said. " I l's a m oral question of
deliberate deception."

11 (T7) TELEVISION THE MORAL

ertangae a sunrise eitaomon or
Kc&gt; s pamtmgi at e berhdey pres­
(D 1101 BNCAK PREVIEWS The
Lite And Death Of Brace ferns
ftogsr Chert and Oene Sweet teas a
loos at ahy Ihe ere of Nme by to
end about Mack Amercene has

800
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la t e Don
(to rsi Sidney Porter M Cosby A
mm men and e lactory worker
engage in bating and hypnotism to
rarte funds t o then lodge |tt|
(1 1O IM 1 MIBB USA PAQIANT
Bob Barker end ( lie Sommer are
hoetk t o me Join annual adilron el
true erem to be n irceel toe bom
me Convention Center n Boon.
M et m which St beauties compete
crown. Oomy
(71 U BAKMCY MILIEU
CD 110) rvT N u ra a t

po ps
C le t k e e l g u t s n e l A n g e l llo m s ro
p e rfo rm s V rv tk k •
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(D &lt;0 SESAME STREET O
1 J (17) THE ADDAMS FAMILY

4:30

IJJ (35) TOM ANO JERRY
t i l t 7) THE BRADY BUNCH

300

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(D (0 MUTER ROGERS
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1:00

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j; O THE YOUNG ANO THE
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I O M 'A ’ S'H
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WONDER WOMAN
ELECTRIC COMPANY(R)
BEVERIT HKLBIILIES

1:18
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B:30

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10:30

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10) SESAME STREET Q
17) HAZEL

3:00

S IM M A M | iP u M iw g M ,g ll

e n t lor hrm ( t il

N E W Y O R K (U P II - M U s
New Y ork is seeking ■ court
order allowing her to compete
In tonight's M iss U .S.A. Pa­
geant, claim ing a contestant
with silicone-enlarged breasts
turned her in tor padding her
swimsuit.
Beauty queen Deborah Ann
Fountain said she used inchthick (aisles to compensate
(or a li-pound weight loss that

TOOAY

(71 O MARCUS W ELIT. M 0

((

4:00

12:30

QCOO MORNING AMERICA
&gt;1GREAT SPACE COASTER
10) RESOP|R)
17) MY T H R U SONS

MORNING

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O H m o v ie
l J O JOHN DAVtOSON

T K IN S H IP S

OOOO MORNING FLORIDA

f R C f lv

t r s f W A L T O N S Trm m e a d

and (a n t o the mountain • newest
resident a s— ttungry charming
yomg lumber lies
Q O WORK ANO MBSOY MnS
m ean Mindy • h m day u a w enwort newscaster unforgettable |R|
I t (35| SPECIAL
t o (10) TLOWOA FOCUS An
mveotigahon ot Wait Ouney World ■

12(17) FREEMAN REPORTS

17) THE FUNTETONEE

O ^ TOOAY M FLORtOA

(I) O THE JtFFtR SO M S George
hnds out mat lo u s e ■ new trend a
amen |R|
ID O ABC NEWS WGHTLJNE

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(35IOAFTYDUCR
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6:25

TONIGHT Noel Johnny
Quests Oeorge SegM

3:30

CAROSM ARKI
J O NEWS

12:15
( 0 (10) MATHEMATICAL RELA-

I DREAM OT JEANNE

Corvad J im

MACMCIL I LEHREK

Case Johnson and Trevor Howard
12 (17) BANTORO ANO SON

FRWNOS

g im v s u s w m

11:30

) GENERAL HOSPITAL
') THE FLPFTE TONES
I POSTSCRIPTS

r | JSI THE WORLD OT PEOPLE
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1t|33l FRED FLMTSTONE ANO

11:13

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OOOO MORNING AMERICA
( T i) TOM ANO JERRY

Q CU Q P O C D © n e w *
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TURE

7 :3 0

M iss New York Sues To
G et Back In Pageant

T ) O ONE UTE TO LIVE

AFTERNO O N

7:30

1 2 (1 7 ) NEWS

I I (17) SANTORO ANO SON

W

rJJ o AS THt WORLD TURNS
(C (TO) SOUTH ST NORTHWEST

1145
CD ( »0) LETTER PEOPLE

TOEkAY MFLOROA
0000 MORNING FLORIDA

M aim

I (35) BARNTY M hltR

Others Have Silicone Implants, She Says

7 00
o ( f ANOTHER WORLD

Orlando Public
■raadcettmg Syltam

7 :23

Cp O M O V«
Tat Man fWing
fCl 1 19Sft| FUtsidoipft Scon, Dorothy

a (1 1 NEWS
j)
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PM
MAGAZINE Can
Naught meets the IS lucky wmneri
of Danes ■ Southtos ra n ch may
each eon one iguare toot, a took at
the Temgeid Diet t o hyper acme
cfukVan Chet Tel on boa cheeses
Audi luheaen hat shape-set surer
Cikeu. Joyce Rumeww laeturea a 1
•creen t v and a I t tune car horn
I JOKER S WXO

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&lt;24

TI|17)FUNTIUE

3:30
10:15

J

(1 0 )

Orlande

O H 10) LETTER PEOPLE

3.00

7 .0 0

Kike Sommer and Bob Barker
(above) are co-hosts. ami Donnv
Osmund will perform, cm •’The
I Ml Mhs USA Pageant," to be
broadcast, live, from Biloxi,
Miss., tonight (tM I p.m „ KT) on
the CBS Television Network.

( 1 7 )

3 -Of)

&lt; T o CBS NEWS
ABC NEWS
3 5 1SANTORO AND SOW
10 S U M C U ttM C
1 7 i BOB NEWHART

CROWNED TONIGHT

1:45

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O

8 :3 0

S J it a a c ft t w e

a
(10)
REPORT

0 (10) A U ABOUT YOU

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(A E C I Orlenda

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t i P &gt; t* l c o w n ,

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ID M ill M M STONY Hoddmg
Carter, former pretv iposeeman to
me State Department, tooie at how

c im

O ® TOOAY
J O MORNING WITH CHARLES
KUAAIT
(710 OOOO MORMNQ AMERICA
|TS I BUGS BUNNY
110) TOOAY IN THE LEONLA-

If Q LOVE BOAT |RJ
M (35) GLENN ARNETTS
(0 (1 0 ) OETTINQ TO KNOW ME

11:30
O ;Ji PAEOWORO PLUE
tJD 110l PfSIOE / OUT

KIT ‘N* CARLYLE *“

by Larry Wright

wny v w r s b u e A T iu e

Xm

CARLUfc! I / W C
IN NV/ fR EN C H O tC ^N tl

Not only are '.here r a llie s on the Rhine to look
■t, there are more than IS castles on the Rhine
that you ra n a rtu slly v is it
And three i r e medieval villages and the B lack
Forest. And the Wagner nod M otarl Festivals. And
German beer nnd tsunt. Treasure-Udro muse­
ums and breathtaking scenery.
We ran hrlp you get la Germaay. We’ll make all
the aiTRngrmraU. And there's no charge to you
for our assistance.
H e'll also sre to II that you fly la Germany
aboard a Tan A m Clipper.

OAV&gt;.

\

"

»F T h o s e A R E I

Fbob \£PXcH&amp;$,'

TN6EC CAWT BC A
tc 6 c R c a t lcpt in

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tU O F fR M E l

8:30
(7l a

TAXI

SUN TRAVEL

10:00

(n o K ito

AGENCY

® T»0) SONG BY to e to ( y
Herburg George Brown end Dent
Kornen perform eongt bom r «
on s Ken bow TheW derdOfOr
end ornere « Rue tribute to ty rw t
t * Her Mag (ft)

Ph. 323-4650
2311 S. French Ave. Sanford

a

11:43

12 (17) MOVIE
The S e t Also
Braes (tH T ) Tyrone Power. Are
Oar drier

R

A

I V

/ W

12.-00

(I) o MCMILLAN Wtue an route
to e Kaweaen vacation Mac
becomes involved m a murder mys­
tery aboard the plena
(7) O C H A M L C t A N G U S
l i t IJ5J AM BARKER

12:30

O D f ouonnow Quae! C lu e
lophar Cross
H O HEWS
(7) O MOVIE

IDO

1:10
the Lady to The

ls e e iB 'W l | l t i f | Robert Mcml
gomery. Leon Ames

200

FRIDAY SeafDDd BUFFET
AH! tj«i Cob £d
APPETIZER-SOUP AND SALAD BAR

O i l ’ O AKY EXVO TKM Al

IN THE
SERVICE

| ri F i r y i T h e a tre s |

aFT A Z A TWiN»i
way n e t m t s a i n n .
A l l bC A TS 9 9 ' ,

t

E L A fA I

1 r ie o s .iv

TAKE THIS JOB
AND SHOVE IT
( P1A«A j f j

CLOSED THURS.
AMERICAN GIGOLO

P re te s t

. F w ta re

I ( t u r n A0WCI ON ALL ALT AIRS
• U K

(3 0 5 )
8 3 1 -4 4 0 5

BAKED FISH • SHRIMP CREOLE
CLAM CHOWDER • CRAB CAKES
FRIED CLAMS
CRAB ROLLS • HUSH PUPPIES
CORN-ON THE COB • FRENCH FRIES

a i »&lt;t

HAIM ■CAHO - CRYSTAL BAIL HLADING
P e it -

FRIED SHRIMP a FRIED PERCH

5 PM TUI 11 PM Children Under 12-% PRICE
wwy i »m »

M A D A M E KATHERINE

iONOWOOO

Ocean Gems

2:30

12 (1 7 l saovw
The Busier M S•nn story' | tfST) Donald 0 Comer.
Rhonda f lemmg

A N T H O N Y N ICH O LA S V I 1 N A
A n th o n y N . t h o lA i Varna. H * 0*
V r tn d V n Rgbatl Lo u 't Vam a
of
1001
E ip la n e d a
W ill
C a u ctb a ffy . hat aw n tad m in*
United Slatav M jr ln o Corps. H t
w ill depart run* 1 for 11 weeks of
recruit training &lt;1 ru t Mar.no
Corps R e c ru it O tp o t. P e r r is
island S C. Upon lom pieieet of
Ironing. Verna w ill bo homo for A
ton dar
boforo going on to
further laconical training In a
fo rm a l M a rin o Corp s school
V rrna enlisted tor tour roars
under the combat arm s anlistment
bonus program V rrn a w ill receive
o U .jW burvrk
LUdlpt'trftMf) iff
M recruit training. f n o r fo his
t n lls t m t n l, V erna w o rie d tor
Bob's S u its and Motors Inc and
graduated from Seminole Com
munity College Adult High School
m th a General Education Diploma
in lun# logo

I

‘ L O V E • M A R R IA G E v B U SIN ESS

BU N IN BUSINESS FOR SO YEARS
IN PRIVACY OF MY HOME
HOURS 8 A M . •9 P M

urn rwsarwsse i l v u t y
m b

TONIGHT
IS STEAK NIGHT

$595

STRIP OR

Cstnpislt

DELMONICO STEAK

C lu ie d S u n d a y

1 BUM K» NORTH Of DOG TRACK RD
lu o e to * nm

iaCaOalterit.

am

ISv burn tern tar SI
i i i u. v..v—, i- it seem tv -

from home."

* VV

3300 S. ORLANDO DR.

321-0690

SANFORD

�T h v rs d s ir. M a y 1 1 , »W»

4 B - g v r i l n | H a ro ld . U n f a r t . F I

Legal Notice

... Parents Help Pregnant Teens
('o n ttn n rd F r o m P i g * 1 A

W h a t d o th e s e p a r e n t s th in k a b o u t s e t

M i d F r a n , a n d G porn in a a d d e d th a t th e

NOTICE
OF A PUELIC
HEAPING to consider the

tw o p r e g n a n c ie s u i the f a m ily A lre a d y
h a s h a d a " b a d e f f e c t " o n U ie boy.

e d u c a tio n In s c h o o l?

Is a ls o lo o k in g f o r w a r d t o th e b ir t h o f h e r

T h o se in te rv ie w e d w e re q u ic k to M y

J u d y 's o ld e r s o n got m a r r ie d a w eek

g r a n d c h ild t h is s u m m e r . B u t G e o r g in a

that s e x e d u c a tio n s h o u ld be ta u g h t at

b e fo re th e b a b y w a s b o m a n d the you n g

shu d d ere d a n d w ip e d a w a y te a r s fro m

borne a n d w h en th e c h ild r e n a r e young.

p a re n ts liv e d w it h J u d y a n d h e r husband.

h e r reddened e y e s w h e n H e le n u l d she

B u t, th e y

m w

h e r fir s t

g r a n d c h ild

put

u p fo r

Tam m y.

d e c is io n

s o m e th in g

s h o u ld be

taught tn th e sch o o ls.

to

G e o r g in a

go

th ro u g h

s a id ,

th e

w ilh

th e

p re g n a n c y w a a d if f ic u lt .
“ T h e b o y frie n d u rg e d a b o r tio n a n d he
h a d taken h e r to th e a b o r t io n r l ln ie . " «he
re la te d . “ B u t w hen s h e got th e re , she
b a c k e d out, p r o b a b ly w h e n sn e saw a ll

" T h e b o y frie n d y e lle d a n d s c re a m e d at

a ls o

q u iz w ith s im p le , b a d e q u e s tio n s taken

h a n d le th e c h ild .

rig h t fro m books.
" T h e r e a r e no t r ic k

q u e s tio n s ," he

H id . " A n d m o st k id s flu n k

K iri* ri"fi't

know . K id s th in k th e y k n o w ."

u ld

she

w a s too

th ou gh t

her

Im m a tu re

to

" H o w d o y o u t e ll a lS - y e a r o ld h o w lo
b rin g u p a b a b y ? ” she a s k e d
K a r e n u i d t h e ir y o u n g e r son w u a ls o

F r a n , w h o h a s b e c o m e v e r y d efen siv e

choked

she

w ent on

v o ic e .

Now that Catherine hat

"H e

a ffe c te d

b y h is

o ld e r b r o th e r g e ttin g

T h a t w ay I k n o w w h a t k tn d o f a boy he
I s ."

»

g ir l* ."

the abortion, the highly

managed a broad smile that tried
to hide her tears when she Mid she had
been to the doctor with T a m m y and had
"heard the baby's h eart beat. I t's
wonderful."
She

sa id no

e x p e rie n c e

o ffe r

adder

to

" t l ' l n o t the e n d o f the w o rld . Y o u c a n

lust throws her hands

now. I have no feelings.

H e le n . " D o n 't b la m e y o u r­
o n ly

m ake

y o u r s e lf

m o re

" Y o u 'v e got to lo o k -fo r w a rd . T a k e the
rig h t a ttitu d e a n d y o u ’l l g e t th ro u g h ,"
u i d D a v id . " W h e n (here ia a p ro b le m , it
h a s bee n e x p o se d a n d a d e c is io n h u been
m a d e , s u p p o rt I t.”

1 don't know what I

w o u ld be.

You

m is e r a b le ."

'I don't think about It

a b o rtio n and e v e n H i d w h e n the w ed ding

c o p e ," u l d
se lf.

In the air and says,

fe lt le ft out In the d e r is io n the k id s m ade.
m o th e r

P a r e n t s w h o h a v e g o n e th ro u g h th is
tr a u m a t ic

o th ers fa c in g t h is u m e p ro b le m .

nervous woman

K a r e n H id a s the p a r e n t of a b o y , she
" T h e g ir l'* m o th e r c a lle d th e s h o ts ,"

" T h e y o u n g e r o n e h ad h a d g ir lf r ie n d s
s in c e th e fift h g r a d e ," sh e u l d . " S in c e
th is h a p p e n e d , h e 's p r a c t ic a lly te e t o u le d

teen Olivia through

d ro p p e d her. I 'm g la d h e le ft h e r now.

g ir l's

She

d a u g h te r-in -la w

m a r r ie d a n d b e c o m in g a fa th e r.

h e r a ll the w a y b a c k , "

she M id . " T h e

u ld .

sch ools to t a lk a b o u t s e s u s lit y , h e g iv e s a

th o se yo u n g ste rs th e re .

t im id ly and In a

T h e y o u n g e r s o n " r e s e n te d th a t b a b y In (
the h o m e a n d h is g ra d e s d ro p p e d .” she

l i a n o l i s a id w h e n b e goes Into the

adop tio n.
For

s a id ,

" W e d id n 't b u r y o u r h e a d tn the u n d

feel' about abortion.

“ I fe lt the k id s w e re to o y o u n g to have
t h is bab y and w o n d e re d w h y the g ir l's

E le a n o r.

d o c to r d id n 't ta lk to h e r m o re about
a b o r tio n ," K a r e n M id .
T h in k in g a b o u t th e g i r l r a is in g

J u d y p a s s e d a lo n g a sta te m e n t o f h er
an d c a lls h e r p r e g n a n t d a u g h te r a sin g le

the

a n d th a t h e lp e d ," c h im e d In h is w ife

d a u g h te r Y v o n n e w h en h e r o ld e r b ro th e r

u n w ed m oth er,

Hi&lt;M m s i s fitc p s re s i f e u i&amp; r !« « lu

jnsrrlfd jtatfy fcefcrc the Lily • «

la i d sne m in t s s e s e d u c a tio n in school

b a rn ; " D o n 't fig h t it or y o u ’l l lose h im . "

a c t.

sho u ld In clu d e a f ilm o n the b ir th of a

B e rth a , N a n c y 's m o th e r, r e lie d on h er

''N a n c y h a t b e e n a ro u n d b a b ie s a ll h e r
lif e , " B e rth a M id , n o tin g s h e h a d co m e

p a re n t r a th e r th a n a n

baby.

re lig io u s u p b rin g in g .

G e o rg in a s a y s s e s e d u c a tio n a t hem e

fro m a la rg e fa m ily . " S h e ’ s b e e n c a rin g

sho u ld

fo r n ie ces and n ep h ew s a n d th e y c a ll h e r

c o n tro l p ills . "

'lit t le m o th er.'
" N a n c y k n o w s h e r r e s p o n s ib ilitie s o f

a

package

of

b irth

w a s s e x u a lly In vo lv e d . A l f i r s t I c o u ld n 't
ta lk to h e r. 1 d id n 't h a le h e r ev en though
she u l d , 'Y o u d o n 't love m e.*

J u d y w a n ts h e r h u s b a n d to h a n d le the

" I w e n t Into m y ro o m a n d p ra y e d Tor

ta lk to the y o u n g e r b o y In th e fa m ily ,

s tre n g th to o v e rc o m e these fe e lin g s ," she

the one w h o In fo rm e d h e r o f her
d a u g h te r's p re g n a n c y . S h e u y s seein g

u i d te a r f u lly , " T h e n I w e n t o u l a n d to ld

b e in g a teen m o th e r ," s h e M id , a d d in g

m x

h e r d aug hter a tte n d s p r e - n a ta l cla ss e s
o ffe re d at M A P P .

" in c lu d e

" I w a s h u rt, flo o re d . I d id n 't re a liz e she

m y d a u g h te r I lo v e d h e r ."

A D O PTIO N O F AN O R D IN A N C E
e v the city o f sanforo .
F LO R ID A .
f*ollc» It her to y gtern that a
Publ.c H earing w ilt be held a l the
Com m ission Room in ho City H a ll
•n lh* City o l Santord, Florid*, al
I 00 O'clock P M .o n Jun* |. I N I .
lo consider th* adoption o l an
ordinance by th* C if f o l Sanlord.
F io rd * , a s le ld w i
O R D IN A N C E NO. I U I
A N O R D I N A N C E O F T H E C IT V
OF S A N FO R D . F LO R ID A . TO
A N N E X W IT H IN T H E CO R
P O R A T E A R E A OF TH E C IT Y
OF S A N F O R D . F LO R ID A U PO N
A D O P T IO N
Oh
S A ID O R
r iN A N C E , A P O R TIO N OF TH A T
c e r t a in

pro perty

B E T W E E N G E O R G IA A V E N U E
AND
NORTH
C A R O L IN A
AVENUE
AND
BETW EEN
W V L L V A V E N U E A N O M A T T lE
STREET
(A ID P R O P E R T Y
B E IN G
S IT U A T E D
IN
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y , FLO R ID A .
IN A C C O R D A N C E W ITH T H E
V O LU N TAR Y
A N N E X A T IO N
P R O V IS IO N S
OF
S E C T IO N
H IG H . F L O R ID A ST A T U T ES .
P R O V I D I N G
F O R
S E V E R A B I L IT Y ,
C O N F LIC T S
ano e f f e c t iv e

Judge Pleads Guilty

N O TICE O F
S H lR I P F ’ l ( A l l
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
C o g g in , H , w a a c h a r g e d w ith possession of
F O R T P I E R C E . F la . ( U P l t - S usp ended
m ol by v irtu e o l Ihot coelom W ill
m a r iju a n a , im p o r ta tio n o f a co n tro lle d s u b ­
A la h a m s Ju d g e T h o m a s R . C o g g tn w ill be
o l E lo cu tio n issued oul of and
sta n ce a n d c a r r y in g a c o n c e a le d fir e a r m w h ile
under i No teal of IN* Slot* ol
se n te n ce d Ju n e I f fo r s m u g g lin g m a riju a n a .
Florida Department o l Revenue.
c o m m ittin g a fe lo n y .
Saminol* County. Florida, upon a
C o g g in s, a rre s te d
w it h
98 pound s o f
l e w i s m ( s e n te n c in g fo r J u n e If. C o g g in
lln a l lu d gem m l rendered on IN*
m a riju a n a In h is lig h t p la n e w h en he la n d e d at
fa c e s a m a s lm u m 30 y e a r sentence.
la m day o l A p ril. * O I H I .ln lN e l
the S t. t i l d e I n te r n a tio n a l A ir p o r t J a n u a r y I t ,
c e rta in c o la a n lilla * . Ran d y
In A la b a m a , C o g g in Is sch e d u le d (o r trta l
M illa r .
E it c u liv t
D ire c to r.
w ith d re w h is p le a o f n o t g u ilt y W e d n e sd a y and
M a y 17 on c h a r g e s he m is a p p lie d state
Deportm ent ol Rovonu*. stale ol
p le a d e d no co n te st to m a r ij u a n a s m u g g lin g
e v id e n c e b y a lle g e d ly ta k in g a gun a n d som e
Florid*. F lo in! III. vs M id Florida
; ch a rg e s .
A ,.* ia n . In c. Dolondonl. atilcN
m a riju a n a th a t w e re u se d a s e v id e n ce In h is
aforesaid W rit al E locu tion was
T h e p ie s ch a n g e c a m e a fte r C ir c u it Ju d g e
co urt.
delivered lo m* a t SNarlH ol
C o g g in h a s b e e n d is q u a lif ie d I r a n c a r r y in g
•.Koyce le w is d e n ie d a d e fe n s e m o tio n to
Saminol* County. Florida, and I
Navo levied upon INo 'oitoning
out his Judicial duties by the Alabama Judicial
s u p p r e s s c e r t a in p h y s i c a l e v id e n c e a n d
described property owned by M*d
In q u iry C o m m is s io n b e c a u se of the felo n y
sta te m e n ts ta k e n fr o m C o g g in a t the tim e of
F lor ido A y ld llo n . Inc , la id
h is a rre s t la s t J a n . J t.
ch a rg e s.
property being loco le d &gt;n Seminote
C a u n ly. F lo rid a , m ar* par
llc v la rly described as Follows
On* load Cessna— M L biuo and
wNiia in calor. No N m e*
and tn* undsrsignod a t Snoriri ol
IN t h b c i r c u i t c o u r t f o r
Saminol* County. Florid* , w ill *1
IM T M I C IIC U IT CO U RT FO B
s b m in o l e c o u n t y . F l o r id a
IN TMB CIRCU IT CO U RT FOR
II N A M onth* IJtn day t l June.
I I M I N O L I CO U N TY. FLOW IDS
F R O B A T I DIVISION
S IM IN O L R COUN TY. F LO R ID A
A
0 IN I . oltor lo r sal* and to ll lo
P R O B A T E O IVIU O N
F ile Number II JSACF
P R O B A T E OIVISION
in* n ignasl bidder, lor ctsN.
Fit* N em ktr II III CP
Division
F ile Number II I1 S C P
iubioct lo any and a ll tv tilin g
D iv id e*
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
D m iiien P R O B S T I
Pfclm nt. *1 m * From (West) Door ol
IN a l t I t T A T I OF
I IN R l : f STATE OF
IN* Seminole County Cour mouse In
E D N A BRIDGES, ( a a
E V A S. CROSBY
R U T H V R O U T W IL L .
Santord. F lo rid a , in * abovo
M RS W 0 (R ID G E S .
Deceased
Doceased
dtscfibed personal properly
D « M IN
I NOTICE OF AD M IN ISTR ATIO N
n o t ic e o f a d m in is t r a t io n
Thot s*&gt;d sal* Is being mod* lo
NOTICE OF A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
| TO A L L P E R S O N S H A V IN G
to a l l
f e r s o n s h a v in o
v a in ly IN* le ftn t o l said W n l ol
TO A I L PER S O N S H A V IN G
C L A IM S
OR
DEM ANDS
C L A IM S
ON
DEMANDS
EatcuHon
C L A IM S
OR
DEMANDS
AGAINST THE A B O V E E S T A T E
A G A IN S T T H E A B O VE E S T A T E
John E Folk. SheeiH
AG AIN ST 1 HE A B O V E E S T A T E
1 A N D A L L O T H ER PER S O N S
A N D A L L O T H ER FER S O N S
Saminol* County. Florida
AND A L L O T H ER P E R S O N S
IN T E R E S T E D IN THE E S T A T E
IN T E R E S T E D IN IH E E S T A T E :
Publish M a y II. I* A Juna A II
IN T E R E S T E D i n T H E E S T A T E
YO U
ARE
HEREBY
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
w ilh sal* on Am* 11. IN I
v n t'
ARE
HERESY
N O T IF IE D
m at
ih a
ad
N O T IF IE D
m ol
Ihe
ad
O EI If
N O T IFIE D
in e l
in *
»u
m n u slra ilg n a t the estate of E V A
m in ittra t ion ol the estate id R UT H
m in im a l .on o llh t e t n i t o t E D N A
S C R O S B Y , d a co a std . F l i t
V B O U T W E L L . deceased. File
B RID G ES, a k a
M rs W
O
Number It T U C P . II pending m Number II ISA C P , is pending
N O T IC E OP S U L K T R A N S F E R
B rid gat.. etctataO. F i l l Num bar
FhO Circuit Court lo r Jam uwle
mo c irc u it Court lor Seminole
Noiic* It hereby given pursuant
II IS I C F. Ik pam l.i* :.i me i ir c u il
County. Florida. Probata Division,
County, Florida, Prebate Olviaion.
to Section 41410) ol INo Florid*
C ou rt lo r S tm ln s lo C ounty.
me address ad ahich it temmeda mo address ad which it Sam molt
SlaH A rt Ihal * Bulk Iron slor w ill
Florida, Frooda D m lm n , Iht
Cou n ty Courthouse, Sanford.
County Courthouse. Sintord. F L
lak* piece a t lolldws:
address t l which i* Sem inole
H I M The prison*! rrp rotenFoflrt
F u r , d o SIFT1
The personal
i Tn* N o m ti end address e* Iho
Count* Courthouse. Sanford, FL
of Iho t t ' o le it O O U O L A S
representative o l mo e s ie lt IS tre n d tr or I* H arry 0 M m I and
1)1)1 in * » o n o n * l fepresentoliv*
STEN STBO M . a h a r o d d rttt it
D O R O T H Y M E A D O R S , whoso
M argaret M m i h it a ils . SMI
oi in* etlato i* P E R C Y L E R O Y
111 W itltr io D r . longw asd. F L
address it P P Boa SAL Sentord.
fc a o e n a ir r
O n**.
O rlando.
ES T R ID O E, w h o u H o r n it SS)
D I M The name and address of the
F lorida The nom a and address ol
Florida M i l t and 1S04 South
N B*acn Sir***, Ormond B oom
personal re p re ta n la iirt't attorney
the person a l r e p re te n te liv o 'i
French Avonut, Santoro Florida
F L D S .J Th* ham* and address of
ora tel farm below
attorney ere sal lorih below
J7MS
In t p o n o n tl re p re s e n ta tiv e s
A ll persons haying claim s or
A ll persons having claim s
) tn* names and business
attorney I I I H I lorih bo low
demands against mo e tlt lo a rt
demands against Ihe estate are
addrrvt
u&lt; Iht 'ren tier** is John
A ll persons hev,ng cla im s or
rrc u n e d .
W ITH IN
THREE
re q u ire d
W IT H IN
THREE
T D a v id so n and Janie* J
demands roti/lk! thk oklOto or*
MONTHS FRO M THE D A T E OF
M O N TH S F R O M THE O A TE OF
Davidson. II* SHer,dan Avenue.
ry g u lra d .
W IT H IN
THREE
THE FIR S T PU B LIC A TIO N OF
TH E FIR S T P U B LIC A T IO N OF
Longwood. Florida M l J*
M ONTHS F R O M TH E D A T E OF
THIS NO TICE, lo lllo w lh Iho
THIS N O TICE, to Ule wdh Ihe
] So la r os known to Iht iron
THE FIRST P U B L IC A T IO N OF
d a rk of lh# abort court o M illio n
clerk el Iho a b o rt fo w l a w ritta i
dor** *11 other but,nets names
THIS NOTICE. 10 III* w itti I ho
statem en t o l any c la im or
statement o l any cla im or demand
and add m m u ia d by Iht Iran
(Ifrk oF Ihr abort court a w ritten
mey may hoy* Each claim must
dem and they may have Each
d e te r w ithm th* Iasi tn r tt years
H rlom onl at any claim ar dtm and
be M w illin g and m utt in d w elt Iho cla&lt;m m utl be in writing and m utl
ar* H arry AArrst Enterprises and
may ma r nave Each claim muat
basis lor iho claim, tha name and
m d'caio m* b a ils lor m o claim .
Bursar Chat Restaurants located
be in w tilmg and m u ll Indicate In*
' address el the cre d it* or ms agent
Ih* n a m t and address ol the
at in* above two addresses
batik lor Iho claim . Iht no m o and
creditor or his oowil or attorney,
ar e lto m ty . end the amount
a d d m io tlh * creditor or n u a o m i
♦ H is not known whether *11 ol
and lh* amount claimed II Iht
claim ed II Iht claim Is not yet
Iho debts oI Hi* I ra n d tr s r p ill Do
or attornty, and ma amount
ertf. the dole when i| w ill become
cla im IS halt y tl duo,Ih* dal* » h m
paid in lu ll as H a y ta il duo a t a
claim ed II mo cla im ia not ye*
duo shall be staled II li lt claim .t
i l w ill become due shall Oa staled
revolt id tha tr ansae lion
duo. ma b ait »non it w ill Lot cm t
II Ih* c ltlm it coromgeni or
contingent or unliquidated. the
S I he properly lo be trsnsttrrod
d ja than ba stated il ma c la im l i
nature o l in* uncertain!!* than be
unliquidated, the nafur* al
t online oni or unliquidated. Iho
iv localod at ISM South French
uncertainly shall be s ille d II lh*
staled II me claim it secured tlw
Avenue. Sanlord, F lorida JlftO.
nature o&lt; the uncertainly ahall bo
cla im msec sited, the security then
Security shall be described The
and may be generally descr ibog a t
H a ird if ma d a im it taturad . tna
be described The claimant shall
claim ant shall doliyar tu H u ie o l
a ll ol th* furniture, llitu ry s ,
security m ail bo described The
rpp Its d im * d a m I* in* d o rk to deliver suHicienr copies o l th*
equ p m m l and Inventory ol th*
Claimant than doliyar tuFflcianl
cla im •* lh* dec* i* mabt* Ih*
m oble me clerk ip m o'l one copy
tre n d tro r lo c t'e d o l w c h address
rop-es oF the claim to Iho d o r k lo
clerk to m oil on* copy to each
lo each personal represent alive
* Tn* estimated total of the
♦nabie mo Clark lo man one copy
personal representative
A ll dorsone interested m ihe
tran sistor s debit it SAJ.MDN
lo tech personal r a p r n o r t a lir t
estate to whom a copy o l this
A ll persona mleraslad In lh*
F The address whore in*
A ll parsons interested in Iho
estate lo whom a copy g« m is
N otw o ol Acm m itfratign has boon
schedule o l properly ond list o l
fsta to lo whom o copy oF m is
None* or A d m ,n u tritio n has been
m tlltd are requited. W ITHIN
creditors o l m* transferor may be
h o lie r «f Adm inistration has boon
m e.led are required W ITHIN
t h r e e m o n t h s FRO M t h e
ntpoctvr] is ISO Canton Avonw*
m o-ltd ore required. W IT H IN
T H R E E M O N T H S FR O M THE
DATE
OF
THE
F IR S T
West, Suit* HO. Winlee Pork.
T H R E E MONTHS F R O M T H E
DATE
OF
TH E
FUST
P U B LIC A T IO N
OF
THIS
Florida
DATE
OF
TH E
F IR S T
P U B LIC A T IO N
OF
THIS
N O TICE, lo Me any obleclions
I Tn* Trander it n
'-P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
T H IS
N O T IC E, la HI* any oblactione
they may have that challenge Iho
made lo p a y ta ttlin g debts
NO TICE, to Mo any objections
validity e l the decedent s w ill, me they m ay have that challenge the
• Tn* transfer it lor *
they me* i l t l Inal cnalttnge In*
validity o l Ih* decedent's w ill. Ih*
g u a lilic a iib h i e l m a p o rta n a i
co m d te o iio n . s a d Sum
wal'diFy o l ma eecadenf s w ill, the
a u a n l,c a tio n s a l Ih* p tr to n a l
representative, or Ih t venue or
t i l OCC oo. &gt;o be p a d as follows
b e a tifica tio n s o l lh a p a fk e n a t
representative, or lh# venue or
rept event *&lt;&lt;vr. or ma voesu* a r lurisdiclion ol Iht court
iio.ojo oo jun* i. i n i . l a m o o
luritiscfien of tha caurt.
A L L C L A IM S . O EM A N O S, A N D
Juno 1. I N ) WOOD 00 Am * I. I H I
jurisdiction ol mo court
O S lE C T IO N S NOT SO F IL E D
A L L C L A IM S . DEM AN D S, ANO
In adodipn lo in* im lia l psymeni.
A L L CLAIM S. O EM A N O S. A N D
O B JE C T IO N S NOT SO F IL E D
W ILL BE F O R E V E R B A R R E D
the transferor snail b* p a d tor
*bBjE C l IONS NOT SO F I L E D
W ILL B E F O R E V E R B A R R E D
Dole o l m o I n t i publication ol
m istin g invonlory on June I, I N I
JV IL L BE F O R E V E R B A R R E D
D a le o l th* l i r t l publication ol
this Notice e l Ad m m isl fallen
a l m* lim a o i closing
Oo’ o of me lirs t publication of
M ay II. IH I
m s H alit* o l Administration:
10 Cratl tort ol tn* Irandorpr
this H o fict ol Adm inistration
May II. IH I
t Douglas I'enslrom
should l i d ih tir cla im s with
M a r &gt;1. IHI.
t Dorothy Meadors
A t P trie n e t R epreson telirt
M tchatl L M ario**, E ig *1 p o
F*»rcy la i t y Esltidg*
s i me Estate o l
As Personal R tp rn e n ia liv e
Drawer M R , A rrt rr P a rt, F d r d a
A s F m c m i Represent aim#
ol th* E t l t i t ol
E va s c r o ib y
MISS, on or beSore M ay II. IH I
a mo i s i i i t oi
Deceased
R U T H V BO U TW ELL
D A T E D M ay II, I H I
Edna Be ««•%.
A T T O R N E Y FOR P E R S O N A L
A tops Ol IMS n o te* has been
a k a M rs M O Sr d o ts
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E :
A T T O R N E Y FO R PER S O N A L
sent la a ll In* creditors ol Iran
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E
S D w igi*! Stenstrpm
d t r w . either paetonaily or by
ATTO RN EY f o r p e r s o n a l
S T E N S T R O M . M clN TO SH ,
Thomas A Space
re g is te re d or c e rtifie d m a ll,
r e p r e s e n t a t iv e
JU LIA N . C O L B E R T A
01 S P E E R l S P E E R . F A
post a n prepaid, return receipt
.Worden V Froeorlck
W HIGHAM . P A
P O B o . IM*
requested and is being published
P 0. Bee IMS
San lord. Florida )IF)I
p O Bos IMP. Stnlord. F L D I M
John T Oaedson
Son Ford, F L D IM
Telephone DOS! M l M l
Telephone 1)011 l n i D I
Jane* j O a rd te n
Ttfaphona 1)011 111 JU S
Publish M a y II. N . IHI
Publish M ay t l , N . IN I
Publish
AAay II. I H I
Publish May it . » . iN I
O
E
l
f
l
D E I FT
I O E l iOl
D EI H I

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

date

W H E R E A S . th en has been M a d
with Ih* C H y Elm * o l th* City o l
Sanlord. F io r d * , a petition con
laming Ihe nam es pi lh# properly
owners In Ihe a r t* described
horom afier requesting a n n tstfion
to Ih* corporate area of lha City of
Sanlord, F lo rid * , ond rsquuiling
lo b* included therein, and
W H E R E A S . Ih* properly Ap
p r a lto r o l S em in ole County,
F lo rid * , h a y in g c e rtifie d m a t
there ar* tw o property owners m
tn* a rt* to be anneied. and that
s a d property owners nave sgned
lha p r lilo n lo r m n e v slw w and
W H E R E A S , II has been o rtrr
nunaii mat in# property described
h e re * a lte r Is reasonabir cam barl
and contiguous tg Ih* corporal*
ore* ol the City o l Santord.
F io rd * , and il hat been further
determined lh a t the annm aiion el
s a d property w ill not result M th*
creation o l on enclave, and
W H E R E A S , lh* City o l Santord.
F io rd * . IS m a position lo provide
m unicipal sere ices lo lh a property
described herein, ond mo City
Com m ission ot The C ity or Sanlord.
Florida, doom s it m ih o b r tl In
t f f t t l o l th* City 10 accept s a d
Pa tltten a n d lo a n n t r s a id
proporty
NOW, T H E R E F O R E . BE IT
enacted by

Legal Notice

the p e o p le of

THE C IT Y
OF
SAN FO R D .
F LO R ID A
SECTIO N I Thai th* following
described properly situated in
lem m oi* County. F u r do. be and
Phd some it hereby annenad lo and
mad a a part ol Iho City o l Santord.
Florida, pursuant la th* voluntary
annotation provisions o l Section
111 Sat. F lo rid a Statutes
L o is I, «. 1 4 i. Blocs it. A B
Russell's A D D IT IO N TO FO RT
R E E O . Plot Boon I. Page Tl.
Seminole Caunly, F ia r d J
Th* a b ort described property is
lu tlh tr described ot a portion ol
the! cretain properly ly n g bet
wean Georgia Avenue ond North
Carolina Avenue end between
W ylie Avenue end M a in e Street:
s a d property being situated in
Seminole County, f i o r d *
SECTIO N &gt;. That upon this
Oreunanc# becom ing • treeliv e the
proewrty owners and a n y in d e n t
on in* properly described herein
shall be m im e d to o il the rights
and privileges, and immunities as
are Irom lim a to tim e granted lo
residents and property owners ol
Ih* City oI Sanlord. Florida, and as
or* lurthar provided In Chaptar
t it . Florid# statutes, and m an
further bo t u b ltr t t* lh a respon
tk n lilie to f r e t d r n c e o r ownership
at may Horn lim a la lim a be
determ in ed b y Ih t g o v ern in g '
authority o l ih o City ol Santord.
Florida, and In* provisions ol said
Chapter 111, Florida Statutes
SECTIO N 1 II any tetltcn or
portion o l o section ol inis Or
dmonc* proves lo be invalid,
unlawful or u m ortttiiulion*l. H
m a ll not ba held lo invalidate or
im pair in* v a lid ity, tore* or m a r l
«♦ any te rtia n o* this ordmanco
SECTIO N a That a ll ordnances
or parts o l ordinances m conflict
herewith be and ih* same a r t
hereby repealed
SECTIO N l
Thai lh ,t Or
dinenct m a ll become effective
im m ediately upon ns passage and
A copy shall ba a vailable a l lha
O lltce ol lh * City C le rk tor a ll
persons desiring tg *iam ,ne Ih*
tame
A ll p a r lia s in i n t t r t t i and
Cititene shall hava an opportunity
la ba heard al t a d hearing
By order or th* City C o m m lu w i
ol tn* City o l Santord. Florid*
H N T im m . Jr.
City Clerk
Publish M a r 14. II. M . 1 Jun* A
IH I
r iE lil
A D V E R T I S E M E N T F O R SIDS
Th* Sanlord A irp o rt Authority
pro p a sts lo h ov* co nstru cted
a d d itio n a l w arehouse spec*,
add,lions to a t itlin g buitd.rqs. and
a d d itio n a l co vered a rea la r
e m lin g p i* e n g in eered m tta l
structures located on the Sanlord
Airport
The work Is more specifically
described as
Phase i 10.100 sq II M t la l
Warehouse
Phase i l IMOO tq II Metal
Warrhuuta A dd ition
Pntase III 4 SOO sq ft Suhthad*
Addition
Any and a ll persons noting
r t y v r s l In I d d .n o m is work ar*
required to s i l l In* Engineer tor
Ih* Airport o l I I ) TU I P la n t and
spot life oi ions tor a ll these phases
or* availabto lo r a non refundable
MO 00 deposit
Th* ba) opening dal* is May 10.
IH I * 1 ) M P M . m Ih* confer me a
room ol Ih* A v p o rl Manager,
Bldg No I. Santord A irport
Submit le d by
A irport Manager
Santord A irport
Authority
Publish M ay It. II. &gt;001 O t i MI
F IC TITIO U S N A M E
N otice ft haven* givers that I am
engaged m business al SW Arden
S I , lo n g w o o d . F la
MMO,
la m mol* County. F lo rid * under
Ih* tir tif io v i name o l BLIN D S
ANO B L A D E 5. and Thai I mlend to
register s a d nam e with Ih* Clerk
Ol lh * C irc u it Court. Saminol*
Caunly. F lo rid a In accorgapc*
w in th* p ro v ’S dn s a l th* lie
Iit tout Nam* Statutes. To Wit j
Section I4S 00 Florid* Statutes
IIU
Stg M a rvin Ray Cooo
Pubi sh M ay I , 14 t l . JS. IH I
O EI M

*
r

§

l y in g

p

H -H H p W » n to d

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1 _____________________ 8 3 1 - 9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

RATES
M im e

HOURS
I 00 A M - J JO P M
M O N D A Y th ru F R I D A Y
S A T U R D A Y * N oon

I.O tO lllW

) consecutive lime* I.H o lin g
1 coniecu live lim es .M o lin g
4.H M inim um
1 U n n M inim um

DEADLINE
Noon Tuesday
A ll C ia s s itie s l A d v e r t is in g a ls o app ea r', in the E t o n in q
H e ra ld on W ed n esd a y p re c e d in g th* H e ra ld A d v e rt is e r The
ra le s s h o w n a b o v e a re lo r b o th da ys.

LABO R ER S
S400MO
t START T O D A Y I
lo t I shifts M el* or tomato W ill
from
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
Lowest Fee
I w k iu la m
t i n rrer.cn A v t
n) m s
S cra p m tttl buyer - must be
evp Reply Bos *) C O Evening
Herald, P O Bos ta il. San
lord. FI
W A N TE D Professional le i A l* .
Players } to I yrs rep
Contact O rla n d o S e m in a l*
J* A la i U S 4711
B A B Y S IT T E R W A N T E D io car*
for I cnildran. m y homo C a ll
111)4*1
sto p e
C A S H IE R S - Wo offer I wee*
paid vacation every 4 months
Now took mg tor osporloncw l
people* read, to work F o r
iraw n ew phone the m anager
af
A irport t ie d 11)41SI
Cassriberry ) » ID )

c o n v e n ie n c e

*—Personals
WHY BE L O N E L Y 1 w r it * - G e t
A M a lt" Dating Serrfce A ll
ages. P O
Bos M i l. Cleer
water, M l u l l _
Lonely J W rite "B rin g in g peuptv
together D e lin g S e rv ic e !" A ll
eges S Senior C ltlio n i P.O.
to ll, w m ie r Haven, F lo
L o n s ly f N ew s in g le t m ag
Stomp ed d rtst envelop* tor
tre* in to
Boa
MO 114)
Boynlon. P L 1M U .
CO M PAI A DATE
Tek* I minuto lo listan t*
rtcorO rd m essage-1 W ) 1)1
H U H it o r w rite Com pel A
Dal* P O Ooi 1011 Sum
marvilto. S C ITfO)
Lonely Christian Singles
Moot Chris lie n singles m your
a rte W rit* Southern Christian
Sing Ns Club. 1 0 l «
I t! !
Sum m erville. SC T ire) t r cell
; j - r ; r t s j ; j .v l
W ill Social Security pay whan
you're 411 Supplement your
re tire m e n t
I ! ) 4141
for
benefits

4 A - H e a lt h &amp; B M U t y
sh axlE E h e r b t a b le t s
WE D E L I V E R
__________ 17114f!_________

DON T STO RE IT. S E L L IT with
a low cast Classified Ad

CetoryAve n u n )

Spring Fever Soto
W tlk tn t Products
U l SOI!

R f t lr e d
tr
se m i r e tire d
salesperson E i c comm F o r
appi C a ll Harold H I 0101

DMSO

Tl yr okft Wkly iwimming,
a

Sanford
C*ni#r

m r v it t m u H ,
E a r ly
C h ild hoed

Do you lo vf your h «d* T Than g iv t
rntm fh« c a r t fh«y datarva
UOwfc For 1 »4J
for 7 C a ll
m sn s
SPUR o r T H E

m om ent
b a b y s it t in g

m n u

Legal Notice
N O T IC E OF
S H E R IF F S S A L E
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y O IV E N
the! by virtu* ot that cvrta.n W rit
ot Estcutton Issued out of and
under the seal ot tha County Caurt
or Orong* County, Ftortoa. upon a
final judgtmant ran dartd In lh*
aforesaid court an Ih* llt h day at
November, A D lHO. in Ihal
certain casasn litlad. lan tm al Star
Company. * Florida corporal k m .
P la m till, vs
Sotomon Oatoon.
Detandant. wnich aforesaid W rit
04 Eiacu tlon was da iiv tre d to ma
as Shantt ot Saminol* County.
Florida, and l hava lav led upon Ih*
lonow .nq d e s crib e d property
Owned by Sotomon Botoen. u ld
property being located In Seminole
County, F lo rid * , m o re par
iK u lo rly described as follows
On* IT)t Chrysler New Yorker,
grron in calor. ID No
CS
DNOCIMST), being stored ot D a r t
Janas w re c k e r, F e rn P a rk ,
Flood*
and Ih* undtrslgnad os Stw ritl o l
Samlnoto County. Florid* , w ill at
II 00 A M onlh# llth day ot Jurw.
A. O IH I. otter tor sal* and sail to
in* highest brdder. tor cash,
subject to any ond *11 ousting
Ions, at the Front IWest) Door ot
theSotnm olt County Courthouse in
Santord. F lo rid a , tn * above
described personal proporty
That u id sal* It being mado to
u t it ly m* term s ot said W ot ot
Esecution
John E Polk. Shoe Iff
Seminole County. F lorid a
Publish May I I, to E Jun* 4 l|
with sal* on June I). IN I
DEI SS

a sec o n d in c o m e ? s
H f t or toss per week, could
•Sen D M . per mg. U S 1 » 0 .

neeo

WON bur* s e rv a n t-H 0/ l i f t ]
p m s I l M I P B H Distributed
by
Nu Ram
Wa
s h ip
anywhere D t t l I D e llf

♦—Good Things to Eat
Yellow Squash
4 lbs SI OO
Acorn Squash
I for St 00
lib * ttc
Bananas
to t o m 00
Cukas
G ra m brans
lib s SI Of
II SOup
Water melons
L a n ts v w t
r iv* l l r t
Green Onions
I bundles St 00
Zellwood W ltow corn M o rttO O
Pic Sling Cucumbers bushel Sa to
IBring your own container I
F la Pu ch e*. Nectarines lb t* t
Tomatoes
lib s II 00

4— C h i l d C a r e
SetC 4«l Swmmtpr Program For i

Lake M ary H I IMS

Now! 2 Locations
17-W next to
Village Smorgasbord

We Take Food Stamps
LeRoy Farms, SR 46 &amp;
Upsala Rd„ Santord
to m ato es.

M to b o s t l SO
Btggs Produce
I N I Sanford Av* 1 I I M 4 I

tl—Instructions
Tsnm i instruction
U J p T A.
Canliad Group or Priv a te
lessons Children a specially
Doug M a ittia w sm
m not

tJ-Speda I Notices
Don't tro u a if with your
zoning, bring it to w e tic 0
i&gt;*«* H I 1731 Art*

L O C A L D R IV E R
SitO M O
I E X C E L L E N T B E N E F IT S I
Super boss
Load, unload 4
deliver FCL
AJkA E M P L O Y M E N T
Lowest Fee
I w k s u ia r y
M i l F rtn cfiA v * .
m s il*
L O O K IN G FOR
A CHAL
L E N G E * W* need a mature,
ca re e r m inded D E N T A L
- iit iU k l
is p e n e n c e
preferred If interested send
resume to Boy tr. Evening
H ertld. Boa 14)1. Santord,
I f ) easy to ptoct a Class,lied A d
W o'll aven help you word
it C a ll 111 M i l
N U RSIN Q CO O RD INATO R
Immediate opening Eaperlenc*
w ith t la llin g and p u b lic
relation* Call M edical Con
copts sal coil
C O N V E N IE N C E
STORE
C L E R K — Good company
benefits Apply Handy Way
Food Stores. Sanlord ore*
R O O F E R S - lO r iio n a a r e a l.
Shinglo* toying only SS a
square M usi hove own tools 4
transportation 1 ?) ISO
F u ll lim * worker Skilled town
m o ln ltn o n c *
4
gen e ra l
a p a rtm e n t w ork for la rg e
camples Apply in person T I
Tuesday
G tn o y o G a rd e n
Apartment*, ISOS w ism S I .
Sanford
n e e o l E c r a f t l o v E rsi
A m e ric a 's fastest grow in g
naddiacrolt company needs
demonstrator)
this area
Den'l m tss this avcifm g new
w ar to sail naaaiecraft C a ll
ja ck i* for m itrviaw
D S JR f

7+— f l c u ln e s s
AVON
R R F R IIE N T A T IV E I
Santord Territories available
♦4* H I* callact 4 II S OIOS
C a u M .a a l Santord
Waitress Wantrd
A p p ly in p e r u n
I I I M04
Have soma cam ping equipment
you no lenger ui»T Sail if a ll
with a Class,lied Ad In Th*
Horoid C all III 1411 or m
I f f ! and a frien dly ad visor
w ill n tlp you
t P N Pun lim e S IS P M SMI*
A p p ly L o k e y ie w N u rsin g
GdPIrr, f i t E. Jnd SJ.
M A IN T PE R S O N

SNOW K

I M A N A G E R IA L L E V E L I
Good mech 4 sloe *«p Ea
cafleni b en sin i
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
Low Fee
I W k i Salary
H I)F re n ch A v t
D ili! *

M AIDS POSITION O P E N
Apply in parson
Days Inn I 4 4 SI Rd 44
Security G uard tor watsend
night sh ill Apply in parson a l
Coble Boat C o m p a n y , too
S ilv e r L a s* R d ., Santord.

S iM I N O L I CO U N T Y
B O A R D O F A D JU S T M E N T
N ahcool Public Mooring
Jen* A IH I
RN F u ll Urn* 0 4 sniff lantorg
100 P M .
N u rsin g tn g C o n v ilo s c o n t
TO W HOM IT M A Y C O N C E R N
Confer Coni eel M r s Brown
N O TICE is hereby given that in*
111 I $44
Saminol* County Board ot Ad
lo ilm t n l w ill n o lj a s p e cia l
Licensed P ra ctica l h u rt* n i
hooting la consider 0 request by
Shift. F u ll or port tint*. Son
Ih* Human* Society ot Semlnolo
toed tewrtmg 4 Conviloscont
Courtly tor 0 Special Eacapfton m
Center Contort M rs Brown
an A I A griculture Ion* tor us*
■ a u t o * ___________________
and construction of a shatter for
touted and injured animats on lh*
Port time Bartender w a ilr ts t
following described property
Apply M e ylo ir Country Club.
A ll ih a l p a n of Lei *0. Plan of
Cnty Club Rd, Sent H I m i
Spring Hammock, at raem dad m
P S I. Pg I. Public Records el
EXCELLEN T o p p o r t u n it y
Seminole County. Florid*, lying
TO E a r n . In fam ily oriented
W ell of It* A.T 4 T. transm ission
1*11 employment with benefit*
I** R w together with th# South
Of • who le u le rep No door te
NO II ot the rom a in d tr 0* u * Lot
dapr soiling *&lt;cfl ban* w ill
« ond Ih* South 100 II of lo t 41.
meet la discuss H I aoiT
lying W t t l o lU I Highway II »)
Further described ot located in
inferstotlor Photography needs
Section 1010 M on Ih t South lid * of
Model* A ll types. Inc o d o rs
General Hutchison Paehw er (B ig
P ro s Portfolio IT) 1)01
Trot Road), m It West of U. i 11
Tl IOIST It
TOP NOTCH IC C .T O P NO TCH P A Y
In is public hearing w ill b* held
in Room 100 o l tn» Saminol*
I TV PIN G 4 S H O R T H A N D !
County Courthouse. San ford ,
Eiceftont benefits
if y o u r*
Florid*, on Jun* I. IH I. a l I 00
good, you got Iff
P M . or as soon tn trta n o r *1
possible
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
Written comments filed w.th Ih*
L°w r*l Fee
I w k s u ia r y
L o rd Management Manager w ill
It If French Av*
1)11110
be cbnoideesd Persons rppearm g
si th* public hearing w ill be heard
Need E rtf* income while you
H tarm g t may bo corrlmurd from
are at home* f $ m ay be m *
lim e to Urn* as found necessary
answer f i n d rta.tt Enclose
F u rth e r d e ta ils a v a ila b le by
stam ped envelop*. F re n c h
calling I D OX), E i l . Iff,
Style. Bos « u N iles, linnets
Persons a rt advised that, if they
dretdu to rep ea l any decision
mad* at mis hearing, they w ill
need a record *1 lh* proceedings,
and tor such purpose, they m ay
need lo insure ih a l a verbal.m
record of the proceedings is mod*,
w hich re c o rd
In clu d es
ihe
testim o n y ond e v id e n ce upon
which tn* appeal is tg be based
Sam,not* County Board
id Adtuslm onl
By Roger Peer a
Chad man
Pvbftth May II. IH I
D E IH

NEEDED

Telephone ScBriton,
Part-Time
Evening Hour*.
Coll 322-2611

E v e n in g H e ra ld

O p p o r t u n if ie s
Evening Herald Paper Route
Net SlSOt wk L e w than )&gt;y
h rs a day delivery tlm * C a ll
m aM O

38—Apts. &amp; Houses

TBSDtn____
Fem ale d a tu m same la share )
Bdrm house. tttO v Vy food
costs L a k* M a ry m a u l

29—Rooms
S A N FO R D - Raat.
mordhiy rales U til Inc « u
Oak. Adults 041 I H I

t
sod

Whatever in* occasion, tn o rt is *
ciastFie d ad lo toiv* II Try
on* soon

JO-Ajxrtimnh
Unfumishad
LUXU RY
APARTM ENTS
F a m ily 4 A d u lts ta ctio n
PootSId* 1 Barms M o tto r t
Car* Apts I D HOO Open an
stoAtnOs.
L A K E JE N N IE APTS. I. |Vy4 1
Bdrm on lo t * Jeruu* in
Son ford Pool, ro c room,
wildoor B I O . Im nls courts 4
disposals w a lk to thopeing
Adults only Sorry no p tt i M l
0141
U n to rd Lovely I Bdrm. * Den.
A ir, carpeted, ce-am ic bam
Turn a v a il 111) Adults Sr)
ISO)
Santord 1 Bdrm. oir Kids. Prts.
S 1 » down s i l l M o la v On
Rentals Realtor I H JJOO
I I D O M C a ro g t Apt

ins

C o l l i n M I lE v m in g s
I P E R S O N or morttod couplt M
vet ar ptdtr No pots 1100
n w . ISO dam dap After 4p m

m JO Il
«*!#y te e n lry liy to g l 1 Bdrm
A p ts . O ly m p ic s«. p ( l |
Shenandoah Village. Oya* 0-4

asms

M ar mar's V illage on Laky Alto
I t Bedroom Aprs tram S1I0.
Localod 11 f t lu ll South ot
A irport Bhrd m :
A d u lts n s o o io
F R O M SID Largo 1 ,1 4 1 Bdrm
opts Pool, lenmt court.
H ) 400
M e lto n tiil*
tra c e
A p ts
Spacious, modern 1 Bdrm, I
B a th apt
Carpeted, k it
equipped.
CH4A
Naaf
hospital 4 taka Adults, no
pets STTO i n n u
— _TT^“ ------------— ----------------

11 - A p a r t m e n t s F u r n is h e d
. ,
Lak# M ary Turn Efficiency
apartment Ftna tor smgl#
m an Private entrances u til.
Btog . P a t« . Screened porch.
Spot toss. W ater tre e
No
children o r pets I I l

�II • ••••' •

11—Apartment! Furnished

4l-Hou-*v

Erst Ar»*
Apartm ent
•Of I person S*P4'*ta M t W,
k itc n * " N l t t ly fu rn is h e d
&gt;nctu4rd S100 Mo
Am* P o r i* t r a i l y U r* Iter

Mov.ng Seta 1 J B L K . Carport
H id e lenced co rn er
in
county Ceth end A u u m e e*.
mortgeoe Rretonebiy pr.cnd
li e too

4 1 -H

St. J„ L , &amp; A )

C

L&lt; I t o iE s K f t Broker
7M0 Sanford Avt

321-075?

31A—Duplexes
A vail I I New 2 6 Q 2 tOfh. Alt
opp&lt; a r p t f t d drapes No
prM in iO O 233) R*doewood

a»v moori fcv#

m i;n

G E T Th o s e l u x u r y i t e m s
FOR A F R A C T lO N O F T M E lR
COST F R O M TODAY S W AN T
ADS!

I ■ r c u tir t homo m L a k * Y j r i
on &gt; acras. M M Mo
1 io r m .1JOO Mo M l 4)41

LANDLORDS
Quant tad im anta wait my
No In* JWTJOO
t o r On R m ta lt RE A L T O R
LAkrfronl I I , Fam ily A m , C
MA. carpet. la ,w ild * orro
llt S ♦ security MI04SS
CattH byrry. $ R i m . Rid». P*M
m o On l WO Mo U l 1X0
Sa * o On Ronfota R E A L T O R
I

Bdrm. i “&gt; Bom. le r r m r d
polio. appliances C m
MA.
o o ro « * .iffK A d m t m o n o

********
fr lr o

R E A LT O R . M L S
l i f t I Franc*
Suite «
Sanford
L I K E CO U N TRY S m tord ho m a
* 'tn owner f«noncinQ L a rg e
tot. fenced. io n ot e«tra% C a ll
U 4 OOP

24 HOUR ffl 322-9283

I Bdrm. ] Bom Cor o or
•n Deltona

I-lsT \ T t

I!
321-0041

M LS

LOCH ARBOR 4 Bdrm. ] Bath.
F am ily R m . inside U tility ,
Carpart. N r* Ctnt M A. large
lane ad yard SI9.M0
IA N F O R O ) Bdrm. 7 Bath. O ld
b r ic k
fire p la ce .
paneled
F a m ily Rm . (quipped hit
chan. New carpal and vmyt.
LargeO ek thadedfof 1121.900
THE F O R EST 2 Bdrm | Bath.
S plit Plan lam ily rm . Oach.
naar Clvh Hoes# Paal. and
Savna t l) M 0
R E D U C E O ) Bdrm , I Bath.
Rvnavalian aim atf campiatad
Aih»n« 117 000 M aht raa
vanabia altar
Oan t wait la BUT R ra l I» ta ta
BU T Raal C tia la and n a it lt l
LA Y!A N A KISH
‘ K IA L T JR

121 0041
1

B d tm
| S b e lh . gre e t
ettu m p in n . tuper eree Clean
At a pm. m ere right In Only
M t too

STAIOJ
Sontard C o ir Colioo* K.ds I ISO
down, n i l mo 119 TJOO
So* On R m lo lt R E A L T O R
1 Bdrm. I Bom. Unfurnished
Korn* Covorrd (Orport ond
utility rm USO Mo M l 1410

M-Houses Furnished
(aue&lt;b«rry Ladefronf A R m t
A if, HKh, Pt*» 1790 M o Sev
On R f f im i Realtor 1)9 7700

I n plut inceme 1 U n.it total
Greet location Super I.non
e n g Only Me too

A LL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
Ite e S PrenchAve
Alter neurt lee 1000

llig ill
H I T ill

Sf O K IN G IT M A K E S W ASTE
s e l l i n g it m a k e s c a s h
p l a c e A Cl a s s i c i E d a d

•* A

nil o» I" te.1

M-Mobile Homes
L l M M i r y 7 i acres K*Ol. P t l t
O K U00 Mo Sl« On Rentals
Realtor. Inc 1)9 7700
Thinking about tbat sum m er
vacahont Gat a batter car
through mo classified ads in
today * paper

Reg
u i le u
«ve i i i Itee __
O V N F R M O TIV ATCO I ’
Nettled undee large Oek ire e v
Ih.t 1 Bdrm heme hot e lord*
le m .ly room n t h eetre *n
t u i t i on lo r eoundp, eelm g
Owner U y t he ll hold mor
•gage le e 1 Ate.ng SIT.W0

LOCATION LOCATION W ithm
w a lk in g d itto n c o fro m a
number •• butm *tt*t 1 Bdrm .
&gt; Bom home. Centre! A ir 4
heel, lirepiAce. fenced L m ore
Orvlr S41W0
IN V E S T IN O R A N G E S N
A rre t of Orange drove w ith )
bdrm. 1 belli. prick home
Over 1.001 M ft el Inr no e rre
* grr* m o u ,r. double gArege
L more 1ITS000
POR L E A S E I Bdrm Ird ifer in
O tfeeneree I or &gt;adults only
S tl me Digcowm leete
ST CM P E R A O B N CV
RC ALTOR 111 ieei
l e e l i M9 MM. I l l I***, 111 P*T&gt;
M it lif if f t i t i a | | f(« K «

Harold Hafl Realty
REA LTO RS, M LS
323 5774

Day or Night

C O U N T R Y L U X U R Y New &gt;y
eery W rit $4 Senlerd I Bdrm .
I BetR L e a daw. L ivin g rm .
fam ily rm . brick l.ry p iacc
Shadow LARA Weed*. I m l W
AI 14 awlrawc*. 1119,100
A P P O R O A O L l. Neel. I lerge
I d , m i. Oeemed t e iim g t .
Serve m e, Kitchen P H A V A
f,none mg Only I1T.IM.
L O V C L T C eee fre Hem e
I
• d rill. f i | E a tA AteemeW e
m y . ly iy e
Lerg e d tu b l*
w e d «erd M . 9 B
P IN IC R IS T
Neef 1 ld , m
I M lO tw .ih law dene B elence
Aeeeb le.
eetv
m enfRIg
AAymeeft
A SSUM PTIO N Ne «eAli*T&gt;*0
Che*', e 1 Odrm. I le t* L e re lp
4444. MMiedtt Fam ily Rm
end Peel M l. 199

STENSTROM
HtALTY -

REALTORS

M l LIST ANO tC L L
M O R I HOMBS THAN
A N T O N B IN TNB
LARFO f O A R IA
R E D U C E D ) Bdrm. I Bath with
Cant H A. W all w a ll carpal,
palm pantry, drear love ha %
L a n d u a p a d l I79.9M
JU ST L U T E D I Bdrm. ) Bath
Nona in tha &lt;a«ntry! Split
laval. Cant HA. Florida Rm .
I at mi Kitchan. Barn. pond, ad
an ft tanetd A c m fttO.MB
COXY ) Bdrm. I Bath ham# an
Ira ad tat with notv root, now
Wan ta wall carpal, hraplacd
and tancad yard! I I I.900
JU ST FOR TOU. ft Bdrm. ) hath
Hama an largo carnar tat
O raat roam. Dam# catin ift.
»lana hraplaca. rqmpprd 041
in hitchan. tarm al D tnm f rm
in d haawlitai pool and palm l
t n t i m arai ftll.ftM
R iD O B W O O D A C R B ftl Daplaa
in ti lanad. alt dtifchat. pavad
ra a d i.
Naar
ftN S l
W ill
lu to r t in a ir tar feaildart Bay
m a t Bond naar ar (atari Ja»t
II laftt From f t lilf f t l
M A Y F A I R V IL L A ftl I B S Bdrm .
t Bath Canda V illat. n a if I t
M ayfatr Canatry Clad fttlacf
yowr l«t. liaar plan A m larm r
dac»# i Oaahfy canitractad By
Shaamaarr tar ftci.700 4 a p i
O pm ftalar day IB.l4ft.BB 4

iftl

A ftS O C U T S ft N EE D ED * Naar
ar a apart* ne ad C all Hard
fttanttram ar Laa A id rifh l Inday A ditcav tf » a c c m i

C A LL ANYTIM E
IMS

F8fh

C A LL ANYTIM E

ins

T r te r k

HAiC0l5{lfT^£AlTT.M
M U L T I P L E LISTINO R E A L T O R

323-7832
E vet H1B91)
TOTE ISIRSI

322- 2420

IT91
Lk M a i p

■im

323 - 2222
323-6363

R EA LTO RS
Multiple Lilting Sarvic#

^

WO \MJNDtR &lt;?UR E ^ N ^ M Y
6TA&lt;SNAYEJ— IO O N E CKN

ACCEPT NEW IDEAS.'

j v e r l ^o k

•» y ju R
AUT£BiasRAPHY

ACE HUSH REFUSES T&lt;? MU EYE
Ti4AT NI6HT NEWS MY*
A
CHIN OP 5TEEL. EVEN THOYSH
IVE iNrCRMED HIM MYSELF.'

197* is tt Cob.a Trl H u ll. *ft Hp
E u m ru d e .
top.
tanas,
gal tra ile r. SI.97S 373 949*
iohnton O utboard motor. Ift Hp .
•075 m odel Used very little, m
A 1 cond P h 373 377*

o

m

IM M A C U L A T E 7 Bdrm. 1 ba.t..
iP 8 ( « v i d*« ng rm . living rm
with dried I ropiaca u rta n a d
porch Now rant A carpof.
m any a i l m
Largo ihadod
lot Good araa Only tn.ftOO
372 0214

SAN D ALW O O D
V IL L A S
1
Bdrm 1 belh. ww. dw. WAD.
C AH . pool, ter pat 4 U ) wo
_______
H ) TMO
Wonder ivnel ta de m ih Two’
Sell One — The quick, eety
W en t A d w ey The m eglc
number ta U I T i ll or U l 0901

42—Mobile Homes
•*vw*w 9i«H«f m* &gt;«•* m ao. j
B drm . I Bath, partly Iwrn .
naad rypa r% Call 37) 197ft S 9
a m , 110pm
Ddl Wsda 78i4J . 3 Bdrm 7 Bath
al
10 •. in ty r y il
Down
p a y m a n f and la d a ovar
paym antt C a ll art 4 30 32)
0010

Wa our baavlttvl now BROAO
M O R E , front A r»ar BR »
G R E G O R Y M O B ILE HOMEft
3003 Orlando Dr
37) ft700
V A A FM A Financing
71 E Kona 17.80
Vary Claan. Unfurttidhtd 17.300
37) IlftOor 377 3907
i v E R Y O A Y Ift B A RG A IN D A Y
IN T H E W ANT ADS 377 7411 or
131 999)
C or* o rd 'TI.ITitO
F a ir cond . Unfurmthed. 13300
C a ll 3714J2ft

43—Lots- Acreage

/

67-Lawn Garden

'ERY UNC
&gt; *b«4 ■

— »•*

I

AND A B L E -

£RUTY
We have m e t a l 10 aera Ira cti
near OeLand 19 000 cath or
110.000 w ith I MOO down
Ile a II pee me lee 1 year*
141} W tat St
U1T9T1
&gt;— ■
M■— — — — ■ ■
Horn# t i l t ovar tooling Crystal
Lana with larga lawn araa
ftoitadia tor lanmt. putting
ranga. or Cardans Ovar I
Ac f t . c N arad tom# otrws
Tar ms ft 79.000
Call Tarry 377 aaf)
O O N A L O O JACKSON INC
REALT O R
377 3793
S E M IN O L E WOODS ta a tu ti.t
ho mas *1a — ft pfvs acras by
own*# C a ll Orlando 377 7970
waaddays attar 4 p m

Oottona Lasatront 70 acras on
pavad Rd
t i l 000
Wm
M alic io n sd i Raaiior 377 7*9)
70 A C R E S m Northwasf Oranga
County Slft.000 10% Down
balance at 10% tnl 372 *104

f i l l D IR T A TO PSO IL
y e l l o w sand

s-v

ER sa le
1 Star
S p t c la l A v a ila b ly n o w h try
but W n t r m A u la Santard

53—TV RadiD Stereo

47—Real Estate Wanted
L it h f h g y ft Brdroom . 1997 Elm
C *v. No#fh Caroi na House •
fire p la c e s , pecan trees, a
b*4u!y MS 713 444*
In vestor
B a y in g
incom e
Rroparly Prin cipals only No
broders Algrean Baa 491)
W nfer P a rd FI U79)

4f Country Property
O R B A M H O U ftl
10 Acres w lh Rive# q.gtts A
F ram e Log home I Barm. 7
Bath w ith deed. pool, lots of
?T'T 2 a ftll d.X S Cwiegi iiHdeis
ng possible with re a l down
pym l 177*407

SO—Miscellaneous lor Sale
O rg &gt; n ii (&gt;«l Paintings Must
i.Qu-dat# stock, half price
C a v a lttf M o forin fVH y 17 97. S
BOOT S A LE
B r . t ir t S e le ctio n C tecd our
p ric e s on T iM
HAY a
N U T R C N A F F K Oft
W*lco Sales
Hwy 4S w 4 M,
W ot 1 4. Sanford 319 *470

65-Pets Supplies

Good Used TV'S, ft7ft A up
m il le r s

7919 O rlando Dr

r* 377 03)7

Po«yy Pupt.

a k c . a Wwat
Faw n or firm d la Par m l, on
pram itat. 11)1 1)14141

c&gt;r Runt in 1% . if f " * g.XHl Du.
the find»n‘ is dinda poorly
y4 ‘ g » to the W AN TADS

til

66—Horses

TV repo I f Zenith Sold orig
V ffl 7S Bai t i l l 1* or S17 mo
Agant 3)9 t ) M ______________

NO RTH CARO LIN A
MOUNTAINS
Mountain cabin with fireplace
Dandy earden tpot T h il It a
handym an t p t o a l becauie II
ta net le iith e d intide. roughed
• r e and plumbing cempieia
Water and ma outable t
( o m p i.ie d
L a rg e
deck
overtaokmg m in t Yeu an lire
Ul
while you lw ih 4 up 1
m .le tlre m Murphy 114 100 00.
S1 .000M down atkume loen
Largo If out ttredm 14 91 ocrett*
r o lu r 4 t m ounfom beauty
P le n ty of Oogwood. Mtn
Lau rel Trawl elf ram twrder t
ihta t r a il Plenty ot privacy,
good acceek. teveral bldg
n e t Real n k a l.m ber. good
y.awt, cool and ou.al Priced
rig n i e l 911.109 00 Term! ere
91.190 99
down,
e iiu m e
e t.tl.n g loen
1 A c m r - t ile d m the mountain!
Good ecceet Tm
tro d it
reedy le bu.id on Goad neigh
bort Id e e lle r cemp.ng Ire.ler
or cabm Owner u d tell
111. WO 00. I MOO 00 down
m a te t you the navy owner
Theta are e lew e* ever 1000
Italingt We neve ell type! el
property tar HOC W per acre
and up We na»e tm a il Irecl.
we etae have te v tra i cabmt.
howt a t old la rm t. ale Writ*
or c e il today tar a tree ntiing
tro th u re You can ca ll tree by
d.ai.ng I loo 411 KOI Write ae
ca ll today
C H E R O K E E LAN D CO M PA N Y
M U R P H Y . N O RT H C A RO LIN A
19904

47—A m ! Estate Wanted
W i b u r r g u ily in M o u irt.
apartm ent!, vacant land an#
A cre a g e
LU CKY
IN
VEST«AE n 1 s . P O Ba. 1100
Sanford F la 11)11 111 d e l
Save your rd w iy and c r td il irom
lo r g c lo tv r e (A lta propyvly
w in tew aquily and atlvm aoia
mortgagee d ttire d I P r icg and
I t f i r t negoe.dblr Can 111 a w l
Igr can4&lt;deniiAI ecpomment

NATIO N AL G U A R D A R M O R Y
7909ft Feenfreed Ave OHand©
I Bid S ot MiChrganSI
O V ER a O O E A L E R S For Info
C a li t t f TO*a
J A M P R O M O T IO N S

F n A Sat M aterial, buttons,
g ir ls c lo th e s , brie a brae
P riced to sell aot Juanita C t .

Alum inum , cons, copper, trad,
brass. S ilve r, ootd W eH days
I 4 30. Sat « l k o k o M o Toot
Co t i l W 1 st St 373 I KM
D ia m o n d s
O il
Paintings O rien tal Rugs
Bridges A ntiques
373 7101

A N T I Q U l A M o dern dons
K * w p ie d o lls A fig u rin e s.
Aieaander d o lls *49 *4JI

M oving Vole Everything must
go' F r i Only 74) Buttonwood
A v e . W*nt*r Springs
r.arage Sale
On Now At
701 B rio rc litff St

77—Junk Cars Removed

78—Motorrvr W
k
—

f.K a w a v a k i loo
taoe. N ygotiabio
11)9019

’• DAYTO N A A U T O A U C T IO N
Hwy 91. t m ild w e ll 0* Spdyd
way. Oaytana B ta ch . w ill hok
a public A U T O A U CTIO N
•vary W fdnctday a l t p m i n
Ihfynty ony In F lo rid a Y o u ! * !
lha r fta ry fd p fic * C a ll N 4 .
I l l 9)11 ter turthwr 04t4.lt
19)1 Capri V 4 R y b u iit m g in *
a n d b ra k n N fw p a m i R»cyni
in to . H I M H I 9199
_

NO M O N E Y DO W N P a y m m lk
9)1 month 74 Cougar X R 1.
P). PE. Auto. A M F M ttyroo.
a r A many other yatras 119
• i» or 9)4 4901 O ra ly r
19*9 (cy lin d e r Dodge Dart with
AC . ao 000 m iles, evcftien t
tend . 19tS 177 7790 AM 4 30
73 P*nto, 4 Speed
Nice c a r 1993
1)1 1774
Class t rd Ads a re the sm allest
b*g news items you w ill find
anywhere
*9 Pont OTO. Runs A drive,
good Needs body work I7ft0o#
wilt tract* tor antiques of equal
value lif t 11 M aple
7) Ford Station Wagon L T D
Brougham, eatra d e a n , new
tires. a*r, PS. P B . 1900or m ade
offer «a3 1*47
1971 Maverick 0 C ylin der Auto
Trans. AC. Clean. New Pam t.
C . c f iif n t C o n d itio n A11 SO
C.n«(t fo# Steffen* 971 IMS
19*4 G a ia i't » 7 Auto Trans. A ir
condition. C le a n . E ic e lla n t
Cond tion. II 000 373 3*0*
1970 VW Beetle
Runs Perfect 11700
Call 377 S70)

79-Trucks &amp; T railers

lf71Chrysler Newport
Air. PS P B .C ru is a Control
1*30 371 s o n

*5 Chevy Pan el Trued, as H.
S1000 Cash Phone 371IS40
after ( p m

FORDG a&gt; aiy. 1974 SCO
190* Chase A ve
373 B3S9

80 Autos for Sale

71—Antiques
Oak Chest of Draw ars. 130 4
Cane chairs. 140 Washstanp
dresser. 143 C o ll 373 3411

I TOP D O L L A R ^ , ~

Fur your car of tru ck, rygar
d im of cond P r tltr running
Fry* lewmg U l 1419 A g m '

Anti

Swnland 32) 4733

S a t. 7)rd 407 P e a rl Rd Winter
Springs. Off H oyes Rd ChO.
baby items, toys, p n g pong
table, antenna, drapes

17 tt Hobday R a m b ler ideal for
traveling or com p-ng Twelve
Oaks Cam pground in g w re at
L o ti* Sanford « M i W on 4*

T«p Dollar P a id for Junk A U w d
&lt; f'v tru cks A heavy equip
merit jj] ftvtO

68—Wanted to Buy

54—Garage Sales

1171 Dodoe Trovco Cam per Van
% ton high top. A ir , Cond .
a m F M tape. C ruiso control.
Stove.
R e t r ig .
Sind.
Bathroom
S lee ps 4 M u st
sacrifice 15 700 D ay 371 0473.
Eve 373 * 449

EU Y J U N K C A R S 6 TR U CK S
From S H to 110 or m ora
C a ll 377 1*74. 371 4440

Saddle and Accessories
For Seie.ftTOO
C o ll 371 0040 or 377 1074

TV'S FO R R EN T
Color A Black A white Free
delivery A piedwp Jim m yS
TV Rental Phone Anytime
373 7770

Dining R m
ftw«te. Bassett
Brass. Wood Can* Glass.
Table w ith beveled glass m
saris. * cha rs A Med china
tl.100 C a ll 471 4909

CASH FO R Y O U R CAR
M artin Motor Sales
701S French
373 7134

VW 19*7 Ptcd U p Trued
Good Mechanical Condition
USO 373 4449

CONSULT OUR

A R M Y N A V Y SU RPLU S
Tents. Tarps. Sleeping Bags
310 Sanford Ave
377 ft791
F re e ie r. S13S F irm Chest type
77 cu it *03 Cherokee Lane.
Sun 1and Estates

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

Conversational P tl-1 0 pieces,
ea rtn to n e n a tu ra l fab ric
Scotchguarded. S9S0 *71 4991

To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

N E E O A S E R V IC E M A N * You'll
tsnd him listed in our Business
Service Directory
SSB M o bile CB. s n o G eCert.
|1I0 14 M Alum inum boat
motor and trailer, iw u For
Solo or Trade for 19 Ft or
tong Canoe 317 a7*i Aft ft p m
Rattan G am e Set Glass topped
table A 4 chairs, laoo. Wicker
shelf unit. SlftO. Rattan bar
stools 17). SftO ea *714*99
Couch and chair, avocado green,
good cond.ttan. 1100 U l 1494*
altar 4 p m

51 - Household Goods
19)9 Smg*r Putura Fully aula.
H P M W K I d . u ! id »9fy ihort
lim a O rd in a l» W 1 aw 9191 Of
t i l mo Aganl 119 9199

ConcrtfE Work

A ir Condition
Chris w ilt Service AC'S, rrtr.f
(reefers, motor coolers, mite
C a ll 373 *777

A n y th in g
C o n c re te
Slabs.
Drivew ays. Concrete coloring.
Etc
D u ality word at fair
prices R o n 37) 407ft Aft ftpm

Aluminum Siding &amp;
Screen Rooms
A lum inum Application Service
t A lum n A v in y l t«d»ng. soffit,
screen rooms, windows, doors,
gutters 3)9 1734 #.es

Beauty C irt

Concrete \M&gt;rk
I

Q U A LIT Y o p e r a t i o n
9 yrt r . p P a lm !. Dfivyw ovt.
He Warn# B * a l 11) |)}|

Conctft* Work, to o firt. Itaork 1
pool! L o n d ic a p m g 4 tad
woyk F r y y y i t ITT MS)

51A—Fumitum
W ILSO N M A IE H F U R N IT U R E
J11J1SE F IR S T ST

45-A-Out of Staff
Proptfty

Free A dm ission A Pardm g
SAT . M A Y 73 9 a m t o t p m
SUN .M A Y 74. 10a m to * p m

75—Rccrealional Vehicks

C a ll C la rk fc H R ) MS ) » 0

Dowwa A*ie. reinforced steel,
fa c to ry m ade. 1*00 10s
373 *300

F P iE

A N TIQ U E SHOW

f o r E s ta te . C o m m e rc ia l or
Residenttai A uctions A Ap
pra*sats C o ll D e lls Auction
m s*7f

T R U M P E T Conn"
E i c r l l m l Cend
C a ll 11)9049

rrr

T»wnWy. May 11. l i l i - m
80—Autos for Sak

59—M u s i c a l M e r c h a n d i s e

lxw nm o w

M ID W A Y 4 Bdrm. bid homa on
an ncra ot land Scr palm,
tancad yd 179 S00 377 07U

H ftld. tawkr*. FI.

O R LA N D O S O N L Y M O N T H L Y

SS Boats &amp; Accessories

=7

lY t n lB f

72—Auction

a F A M I L Y Yard Sata
HO. M jg n on a
Thurt A F n 9 taS

T»4E *,RTEfflE5?

R E A L f i t AT |
• E A l *OR 377 7r94

Sanford’s Sales Leader

C A L L 321-5774
Midden H U I t N N t ) B drm . 2
bam. split plan homo Cant
H a a t.A 'f. community pool and
(lU tN M W A ll tor i l l too
A L O I R 1 PONO P * A L t i INC
( P A U »7 M I

CallBart

Tomorrow m ay ba lha day you
sail mat ro il a way bad vow v t
nowhor• to ro ll #way
II you
piaca a Ciass t ad Ad today

41—Houses

ft iUFFERlfW

Bath
H ot
end
your

realto rs

M odtrn.f fnf tour Horn#? M i l no
longer needed buf useful items
with a Classified AO

wIVIU2ATL?M

FRJM

PtP TriE
FUUTZER

home

41B-Condominiums'
For Salt

KJS H
REM

n»ct o Bdrm A . a. table

M r tat m o n o

co untry

.ne ow e. T tiory A B R . I
Hom e m good condition
t e v . r e i c ilr u t I r e tt
garden tpace Th^ it
place Only SAT TOO

REALTY

M otor* j norm , 1 Bom. C a t A«r
r » Y r old B fi(K homo t m
mo No Pro
TH E B Y W A T E R C O M P A N Y
REALT O R
A00 9100
I BDRM . im c rd backyard Of!
L o la Mor» Blvd . noor IT t l
M*»». rffrig 1 n o ir r fur
n.|h*d AvAil A I IM S mo
&lt;100 dfDOS.t JJI09IT

109W C o m m .rc .9 lll

R O B B ir s

O U P l E X . 1 Bdrm. A ir. K « t .
pool U K mo l a , On R m U ta
Raattar 1)9 m o

LAKE MARY t Run
P u ll
M cX*n. Carport. 11)1 mo la .
On RonlAta RM Itor U * 1X0

m
J1TAI11

p

NEW I I O I M I l L O N V I L L E
1 BR. I Both K it Appi . A C. No
Prtt. 1)00 • Orpo( • l x
ill
Hal

32-Houses Unfurnished

The T.ipe T e ti.d P rm
Reg Real E t i t i f Broher

la r g e

(SUCM.MAJ^F'KlCR
c o m m it t e e

( H l l f h l l U f Inc

BATEMAN R E A L T Y

54—Garage Saks

VtV.Y TKE W E(SAD, TW1A45 HCW CAN YJU JEST ^

in i r i

Fum ish*d rp a rlm m ts tar Senior
t &lt; W I ] t l P llm y tto A r t . j
( . g a r No ph«n* (AMt

with Major Hoopla

OUR BOARDINO HOUSE

ousps

TO W ER S h t X U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y H a y n a tt! B*auty
taooa 119 E l ! l S t. M l S)41

372 S477

if ycni non t tell people, how are
they 90 *ng to know* Tell them
with a classified ad. by calling
371 7011 o r B it f f t l _________
a N EW green crushed velvet
sw*vel rockers. fttTO each 1
m atching ottoman. 140
377 U3I

57—Appliances

M ICROW AVE
fro n d New. push button control
has probe O riginally S*19.
balance S3SB. S19 m onttly

____________?&gt;♦#»♦_________

Boarding &amp; Grooming
A n im a l H a .y r Doard.ng and
G rp o m in g K annata Shady,
m tuiafad, u r r a n . Hy pcoot.
m aid., o u tw l. ru n . *ta« AC
cagat W a cd t* f your p*tt U l
S )» ___________
Snowh.il Kafutata pygud Id an
novnet lh* addition ot L a rry &amp;
h rtty, tgym yfty with An.mal
H a .y n 14 ttouf Car* Full

M IC R O W A V E
Brand now Tappan n c i n a v y
o .r n Only two III ta ta ll at
Ihta pried 9H0 cath or I N a
month NO M O N E Y DOWN
F ryy hpm a In a l. No obiqai.cn
C a ll 941 1194 d4y ar n .lt
w ath « r rypo b i a*iu.« modal
Sold P r ig l « 4 1 L uw d thocl
lim a »*i 1199 I4ar 919 11 mo
M M U 9 9M4
ty n m o ra porta. tar»&gt;c». utad
w a ih rrt
M O O NEY APPLI
A N C E 1 111 0491
R E F R E P O 19Cu H Iron I r t f
Or.g U l* . now 9101 or 119 mo
Agortl 1191199
L o r g t tataclw n Aparlm onl tu#
- g a l ra n g y !
G u a ra rly y d
S a n fo rd A u d ta w . t i l l s
F ro n rh U1T1J0

53—TV Radio Stereo

Furniture Refinishing

Handyman
Re tire d W il’ *ia
almost anything m the home
37) 7020

Hauling &amp;
Yard Work

M'

Hauling A Y a rd Word IB % aft
*.m A d )7) 17)1 no a m 377
7497 L a rry , Jo y ce Bryant

Home Improvement
Building Contractor
B il l Cor so. S ta id C t r lit ir d
B u ild in g
C d n lr a c t o r
H ri.d m t.a i or Cammarctal.
Ue w gy Ramodtrlad 111 0*44

Burglar Bars
C a ll A b ility IronwgrKi
tar W.iKtaw 4 D«or Guards
F r m E s t 111 1400

Rym odrlm g 4 Rapa.r. D ry rvdta
Hanging. T m tu ra d C H lm g t S
r, B a l» d. n i 4 U l . H I 9441.

C E N T R A L P L O E IO A HOME
IM P R O V E M E N T S
Paw l.ng. Boot HIE, Carpm try
I I I . Bondrd 4 Guarantaad
F -y * E i t im a ln 111 1949

C O L O R T E L E V IS IO N

la n .th IS " color TV O rqvia l
p rta f o w r 1)00 b a n n e r duo
S IN d» la k a over parmanta b it
p rr month SHII &lt;n warranly
N O M O N E Y DOW N W ill
d t l i . t r F rto homo tria l Call
M l S194 day or n .i.

IB

Ceramic Tik

q u a l it y at a p a ib p r ic e i

Gan R r p a .r i 4 Im prdy I) yrk
locally S4n.gr D isc H U M S
;

M E lt a T J E R T i l e
N rw o r ftp a r, lyasy sh o w r.i g«r
ip t C U ily U y t t E i p 949 EM)

Clock Repair
G W A L T N E t JE W E LE R
104 S P a rk Asa
U l 4109

FON SECA P L U M B I N G
Con
(traction. Repairs. Em aroon
cy L K . Bonded, m s 37) 40/S

Pressure Cleaning
Lawn &amp; Garden
Service
Franks L a w n S a rv lc t

Mob'l* Momev Houses. Roofs.
Trucks. Trotter. E tc P o rta b le
Unit HareM Rendtn 37) llftft

4 Landscap.ng Q u ality F ust
Catll9»4l J94 4M d C a tta il

Remodeling

Carson Lawn Service
(om pttta law n c a r t 1)11)91
C r o c k r lh l la w n
B ra u l.lic a f ion and
M a .n ly n a n c t 1 ....I •
Tha personal toucht

Com plete H om e R e p a ir s A
Remodeling, P oin tin g, room
additions, dryw oll. etc 70 yrs.
evp Coll 131 ftp*7 eves

Remodeling Specie Hit
W9 han.1 i* I M
Whol* B a ll c l W a .

niBrai

A t L a w n C ar*
A ll R h a id l. Top Quality
lo w p r.c * ! R ay ISJ4S19)

B. E. Link Const.
322-7029

Law * M aw .ay
Yard 4 Oa&gt;aga CHaw . a
■ r u ih R y m tra l
H T. L A C K E Y
MSA94I

Masonr
*11 Typrs a t M a s o n War*
Sp*ciai.|,ng In F a n c ts and
A dd .iq n t 111 t i l t

Financing A fEH gblR

Roofing
ROOFS. N a i l repair ad. Replace
rattan a a rt! and thtngl* w*rk.
Iic tn ttd . in s w rtd . bandad

Ms. m ain.

. 4 m rniodri.ng
Ng loo lo o sm all
M l las) or A lly . 4 M

Insulation
SAVE E N E E G Y 4 O O LLA R S t
t a ll 4 Etawn PR O N TO IN
S U l AT ION C O H S lt O o r U *
I))| F ry * E ttim a t* *

Sandblasting
S A N O IL A STIN O
04VIS W I L D I N G
111 4194. I A N P O E O

OUR R A T E S A R E LO W E H a
L a ky y la w N u rs in g C A h ta '
919 E Second St . Van lord
______
aw)

m

Tax &amp;Accounting
Services

Painting
Or
h o u s e p a in t in o

Home Repairs
T E L E V IS IO N
R C A . i r ’ td lrritia n . X L IM Solid
S ia ta
C o lo r
P o rta b it
W d rra riy Pay ll&lt; 9 or Sid
M onthly Financing No Down
Paym ent.
B A R S 1109 N M ills Ave (17 f!)
Orta*** i P U A i k

LA RO E T R E E IN S T A LL fcR
Land!cap.ng O ld La w n s Ro
plat rd MS SMI

Fredd e Robinson P lu m b in g
Repairs, fa u ce ts, w
C
Sp'tndlers 77) 0110. 373 0 70a

Nursing Center
A L L P H A S E S R E M O O E L I N O tl
Plumb.ng, E lse . C a rp m try. II
Y n E . p Haas ra iys Fra*
Est i n M U

Carpet Cleaning
Shampoo A Deep Steam Liv,
Dm Rm . H a ll. 171 B10 ea
additional rm 331 0*49

Plumbing
spymg Yard C lta n U p Mowing,
bad! mulched, th ru o pruning,
wyydng. b a sic yard car*
Monthly r a id !
C a ll l» r
ml John 949 9040 A m Pm

Wor^trrsorx

Brush Cutting
C U S T O M WORK
R a a t a n a b it
R a ta t
F ry .
e tlim a ta C a ll E a ily A M of
t \ . m i n i or I M U J99 1M4

. B ill A Jim s Furm
turo
loathing A
hestoi it ion We buy
A s e ll C a ll B3I 3111
otter h rs B31 S71S

^
i P ' O
1 Ift^

i*f..c# sassm

I M B r t l Buy In Town - A low
■ coal r ia u it io d Ad

Landscaping

Cypress Mukh
Top Q uality M u lch delivered to
home or business 3 ft Yds Sift
M0 C om Oan 373 t f u

Painting

Ironworks

T E R R Y 'S IN T E R IO R S
W*ndow G uards. Door Guards.
W allpap yrm g . p y .n l.n g L ow
Stating G lass Door enc(mures.
p
ru
a t Guar w ork 1)14114
Pa tie an d P o o l ra tlin g s ,
fm ces. Gates. F ir e Escapes.
Steel Stairs. O m a m a n fa l Iron
Painting A
Furniture. E tc Com e see our
Pressure
Cleaning
d splay. 1001 E 2Sih right her*
m Sanfordf A b ility Ironworks. |
NO JO B TOO L A R O E O R
37) laoo
SMALL Duality • m ust C a ll
377 0071. 37) 7791 F re e 1 st

ln ly r .t r A E a lt n t r
H T L A C K E Y IMB94I
Htilm an Pa.nlm g A R a p t ''!
Quality work F ry * E st D itc
ta Seniors QU 9*9E R»**e
ttaus* Pa n t*. 1st Clans W orV
rrasonaoia peicvs IS re a r,
n p Krywwlh H od 11) S1S9
aWyl'rM a ll* f S.
P ra i« ,tio n * i
H aint.IT) F.'*
lyeW. Irderior
Hym odellng
L k Int F ra * B u t 041 1st)
Custam D t c a r tlin g
Pa.ni.ng.
wdartar y .le rta r,
plastering
n*iip 4 p*r,ng Q u a lity work
Reoi F ry * E s t M l l»)S

B ui mess ond in d iv id u a ls
E h ia b efh A G rm die C P A
117 IK S

Tree Service
T rt’ C***tT
T rt*
S *r« ic« .
Trimming, r rm o v ti. ctao n n g .
rwulng Fra* E s t 1TJ 94tfl
h aepee

Tr.m m itv
K*pm g

’S t e e e s e a v ic e
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Cambodian Unify Is Sought To Oust Vietnamese
P E K IN G (UP1) A b u n t o(
diplom atic and m ilitary m aneuvering is
draw ing the battle lines in Indochina
more sharply than at any tim e since the
;Vietnam war.
The United States, China and non.communist Southeast Asian nations have
achieved what diplomats describe a s a
|"w orking coordination" aimed at driving
Vietnamese troops and their Soviet
supporters out of Cambodia.
; They are attempting to nudge r iv a l
Cambodian rebel factions into a “ united

front" that would receive Chinese and
perhaps American weapons to fight the
V ietnam ese snd the lfe n g S a m rin
government they installed in Phnom
Penh.
In addition, the five m em bers of the
Association of Southeast A sian Nations —
Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines,
Singapore and T h a ila n d — have
requested a U.N. conference in J u ly in
New Y ork to demand V ietna m 's with­
draw al from Cambodia. With U.S. and
Chinese support, the c o n fe re n ce is

certain to be held whether or not Hanoi
and Moscow attend.
For Its part, Hanot has attempted to
legitimize its control of Cambodia by
staging national elections that showed
(X'erwhelmtng
for the H c r j
Samrin government Hanoi opposes the
international conference u interference
in Cambodia's internal affairs snd says
the Cambodian situation is "irrever­
sible."
Another apparent sign of the hardening
of positions are reports of new skir­

Students Doing Better
With Literacy Testing
T A L L A H A S S E E , Fla. (U P I) - Seventyeight percent of the high school students
taking the functional literacy teat for the first
tim e last month passed, the best showing In
the five-year-old program, officials said
Wednesday.
Fifty-one percent of the blacka tested
passed, better than a 100 percent improvement
over the original testing in 1077, Education
Com missioner Ralph Turlington reported.
"These are the highest scores, basically,
that ws've eve; had, capettally In math­
em atics." Turlington said at a news con­
ference.
The results released Wednesday w ere from
the literacy exam given to high school
sophomores during the week of A pril 1-8. It is
this group that must p a is the exam to get a
high school diploma if the state is able to
convince a federal Judge in Tampa that Its
testing program is fair.
T h is group of students w ill have four more
shots at the test before their June 1983 sche­
duled graduation. Turlington predicted that 95

The showing was ordered recently by the Mh
Circuit Court of Appeals, which concluded that
the testing concept isn 't unconstitutional on its
face, but the test as currently structured Is
potentially discrim inatory.
The lest, which measures 9th grade reading,
writing and computation skills, was first given
to 11th grsders In 1977. Of that group, an
alarming 71 percent of blacka failed, com­
pared to only a 23 percent failure rate far
whites. The failure ra te for a ll students was 17
percent '

Lane Kirkland Attacks
Administration's Tax Plan
W ASHINGTON (UPI) — In a sweeping
attack on the administration's "g ro ssly un­
fa ir ” U i cut plan. A F lrC lO President lane
K irk la n d Wednesday urged Congress to reject
the president's three-year proposal In fa v o r of
a one-year reduction.
"T h e administration program is presented
with a facade of 'equity' for Individuals and
'neutrality' for corporations," K irk la n d told
the Senate Finance Committee in prepared
testimony. " It is neither."

The finance panel is conducting a series of
heelings before drilling Ua own tax cut
blueprint
K irk la n d said President Reagan's c a ll for a
30 percent cut In personal Income tax rates
over the next three years "would risk further
inflation, exacerbate fundamental economic
weaknesses and waste essential government
revenue."
K irk la n d said the AFIsCIO supports a plan
that would give tax credits to offset the recent
increase in Social Security taxes, thereby

benefiting mainly people earning less than
130,000 a year. The adm inistration's plan
would give the biggest tax cut to those who pay
the most in taxes — wealthy Americans.
The AFIsClO-tupported plan would refund
to taxpayers 20 percent of their S o d a l Security
payments during the y e a r even if they paid no
income tas, with equivalent reductions to
those not covered by Social Security.
It would cost |1( billion, compared with the
930 billion cost of the first year of the ad­
ministration program, K irk la n d said.
"B y centrist, the sd m in iitrstia n 's tax
package is grossly unfair and much too
costly.” he stld. "It would add to inflation,
exaggerate basic economic problems and
dissipate funds needed far (heir resolution.
"Beesine we are also concerned about the
consequences of locking the economy into a
three-year tas rut, the A F b C I O supports a
one-year tax cut,” he said. “ Any further
chances should be baaed on experience, not
guesswork."

ru th le s s ,
home-grown co m m u n ist
movem ent that, under former P rim e
M in iste r Pol Pot, forced the m ass
evacuation of Cambodian cities.
The
C am ho d lsns
sre
d e e p ly
m istrustful and resentful of each other
from long years of experience. Sihanouk.
B ut the Cam bodians ip p e a r to
recognize that some semblance of unity
w ill be required before they can expect
large scale m ilitary assistance against
the Vietnamese.

y TO END A ll

f ;

percent of the blacka eventually w ill pass,
getting a diploma instead of " a certificate of
completion” and that the passing rate among
all students w ill be "98 to 99 percent."
Turlington reiterated his belief the state w ill
convince Judge George C a rr that material on
the exam is taught In the public schools and
remedial education program s have aided
blacks suffering from inferior early-childhood
education they received In the old desegregat­
ed vhrv&gt;l«

"W e do have a working coordination
among the parties," one diplomatic
source said. "W e all support the for­
m ation of the united front and we all
support the convening of an international
co n fe re n ce. Ueyond that, I ' m n«l
prepared to speculate.”
F e w d ip lo m a ts underestim ate the
difficulties of foriging a united front
am ong the u np re dicta ble P rin ce
Norodom Sihanouk, former Prime M inis­
ter Son Sann and forces of the Khm er
Rouge i Red Cambodians), the country's

mishing along the China-Vietnam bor­
der, with each side accusing the other of
intrusions and provocations.
Western diplom ats are cautious about
p ro c la im in g the fo rm a tio n of an
"a lliance" among the anti-Hanoi forces,
saying there are s t ill some key dif­
ferences, p a r t ic u la r ly among the
Cambodian rebels
But they acknowledge the efforts of
these countries are coalescing in a way
that could bring re a l diplomatic and
perhaps m ilita ry pressure on Vietnam.

/cu e /

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Teen Drug Use Dropping;
But It's Still A Problem
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - Teen-age use of
m arijuana and "angel dust" leveled o ff in
I960 after a 17-year rise but drug use b y the
young is still "a major national problem ," a
researcher says
Dr. AfredS. Friedmsn, director of the Drug
Treatm ent Program at the Philadelphia
P sych ia tric Center, said Tuesday that 1980
was the first year since 19(1 that the use of
cigarettes, marijuana, tnhatent-solvents and
P C P , known as "angel dust," leveled off
among high school teens.
He said, however, that I960 showed a n in­
crease in the use of stim ulants and
methaquaiane among teen-age girls.
Am ong adults, the use of hard drugs such u
heroin, cocaine, hallucinogens and tnhalrnts

increased from 3 percent to 33 percent during
19(2 to 19(0, he said.
While 37 percent of high school students
reported current use of m arijuana in 1179,
Friedm an said the num ber dropped to 34
percent in IM0
"However, (0 percent of the d a is of ’10 still
reported that (hey had used m arijuana some
time in their lives, the same as the previous
year's class,” he said. "Obviously drug use
among teenagers, as w e ll s i alcohol use, is
still extensive and constitutes a m ajor nation­
a l problem."
Friedman said the I960 figures were
developed by the U niversity of Michigan
Institute for Social Research.

5 -Pc, WOOD DINETTE SUITE

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V o lu s ia F la g le r Included

5 Historic Preservation
Boards Get Committee's A x
T A L M H A S S E E . Fla. (U PI) - The Senate Those agencies were given a year to switch to
governmental operations committee, ignoring
d t y snd county support, at the request of the
pleas by Tampa officials, Wednesday voted to Secretary of State's office.
aboitah five historic preservation boards — but
The committee approved continued state
spared boards in three other old dties.
funding of the SL Augustine. Pensacola and
K e y West preservation boards Those sevenThe committee also approved creation of an
urban redevelopment fund, although the spon­ member boards, appointed by the governor
sor of the b ill said the 110 million proposed for
and confirmed by the Senate, would operate
rebuilding downtown areas is not in the budget
museums.
this year. Sen. Edgar Dunn, D-Deytona Beach,
In addition to the five historic preazrvation
said he wanted to set up the legal fram ew ork
boards getUg the ax, the Ybor C ity Historic
fgr m aking grants to d ik e fur urban
D istrict and Barrio Latino Com mission would
rebuilding, when money becomes available.
no longer exist by statute — but could be
.A t (he request of Attorney General J im
turned over to county operation immediately,
S e a Malcolm Beard, ITTim ps, argued
Sm ith, the committee also approved a b ill
allow ing d t y and county police agencies to
unsuccessfully (or continued state operation of
enter into mutual assistance contracts. S m ith
the Tampa-Hillsbcrough preservation board.
said F lo rid a 's existing law on the topic is ao
H e said many "dedicated, selfless citizens
have given of their tim e and nteney" for
unclear he has been "discouraging" m ayors
and police chiefs from asking him for a le g a l
preserving historic parts of the T tra p s Bay
opinion — because he might have to tell them
area.
Mercer Fearington, representing Tampa
it is technically illegal (or police agencies to
help out across d ty and county lines.
Preservation Inc., futily told the committee,
" A s fast as Florida U growing, we ought to do
The committee approved a "Sundown" b ill
a ll we can to keep the condom iniums from
abolishing the Tallahassee, Boca Rston,
swallowing up the h isto rica l areas that we
Tampa -Hillsborough, Broward and V o I u s I j h
have."
F la g le r County historic preservation boards.

%

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Tebie
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WHILE
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ORLANDO

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�</text>
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                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, May 21, 1981; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
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                    <text>4S—EVSflifllHIr$id, Sa nford,

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April 14, 1!I1

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ERASE HOLE 1?
The "100 pircent" success, as test boss broken or obsolete material back.
ection of the spacecraft, will some discoloration of the shuttle's heat
HOLE HAS A
— —1
—
—
—
—
—
demands because of illness readjust I
The one big worry about the
IT'S DIFFICULT
tators
whose
delighted
cheers
rang
for
by-inch
insp
MMM-EVERYTIPIY
The
selection
of
Engle
and
Truly
to
be
CARD!
Slayton called, blew away the frustration
MEINIPJG'
.
c kly Columbia can be shield was noted by ground crews.
GETTING USED TO
will need supplements.
_____
flight
Columbia's
searing return through the
miles
across
tile
barren
Mojave
Desert.
deterniine
how
qui
by
i
years
as
problem
after
the
next
crew
was
announced
ond
Is,
while
you
are
Thesec
Wit up over 21
r-N
I
.
r.
(HESE COMPUTER
your prescription of both
p
atmosphere
was dispelled by a post.
zll~
the
in.
1-"roni
trying
to
stay
awake
at
night
problem
cropped
up
in
development
and
control
chief
M.P.
Frank.
cARPS!
a
local
including everybody
putting
the
shuttle
into
Roy
aimed
at
Upi:
their
special
tent,
front
gle,
front
Abilene,
Kan.,
and
Truly.
landing
inspection.
celebrities in
use coffee then. The cabyour doctor is concerned to
Project managers obviously were of Fayette, Miss., acted as backup
jj
HOROSCOPE
The insulating tiles on the nose and
chief Donald K. Slayton and Leonard Nimoy of TV's "Star Trek"
landing
the
hiilcd
the
for Young and Crippen. Both are
Aira underside of the craft withstood the Jolt
series,
Trek"
TV
sensibly
used
.0 0
but
careful
and if
.
I
stimulant
the
80-ton
shuttle
glide
to
anxious
to
take
quick
own
ed
4,
series, watch
ha ving pernicious anemia.
A
as an American victory, the beginning of put it.
Force test pilots but neither has fl
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL
could he a help. I'd ra ther you
ffe ting of launch, and during rewith
Young
to
a
recommend tha t
strongly
Crippen,
arriving
busuccessfully deflected heat pie.'
a new age.
spacecraft before, although Engle has and
than take pills,
use
that
0
entry
advice,
follow his
"Eat your hearts out, Russians," was rousing welcome in Houston Tuesday
been to the fringes of space in the X.15 dicted to reach up to 2,600 degrees.
s
For Wednesday. AprIl 15, 1981
D
11
To help you understand the Vitamins won't help.
r
tile slogan on .I T shirt worn 1)), one evening, sunitned up flow everyone
rocket plane.
But in light of the fact some of the Wes
I
I
full consequence of this. I am
connected with the program now feels
I
fetitak' spectator.
Finally,
when
you
feel
The
Columbia
set
a
batch
of
firsts
with
on
the upper aft section of Columbia were
g
you
The
Health
Letter
sendin
Although TV cameras picked up the about tile shuttle's future: "We are really
CAPE CANAVERAL,Fla.(UPI) — were the first solid fuel rockets ever
its flight this week:
oft under the stresses of Sunespecially with persons you number 4-5, Vitamin 1342, sleepy I hope you can be
knocked
April 15, 1961
business
to
.stay."
shuttle Columbia is the used for a manned space flight,
t!!!k
The
shuttle 104) ittiles away, it was moving so in the space
It was the first spacecraft to be tested day's blastoff, the entire insulation
Folic Acid, Pernicious physically active. Physical
Success in your chosen field feel have stung you in the
They also were the bigget solid-fuel
"The space shuttle Columbia is a
world's first reusable spacecraft, but
Fast, inure than 200 mph, most spectators
in space the very first time with men system is certain to get a thorough going.
is likely this coming year, but past.
by Howie Schneider
Anemia. Others who want this activity stimulates your
latest
of
its
half
a
dozen
rockets ever used in the space
until
it
loomed
phenomenon,"
Young
told
the
cheering
EEK &amp; MEEK
that's only the
did ruit sight the Columbia
aboard.
can
send
75
cents
with
a
biological
system
and
helps
over.
you may have to work harder
program, with a total thrust of 5.3
issue
and diving for the crowd of thousands on the astronauts'
space
firsts.
nose
down
iiverhead,
(
(Sept.
23-Oct.
23)
It was the first to hurtle into orbit with
LIBRA
at
is
why
Th
keep
people
alert.
/0)
than usual in order to attain it.
)...LAST
IrtX)
self-addressed
Force
Base
ctful long, stamped,
When It was launched Sunday million pounds.
Christopher C. Kraft, director of the
surface of hard packed dry mud, just arrival at Ellington Air
the aid of solid4uel rockets.
recommend that people
I
Be prepared to pay the price. For one who Is usually ta find envelope for it to me, in care
HAD
)
first
f'ff
return
to
Earth
Houston
Vacie center arA an old hamid in
O
/
was
the
first
tocould
you
ARIES (March 21-April 19), and diplomatic,
cofrlcom,..
of this newspaper. P.O. Box should not exercise shortly
"Any titne you can take something that
Columbia became the first spaceship winged spaceship. with a wing span of
e
pscebualsus,hadwry
suusmatkm,
1J16P
first
parachutes;
the
th
illed
tile
,I
ir
as
the
rear
wheels
of
f
without
th
aid
Cheers
e
.
frustrating
in
Yourself
they
are
Coworkers are likely to have
Radio City Station, New before going to bed it
feet and a tail 48.3 feet tall.
into
space
and
land
it,
maiden
78
its
2
dust.
big
and
launch
it
Columbtli's
sterUzg
per.
the
it
a
1551,
a
human
crew
on
wIngs,
so
It
could
of
what
carry
to
a
trailing
plume
of
equipped
vith
—
I
touched, raising
ever
their own problems today, so situations today because a
having a problem sleeping.
.
short of a miracle, I
..
The space shuttle is about the size of
space
you've
done
nothing
All
previous
manned
York, NY 10019.
meant:
formance
flight.
ke
a
plane.
li
come
back
and
land
ts
iIouston
jubilant
over
the
th ese asse .
failure
In
be careful not to Lay any
going to
"We Just became infinitely smarter."
/
spacecraft have first been tested in a DC-9 airliner and has a cargo
. I
It will be the first to make more than
shuttle Columbia's near-perfect Per- t)CIie!'e, I think Americans
burdens on them. Yours may
this
bout i times as
eir
money's
worth
out
of
Earth
orbit
without
humans
aboard.
capacity
a
th
one trip to space. And that ability is the
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
fornmnce on its shakedown cruise, get
be the straw that breaks the
Meanwhile, Defense Secretary Caspar
The Sunday launch also made the an Air Force C-130 cargo plane. The
key
to America's pushing ahead of
project officials quickly picked ,I two- habY-"
camel's back. Find out more Serious responsibilities
I
ds
e
will
cut
Weinberger
today rejected Soviet
ts
off
stan
as
at
bl
th
world's
first
entire
package
th
e
space shuttle
COWPO,
Crippen, whose sheer joy at being
Russians in space, since re-us
titan crew to I l its next mission, possibly
of what lies ahead for you in should not be shelved today In
#
charges that the space shuttle's main
tail
and,
counting
fuel,
feet
its
184
ride
piggyback
on
ce
the cost of-operations immensely.
weightless during the voyage was
III September.
the year following your bir- hopes they'll care for __________________________________________________
mission Is military, saying auth uses are
inain fuel tank — until the 154-foot-tall weights 2,227 tons.
inillions on television, said:
by
Just
hours
after
John
W.
Young
and
virtually all the way by corn- " ll secondary" to civilian and
Guided
thday by sending for your themseives. That which you
two-deck
diamonds.
huttle's
Although
the
s
e
Indian
th
cylinder was jettisoned into
4
"As the rookie of the group, I can say
Robert I., Criipen glided in to the softest
puters on board — the ones whose failure scientific applications.
There was considerable
COPY of Astro-Graph. Mail $1 neglect may compound itself
cabin is built to accommodate a crew
Ocean
just before reaching orbit.
~
g
12
years
to
get
my
flight
in
in
wait
that
complications.
new
In
California
desert
se
and
cau
used
......
thought
before
the
play
________________________
of
landings
on
the
....
.....
for each to Astro.Graph, Box
......................_
______________________
_______________________
NORTH
South
trick
two.
Finally
"It has a great deal of scientific goals
Tuesday,
it
was
announced
astronauts
space
was
well
worth
it.
nine
Just
th
e
flight
to
be
scrubbed
wi
City
Station,
N.Y.
th
SAGITtARIUS (Nov. 23.
The 60•K10653
by Ed SuIlivar 489, Ra dio
ruffed a diamond and led a
rockets, blasted loose from Columbia many as 10 in
that can be translated into civilian
—
Richard II. Truly, tine for another 12 years if that's what
PRSCILLAS POP
Joe
Ii.
Engle,
48,
and
untdown
Friday
To
co
e
th
minutes
left
in
019. Be sure to specify birth Dec. 21) In social situations
to
spade to his queen West pro.
and parachuted into the Atlantic foot-long cargo bay is big enough
plications of great value," Weinberger
•7
e
43, will be next to take the world's first it'll take — but I don't think it will."
the craft followed its flight plan precisidate.
may prove unwise to
ace and played his
today
it
the
duced
SOOI(-OF•Tl-4E-1
Ocean
to be recovered and reused, hold a Greyhound bus.
THE
From
their
breathtaking
blastoff
4AKQI011
IT
TOO"'
IN
C*-4
Kl
of the reusable shuttle.
said
E.VERY
TiME
I
REAP
ace of trumps and cashed two
reusable space ship up.
SI.CULP) I GUE.55 I'
ly.
TAURUS(April 20-May 20) appoint yourself chairman of
MOUTH CW5.1
until
LIKE A CLUB!
day
at
Cape
Canaveral,
Fla.,
I'LL TEU_
EAST
un
fil
li
ng
S
jUST MN'T
high
diamonds.
Crippen
start
Yown
and
TRY To
Today,
today
—..
Don't take too seriously
the entertainment committee. WEST
•J 82
A 74
ICU AUT fl'.
"You had the wrong hand,
_____
RE.At' HAVE THE
like to be told
_h'
"'
things meant to be fun. Frie nds
A 632
'4
partner." said South.
,,-........
MORE. INTERET!
Mak in g a few bum shots in how to have a good time,
GEE
•KQJ 104
____
.
"Not exactly," replied
PRISCILLA 'J—.------C
No Expansion
47643
TERRIFIC!
,
45
tennis shouldn't be allowed to
'
North. "I had the wrpng
I.
Dec.
22-Jan,
CAPRICORN
l
:,:,
it
partner."
spoil your whole day.
SOU'I'H
Competitive situations
Kirchhoff said such a plan removes the indicated strongly they wanted ft
right. South must
North
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) 19)
structure at a cost of $762,000.
.
of
By DONNA ESTES
your
cup
not aren't likely to be
make
an
unusual
play
at
trick
KQJ
1017
expand a facili ty to stay downtown,
Your staying power may
The options were contained in a special necessity of removing a roof to
If at all possible,
to take It.
Herald Staff Writer
today.
A
863
one and
•
".
I(
two-floors.
later
to
k
V1.
building
1
story
"The people of Sanford have given a lot
I
~. N
be up to par today. Too many tea
~ VII., - Seminole County applied today to study done by the Altamonte Springs one
C.)
0 q)).
4.19
It West leads a trump,
(141,
SI%"
= I
A! distractions will get you off- try to avoid them. Let
14.
T")/
any
county
money
would
be
of
support,"
Asked
if
~V4,4,4
Mrs. Glenn said. "The
4~7
engineering firm of
South can clear the
challenges be taken up by
%ko.
V~, ,
Secretary of State George Firestone's architectural and
f
Vulnerable: Both
project
$400,000
for
a
V".
available
in
—
people
have
dicated what they want
as
- .
our
will
to
,
while
still
in
control
o
dia.
course
and
inhibit
)
k. , .
others.
office for a $50,000 grant to aid in the Greenleaf-Telesca. That study w
Dealer: North
monds and may even et an
truction of the ad. d,"
and
cons
renovation
and
Monday
you
start.
w
t
ha
county
on
finish
e
It
th
over
to
1i renovations of the county branch library turned
#14
overtrick it West doesn t take
Eleanor Anderson,
—
West North East south
CANCER (J un e 21-J uly 22 )
discussed during a work-shop Monday ditional building —
AQUARIUS (Jan, 2( -Feb.
his ace of spades.
downtown Sanford.
i
In
Pass
14
study
was
$5,000.
management
and
budget
director,
said
believe
nd up for what you don't 19) Be ca re ful today whe n
If West leads a club at trick
The county's application for the afternoon, Cost of the
Pass 4
2•
24
______________________
_ by Stoffe &amp; Heimdahl Sta
________________________
but
Commissioner Robert G. Feather the county has $50,000 set aside for
BUGS BUNNY
today,
in
two,
South
wins
in
his
hand,
who
hold
Pass
Pass
I'au
persons
money,
which was set aside by the
th
in g wi
ce
condeal
ruf
Is
a
low
diamond
in
dum.
trod
u
voted
against spending any additional library capital reserves. This money is to
deli
rately
in
be
'
A
i-IA"TES
Legislature for library construction or
equally strong views. They
AN
)PE OFF
'
my
and
plays
a
spade
to
his
"fl.415 SCENE,
.
used to match the state grant.
your
into
troversy
Action Reports
renovations for Seminole County a year county money on the library service now. be
Opening lead:4K
won't appreciate your trying
and
West's
Eventu.
jcE'r.
iyir
QN.
In
addition, she said, the county has
OFF 'Th RooF OF "n.4g)
sa
he
discussions. The less id t
Around The Clock ..............4A
Ile
said
he
preferrs
to
wait
until
voters
I
to make them over into your
ally. South will get to chuck
ago, is expected to be approved and
$142,000 set aside for capital
th
SAt.00N Ot'47
e referendum whe ther
better.
......................10
in
a
futur
decide
Calendar
his
last
low
diamond
on
the
e
next
30-60
th
in
county
own mold,
forwarded to th e
y want more county money spent on improvements and none of this money is
. 22)
_____________________ king of spades or a high club
LEO (July
ClsuilIed Ads ..............4B40
(lays,
Commission
Chairman
Bob
Sturm
for other projects.
and lose just the first trick
Normally you are very
Ar_
PISCES (Feb. 20-March )
IC
Co
libraries. He said considerin g the other currently designated
said today.
________
and
two
aces.
4
)
,
EM.
library
She
said
the
county
also has some
By
Oswald
Jacob)
you
may
been
in
g,
generous, but today
Even if things have
priorities
for
county
fund
.....................
3fl
Dear
Abby
to
If West leads a second
Actual constr uction is expected
$118,000 in federal revenue sharing funds
not be too eager to share with running pretty smooth and Alan Sotag
is
a
"frill."
Deaths
service
r,
tobe
diamond. South rut Is in dumr
or
early
Oc
.
begin in late Septembe
Commissioners Sandra Glenn and Bill which are unspent.
others things they had a hand financially up until now, don't
a
ltot'lal.......................4*
0 @
South wasted no thought on my a'td leads the spade. Once
Sturm
said. He said after receipt of the
Ms. Anderson, cautioned, however. if
to
take matters for granted trick one. lie knew that aces more he will be able to disin helping to bring about.
........................3A
Kirchhoff
said
their
preference
was
Florida
funds, an architect will be selected to
.j'.,
renovate the current facility and to the county uses this fund for library
23-Sept.
22)
VIRGO
(Aug.
There may be a fl y In were invented to take kings card his last low diamond.
today.
-I
:,
prepare plans for the renovations and
:.
________________
in g on an construction th e co unty will have to abide
_____________
_______
Na tion .........................SA
en bids will be let for the construction, construct a two story build
th
."
— such
pens
ive
0.01
ch
can
be
ex
hi
e
city
of
Sanby
rules
w
thelves ..................iB.30
th
by
owned
d
.
-I
The majority of the commissioners adjacent lot,
L:.
union wages to
county
at
no
cost.
as
a
requirement
to
pay
.........................IA
th
e
People
to
ed
by
Leonard
ford,
but
offer
Starr
.
ANNIE
Tuesday opted for renovations to the
persons used in the construction work,
id
they
felt
1,A.uA
nn
sa
Mrs.
Gle
Kirchhoff
and
,
1917-vin ta ge build ing at a cost of $110,000
EAt41LE4YEAH,RIHT!
IPP .
Kirchhoff argued against the Ida a
TeIeion .....................20
best course with the adjacent
.THEWROH6K,INPOF
by
Bob
Thaves
i.IpoH'Ts.N0v4
the
FRANK AND ERNEST
to $140,000.
ore
I iOT A
.
Weather .......................IA
LET 'YOU BE
JHA
PUBLICITY CO(JL
building would be to build a two-story Sa nf ord library should be in a m
WHY "tl)u TaIEP TO
THO(JGHT
Y(4RB1JCK' WARP?
er study
th
al
location.
He
said
ano
Office
tr
mer
U.S.
Post
finishing
cen
interi
ME55R6E
FOR
14
f
or
or
de
World ..........................2*
The
building
building
but
to
provi
EKPOE() A9 THE
uNt?OUE EVERYTHING
COVER UP FOR ME,
SCRAFICING
OH' YOU MEAN
patrons from all over
e
county for only one of the floors,
at
library
to
th
th
AGTUL'LY,
shows
brary
is
leased
li
HER.
.
serving
as
FROM
RAY AHER?
YOO'VE BEEN
R. CHOORG,BIJT
CAREER
ANNiE.
under a long-term arrangement with the
Neither believed the second floor space Sanford, Lake Mary and from as tar
__________
TRYIN6
TO
/
V(OULP HELP ME?
sure away as Geneva and Oviedo use the
Sanford.
city of
Is necessary now and neither
.
The commissloriers considered several that administrative office space, Sanford library at its current location.
HG/ I PUT

I HONE 'OU RO5ED

A PINK APRON Wfl'$4

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fastening

assistant

I!r!or

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W41

-

_____________________
___________________

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Evening Hera I

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__________

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________________

ets shuttle

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me.

Off

The Ground

—

your

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____

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______________

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-________

carrying

astronauts

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____

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people,

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crew

future," as test

__

___________________

—

k,1J1

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_______

I

Spacecraft Set Many Record

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________

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space

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MEAN

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______________________________________________________

WIN

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ap-

_________________

_

______

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____

_______

won't

______

_____

___

p !r

For Sanford Library

_______
_____

Renovation,

__

was

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_____

:

refuse

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TODAY

_____________

IN

YOU JUMP

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23-Aug

_____
_____

mics

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________

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________

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_______

_____

_____

_____
_______

_____

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______

I1IIC0th.Pt4'T

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Is Midnight

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IDYLL WILDE HOSTS

-

__

_

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As

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_____

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thousands

space shtittle launch into space. the

_____

_______________________________

recommenda tion that Rozaniky be given
the back with more money.
By BRITI SMITH
Winter
a
$1,500 merit in crease and aID percent
Rozansky, who has been the
HeraldSlaff Writer
for two years, cost-of-livin raise.
Winter Springs City Manager Richard Springs
Even with the extra money, Trencher
got his report card Tuesday currently earns $X,000 annually, a sum
Herald Photo by Tom Vin(
"Hap"
ed
Wilfr
il
g.'
As
a
counc
men
ta
Arnold
and
said
Rozansky will still be underpaid,
ndin
was
rated
'ou
ts
and
night
ALIENS
reward, the city council gave him a pay Maureen Boyd thought was sufficient noting that the average salary paid
Torcaso, managers in cities the size of Winter
journeyed to Cape Canaveral to watch America's first raise.
But council members John
Springs is S25,W0 a year.
g

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_____

...

city manager

1

"ISVP

..

U* r I

__

Winter Springs Manager 'Outstanding

___

__________

'l-If

city

third grade classes at Idyllwilde

While councilmen gave Rozansky high Jim Hartman, and Martin Trencher said

Also Tuesday, the council gave
aliens around. In a production marks for his overall job performance, the city has to keep Its salaries com
Elementary %%'as showing visiting
m
o
th
er
si
il
to
petitive
with
those
paid
In
arunanimous
final approval to rezoning
aliens from the planet what In common terms wouldamount
entitlt'd 'Ilie Miens' Visit To Disney World,"
for
three separate parcels of
received
the
one
sized
municipalities
In
order
to
attract
changes
vacationing students a 'B' (he could have
Buzz experienced the wonders of Disney with
ees. They
residen al
land from a rural or
ey were and retain competent employ
as guides. Above, Mrs. Nancy Morace helps her son, Joey Morace, 8, higher rating of 'Superior'), th
wi
th Mayor Troy Piland's classification to commercial.
along
went
to
couple
the
pat
on
somewhat hesitant

ti

out of his robot eustUnw.
___________________________
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WASHINGTON (UPI)

—

Americans have until midnight to
file their 191110 bicorne W returns or
face the possibility of being
__

assessed a penalty by the Internal
Revenue Service.

I.

___
_____

________

_____

Id e ty
ofSanfordandthecitlleflsOfSaflfordhad

on a lot adjacent to the 64-year-old building does need expansion.

J-TJ?

RT

10YbUA FU"

_

_____

He and Mrs. Glenn

.
.
1.4.14
--- ____ ______
____

by T. K. Ryan

TUMBLEWEEDS

11

_________

fl*IVes 4-14

effective

in

from

1

________

PIRGN'T

oww'

Kirchhoff said It would be more cost
binding operations for
options for renovations and expansion of warehousing and
to expand the current downtown
Saned
L
oc
at
should
be
books
ry
libra
renova tions
the facility ranging
than
to build a new one in another
u
ctlng
the
library
alone at $110,000 to renovations and ford. But, both sa id cçnstr-

_____

THEW w1rKour

IN'I"ERES'P.
a'c

-

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1

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L

Any taxpayer unable to file a
return by the deadline may have a
6ayezteUfor the asking, but
it is not exactly a free ride, They
must file Form 40, estimate their
tax bills and pay today.

7be exterialon is for 10% out Um
return, not for paying the tax,

Princlpal Don Reynolds
stocks the

Lake Mary pond.
S.. Page 1 PA.

�-

.

EvenlngHe,5101'd..

Natural Mom Turns Him Down
SA-9venino Herald, Sanford, El, Wednesday, April 11, Ifll

Baffling Case Closed
Coke Invades Mainland China

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Polish Officials Retreat
From Rationing Statement
WARSAW, Poland (UM) - Polish authorities said today
an announcement of drastic food rationing was premature
and the Solidarity union libeled the move a government
retreat In the face of labor opposition.
One day after the official news agency pap announced
emergency rationing of butter, flour, rice and other cereals
starting May 1, a spokesman for the government said the
"Information spread by the mass media was a simple
misunderstanding" and had not yet been approved.
In Moscow, the Soviet media criticized the Polish
situation for it third straight day, singling out Solidarity as a
force of Inatability. It was the most concerted attack since
Solet President Leonid Brezhnev indicated last week
Poland would be left to solve its own problems.
Solidarity had issued a communique from Its
headquarters In Gdansk after the PAP announcement
complaining bitterly that the rationing was announced
without consultation. The rationing is the first since World
War It.

"Maybe they tried to surprise us, thinking that if
Solidarity does not react, then that means they agree toil,"
a Solidarity spokesman said. "We Issued our communique
to all regional union branches and that Is probably why the
government changed Its mind like that,"

Death Ruled Suicide1

PEKING (UP!) - The guest raised red paper cups of
Coca-Cola today to mark the opening of the American soft
drink's first bottling plant in the People's Republic of
China.
"To Sino-American friendship," the toasts rang out.
The American guests, including Coca-Cola Chairman of
the Board Roberto C. Goizueta and Charge d'Affairs J.
Stapleton Roy, downed the Coke with gusto - straight from
the OW-ounce bottle.
The Chinese, still strangers to the American soft drink,
took cautious sips.
"It's okay," said one food official. "Not bad," another
Chimese' remarked politely.
Despite the potential market of I billion people in China,
the 45 million bottles of Coke that the plant Is capable of
producing yearly will initially be sold almost exclusively to
foreign visitors,

The case baffled Casselberry police from the very beginning: a classic whodunit.
They had a 26-year-old woman shot to death at her 1501
Carlisle Drive home and no apparent motive. At the time of the
shooting, the woman's 71-year-old husband of eight months lay
In a hospital bed with a malfunctioning pancreas.
The death weapon - a .32-caliber pistol containing only one
cartridge - was discovered under the mattress of the bed
where the victim was found by officers who were admitted to
the mobile home by a 24-year-old male friend of the dead
woman.
In a supreme bit of understatement, Casselberry Police
Chief George Karcher described the circumstances
surrounding the slaying as "very peculiar." But after nearly
four months of probing the Dec. 28 death of Louise Poe, Karcher is closing the case as a suicide. "There Is no evidence to
suggest foul play," he said today.
There was no suicide note, 'but in the face of her own
statement -she said something like 'I shot myself,' or 'I did it'
- there was nowhere else to go with the caw," Karcher said.
"It could have been suicide or an accident. We have nothing
to prove otherwise."
The decision to close the case did not come easy. Disturbed
by the peculiarities of the case - "we still haven't figured out
how that gun got under the mattress" - Karcher requested the
State Attorney's office enter the investigation in February "to
make sure we had left no stone unturned.
"We turned them all over, but nothing crawled out," he said.

Suicide Helper Charged
LONDON (UP!) - A court charged a member of the
voluntary euthanasia society EXIT with murder for helping
a ao-year.old woman commit suicide by giving her brandy
and sleeping pills and putting a plastic bag over her head.
Prosecutor Roy Amlot said Tuesday EXIT member Mark
Lyons, along with the group's Secretary General Nicholas
James Reed, also faced charges of aiding and counseling
suicides or conspiring to do so in the deaths of eight other
people.
Amlot said Lyons was charged with killing Isabella Ward,
), by giving her brandy and sleeping pills and then putting
a plastic bag over her head.
Reed allegedly referred Mrs. Ward and eight other
suicides to Lyons, who, often using false names, used his
"suicide kit" to help them take their own lives, officials
said,

No Hassles For Recruits

Agent Backs Webster

INVESTIGATION CONTINUES,,

Police are continuing their probe Into the shooting death of a
76-year-old Lake Mary man who was found on his living room
floor with a bullet wound in the head.

Hy United Press International
In the European evening and the middle of
the Asian night, the world gathered around
television sets to watch a new era In space
exploration dawn with the return to Earth of
the Columbia space shuttle - "the first
covered wagon on a new American frontier."
"Touchdown!" an Italian commentator
shouted as Columbia's wheels met the
California ground Tuesday. "A stupendous
landing. Unforgettable, incredible images.
A perfect conclusion."
Most of the world agreed. Live '
coverage was carried across Western
Europe and much of Asia. Newspapers
splashed their front pages with pictures and
headlines hailing America's triumph,
Viewers of the Japan Broadcasting
Corporation's "space show" from Edwards
Air Force Base at 2:30 a.m. heard a cornmentator chortle, "The success of space
shuttle resembled Lindbergh's first flight
the Atlantic."
A,Jlam saw the Columbia land at 4:20

percent failed at transportation.
Overall, Army statistics suggest that 45
U.S. Army recruits today are guaranteed percent of its recruits are just barely able to
seven hours of sleep a night, and spit-shined pass qualification testing. This means that in
boots are no longer necessary. Knee bends recent years, almost half of the basic trainees
have been dropped from the physical training going into the regular service are marginals,
activity, and the men may wear mustaches, and Sen Nunn says marginals aren't the
The recruits are even allowed passes to people who win wars.
Many officers here agree. One tells of
"facilitate the military socialization process."
The Army says it does not want basic commanding a unit in Europe where "every
training to discourage trainees. That's why all other troop was out of condition, and most of
activity must now be modified, or halted, when them lacked some of the skills they needed to
outside temperatures get too hot or too cold, fight. I remember with horror that 10 to 20
One training commander has told his men to percent of my men and women did not know
treat recruits with the dignity they would give how to properly zero their rifles."
Win wars? The latter officer says his
members of their own families.
This means no harassment. No "un- European command could not beat an all-elf
necessary stress." It also means severely orchestra. "They just weren't motivated.
limited prnsliutbon. LU wreants axe ml 11w,v *anted higher pay and less wnrk. You
t)wq,irntFriday,thena had to
allowed to "curse ce hrf&amp;e" rerus ic
-ww 6q txp.t It
cq"uit 4k trui Nwr&amp;
tough them to wq way. U a asuw '.r&amp;i
maian't:11 ta tvsrn ItlW weultumit.
traine, to do
.w flaut bt
IU .tbid!: nt1htttutt thu
not done on rocky or qdvrwm ialWknuf sf11
r'im::tjttbi ximulthnic, .ithmtl it. tam,
And vocbetiie bt sur'piunt witu 4uui1uzu.
Dollar Up,
'Capt. Barlotta says rertulzs 411 Tlwt .fluxiizjun 1ill- IMM1111', uld], tilf!=W mmunalld amd an
once recs4ied limesumawn tiTh whudii tu, jwa&amp; wmW lui thusu :triunng, am sesd
Gold Down
their caes. Rary, Me raneftwirt jItiimi! I0l1nq; Aawk. tit 0==991111 SW
e
asked if they liked thee &amp;M spanfts... sinS =uwir wntht st Me f.ze arbi1
LONDON (UP!) The U.S.
=w if thumis x4 efatade testing.
the answers were then gassed on to
54
=Ntl
,
I
l
e
m&amp;&amp;
dollar
edged up at the opening
will
not
b
f
It
changes
school's
commander.
training
on
major
world money
Barlotta says the questlonaire was insane. iwm.iiue4. The Pentagon thinks it will be at
markets
today
and gold eased
And others here think that such nonsense least a year before all units can become in.
lowervolved.
And
anyway,
many
critics
of
the
destroys authority and moral, "A leader has to
Gold opened at $452.50 an
be in control," says Drill Sgt. Ricky Gibson, system say the changes will not be enough,
ounce
in London, down $3
"but we no longer are In this Army. I don't even when fully implemented, to stay the
from
Tuesday's
close of
think there is any way we can train good decline of the Army's rank and file.
$485.50.
It
opened
$1
down in
Thus
Jerry
Anderson
will
likely
continue
to
soldiers under these conditions."
So here Is the nut of it, The Army may no get angry when he visits this ban here. And he Zurich at$451.5ofrom $482.50.
longer be training good soldiers. The Pentagon adds that he'll pray there is no war. "These
5 foot 8, 150 people today, they aren't soldiers, they're
Insists the average recruit
pounds, 11.6 years of schooling and almost 20 clowns. Look at them. It makes me nervous. i
is bigger, better educated and see the Russian soldiers on television, and
years old
'more mature than ever before, but, sigh, does there is no comparison."
Capt. Barlotta: "The U.S. soldier has no
he know what he's doing?
Sam Nunn is one who thinks not. He's a US. idea of self sacrifice, national pride or
MRS. RUTH MAY BOYE
senator from Georgia, a Democrat who says dedication. They do not wear their uniforms
Mrs.
Ruth May bye, 64, of
flatly that many people trained in the modern properly, they show no respect for public
10
Magnolia
Ave., Sanford,
28
the
use
of
drugs.
I
condone
claims
almost
35
perplaces, and they
Army are turkeys. He
cent of the people who enter service drop out submit that these people cannot begin to un. died Tuesday morning at
before completing their enlistments, and derstand the Importance of their profession." Seminole Memorial Hospital
"Like I said," Anderson adds, "it's a mob. as the result of a traffic acnanyofthose who stay in are no prizes either.
They
are aimless, they don't have goals, and cident. A native of Sydney,
Nunn says that the Army's own figures for
troop efficiency are "appalling." In 197$, for they don't care about anybody but themselves. Australia, she Caine to SanInstance, the results of the Army Skill I have my old uniform In the attic, and I've ford four years ago from
Qualification tests Indicated that 43 percent of always wanted to be burled in it. But not now, Random Lake, Wis. She had
those examined failed as combat engineers, 67 It doesn't seem to mean as much anymore. been a missionary to Papua,
New Guinea for many years
percent failed in commu nications, and 83 I'm very sad about tit."
with the New Tribes Mission.
'Y I
She was a member of the
Sanf ord Bible Church and
'6
active in the jail ministry of
.
v
P.Good News Mission.
By TOM TIEDE
Last oi TWO Parts)

GUNMAN ROBS SHOPPER

A 30-year-old Maitland woman was robbed by a lone gunman
Saturday afternoon as she exited a westqlde Sanford market,

Action Reports
* Fires
* Courts
* Police Boat
Celeste Jannotti told police that she was leaving Richard's
Market, 1506W. 13th St., about 3:30 p.m. when a man about 2.3
years old walked up to her and pulled a pistol.
The bandit reportedly took Jannott's purse containing $29
and fled on foot.
BEEFY HEIST

The Arby's restaurant at Interstate 4 and State Road 434 in
Longwood was broken into early Monday and robbed of $900.
Seminole County sheriff's deputies said the bandit(s) entered the restaurant after cutting a lock on the drive-through
window..
Once inside, they pried open the office safe and stole an
estimated $900 cash.

WEATHER

World Watches Shuttle's
'Unforgettable' Landing

But Can Marginal
So'ldiers Win Wars?

1.1. David Higginbotham said Lake Mary police have been
unable to find any apparent motive for the slaying, adding that•
there were no signs of forced entry to the house.
Dead is George H. Armbruster of 756 Sun Drive whose body
was discovered about 5 p.m. last Tuesday by his wife. Armbruster's .22-caliber pistol was found under his body.

am. and stations ran saturation coverage
through the morning peak viewing period,
with one Sydney station showing the landing
four times in an hour.
"The first covered wagon on a new
American frontier," The Australian Sun
said of the world's first reusable space ship,
"just like the Old West."
In Japan 800 would-be adventurers were
so enthused they formed the Society of
Shuttle Friends and started saving money to
realize their dream of joining a space trip.
China's official Chinese news agency
Xinhua called the flight A "historic voyage"
The excitement was not completely lost in
the East bloc as East Germany reported the
landing nine minutes after touchdown,
much faster than its usual reporting.
In Western Europe, viewers were given
live coverage of the shuttle mission from
delayed launch Friday to the return
Tuesday.
"Oh, fabulous," a British television
commentator cried as Columbia touched
down. "Just fabulous."

NATIONAL REPORT: Rivers from Iowa to Ohio, deluged
by fierce thunderstorms that thrashed the Midwest for five
days, surged to dangerously high levels today. Remnants of
the relentless wind-driven storms, which were blamed for two
deaths and two serious injuries, dwendled to rainshowers
along the New England coast and from Pennsylvania to the
Carolinas. Thunderstorms pelted the Southwest from Texas to
Arizona and Utah. At midday Tuesday, the mercury fell to 27
degrees at Sault Ste. Marie, Mich.
AREA READINGS 19 a.m. :temperature: 77;overnlght low:
64; Tuesday's high: 88; barometric pressure: 30.34 and rising:
relative humidity: 73 percent; winds: East Northeast at 7
mph.
THURSDAY'S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 6:16
a.m., 6:35 p.m.; lows, 11:50 a.m., 12:08 p.m.; PORT
CANAVERAL: highs, 6:08 a.m., 6:47 p.m.; lows; 11:41 a.m..
11:5.9 p.m.; BAYPORT; highs, 11:37 a.m., 12:09 p.m.; lows,
6:09 a.m., 6:29 p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
50 Miles: Winds mostly east 10 to 15 knots becoming nor.
theasterly around 20 knots by tonight continuing Thursday.
Seas 3 to 5 feet increasing to 5 to 8 feet tonight.
AREA FORECAST: Fair today becoming partly cloudy:
tonight and Thursday. Not so warm with a slight chance of
thundershowers Thursday.
EXTENDED FORECAST - Mostly fair and mild Friday
through Sunday. Lows mostly in the 60s. Highs mostly in the
805.

NATION
IN BRIEF

AREA

-

DEATH

PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI)

.Mosaam

years in prison on each of 14 felony counts "rejected everything we gave them."
handed down Tuesday by a Maricopa County
"There's been no progress," said chief
grand jury.
Industry negotiator Bobby R. Brown,
In 1974, Klelndlenst became the fir st federal
attoriTey general to plead guilty to criminal president
of Consolidation
Co. Thetable,
two
to return to theCoal
bargaining
agreed
charges for giving false testimony to a sides
but not until Friday.
Senate committee investigating an International Telephone &amp; Telegraph payoff
scandal.
The indictment Tuesday alleged Klein. LOS ANGELES (UPI) Mayor Tom
dienst tied in appearances before state bar Bradley won a landslide victory Tuesday to a
committees investigating his ties with a third term as chief executive of Los Angeles
and moved into an excellent position for a
convicted racketeer,
possible race next year to become the nation's
first black elected governor.
William Defeating former Mayor Sam Yorty by a 2-1
ATLANTA (UPI) FBI Director
margin, Bradley, one of the nation's highest
Webster's remarks at a Washington press ranking black officials, became the first
23 mayor in Los Angeles history to win a third
lunch on the investigation into Atlanta's
of the
child murders have incurred the wrath
term without being forced into a run-off
police, the mayor and the City Council, who election.
viewed them as an "attack on the credibility

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___

Wednesday, April15, 1911-Vol. 73, No. 202
esciI Saturday by The Sam"
PwSIisMd Defy and
$aaday.

F[

Memorial sins may be made to
Now 1,Ih.a MItI.,., or r..w4
N ews Mission. Burial In
kves'grs.n Cemetery. Gramow

:, LE

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; HUNT MONUMENT CO
-

kcad Class PestlS Paid at SeaterS. Florida niH

D.averyi

Wifi. $1.11; MulL I4.21 SMutbi. OliN:
Millis Well liii: Meall, $s.'i: a Miaffis.
Veer. $4515.
USII, Year, U7.M

today

'hw

The avef $91 Lapp eats $
pound of reindeer meat

fi,

-----

---.--

p I

each day.

...

20%

The FBI director's remarks the day before on today's agenda are workshops about such
seemed to indicate the FBI had "sub- possible legacies of their ordeal as marital
stantlally solved" three or four of the killings stress.
Workshops dealing with such subjects as
each an isolated case. It was not reported,
however, Webster and investigators in marital stress and encountering another
Atlanta have been saying that for months. hostage crisis were planned for today.

3 0%

to

off

-

20% off

Rampaging Rodents

FLORIDA

-

Prison Escapees
Are Gunned Down

20% to 30% off

_AVC___*r1
`=;It;%/.,

Our breezy spring shoes.

lnfants',.girls' and men S
dress-up shoes.

Hungry rodents are
ORLANDO, (UPI)
ignoring poison and Invading new residential
neighborhoods a few months ahead of their
usual August invasion in search of fruit, dog
food and other food.
Royce Roberson, director of the Division of
Pest Control in Orlando, said Tuesday the
rats are ignoring poison left by Orange
County Health Department workers and have
ventured Into the neighborhoods in Orlando

IN BRIEF

Sal e 7 .99
tZ4'!

A dash for and Winter Park.
ZEPHYRHILLS, (UP!)
"The freeze earlier this year played havoc
freedom took one inmate just a few feet from
with
the fruit," Roberson said. "It destroyed
the 10-foot-high fence of the Zephyrhills
that the rats
Correctional Institution and another about a the early and mid-season fruit
-

lion

paraders. Sizes 5½ to

love."
quarter of a mile, prison officials say.
Guards with shotguns downed both Wayne
Emory, 28, and Vincent Figley, 22, as they
Attorneys for
TALLAHASSEE, (UP!)
tried to flee Tuesday night. Both were treated
facing execution in Florida hope
120
prisoners
at the Dade City Community Hospital, a
to get the U.S. Supreme Court to chastise the
hospital spokeswoman said.
Vernon Bradford, Florida prisons system state Supreme Court for Its review of capital
spokes man In Tallahassee, said the men cases.
A coalition of 84 lawyers, including some of
made a run for the chain-link fence, topped by
prison yard the country's leading opponents of capital
barbed wire, while walking In the
punishment, couldn't convince the state court
after dinner,
It violated the U.S. Constitution by reviewing
confidential reports on the inmates when
deciding whether to uphold their convictions
MIAMI (UP!)- Another Briton fell victim and death sentences.
to Miami's crime Tuesday while area tourism
officials worried about losing 360,000 British
tourists this year because of four assaults this
TALLAHASSEE, (UP!) The Senate has
month on British tourists.
House a liberalized wrongful-death
In the attack Tuesday afternoon in the sent the
it won't accept too much
restroom of a beachfront park, Neville Ash, bill and warned that
tampering
with
it.
40, of Wembley-Middlesex, England was
The wrongful-death bill SB 150 by Sen. Paul
robbed at knifepoint.
1)-Miami Beach, would allow
Steinberg,
man
walked
up
Police say a young white
in an accident to
behind Ash and said "Ok buddy I have a knife relatives of a person killed
I'll
not
file
suit
even
if
they
were
not financially
In your back give up your wallet
an
dependent
on
the
victim.
It
would
also raise
hesitate to kill you." Ash surrendered
the from 21 to 25 the maximum age for parents to
undetermined amount of cash and
sue for the loss of a daughter or son.
assailant fled.

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Wrongful Death Bill
-

Herald Staff Writer
Casselberry City Council voted unanimously
Monday night to Impose a $50-a-day tax on the
Seminole Greyhound Park as expected, but
continued the maximum building height
controversy at least until May 4.
A motion which supports lowering the city's
building height ordinance from 100 feet t 35
feet, would have obviously passed with a
majority vote fmCoundUanFrabutts,
Tom Embree, and John Leighty.'
But a minor technicality In the language of
the amended ordinance prevented its formal
adoption. City Attorney Kenneth McIntosh will
rewrite the document and submit it for vote at
the council's regularly scheduled meeting On
May10.
Mayor Owen Sheppard, who has adamantly
opposed the amended ordinance, said he ex
perth passage in formal vute whenever It is put
before council,
of building high-rise
4619
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cushioned terry lining, padded

condominiums in Casselberry, but I am op.
posed to lowering the maximum building
height to 35 feet. Such action closes our options
In looking at other projects that may be
beneficial to us in the future," Sheppard said.
Joined by council members Bill Grier and
James Lavigne in denouncing the proposed
amendnwtit, Sheppard denies favoring constructlon of the too-ft. condominium structures
PTOPOd by Bonair.
In the last few weeks, the Casselberry
building height ordinance has become a major
issue with city officials since they rejected the

By SYBIL MITCHELLGANDY

20% to 25% off

20% off

-

Casselberry Approves
$50-Per-Day Race Track Tax

GALLON
REG. 14,99

Jen'y Jordan. Friends may pay

In

HesaW. i.e., 3M N. Freak Ave.. Sanford, Pie, SIn I.

Ha

ChurchwilhChoplain Bill Austin
officiating. ossisted by the Rov.

-

-

SD

resists grease, dart, moisture
applies easily-dries quickly
matches Spied Satin colors
easy water cleanup

With traditional cowboy
heel and composition sole.

Sale 9.99

Men's sizes.

Rig. 12.99. Nylon-suede
logger with padded collar I
and tongue, cushIoned insole,
molded rubber sole.
Men's and boys' sizes.

Not shown:

Sale 13.59
do

Rig. 16.99. Boys cowpunch
western boot with rugged vinyl
upper, contrast stitching on
shaft. Honey-black, black-black.
Boys' sizes.

Ponair building project

With the unanimous adoption of the $50..
day tax on the Seminole Greyhound Park, the

general fund will collect $50 per racing day
from the track effective on the scheduled
opening, Monday, May 4.
Council acted on a Florida statute that gives
any city or municipality in the state the right
to Impose a tax on racing facilities within their
boundaries. Tax on dog racing "Is not to exceed $150." according to the ordinance.

U'

Of course you can charge it

HOWElS

HOSPITAL NOTES

GLASS &amp; SCREEN
HARDWARE

1401 S. FRENCH AVE. SANFORD

(305) 323-1222

OPEN $4 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

0

JOel H. buenile, Altamonte
Springs
Elizabeth Haigh, gallery
R. 5. Zipperef. Osbary
Jacob M. Garrett, Jacksonville,
Fla.
Ron M. Jones. Oranas City

$..lelie Memorial H1*t
l14
ADMISSIONS
Sanford:
betln4S A. Holloway
Debbie L. Lel
Ernest Moody

By

DISCHARGES
Sanford:
NOrval 0. Angle
Virginia C. Wallace
Mary Woodberry
Russell E. McCain, Delimit

1

JCPenney

94I.J C en.yCo'pIny

I

SANFORD PLAZA
Hwy. 17.92£ State Rd,
lOam 9

OpsnSundayl2:30-S:SOp.m.

!,

Inc

3

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court says it is
Two legislators citizens in such a shameful manner," the two men constitutional until the appropriate
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI)
not."
said today 1,200 to 1,300 Iranians should be kicked said In a statement.
of
disgraceful
treatment
the
endured
"Many
of
us
The proposal probably should be worded so that
out of state colleges and universities to protest the
full
knowing
American
hostages
In
silent
anger,
Iranians who have fled their country and want to
holding of the 53 American hostages In Iran.
Sen.
Dick
well
that
this
Iranian
action
against
American
become
American citizens can attend public
and
Rep. Ted Ewing, R-Sarasota,
was, in fact, symbolic of their hostile
educational institutions, according to Ewing.
Langley, Rclermont, said they have introduced citizens
Americans, and our
"I'm sure some provision could be made for a
bills banning Iranians from public educational feelings toward all of us as
nation."
genuine refugee. It is not our intent to ban genuine
Institutions.
The proposal no doubt will face substantial
people who don't want to go back."
The proposal (RB 935) would force between 1,200
in the Legislature from lawmakers who refugees,
and 1,300 Iranians to drop out of state colleges and position
Thousands of Cuban and Haitian refugees have
does
universities, Ewing said. He doesn't know how don't think It is constitutional. If the bill
in
court
fled
to Florida in recent months, straining already
will be challenged
many Iranian children are attending public schools, become law, It certainly
and probably will withstand the challenge, Ewing overcrowded public schools. Gov. Bob Graham and
but doesn't believe the number is high.
other officials are complaining bitterly about the'
"We see no reason why the taxpayers should said.
"I don't see any reason why the Legislature can't federal government's failure to provide money to
continue to underwrite and pay for the education of
education," he said. "It's help Florida handle the refugee influx.
students from a nation that has treated American do this. We set policies for

-

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husband, Rola nd Philip Boye,
Sanford; two brothers, Cyril
Parry, Gosford, New South
and
Australia
Wales,
Raymond Parry, Cam.
beiltown, New South Wales; a
sister. Mrs. Mares Gordon, of
Semaphore, South Australia.
Gramkow Funeral Home is
in charge of arrangements.

t

Kick The Iranians Out, Say Florida Legislators

Hostage Workshops

• Beautiful, flat finish
Scrubbable, stays colorful
Easy water cleanup

1 01,1 1 1 ,

-

-

of our government."
As a small crowd gathered Tuesday to bury
Larry Rogers the 23rd victim and second WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W. Va.
America's publicity-shy former
consecutive mentally retarded black youth (UP!)
slain, Mayor Maynard Jackson fired off an hostages enjoyed horseback and tennis at
their reunion at the posh Greenbrier Hotel but
angry letter to Webster.

Funeral Notice

Became the Army does not want basic training to discourage trainee,, all
activity mat now be modified, or baited, when outside temperatures get too
hot or too cod, Capt. Sam Barlotta, who has been In the drilling cadre, says
the primary goal of modern recruit training seems to be to avoid hurting
anyone's feelings.

.

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...

her

SOYS, MRS. RUTH MAYFunical $irvicfl for Mn. Ruth
May boys. 64. of 2510 Magnolia
Ave.. Sanford, who died
Tuesday. will be at 3 p.m.
Thursday. at Sanford bible

-

Atlanta Officials Ired

u"Ohl ,
On
SO smKlS" Qq QUIDIDES
FAMOUS Glidden Spred Satin Latex
Ili
IMAGES
511
to
-U
WI

Bone Marrow I

-

Bradley Wins Again

hi ,0t01AtS9j%1l
WIL 16 a a-us Igull
,
IkJUL PkIIIIS

,.

include

U.S.

Former

Miner's Reject Offers

4PRII 22

,.

Survivors

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Attorney General Richard Kleindienst, who
resigned at the height of the Watergate
scandal, was indicted on 14 counts of perjury
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The nationwide
for statements he made to a Bar Association strike by 160,000, soft coal miners, now in its
committee investigating his dealings wi th a 20th day, is expected to drag on without
convicted racketeer.
Richard progress until at least Friday.
Kteindlenst, former President
After five hours of new negotiations
Nixon's law enforcement chief for 14 months Tuesday, United Mine Workers President
until May 1974, could be sentenced to UP to 14 Sam Church Jr. said industry officials

Needs

"I don't know what to think. It's sort with his wife Marilyn and two young
best
Maria Pinon is i&amp; from George's doctors saying his
MIAMI (UP!)
th chance to survive leukemia is a bone- of a combination of understanding sons, said he will now set out to findS
and James George is 33, and bo
from a genetic that it could be a messy situation, and his father. The problem is he doesn't
must have a bonemarrow transplant marrow transplant
she could be making what she thought even know if there is a father listed In:
from a blood relative If they are to relative.
1.
Missouri
was
a correct moral decision. But I his sealed adoption records.
The judge refused to break
conquer their leukemia,
"He could have 18 children with
the other side of it. I don't
know
The difference is, Maria's sister is law by opening his adoption records, don't
is the problem, another woman," George said. "They
willing to be her donor, and but passed on a message from George know what she thinks
who
would
be
hurt.
I'd
like to know, so would be half-siblings. If they all say ,
businessmen in Tampa have come up asking his mother to let him contact
no, than I will start living my life
decision,
own
make my
with the money to pay for the his half-sister, who doctors say would I could
"I
don't
want
to
hurt
people,
but
it's
differently."
an orphan be the most compatible donor.
operation. But George
George's disease is dormant now
His mother, in a letter to the judge, in everybody's hands but my own. It's
adoption
by
his
unwed
given up for
could erupt at any time, his
but
in the hands of the Missouri
cannot find any relatives said she couldn't cooperate.
mother
either
doctors
have told him
in
the
hands
of
the
"The letter said she had a very 1,egislature, it's
witting to donate their bone marrow.
itself
or
destroying
his
body
George heard from his natural difficult decision to make, and had judge, It's in the hands of my mother. ravaging
enough protective white blood cells
But it's my life."
mother Tuesday for the first time in decided not to cooperate because
George, a computer systems ac- that some other disease would kill
his memory through a Kansas City people would be hurt if she did," countant who lives in Miami Shores him.
judge who forwarded to her affidavits George said.

-

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#., a

Agent Mike Twibell told a Macon, Ga., civic
club that his boss, FBI Director William
Webster, was correct Monday when he said
there were suspects in four of the slayings.
Twibell said some of the children were from
broken homes and that their slayings were
domestic killings.

Leukemia Pat*ent

One Court To Another

.

e.

FBI agent claimed Tuesday night.

Richard Klelndienst
Indicted For Per ury

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ATLANTA (UPI)-Four of the 23 Atlanta
black children found slain were killed by their
parents because they were "nuisances," an

Wednesday,April lS,10813A

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�Evening Herald, Sanford, Fl.
ThereIs a lot of alarm these days about the
aimber of lives taken as the result of violent
meet crime being on the tswthg. Although this
type of crime may be more sensational, the
families and friends of victims killed In traffic
accidents are just as deeply affected.
More than 41,000 people have died on Florida's
streets and highways In motor vehicle crashes
during the last 20 years, according to Florida
Highway Patrol records. "And every year the
total continues to Increase," said Colonel Eldrlge
Beach, Patrol director.
"When the other 2,700,000 persons who were
Injured during the same 20 years are added, the
result Is staggering."
The pa trol's records show that traffic deaths In
1001 are running about 20 percent ahead of 1,
which had 2,178, an all-time high record.
It has been estimated that half of the people
who the In traffic crashes die as a result of one of
the drivers using excessive amounts of alcohol
Beach said.
"Apparently the old admonition of 'If you
drive, don't drink," failed to convince drivers
Involved In many crashes," he added,
"Possibly a better warning would be for people

Evening ltleriW
(LISPS

411-21110)

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 305422.2611 or 831.9993

Around

Wednesday, April 15, 1981-4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, $4.25, 6 Months, $24.00,
Year, $45.00. By Mall: Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.

I
A Critical Look
At National Parks
While the Reagan administration Is laboring to
scale down the federal budget, the National Park
Service remains awash in unspent money from a
6......
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Li........3
I...
I,,.ê ....A
uy u IIVILtIlL
I[USL IWIU UVLUWVU

The,

than ever before; of the total business contribution in 1179 to all philanthropic causes, the
arts received 13.3 percent - up from only 8.9
percent In 1970.
Twenty seven percent of the companies
responding to a recent survey said they Intended
to Increase their arts support over the next three
years, and 56 percent said they planned to
maintain their current level of support.
By a majority of 59 percent to 39 percent,
Americans reject the Idea that the arts are only
for a privileged few.
Eighty one percent of the public 'feels It im-

to learn their limit. With the body burning up
about one ounce of alcohol per hour, drinkers
should pace themselves up to their limit."
It has been proven that some people are
physically affected with only one or two drinks
while others can handle more. A beer Is usually
compared to a one ounce drink.
"With Florida setting an all-time high in
traffic deaths In 1 with just under 3,000 people,
and half of thosekilled as a result of alcohol,"
said Beach, "our drivers need to take stock of
their driving habits before It gets worse."

In their communities.
An eighty six percent to nine percent majority
feels that it Is important to the business and
economy of their communities to have such
facilities.

A

Fifty one percent of Americana favor paying
an additional $25 a year In federal taxes to help
support the arts, and an overwhelming 70 percent are willing to pay $5 additional.

RUSTY BROWN

New

Gavin Road Clear
Retiring Ambassador to Mexico Julian Nava
has some advice for his successor.
The United States' role in Mexico, Nava said,
must be that of a partner, not a tutor. Enlightened
self-interest, he added, demands that we join
hands with Mexico to meet the needs of its
burgeoning population. Estimates are that the
increase by the year 2000 will be 50 percent about 100 million.
And Nava believes that actor John Gavin,
President Reagan's choice for the post, Is wellprepared. "I think the road is clear for John," he
said,

'BERRY'S WORLD

diabetes a endocrinology at the center,
"We think, but we're not mire, that these
animal Insulins may Inhibit your own pancreatic insulin," the doctor a44euj,

One solution would be for diabetics to use
human insulin, but that Is not practical,

)Cjtatcii explained In a recent interview,
He said there Is ,no way to get It (Insulin)
from humans."
"It breaks down very quickly after death,
That's one of the reasons we've had trouble
with its" he said. "Only those samples where
pats
tien have died and the pancreas was
immediately removed could be used. And we
only got small amounts then."
Kitabchl explained how the biosynthetic
Insulin was produced.
.,Wentio in CalUorniawere able to'traln'

11

Thoughts,

'

;.

Y

•"

9

ire

3

Herald

44

r

II.

Someone had his head on straight when he
Invented the refrigerator door.
Not only does It keep the food cold and the
flies out; It provides a nifty place to Out things
that you would otherwise lose.
I feel secure all summer knowing that the
dry-cleaning claim ticket for our winter
clothes Is safely anchored under a butterfly
magnet on the refrigerator door. I would have
to spend an entire weekend looking for It If It
were to float around the house from May to
September.
The refrigerator door provides a multitude
of services. It Is a place to praise the children,
for example. My friend Carol has posted son'
Andy's perfect spelling paper - the one with
two stars and a smile sticker from the

4

Winners of the AU Souls School's Social Studies Project Contest display their
e x hibits at a recent social studies fair. Eric Williams (right) won 1st prize
with his scale model 'The Alamo." Tina 'incent (second from right) with
her ''Irish Village" and Katie Cook (second from left) with her ''Cotton
Plantation," tied for 2nd place. Timothy Fall won :;rd place with ''An

SOCIAL STUDIES
FAIR WINNERS

Iroquois Log House."

-•.', '

- t

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'er'.

-

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JiiJ111JI.

ii-itri;

and the Detroit Free Press and two went to The - New
York Times. The 1981 prizes
won by Times staffers John
M. Crewdson for national
reporting and Dave Anderson
for commentary, bring the

total number of Pulitzers won
by The New York Times to 48.
Winning teams gathered in
their newsrooms for chum.
pagne celebrations and at the
Observer, after speeches and
cheers, a belly dancer performed In the city room.
In New Orleans, however,
Mrs. Toole quietly recalled
how she took her son's
manuscript to publisher after
publisher - all of whom
rejected it.
"I tried eight publishers
and died each time they
retued it to me because I
believed In It. And I thought to
myself, 'These stupid
publishers," she said.
Finally 'she got novelist
Walker Percy to readit.'
Percy persuaded the
Louisiana Slate University
Press to publish it In 1980.
Critics have since called it
"rollicking, foot-stomping
wonder" and "a masterwork
of comedy."
Two reporters from the
Arizona Daily Star In Tucson

teacher,
"But Carol," I said the other day. "Tlfts
paper Is from January. Isn't that kinds old?"
"It'e never too old until there's one to ,
replace It," she said.
Carol, you see, Is really a philosopher In,
housewife
disguise. She doesn't dig the
ROBERT
neatness bit that most homemakers are
expected to emulate. To reassure herself that.
she Is OK anyhow, she keeps on her
ime For Reform, Again..e refrigerator door a New Yorker magazine'
cartoon showing two people on a heavenly ,

WALTERS

T

WASHINGTON (I4EA) -Because Us year
marks the 10th anniversary of the effort to
overhaul federal laws governing the flnancing of political campaigns, it's an 8P propriate time to assess the success of those
reforms.
Prior to the passage of the Federal Election
Campaign Act of 1971, the financing of
campaigns for the presidency and seats In the
House and Senate was governed by a pair of
statutes dating back to the early 1900s.
Because those laws were riddled with
loopholes and seldom enforced, enactment of
the FECA - and the 1174 amendments
establishing the Federal Election Cornmission-offered the promise of a new era of
full disclosure, vigorous enforcement and the
elimination of "fat cat" Influence in politics.
To a very substantial extent, those hopes
have been fulfilled - especially In cornpsrison with the pre-FECA years when
u
wealthy donors seeking to "buy"
(or least
"rent") politicians could make five- and six.
figure contribution to office-seekers that
never were even disclosed to the public.
But the same members of Congress who
never have been especially reluctant to pass
legislation establishing regulatory agencies
to oversee the work of assorted Industries and
professions have been notably unenthusiastic
about the commission that supposedly
regulates their conduct.
Noting that Congress repeatedly "has
Wldeflfl11ed the thttty and independence
of the FEC," a new study produced by
Common Cause aptly describes the coinmission as "an agency born of necessity but
truly unloved by Its parents."

'flurough constant oversight of the FEC that

has, on numerous occasions, bordered on
harassment, Congress has attained what It

sought from the commission - an agency
that treats wayward members of the House
and Senate (and the president) with
deference and delicacy not accorded to
others.

That situation has produced a commission
with the characteristics of the neighborhood
bully who regularly picks on the little kids
unable to defend themselves but scrupulously
avoids confrontations with those who can
fight back.
The refusal of those who wield power In this
capital to properly insulate the FEC from the
pressure of politics was vividly demonstrated
by the metamorphosis earlier this year of
Max L Frledersdorf.
After serving as a member of the FEC for
two years, he abruptly resigned as its
chairman and was immediately Installed as
the chief congressional lobbyist for the
country's most highly politicized Institution the White House.
Like too many FEC members, Frledersdorf
came to the agency from Congress, where he
held a variety of staff position. Indeed, the
commission has long been a haven for retired
or defeated legislators and their aides.

The president and Congress can remedy the
situation by appointing and confirming future

commissioners on the basis of the standards
explicitly set forth In the law: "Members
shall be chosen on the basis of their experience, Integrity, impartially and good
judgment."

Congress should abandon Its Insistence
upon holding veto power over FEC
regulations and should surrender its privilege
of having two non-voting FEC seatsreserved
for representatives of the Clerk of the House
and Secretary of the Senate.
-

^tA

1.

In

I) - itt1 (miii

'
white
robe. The other, hair awry, eyes askew,
Is wearing a splotchy, spotted garment with
the hem falling out. The Immaculate one Is;
saying to the messy one: "Well, you were
right. Neatness didn't count!"
A lot of friends keep diets on the
refrigerator door to halt themselves when
tempted to reach Inside for a goodie. But one,,
who has given up the fight, has a cartoon,
character eating a gooey sundae and chirping
smugly, "Man should not live by bread
alone."

"Perform a death-defying act. Quit
smoking." That message was found on the,
door of a friend In the midst of her anti-weed
struggle.
Joanne, who runs a travel agency, has
posted the Itinerary for her upcoming trip to
Malaga. Handy for the stay-at-homes, she
says, "also the police If they come looking for

me and the burglars If they're going through,
the house,"
She says the refrigerator door Is the must
place for must messages to the family, things'
such as: "There will be no laundry service'
here for 10 days beginning April 25, Please;
make other arrangements."
Parents of teens say they have to leave
warnings to scavengers on the door: "Don't'
eat the chicken. It's for dimmer,"
And kids who get uptight If they think mom'
Is nagging take more kindly to unspoken but
posted reminder,. I read this note under an,
owl magnet: "Be*, you must write Grand-mother athank you for the birthday gift and
tell her how you've been doing at school."
Still others use refrigerator doors for new
snapshots of family members, magazine
photos of dogs that look like theirs and
newspaper clippings with locations of auto
license bureaus, antique stores, etc.

Yes, the ref rlerator door Is a must In every,.
home, If I ever design my own house, I'm I
going to have one wall of the kitchen done In
refrigerator doors.
'I

.

WASHINGTON- Uncle Sam has an Im- potential forfeitures In narcotics cases
pressive arsenal of weapons to use against prosecuted under the two statutes amounted
taxpayers who intentionally or accidentally to a puddling $35 million, Yet law enforcemant officials figure that the illicit drug
skimp on what they owe the government.
generates about $54 billion 1 year.
trade
Without warning or cowl order, the federal
apparatus can seize all or part of yoir bank
My associate Tony Cspacclo has searched
account, confiscate your paychecks or slap a the records and found some of the most
lien on your busb or personal property. flagrant e mples of mobsters being let off
But for some reason, while the feds are t he hook by federal bloodhounds who track
sometimes overzealous In their pursuit of petty tax theaters to their financial graves.
unall-tIme chiselers and beisdulki citiz-'., Hen, they are:
they have been strangely negligent In their
-Jose Valenzuela's organization raked In
pursuit of drug traffickers and big-time
$10 million to $16 million a year from Its
rackáeers.
Two special acts of Cmgreu, passed In heroin operations, which extended from
laboratories In Mexk to the sidewalks of
1670, empower the Justice Depss tm.nt to
t4
setse mobsters' awia In
to civil New York. Valenzuela lived high off the hog;
fines. Yet the minber of frfMU
aider he spent $13900 in cash on kixury cars during
these provisions can fairly be described as one three-year period, and put down $316,000
mostly In cash - to buy and redecorate a
paltry. In short, racketeers are getting better
rnk1wm In San Marino, Calif. Valensuela and
treatment than
of.the-mill tax evaders,
Through Mardi 1W, assets forfeited and 10 members of his dope ring were convicted,

but only $55,000 was assessed In fines. No
aerets were seized. ---

____

____
xa

_____

___

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-'M "Black Tuna" marljuana.smuggllng
ring headed by Robert Meinster and Robert
Paltahorn handled more than a million
pounds of dope, earning gross receipts conservatively estimated at $300 million. The
gang spent thousands on yachts and executive
jets - and even ran up a $60,000 restaurant
tab In a single night. Yet when the feds at
tempted to seize two iesldences worth
$750,000, five yachts and an aut1on business
that was used as front, they wound up with
$16,000 worth of assets.
-In his prime, Leroy "Nkky'' Barnes ran
the biggest heroin operation in the United
States, according to the Justice Department.
He and his gang earned milli pushing junk
at the retail level In the streets of Harlem and
the South Bronx,
Barnes himself had five Mercedes Benzes,

a Cadillac,a Corvette and a Qtroen MaseratL
His 1114 and 11Th tax returns listed a total of
$577,000 In "mIscellaneous" Income. He had!
$1.5 rnlllloin invested In Michigan reel estate.
The G-msn put Barnes away for life and'
fined him -are you ready?
There'
_

-ii*oo,.

were no criminal forfeitures.

I

___

A convicted associate of Barnes, Joseph'
"Jazz" Hayden, listed $264,140 In
1011111111111111111011111 Income on his 1m76 teL
returns. He drew a 15-year sentence, a $25000
,
flne-andforfeit.dnotapenny.
1
_______

M1

-Jaime Araujo headed a herolâ syndIcate

based In Lea Angeles and Mexico before
federal agents brought him In. He was send
tenced to 25 years In prison and fined a'
whopping $1.2 million. But he had to forfeit
only $210,000 In ,yshlcles and real .state,!
thought It was estat4ished that his dope rtnl
had earned $33 million and had Invested $1.
million In real estate In the United States.

_
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Hollow milk
chocolate robbit Save now

A

16-ox.' Eggs
Milk chocolate
coconut. fruit/
nut eggs Save

7-oz.*
Box
Animal Crackers
Easter novelty
box for kiddies
Delighti Save
'
Nel wi

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____

Sale Price

Sale Price

2$

8"Bag.
7

oox Yellow or

Large or smufl
candy coat ed

10.oz.

Boxes
Marshmallow Peeps
15 peeps per
pink

Speckled Eggs
-

malted

43-oz

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1

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(amen

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with fi lm

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Job Reading
Books And
Pulitzer, Too

1

WASHINGTON (UPI) Washington Star book editor
Johnathan Yardley says he's
lucky to be getting paid to
read books and it's doubly
nice that he won a Pulitzer
Prize as well.
When notified of his
election
Monday for a
It
Pulitzer In crIticIsm, Yardley
said, "It's fabulous."
Yardley has been a book
reviewer for 16 years and
said,"I guess I'm one of those
few people who gets paid todo
what Iwant to do. As a friend
of mine who's in the same
business once said, 'it's quite
extraordinary to be paid to
read books."
Yardley said his greatest
pleasure in reviewing Is
writers,
finding new
people who are
good and helpin g them gain
recognition through my
writing."
The author of "Ring:
Biography of Ring Lardner,"
Yardley saW he is now in ft
early stages of preparing a
biography of HL. Mencken.
His area of special interest
and expertise is contemporary American fiction,
"more narrowly southern
-61
.• .. . .--' di
r on
uJU%,. ijie
general
circulation
a
newspaper, I have to touch
base cm a lot of different
writers and styles.
Yardley said he drifted Into
criticism while working as an
editor on the Greensboro
Daily News In North Carolina.
He later was a book critic for
the Miami Herald before
years
coining to the Star 2
e

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44

. '

JACK ANDERSON

'It the United Slates wants to get belligerent
and militaristic, we can start playing that game.
Ion"

;

t.

-

An earlier study, conducted by the highly
bacteria to make the units oflnmalin,"hssald. respected Administrative Conference of the
"You grow two types of bacteria. One bee- United States, suggests that "If the FEC can
terla has a message for the A-chain (of DNA). be analogized to an automobile, any con.
The other for the B.dndn.Thenyou break ths sideratlon of (the law) must conclude that
cell, separate the Achahi. and Bchaln. Then more legislative attention was lavished on the
put them together by a chemical reaction." brakes than on the engines,"

___

'

'

Warm

Insulin For
Di

ftw

Sadness 9' 1

4

auu

magnanimous Congress.
The availability of almost limitless funds for the SCIENCE WORLD
asking during the last 10 years has led the park
service into a vast acquisition program. New
parks thus acquired, many of them In urban
areas, have changed the nature of the National
Park System, and some say, for the worse.
The park service's bonanza Is the Land and
Water Conservation Fund established by
Congress in 1964 to pay for expansion of the
National Park System. The fund receives a share
a betes
of the government's Income from the sale of oil
and gas leases, a modest $200 million In 1968, but
qjpijs, Tenn. (UPI) - A new type of
this year with a windfall from the intensified synthetic Insulin, the product of genetic engineering, may soon be available to help
search for energy, nearly a billion dollars.
With all that money to spend, and with the many of America's 10 million diabetics who
reactions to the animal Insulin
nation's prime scenic treasures long ago locked suffer allergicthe market.
urrently 011
up in the park system, the National Park Service
The new drug will be tested on diabetic
has been Investing increasingly in second-class
Patien ts at the University of Tennessee
real estate. Its money has gone into scenery that Center for the Health Sciences.
Is merely pleasant, rather than noble, and into
The biosynthetic Insulin was developed by
researchers
from Eli Lilly and Genentech
urban parks that big city dwellers should be exwho
used
a special technique to splice an
Inc.,
pected to provide for themselves.
prodi$
gene Into bacteria. The
The park service bought 2.8 million acres of
in turn produce insulin similar to
bart
such land in the last decade. But even with this that er's
made by the human pancreas.
unprecedented level of acquisition, there remains
The University of Kansas School of
an unspent $1.1 billion in the Land and. Water medicine conducted pilot teats of the new
Conservation Fund. The park service never- insulin on five diabetics last year and a
theless, is land poor. This money cannot be spent handful of clinics and hospitals have already
begun additional testing.
for operation of the parks it buys.
The University of Tennessee center Is
Worried about the cost of improving and .nnivina
tvthaet with Lilly to cosnoere
-...
---maintaining new parks, interior secretary dames -'-''blos'nthetic Insulin with beef and pork
G. Watt has wisely halted the purchase of ad- the
Insulin the types commonly used bymost
ditlonal parkland. And, quite properly, he wants diabetics today - In a three-way test using
to divest the government of some urban parks. about 30 diabetIc volunteers.
"We hope to get started in April," said Dr.
Moreover, the. Reagan administration wants
the
Land
and
Water
ConAbbas
E. KItabchl, program director
Congress to unlock
runt inn Fund and nut those aurnius millions to Clinical Research Center at the center.
Volunteer diabetics will be periodically
work in the general fund , or at least to jn
center and reactions to the
at
the
some of this Idle reserve to be used for park examined
,w and old tyes of Insulin will be studied
maintenance and operation.
and compared for at least a year, KitabchI
Although some ardent conservationists are said.
The tests could have a special meaning for
objecting, the state of the economy requires
Congress to terminate this trust fund that has more than 10 million Americans who suffer
outlived its purpose. If and when more parks are from diabetes, a disease In which the body
a
needed in the future, Congress can always ap- cannot make use of sugars and starches in
normalwaY,
propriate the money to buy them.
With diabetes, the pancreas either cannot
enough Insulin or the body cannot
produce
Meanwhile, Watt shows an admirable, properly use the Insulin that Is present.
pioneering spirit in seeking to give private
bed j1.
All Injectibli rnixttwe of pork
business a larger role in the management of sulin Is the most common treatment for
national parks where they already operate guest dIIbeU, but there are sometimes problems
facilities. We trust he will show the same boldness with side effects and allergic reactions,
'fte
In examining closely the restrictions on access to
of the problems with non-synthetic
some parks that should be open to everyone, insulin Is that It Is coming from animal tissue.
It's a foreign substance," said Kltabcht, a
rather than a few hardy backpackers.
past president of the Tennessee Diabetes As.
soclatlon who heads the department of

Mixed With

-Drama, Beth Henley for
NEW YORK (UPI) -The - Clark Hallas and Robert B. Pulitzer for international
of the Charlotte (N.C.) Lowe -were selected from a reporting for her dispatches "Crimes of the heart."
-Hi story, La wren cc
tjbserver celebrated their record field of 159 entries for a from Central America. The
1 8 Pulitzer Prize for Pulitzer for investigative Longview Wash,) Daily Cremin for "American
erltorIous public service (special local) reporting The News won the award for Education: The National
i th champagne and cheers pair uncovered Irregularities distinguished local reporting Experience, 1783-1876.'
- Biography, Robert K.
Thelma D. Toole, the in the University of Arizona for its coverage of the
mother of the fiction award Athletic Department that led eruption of the Mt. St Helens Massie for 'Peter the Great:
His Life and World."
4inner, marked the moment to the resignation of the head volcano.
-Poetry, James Schuyler
Mike Peters of the Dayton
4Ith bittersweet memories of football coach and his indlctment on 88 felony counts (Ohio) Daily News was for "The Morning of the
tr dead son John.
"This Is just exquisite and stemming from an airline awarded the Pulitzer for Poem."
-General non-fiction, Carl
editorial cartooning. In the
the same time I am ex- ticket fraud.
Press criticism category, Jonathan E.Schorske for "Fin deSiecle
Free
Detroit
r1enctng a great deal of
and
Politics
cspaIr and sadness," Mrs. photographer Taro Yardley of the Washington Vienna:
reviews.
Culture."
Yamasaki, 35, won the feature Star won for his book
'çoole, 79, said.
For the first time since 1935,
In feature writing, Janet
I Her son, New Orleans-born photography award for a
Washington
Post
the
Pulitzer
board (lid not give
taken
over
a
Cooke
of
the
of
pictures
John Kennedy Toole, commit- series
td suicide In 1969 at 32 - 11 l0.day period at the state won for the story about an 8- an award for editorial writing
and for the first time since
year-old heroin addict.
Years before publication of his prison in Jackson, Mich.
and
letters,
winners
1965,
no award was given for
arts
In
Shirley Christian of the
Pulitzer-winning comic novel,
music.
of
Dunces."
Miami
Herald
won
the
were:
"A Co!ederacy
"He
for
yearned
recognition," Mrs. Toole said.
"He killed himself when he ________________
--------, -----couldn't get it published. He
K mart ADVERTISED
ii
was so distraught."
MERCHANDISE POLICY
IrrIrirIII
VISA
I
I..,..
1:, -1(o -.'.
The Charlotte Observer won
II
W W
I
..' '•.'
the 1981 Pulitzer Prize gold
4,0 10 Shy
medal Monday for Its series ____________________________________': chase
mai
p,1n,s,
I .
on the failure of government
I'• .'
M'. y q..rri!, 1.1 *
.1 -4114VO 01.Industry
to
fight
"brownand
lung" disease In the nation's
textile mills,
Three awards went to newspapers owned by the KnightRidder organization - the
Observer, the Miami Herald

portant to have more and better arts and cultural
facilities f or both the performing and visual arts

Funding for the arts Is expected to feel the axe
under President Reagan's proposed budget.
Graanoot culture has been flourishing In the last
few years mainly because of government grants
and matching funds from the community, local
governments and businesses.
According to a recent American C'incll for
the Arts publication reflecting current trends in
and attitudes toward the arts U.S. business
support of the arts reached a record level of $436
million in 1979, up from only $22 million in 1967.
The arts are receiving a larger share of
business' overall philanthropic contributions

1981 Pulitzers:

Joy

1

Wednesday, April 1S,l$i-5A

551W. HWY. 436AT
FOREST CITY RD.

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�Evening Herald, Sanford, Fl.

W4ay,0p011,WS

Back In Business
-

FCOPLE

The film was never released.
talkshows and his annual muscular dystrophy was."
ByDAVIDHANDLER
HIt's still sitting In Sweden. I'm not aloná
m
about
a
clown
In
il
o
er
f
Lewis ma de an th
NEW YORK (A) —
signs are all tele thon.
, the last film he made before "Hardly Bergman has two films stuck on the shea'
BARI E F
there. His hotel suite is hopping, crammed
But he knows he's been out of circulatIon. 1972
J.
With assistants, cues of photo equipment, "Hardly Working," a low-budget comedy working." It's called "The Day the Clown there,
Godard
has
one 'Hardly
too. Working' over'
"I
wanted
to
release
ut
a
concentra
tion
sound equipment, jars of jelly beans, dishes of about an unemployed clown who finds true Died." He says: "It's a bo
and the French cigarettes he love and happiness In the U.S. Postal Service, camp in World War II and children. I play a there first to pay them back for being nij
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassls
chalnernokes, novelty lighters, a mammoth opens with a five-minute compilation of his has-been clown who's 78 years old. It's the
fans," he
says.
"They've sustained
- my
cinematic
career
in Europe.
proudest work I've ever done."
"The
electric
typewriter,
pties
of
stationary.
Tom
funniest
bite
from
his
old
films
'Queen Of Decadence'
Snyder Is calling. The dog Is barking.
Bellboy," "The Errand Boy," "Cinderfella,"
J
err
y's
back.
Fresh
train
an
audience
with
"Who's Minding the Store," "The Patsy."
By GLENNE CURRIE
the
president
Of
the
United
States
his
eighth.
Quick
bite of the young Jerry, the hyperactive
Jacqueline Kennedy Onuaia has been named New
After
a
10-year
absence
from
the
big
screen,
burrhead,
the Innocent moron, the kid who
York's "Queen ofDecadence," by Shop Magazine.
an
admitted
addiction
to
prescription
drugs,
a
could
spend
10 minutes trying to get out of a
Publisher Nick Monjo's tongue4n.cheek, 104nostbusted
marriage,
bankruptcy
Jerry's
back,
pullover
sweater
and keep you howling with
decadent list also includes Lauren Bacall, Regine and
Decked
out
in
a
black
silk
monogrammed
laughter
the
whole
time.
Glorida Vanderbilt.
,
"It's
very
Important
to re-establish Jerry
di
r
t
boots,
slick
black
Monjo defines decadence as"the placing ofpersonal
fl&amp;keU)
— Jerry Lewis at after a 10-year absence," he explains Into the
h
a
ir
And
P
ancake
pleasure over the demands of society." But he
tape recorder. His tape recorder. He has every
issuesie 86 is back in business.
shouldn't be taken
some
"Hardly
Worklng,"
the
film
he
directed
and
interview he's ever given on tape
magazineluinpatogethernew faihion3oand
starred
In
for
a
Florida
combine
and
released
25,000
cassettes,
along
with
an
archive
of 15
Seventh Avenue and calls them the "New Dcadenc"
taM year In Europe, Is being distributed here million feet of film, every newspaper story,
by 10th Century Fox now. In June, he starts every photograph. "Jerry has to come on
Martha Ray. A Rag Doll?
fthnlng "The King of Comedy," director correct right away. I also figured I've got a lot
Xatin SCOtCSS&amp;5 now film In which he co- of young people out there who don't know that
Martha Rayeis being mentioned ua possibility for
fella. Solestablished his demeanor fast. And
Mats with Robert DeNIro. The big time.
the leading role Ina new Broadway musical.The Show
Not
that
Jerry
Lewis
would
tell
you
that
he's
the circus is right for him. Any time I can
—
what
the
fashion
world
callo
rwiway
Is "Rag Dolls,"
.
...
sver
been
anywhere
but
on
top
of
the
heap.
Not
create
Jerry In a clown setting it works. He'll
models — by Chris Anderson and Sharon McG,hss.
that
he'd
epr
tell
you
that
sharing
the
screen
excel.
The main character Is a model agency boo named
"I have a great love for clowns. There's a
with Dean Martin had anything to do with that
Rosalind Rosenberg. They're talking about a $1.6
of
box
office
winners
In
the
lISOs.
Or
sadness
that pervades their lives. I've studied
million production for Broadway in the fall with Joel
tha t do Stringof critical and financial flops that whole world. We actually know 50 little
Grey directing and Oleg Caulnl designing the
[awls wrote, Marred in aixi directed after he about it. The Barnum and Bailey clowns once Jerry Lewis in "Hardly Working," a low-budget comedy about an unem.
costumes for the fashion show within the
established his solo career had anything to do let me make up with them and go on with ployed clown who finds true Love and happiness In the U.S. Postal Servir." "I
with self-Indulgence. Or that his career for the them. It was a great honor. I appeared in front have a great love for clowns. There's a sadness that pervades their lives
Tribute To Stanwyck
past 10 years has been confined to nightclubs, of 75,000 people and they didn't know who I we actually know so little about It."
The Film Society of Lincoln Center held a special
$125.a-head gala benefit Monday night to mark Bar.
bare Stanwyck's 50 years in show business. Miss
DR)JG STORE
AMERICAS
Stanwyck, now 73 and living in semI-retIrement, made
85 films in a career that began In 10. She caught a
couple of Broadway shows while In New York for the
YOU'RE
Avery Fisher Hall benefit, also attended by her old
friend William Holden.
GOING TO
Miss Stanwyck never remarried after divorcing
LIKE
Robert Taylor in 0. But she says, "Sing no sad ci
Stanwyck. Whatever I had, It worked, dlde't It?"
OUR

MARKSVILLE, La. (UP!) While the
rest of the nation dyes gaily colored
Easter eggs and readies Jelly bean trails
leading to baskets of chocolate bunnies,
French-speaking Avoyelles Parish
prepares for Easter by laying bets of $100
and more on the annual eggknock.
Thousands will gather around the
Marksville courthouse square Easter
Sunday morning to "knock eggs," a
tradition traced back to their French
ancestors.
L' Once an Easter morning ceremony for
children in the home, egg-knocking has
gone big time in organized contests with
stiff competition, wagering and prizes for
-

IN

—

-

—

—

ill

—

.

LEADERS OF THE PACK
-C-'

''s

IL i

-

FAMILY

Easter

Most Respected Women
Nancy Reagan, Margaret Thatcher and Mother
Theresa were among the "10 Most Influential Women
In 1910," reports a poll of 1,500 members Of the
University of Southern California Panhelllc Council.
The USC students also placed on their list Los
Angeles Rams owner Georgia Frontiers, actress
Goldie Hawn, Princess Grace of Monaco, former
Congresswoman Barbara Jordan, psychologist Irene
Kassorla, Imelda Romualdez Marcos of the PhilipPines and actress Barbra Streisand.
"They share one thing In common," says Erin
O'Brien, president of the group re,ieseutlng all USC
sororities. "AU are trendsetters whose activities
present women with new options."

"'
W,thwh'tsn.r$$brsSth
resh,s. Limit 2
1CU$
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Superstars

ANACIN
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form Limit I

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types Limit
label

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Twin blade. Fits Tree U razors. Ia
.

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.119

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Grimm, however, thinks mom Titanic artifacts will

-

be found from the ship's watery grave In the icy North
Atlantic, He has already sunk $1.25 million to finance

__

SOLARCAINE
LOTION

efforts by a team of crack oceanographers to local.
and phtotograph the ship. He says he hopes his quest
will be achieved this summer and said the recovered

189 .

cso'ea ........
6-oz. bottle.

artifacts alone should repay the costa.

Limit I

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,

___

spray. ____
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Donald Pleasance aistar,ls"HohlywoodlL" It's being
produced

by Pumpkin Pie Productions. Doss tAme

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- 2 PAIR OF NO NONSENSE __
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CASSELBERRY: Seminole Plaza 1433 Semoran Blvd.
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ORANGE CITY: Four Townes Shopping Center

14

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Instant pa.1u.ecapab.1ti Fted
focus from 4.1I

shuttle Columbia: "I think ofthe shuttle asaralboed,
but we sorely need a station at the other end."

-

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-------

Everyone, that is, except the man they know only as To.
Tom always remembers.
shows up every Saturday, as fie has for the past six years,
hand them perhaps their only good fortune of the week —
toIf'
food, free of charge with no sermons.
"I used to eat at the mission, but I couldn't stand all that
Miition stuff7" said a wizened woman who Is a regular at the
corner. "But Tom don't put us through-that. He just gives us
our food.
II veteran and retired steelworker who likes to be called Just
"Tom."

d

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anguished expressions.
They wait each Saturday on I corner in a rundown factory
neighborhood of Detroit, clutching dog-eared bags and boxes.
111e), are unnoticed by most passers-by and quickly forgotten
by everyone else.

161 lon't know if I could make a go of it without him."
World War
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M. Dunkle,
Samaritan

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119

more reason now to mount his search for the tll4ated
Titanic. The only piece of china to be removed train the
giant ship before It sank on that "Night to Ruznwnber"
______
In 1912 Ii valued at about $30,000. But the small saucer
was stolen In Los Angeles over the weekend dwing an

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-

Hero Describes Feat

Secret Service agent Timothy McCarthy said he
moved in front of President Reagan when the president
was shot March 30
in "kind of mindless reaction Ihad
been trained for ... I reacted to the sOund when the
shots were coming from.! knew we were being fired
upon and, I was pretty sure, by one person," says the
nine-year Secret Service veteran.
in the stomach and fell to
He says he didn't lose consdouateis until he was
anethetized at George washington Hosptal before
surgery to remove the bullet that passed through g

1" UP TO 19"

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stars at a party afterwards.

AJAX

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-

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OIL OFBEAUTY

capsule

Ballet superstars Mikhail Baryshnikov ai PAM
Nureyev danced Lfl the same ballet for the first time
Tuesday evening. They were joined by Hermions
Gingoid and Gwen Verdon. The occasion was a ph
performance at New York's City Center tobenstttU
Paul Taylor Dance Company.
______
The two Russia ns have danced previously in works
by fellow choreographer Taylor, but this was the
.
Um they've appeared In the
Taylor's comic "From Sea to Shining Sea," which has
opportunities for guests whether they can dam or not.
Ticket prices for City Center's 3,117 mats were $11 to
W. plus another $100 for anyone wanting to join the

'

ECKERD

BOTTLE F"

Dance Together

DETROIT (UPI) The forgotten people line up in the late
afternoon amid the dingy shadows of industry, awaiting the
man whose free beans and bread will help them survive
.tnotlicr '.eek
The men wear ragged overcoats and stubbled beards. The
women, some with children in tow, wear stained kerchiefs and

WE'RE GOING TO MAKE SURE.

.

SAINDE8OLEIL
GILEE ORANGE
3.OU$CS
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AMECAS FAMILY DPXUG STORE

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New Stars Born -In Space
Shuttle astronauts John W. Young and Robert L
—
Crlppen became hot television stars this
choosing to transmit their space premiere from of all
places, a spot more than 170 miles above Hollywood. As
the ColumbIa passed the California coast and whined
by Hollywood at 17,500 miles an hour, shuttle pilot
Crlppen turned on his TV camera Sunday
Millions of earth-bound viewers were treated to a
spectacular, view of the shuttle's flight deck, with am
pouring In the windows.

\,

CLOSE UP

adults.
"It's more fun than Just hiding eggs,"
,
said Brent Scallan, organizer for this
year's knock. "We're like kids again. I
(4"
wouldn't miss one if I had to."
The idea of egg knocking is to find a
chicken
egg flarti enough to survive a
l
knock from a competitor's egg without
Herald Photos by Tom Vincent
cracking. The pastel-colored eggs are
boiled and knocked point-to-point until
the weaker one cracks.
At the contest In Marksville, Scallan
said three rounds of 50 contestants each
San ford Cub Scouts took several awards in the recent Pine Wood Derby for which
will knock-off Easter morning until a
the boys build, paint and race their own model cars. Winner from Cub Scout
winner is found in each group. Then the
Pack 308, showing off their speedy designs (above, left to right) are: Craig
three finalists knock for first, second and
Carter, Buck Alexander, Michael Fetterhoff, Shane Prevatt, Mike Fuller and
third prizes.
Michael Tindall. Shane Prevati went to district competition and won 1st place for
Contests also are scheduled for a
design among eight-year-old competitors. Taking a triple crown w's Charles
Smith lii (left photo). Charles took 1st place for Pack 508; 1st place for the
harder than chicken eggs and a match
Seminole District and 1st place in the Cub Scout Council for Central Florida.
for children.
-

-

'

...More Fun Than
Just Hiding Eggs'

' Hardly Working'

Jerry Lewis Is

Wednesday, April IS, 1F81-4A

I

EIi

"1 used to just help the alcoholics, help them get something
to eat now and then or find a place to sleep, oh, maybe 20 or 30
years ago," Dunkle recalled. "But it really became an ob.
session. Once I started, I had to keep at it."
With classic humility, Dunkle dislikes discussing himself.
And when he does, he Is deliberately contradictory.
lie believes in Christ, but does not call himself a Christian.
lie is a fervent Bible reader, but shuns organized religion. He

will not admit to being "born again," but describes an
Epiphany he experienced years ago as a "mind resurrection."
lie allows he served in the artillery in Europe during the
war, and toiled in a Great La kes Steel mill for 39 years until he
retired in 1971.
But then tie retreats.
"The Good Book says you should give to the man that asks'
without hoping to receive," Dunkle explained. "It isn't that
I'm a wealthy person, but I have enough to get by. And this
gives me peace of mind."
What brings the people doesn't matter much to Dunkle.
Some drink too much, others work too little, but most are Just
down on their luck.
"If they'll stand in the cold for what little I can give them,
they've got to be hungry," he said.

-

�.

.

,

Evening Herald, Sanford, Fl. Wednesday, April IS, 1981-IA

Rock ets- Launch

SPORTS

Mighty Mite Murphy Dusts Off Spurs

bA-Evening Herald, Sanford, Fl, Wednesday, April IS, 19$1

Parker Chop Scores Two In 8th

As

Red wHot Raiders Kayo

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By BENTON WOOD
Herald Sports Writer
"I guess we don't start playing until the
eighth inning."
Once again, Jack Pantellas' Seminole
Community College's baseball crew felt
out its prey before delivering the
knockout blow in the eighth round. A
three run rally helped the Raiders to
their 16th TKO in their last 18 bouts as
they dumped Valencia 64 at home
Tuesday afternoon.
The win marks the 11th division victory
in a row for SCC, who Is now the number
one contender in the division for the title.
The Raiders have already earned a slot
in the state JuCo tourney in a couple of
weeks.
"I'm really proud of 'em; they've
fought back all year," said winning
trainer Pantelias whose fighters have
knocked out 21 opponents in 36 outings
including Valencia three out of four. "I
felt like we'd beat 'em If we'd stay

Raider third baseman Vince RIva (13) goes high In the air to snatch
a throw from catcher Jimmy Mee. Valencia loaded the bases, but close."
The Raiders were even on the
could only score once as second baseman Bob Parker gunned a
until the seventh when
scorecard
runner down from short right field to complete a double play. Matador first baseman Larry Hernandez

.

.

•

liming when Mee moved Scott Matthews
into scoring position when his pickoff
attempt sailed into right field. A two-out
single up the middle by catcher Ron
Bunnell gave Valencia an early 1.0 lead.
SCC answered in the bottom of the
inning when Mee led off with a walk
before Clarke belted a two-run homer
over the left field fence.
With two on and no one out in the
Matador sixth, Mee pounded on a
sacrifice attempt In front of the plate but
center.
Pinch hitter Mike Ripa sent Fawbush his throw to third was high loading the
to the showers with a single, and right- bases. Keith tied the game for Valencia
fielder Jim Melliand greeted reliever with an RBI fielders choice, but BirJack Dietrich with an infield hit to load chmeier came on in relief of starter
the bases for lead-off hitter Bob Parker Kevin Smith and shut down the rally
Parker chopped a one hopper to secondClarke's two-hit, three-RB! day led the
base, but the speedy redhead forced SCC attack. Melliand and third baseman
Valencia shortstop Jeff Keith to throw Vince Riva each had two hits in four trips
the ball away trying to turn a double play while Hernandez and leitfielder Jim Ople
scoring pinch runner Loren Levy and had a pair of hits each for Valencia.
Rips with the winning runs.
010 101 100-4 7 3
Valencia
"We almost threw the game away," SCC
020 010 03x-6 10 1
Pantelias said afterwards. "It's not like
Birchmeier. LP Fawbush
WP
us to throw the ball around the way we
did today."
Herald P1111111110S by Scott Smith
The Matadors scored first in the second

-

By United Press International
Calvin Murphy who skeptics said
would be cirutiuned nt of the league
in a few years on being selected on the
second round of the 1970 NBA draft,
scored 36 points to lead the Houston
Rockets to a 123-117 victor',' over San
Antonio Tuesday night.
,\ll-Star center Moses Malone added
34 and the Rockets now have a 3-2 lead
in the Western Conference playoff.

In the other Western Conference
their fast break and George Gervin's
not getting 30 points does not hurt at semifinal, the Kansas City Kings can
eliminate the Pacific Division
all."
Houston dominated the final three champion Phoenix Suns with a victory
quarters despite a sellout crowd of in Phoenix Wednesday night.
The Kings finished the regular
16,114 at San Antonio's HemisFair
Arena. Rookie forward Reggie season under .500 and their 3-1 lead in
Johnson kept the Spurs close, hitting the series is even more startling
25 points, but Gervin, the league's considering Kansas City is playing
third-leading scorer, was held to 23. without its starting guards, Otis Bird.
Mark Olberding added 21 for San song and Phil Ford.

Murphy, 32, the smallest and oldest
Murphy, who sports a 20.point
man on the court, gave a dazzling
performance, hitting 16 shots from the- "areer average in post-sea so n play,
floor and 4-of4 from the free throw credited his teammates for giving him
line, where he shattered hick Barry's shooting- space.
"They set such great picks for me
consecutive streak earlier in the
tonight," Murphy said. "We stopped
season.

A
Antonio.

By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
"Everybody's going to have to sing and dance
the first year."
The fiddler calling that tune Is Lake Mary High
School Principal Don Reynolds, whose job it is to
stock the Lake Mary staff pond.
Reynolds' problem is, he has a large, complete
school with just 900.1000 students, but must offer
a complete curriculum of activities.
The Lake Mary staff will be made up of 24
teachers for its initial year.
Twenty-one of those instructors will come
from Lake Brantley lfl, Seminole-grooms
( five) and Lyman ( five).
Because of the transfer of students, the
teacher reduction at those three high schools is
Lake Brantley (15), and Seminole.rooms and
Lyman five each.
With the smallness of the staff nobody's going
to do just one tiling." said Reynolds. They'll have
to sponsor clubs or coach a sport or two.
"it presents a problem of getting everything
(lone. We've got 13 or 14 sports to cover. That's
over half the faculty coaching a sport," pointed
out Reynolds.
Thus far, to stock the pond, Reynolds has
shown an inclination to lead toward younger
coaches who have not had the opportunity to
coach at a varsity level.

£r

1

-

111w

JIM MELLIAND
Scores for SCC

I

SPRING SALE

-

"Everybody's got to have a shot at it
sometime," said the personable principal,
"These people have earned their shot.
"I've had coaches that have got out and
wanted to come back. They've had their shot, let
someone else have one.
"It would be very, very disheartening to work
real hard, do a tremendous job and not get a
chance to be a head coach because you'd never
been one before," concluded Reynolds.
Beathard served under Reynolds at Seminole
for eight years. Smith worked as a junior varsity
coach at Lyman for nine years.
Richardson sered his apprenticeship at Lake
Brantley as JV boys basketball coach for five
years and girls varsity coach one year. Gibson

-

a

Milton
Richman

person Louis was.
Louis was an easy mark everywhere
he went.
I recall interviewing him once years
ago backstage In Harlem's old Apollo
theater where he was making a oneweek appearance. There was a knock
on his dressing room door. When he
opened It and saw who was standing
there, he went into his pocket and fished
out a bill without a word.
"The guy Is a moocher," a friend of
his in the dressing room grumbled to
Louis. "He keeps coming around every
day and you never turned him down.
"That's OK," Joe shrugged it off. "I
started out givin' him 10 and now I got
him down to five."
He simply didn't know how to say no.
Freddie Somers, a boxing publicist
and one of Louis' closest friends,
arranged to have Schmeling visit this
country to referee some bouts in 1954.11
was Schmellng's first trip back here
since Louis had flattened hIm 18 years
before.
Seeking to effect a reconciliation,
Sommers brought the former German
champion to Louts' home In Chicago.
When Louls who had been out playing
golf, returned, Sommers got up to greet
him and inform him Schmeling was In
the living room.
"1 don't wanna talk to him," Louis
said. "Get rid of him,"
"Joe, the war Is over," Sommers

reminded him.
Two minutes later, Louis was shaking
hands with Schmellng and making
arrangements for a big dinner together
In a Chicago restaurant to celebrate
Max's visit after all those years. They
were good friends at the end.
Few people I ever met in sports were
more honest than Louis.
He had his opinion of the modern day
fighters but generally kept It to himself
and rarely downgraded any of them.
The best fighter he ever saw, he told
me, was Henry Armstrong, who won
three different titles, and he also said
Jack Dempsey was his Idol.
Louis thought Muhammad AU was an
outstanding fighter. I don't think he
thought All was better than he was, and
having seen them both, Iknow Iwould
pick Joe Louis.
One of the saddest sights l ever saw lfl
connection with Louis was the way he
was knocked out by Rocky Marciano in
1951 when he was 37. He was Just a
punching bag for the tough-fisted 7year-old Marciano and shouldn't have
even been In the same ring with him.
,,Of all my fights, that one gave me
the least pleasure," Marciano told me.
Louis had not complained of feeling
poorly before his death last Sunday. On
the contrary, he seemed to be doing
well after having had a pacemaker
implanted four months ago. So well, in
fact, that Sommers, dropping by his
house in Las Vegas a week or so ago,
had said to him:
"Champ, you look so good, when are
you gonna make a comeback?"
Sitting In his wheelchair, Joe flashed
that familiar smile of his, the one he
used when he didn't want to let anyone
really thinking.
know what he
was

was at Lake Brantley since its Inception and
built a solid track and cross country program.
Henry has been at Lyman for three years. She
has coached girls volleyball, softball and
basketball.
Lake Mary will have a 10-game freshman and
sophomore football schedule next year.
"We'll play a junior varsity schedule aualnst
the county schools the first year," informed
Reynolds.
The Rams will play small 3A and 2A schools
the next year and "hopefully" move into the Five
Star Conference when the school has all four
classes.
Reynolds does not feel this situation will
hamper his selections. "We've got a lot of cxcellent teachers in Seminole County," said
Reynolds, "We've been flooded with a p.
plications.
Once Reynolds receives an application, a
negotiating process begins with the county
principals.
"Another principal might say, 'Don, if you
take this guy, you're going to kill me," said
Reynolds about the negotiating. "I'll have to
reconsider if another principal can't afford to
lose a teacher.
"It's kind of like a chess game, but a number of
good people have applied, so I'm not worried
about getting good people," insisted Reynolds.

Berem i Plate Leaves Padres Famished
-

CONFIDENCE!

'

PIUS Ill.

UIACKWAU.

1178.1:;

$30. 15

$31.70

$1.61

I:78•14

$35.05
$36.75

$36.85

$1.75

I7HI4

$38.75
4O.05

$38. 10
$39.25
$41.15

678-14

678.15
1178.15

( )lIwr

Power Streak 78

PRICE

SAL? PRICE

$41.30

$43.15

i

$2.14
$2.28

,

$2.:U
$2.57

I1' "tti'ittiIh .tttl ,&amp;'il
'
'

l'k'ntv

27 ,

Sitle I'vtt'cd. Tog,!

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MVE ON

i Ivt'st&amp;'r Corti
t' ,.td nppul'j

11.1014111
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11"pt,10,111111tv (if 111,1%
1
p1V ti )I)'.ITII( lI( ,?1

A78-13 MAI:k.
1.

-

-

Stile fnds

April 25

$39

whitewall
Site

RegularI

Pvkr

s'mci:

$5385
$55.95
$60.75
$(4.55

$44.00

11178.14
178.14
678.14
1178.14

678.15

I $62.15

Save Now Through April 25

1178.15

$67

i

I

you
Sas'e

Plus liT
NO trade
tw,tivd.

$46.00

$ 9.85
$ 9.95

$49.75

$11.00

$53.05
$51.00
$55.20

$11.50 S2.62
$II.15j $2.50
$11.80 $2.72

$2.04
$2.14
$2.44

PROLONG TIRE tin;. IRK)S1 MP6

SALE

Front-End Alignment
IIiSjW('l itlI four liii's (fltti'l't ITIr
wht'i'I c',iiiitwr.
casler. ,incl ON' I,, pu$wr ,tliqamwnl
Inspect suspt'nsun .tiid sk,'rin9 syj.
Iii,i'. . II.S. (4,5 ,,ntl iniporis With
.KIuslE1l)k suspcnskns. I,wk,des front.
wlwel tints'. Clwvi'ttes, tnwk.s. ,t,wl cars
ti'qisutntj M.ic l'twrsot, Strut ci,nectkwi
ESIIIT.
'

'.1•.f ..f':i:,:::.,.

I

2.WHE11. FRONT DISC: Install ,ww

fr,,u,l I,raki pads aitci qrt'asi seals
Ht'surf,n't' hum ri,lots . ,j,'4kK'k front
Cali wrs and
iwarinqs Inst
pec
hydraulic sysirull edd fluid &amp; toad
U,tI
ti'st 141. tI)oes not hiwludi' liar ts4wds).
%,tv4cvs extra If ,wr-kd
OH
4.WlfIJjI. DRUM: Install new brake Iiuiin, all 4 wheels . New
(wiil qr.'asc' 54.115 . Hesii,twt' d,unis' Ilihuk (ni,nl u,twrI Iwarint.
Inspect Iiydiai,lk' ysiitn Acki fluid &amp; ritcid tisI car. • Most U.S.
cars, stunt, inhixut.

Complete premium brake overhaul for most American and

imported cars. We'll rebuild
wheel cylinders or calipers,

.'..

Jsè

the stronger offensive teams in the American
League this season and Tuesday they
demonstrated their potential.
Sparked by Fisk's grand slam, a two-run
single by Luzinski and three hits by LeFlore,
the White Sox, hammered the Milwaukee
Brewers, 9.3, before a Comiskey Park homeopening crowd of 51,560.
Tigers 6, Royals 5
Rick Peters' opposite-field single scored
Lou Whitaker from second base In the ninth
inning to give the Tigers their victory and
spoil the Royals' home opener.
Indians 7, Rangers i

Adjust parking brake. Bleed
and refill hydraulic system.

Sale
79.99
w

A's 5, Angels 2
Mike Norris tossed a four-hitter and Cliff
Johnson scored a run and delivered a two-run
single at Anaheim, Calif., in helping the
undefeated A's to their sixth straight victory.
Geoff Zahn, 1-1, was the lose r.
Twins 5, Mariners 4
Ron Jackson hit a pair of solo home runs
and Jerry Koosman ran his lifetime record
against the Mariners to seven victories
without a loss in sparking the Twins to victory
at Seattle. Glenn Abbott absorbed his second
straight loss.

Craig AM/FM car stereo.
Reg. 99.99. Great in-car sound for compact cars! Craig - AM/FM
In-dash unit has a cassette player with locking fast forward/eject.
Mix and adjust your sound with stereo/mono, balance control,
muting pushbutton, separate local/distance.

Tulwkss. Load
Rasww I). Ous
Uh 117. No
itade needed

.

.

.

GOOD'0 YEAR
ft

'd

ill roun IND(PI ND(N? v.5mm FOR His P*ICE AND CREDIT tmnsi pn,cii AND CRIDOT tenwi AS SHOWN AT 0000,tAn ItnVICE $TOI5 ,N ALL COuuNm(s
umve DCV THIS NCWSPAP$N SLVICI SNOT AVAItASLI LV $TL$ID LOCATIONS

Sale 24.99pr,
2-way door
speakers

So you think you're tough?
Well, Sun Belt Promotions and the Kissimmee Veterans of
Foreign Wars are going to give you a chance to prove it.
Friday April 17 and Saturday April 18 at 8p.m. Sun Belt and
the Kissimmee VFW are holding the Supermen Fights at the
Hyatt House on 1.4 and Highway 192 at Kissimmee.
There are two divisions with cash prizes of $500 for first, $200
for second and $100 for third in the lightweight (130 pounds to
180 pounds) and heavyweight (181 pounds to 300 pounds).

blackwaft

list,. any of thest' other ways to buy: MasterCard Vio
Anwric,m Express Card (aflt. anc:Itt' l)nwr Club Cash
•

-...

14.88

resurface drums. install new

linings, springs and seals.

'Supermen' Fights Friday

8.75.16.5

Sale Ends This
Saturday April 18th

.

:

Brake overhaul
Disc/drum 119,88
Drum/drum 119.88

Wheel
alignment.

Toby hlarrah and Bo Diaz each drove in two
runs to lead the Indians to their first victory of
the season and hand the Rangers their first
homeopening game loss in six years.

107.89

Hey Tough Guy!

$55 7O
Tubrlu'ss. Iiad
Kanji C. plus
Sill liT NZ
u,atk ,iis.d,.d.

.

_-

for $16

[Sale

.

blackwali.

.

Goodyear
R,vlstng
cs,,, Account

For Pickups,
Vans &amp; IV's

678.15

.

r

,
Los Angeles l)odgers Rookie I erflafluO atenzuela continued his line spring work by beating
the San FraliCiSC() Giants I-I Tuesday. The young
left-hander is 2-0 for the year and has been a solid
replacement for Don Sutton who opted for free
agency and signed %vitil the Houston Astros.

Campers

stri.nth of ttniiwred.
bug we.trItij nylon cord
liii' di;wndabhlitv of rugged
bias. ply ri)nslnclon
1I.st tread radius promotes
long. even wear

Brake Service- Your Choice

With the likes of Carlton Fisk, Greg
Luzinski and Ron LeFlore in the lineup, the
Chicago White Sox are expected to be one of

_

A Light Truck,
Favorite That's All Muscle

Tracker IT,.

MAINTAIN STOPPING I)ISTANCI

'Iiarge It'

4

Fisk, Luzinski Support Socks

-Pt

-

Say

W

'

I

RAIN CluCK If Wr sell nut ol y,ui stir , 16411 Issue you
a rain tInt k. assunng future driivrnj at the .,K'ruh,cd pric e.

Just

Wheel balance.

Rookie left-hander Fernando Valenzuela
pitched a four-hitter and Giant-killer Ron Cey
drove in three runs with a double and a
sacrifice fly, enabling the Dodgers to extend
their winning streak to five games. Vida Blue,
0-I, took the loss.

got a helluva future In baseball," said San
Diego Manager Frank Howard, "Overall I'd
say it's about as fine a pitched ballgame as

you're likely to see."
"In the past, control's been my problem,"
Berenyi said. "I feel I have the stuff to get

17* C*4N'T BE POLYGIAS1

Plus liii ci,slt'
k,n,'d tick of
,,'stlkiil lMlW.1i't
117$13 whitewall.
tiktit (On.
10111% $114011 I. 00
11(1 .11141 1411111
,nhlI',19c'. l(i)

$88 Wheel

Astros 8, Braves 2
Joe Niekro, continuing his role as stopper,
tossed aseven.hltterto lead the Astros to their
initial 1981 victory In five games. He also
knocked in two runs with a single in winning
his first game in two starts. Bob Walk,
making his Atlanta debut, absorbed the loss.
Dodgers 7, Giants 1

IF ir

FOOLYGLAS!

l'ajis and .,i$dsituoai
wtkrs ritta ,wttkMl

Foster's second homer of the season made It
4.0 In the third inning.

"Based on what I saw, barring injury, he's
'

Cushion Belt Polyglas

$19

these batters out if! can get it over the plate."
The Reds struck early with three runs in the
first tnutg ott loser John Curtis, 0-1 as Dave
Concepcion hit a two-run double and Ron
Oester chipped in with an RBI single, George

By United Press International
Bruce Bercnyi found the plate Tuesday
night and sent the San Diego Padres home
famished.
Cincinnati's young righthandet, whose only
question mark was control, tossed a
masterful two-hit shutout In helping the Reds
to a 4.0 triumph in San Diego. He struck out
four and walked four, yielding only a line
single by Terry Kennedy to open the third and
a seventh-inning infield hit by Luis Salazar.
One frustrated observer, who knows a little
about hitting himself, thought the Reds have
themselves a true phenomenon.

SAVE tVITH

(l),N,s, ilii
sucnqth of tdx'r

As long as I
NEW YORK (UPI)
live, and as long as I can still
remember, I'll never forget how one
young man turned an entire city upside
down and brought blacks and whites
completely together in less than three
minutes.
Joe Louis, only 24 at the time,
managed this remarkable accomplishment on June 22, 1938, by
knocking out Germany's Max Schmeling In 2:04 of the first round at
Yankee Stadium.
Television was pract1ly unknown
then. Everybody listened to the fight on
the radio.
Louis was defending a lot more than
merely his world heavyweight title; he
was, In a sense, defending the national
honor as well as his own. Hitler was on
the march In Germany and Schmeling,
quite possibly unfairly, had been
portrayed as a Nazi sympathizer. All
the ingredients were there, especially
since Schmeling had put the only stain
on Lows' recusti by kayoing him in 12
rounds two years before.
"I came to find out Schmeling was a
pretty decent fellow," Louis would say
later, "but that second fight with him
was the biggest kick I ever got out of the
ring."
Referee Arthur Donovan had hardly
signified the fight was over when people
throughout New York City began celebrating. It looked like New Year's Eve
in Times Square, and Harlem went
absolutely crazy. I was only 16 when
that happened-but I still remember all
the Joy and delight that spilled over into
the city's streets.
It all came back to me on Sunday
when I heard Joe Louis had died of
one Of
heart
the things I thought about was what an
uncommonly generous and giving

champion Boston Celtics, having
rudely dispatched the Chicago Bulls in
four straight, await the winner of the
Milwaukee-Philadelphia brawl. The
76ers and the Midwest Division
champion Bucks are tied 2.2.

F~ Valenzuela Victimizes Giants On 4 Hits

KOCI Moose
Showdown

Louis Punch Brought Blacks, Whites Together

Murphy, who has never played for a
C;,LlIPjOnShII) team in 10 previous pro
seasons, earned the respect of San
Antonio Coach Stan Albeck.
"He had his rhythm and he's a
tremendous pro," Albeck said.

Roger Beathard (33), Willie Richardson (34),
Don Smith (34), Cindy Henry (25) and Mike
Gibson (31) were appointed to coach football.
basketball, baseball, girls sports and track and
cross country respectively,
"I really don't have a philosophy as far as age
goes," countered Reynolds when queried on the
staff similarity. "If Roger (Beathard) had been
25 or 80, I'd have given him the shot."
Reynolds likes coaches who have put In their
time or paid their dues at the junior varsity level.
He doesn't feel Its necessary to hire a veteran
varsity coach.

-

-

?.. thy L'tII
t'iIIIV
,h.. Air ..It,,
LII
ISIIII)IIIU IJIS IiUhh

Reynolds Stocks Lake Mary Fond

Old

i zoinKs

Anthony Davis pounded a pair of Seminole Petroleum
Triple I.I.I. Trucking pounded
011 300- S 6 3
100 100- 7 2 0
Jack Prosser Ford
Flagship Bank 184 Tuesday night, and in doubles for the losers.
for
Hickman
pitched
no-hit
ball
Clay
the process threw the race for first place
WP - Tommy Mitchell (12 strikeouts). LPin the Sanford Little American League the first four innings against Butch's Alex Wynn. Hitters: Seminole Petroleum Chevron, while he and his teammates Tommy Mitchel 2.3 double, Rodolfo Orsini 2.3
Into a three-way tie.
double, Mat Hines 17, Lewis Wade 1.3; Jack
Atlantic Bank topped Butch's Chevron were piling up eight runs.
John Hendricks 12, Alex
Prosier Ford
The Butch's Chevron bats finally came Wyn n 1.2.
84 and Seminole Petroleum nipped Jack
Prosser Ford 5.2 in other Tuesday alive in the last two frames, but the four
000 022- 4 4 2
Butch's Chevron
hits was too little, too late. Three of the Atlantic
021 30*- $ S 1
Bank
games.
Triple I.I.I. Trucking, Atlantic Bank four hits were for extra bases.
WP Clay Hickman 0? strikeouts). LPHickman, who finished with a dozen Myriel Reid. Hitters: Butch's Chevron - Steve
andSeminole Petroleum are all 34,while
strIkeouts, also paced his team at the Warren 1.2 home run, Ronnie Hayes 1.2 triple,
Flagship Bank is 3-2.
Gary Derr 1.3 triple, Tony Hayes 1.7; Atlantic
In today's action In the Sanford Little plate with a home run and single.
Clay Hickman 23 home run, Eddie
Bank
Butch's
or
Steve Wa rren homered f
National League, Sanford D.A.V. pla ys
Korgan 1.3 double, David Rape 1.3. Leslie
the Railroaders at 5 p.m. at Fort Mellon Chevron, while teammates Ronnie Hayes Thomas 13.
Park, while Cardinal Industries plays and Gary Derr legged out triples.
Seminole Petroleum broke open a close
Sunniland Corporation at the same time
at Westslde Field. Poppa Jay's plays game with three runs In the top of the
Clem Leonard Shell at 7 p.m. at Fort fourth and edged winless Jack Prosser
Ford behind the hitting, of Tommy
Mellon Park.
falling behind 3-0, Triple I.I.I. Mitchell and Rodolfo Orsini. Both had a
scored three runs on three hits in the single and double.
Marvin Kiillngsworth was the winning Junior League season is scheduled for 5
bottom of the second to tie the score.
Flagship Bank bounced right back with pitcher, with relief help from Mitchell. p.m. today at Chase Park, when Moose
three runs in the top of the third, but the They climbed for 12 strikeouts, including and Knights of Columbus collide.
Knights of Columbus, the pre.eeason
Truckers charged Into the lead with a five by Mitchell in the last two innings.
________________________________
favorite
after finishing second last year,
four-run third Inning,
and
Moose
are both 2-0. The winner of
S
123
006
9
Flagship
Bank
Triple I.I.I. then pushed seven runs
. 034 72-16 12 2 today's game will move Into a tie for first
across the plate in the fourth while Triple l.l.l.Truck
winning pitcher Mike Edwards blanked we- Mike Edwards. LP- Johnny Wright. place with defending champ Kiwanis.
Hitters: Flagship Bank - Anthony Davis 2.3
In tonight's other game, Rotary and
Flagship the rest of the way,
two doubles. Darns Litt In 33, John Lewis I2
Edwards and Keith Denton led the double, Johnny Wright 1.7 double, David Elks tangle at 7 p.m. Regardless of
winners with three hits apiece and they Martinez 1.2, Eric Hansen 1.3, Jack Jackson 1. which team ends up in the tie with
Mike Edwards 3.3 KiwanIs, it won't last for long. Kiwanis
each hit safely In the second, third and 3; Triple 1.1.1 Trucking home
run, double, plays Moose at 5' p411. Friday and then
double, Keith Denton 3.4
frames.
Denton
finished
the
game
fourth
Bernard Mitchell 24 triple, Sammy Edwards
with a home run and double and Ed wards 24, Reginald Bellamy 1.3 double, Bobby Sew 1. meets Knights of Columbus at 7 p.m.
Monday.
2.
had a double.

VLLo

answered reliever Steve Birchmeler'S
fastball by lining it off the scoreboard
over the right field fence for a solo home
run and a 4-3 Valencia edge.
Seminole catcher Jim Mee answered
the bell for the eighth round by drilling a
curve Into left field for a single off loser
John Fawbush.
Mee moved to second on an infield out
before designated hitter Tom Clarke tied
the game with an RBI single to left-

i__ Fl .........L...

riuqb"ip
irlDie
To Forge 3-Way" Deadlock
-.-

S eries E dge

Keg. 29.99. 2-way stereo speakers
are only 1'2" deep, yet can handle

25 watts of music power. Equipped
with 4.5 01. magnets, 6" woofer,
I" dome tweeters. All hardware.

Prize money Totals $1,600. Giveaways include an
automobile, cases of soda, free meals, free drinks and more.
The entry fee is $25. Most fees are paid by the sponsor of the
fighter, whether it be a local bar or a local church. The fee
should hi paid to a qualified Sun Belt representative only.
"This isn't no freak shoss warns promoter Kent Foyer.
"Each fighter will have to undergo a physical exum before
allowed to fight.
"We'll have a qualified physician at ringside. Sun Belt Is
dedicated to safety. Only AAU and Golden Glove certified
equipment wii be used," assures Foyer.
Contestants will fight three two-minute rounds. Fourteen
ounce gloves will be used. AAU boxing rules will apply and
only members of the same sex will be matched for fights.
jarly entries include police officers from the Orange and
Osceola county departments and a member of the Orlando
Police Department.
Tickets are $7 for general admission and $12 for ring side.
(1lt1drn under 19 a'rornnanied by it parent are admitted frce.
,"

L

SANFORD PLAZA
AUTO CENTER
Hwy. 17.92 &amp; State Strut
Open Monday-Saturday Sa.m,.t p.m,
Open Sunday 12:30.5:30 p.m.

.
_.

-

'

,•

.•

..

'

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•. .

.

.-

-

.

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,----

----.-------

,.--

----

.

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n&amp;.-tv.iski Hri

•.r-'.'

- ................

anford Fl. Wednesday,

OURSELVES

April IS, 1901

-SCOREBOARD

I 2 .333 31 ,
00), Kansas City
West
(Bystrom
Philadelphia
Can; 4. Dr. DunkinStein; S. Squirt
1 3 250 i
Texas
0
1.000
5
Los
Angeles
Uptown
1:35
p
m.
1.
Scott; 6. Hey Arlene;
1 4 200 4',
Seattle
DOGS
4 2 661 12
Cincinnati
Atlanta (Boggs 00) at Hous
Athllng; S. RK's My Katy
1 1 .200 4'
Minnesota
3
2
.600
2
Atlanta
ton (Ryan 00). 8:35 p.m.
7.16. D: I. Whiz's Cal; 2.
12th
Tuesday's Results
A$s.IaMe
2 1
San Fran
Cincinna t i (Solo 0 1) at San
Mist Free; 3 Kerry O'Hara;
Bait at BoStOn, ppd rain
Tue ayNghtrnt$
2 4 333 3'
Diego (Mura 00). 10:05 p.m.
Revel; S. River Best; 6 PKS San Diego
Chicago 9, Milwaukee 3
lslrac-$.I0, B: 31.1$
I 4 .200 4
Houston
Los Angeles (Hooton 10) at
3.40 Nero; 7. Naples Virtuoso; S.
Detroit 6. Kansas City 5
too
3?Outo
Tuesday's Results
San Francisco (Whitson 0 0).
Another Clanton
Cleveland 7. Texas i
2M.L.. Slu
Chi at Mtl, ppd, rain.
1035 pm.
4
Minnesota 5, Seattle 4
SSooker Tom
St.Louis at N.Y., ppd. rain.
American League
Oakland 5, California 7
0 (1.3) 14101 T (3.13) 01.40
HoustOn 8, Atlanta 7
East
Today's Probable Pitchers
tadrace-$14,D: 31.57
Cincinnati 4. San Diego 0
W L Pct.
is.x s.40
(All Times EST)
sw.oths
LOS Angeles 7, San Francisco Detroit
3 1 750 Major
League
Standings
s.00
Baltimore to. Martinez 00)
30W'SLImOfl Drop
"
2
1
.667
I
Mllwauke
Press
International
By United
1.60
at Boston (Torrez 00). 2 p.m.
2Bud'sBInky
'
7 1 .667
Baltimore
T od ay's Probable Pitchers
National League
p
135 64; T
liiaas 00) at
Milwaukee
Q (3.3)
I
2
2
.500
New
York
(At)
Times
EST)
East
00 or Burns 0
Chicago
(Trout
(0.1.2) IASI.2$, DD (lU 11531
I
2
2
$00
Chicago
(Reuschel
01)
at
Toronto
W L Pct. 08
)rdrac.-0.14.,Di 31.12
2:15
p.m.
0),
.333
P,
1
2
00),
1:35 Boston
2 1 .661
Montreal (Rogers
s.no.. New York
..i s i
Cleveland (Barker 00) at
3D.vl0
I 2 333 1'.,
Cleveland
2 2 .X
'
pm.
hlla
Texas
(Medich 00). 6:55 pm.
But
West
'z
1 1 .500
Louis (S Martinet 00) at
3.60 Montreal
New York (May 1 0) at
3 Reverend Lot
6 0 1.000 New York (Zachry 1 01. 2:05 Oakland
''
I I .500
St.
Louis
Toronto (Todd 00). 7:30 p.m.
0(34) 29.30: P (34) 51.71sT ($
2 I .667 V,
Chicago
1 2 .333 1
pm.
Pittsburgh
Detroit (Petry 00) at Kansas
1 3 .500 3
34) 307,30
00)
at
Calllornia
1
(Bibby
33
pittsburgh
1
2
.3
Chicago
--

-

.

BASEBALL

--Curtis (o 1
Foster (2).

City (Gura 01), 8:35 p.m.
Langford 10) at
Oakland
California (Jefferson 0-I), 10.30
p.m.
t
Minnesota (Erickson 01)
Seattle (Gleaton I 0). lC:35 p.m.

). HR_..Cincinna?i. Kan CITY

401 000 020 1 B 0
000 00) 000-110 2
000 100 123- 71° 0 Texas
waits and Diaz; Matlack.
LOS Ang
I12
000 000 01
Safl Fran
Blue, Babcock (8) and Sundberg W.
valonzudla
and Yeager;
pi. Holland
(9) and Waits 1)0). L--Matlack (02)
Mutfiti
Sadek
w.-vaIenzuela
(2 0). L
too Ill 100 5100
Major League Results
HR-Los Angeles. Minn
000 012 too,- 4 8 1
Blue iou1.
By United Press International
Seattle
Koosman, Corbett (6) and
Yeager (1).
National League
American League
0 Smith. Abbott, Clark 18) and
000 020 000- 2 7
Atlanta
0)0002 - 3 1
W(7).
Gulden
Bulling,
200 231 0- I 13 0 Mllwak
Houstn
002 6100 -c 11 o Koosman (11). L-Abbott l02.
Walk. Mann, (I). Mahler (5). Chicag
(i).
Cleveland
VuckOvich,
Garber (7) and Bend id, Augustine (6). Lerch (8) and HR_Minnesota. Jackson 2 (2h
and
Smalley (1); Seattle, Cruz (1),
Niekro
(9);
(B). Baumgar
Pocoroba
SimmOms. Yost and
Fisk. w- JAndersOn (1).
Ashby. W-NiekrO (11). Lten, Hickey (9)
(1).
L-Vuck
Walk (01). HR-Puhl
(1 0).
Baumgar ten
000003 007- 5 12 0
MRs_Milwaukee, OakInd
0 1)
000000002ovich
2 1 3
6)
4
Calif
201000 00
Chica
Cindi
(2);
Thomas
Norris and Heath; Zahn,
000000000-0 2 0 Money (I).
San Dgo
°' F
Renko 19) and Downing WBerenyi and O'Brry; Curtis,
000 103 101- 6 132 Norris (201 L--Zahn (1.)).
(8) and
Urrea
LoIllir (1)
Detroit
TKennedy. W-Berenyl (10). L
clevind

-.

1040 3.10 2.00
400 520
4.00

4 Sword Storer
iManIteeStIlts

0(34)2730: P(3-4)$I.$;
1
' ($41) 221.11
$*rscs-S14,Ct 31.13

IRR'sPurttyBOY $20 3.20 240
1.60 3.00
I Big $cOfl
320
31.eM$r4.Poppy
0(1.1)14.10: P (2.1 ) 19.40: T (2

Briefly
Singles Of Sanford Ask
Interested To Supper
The Singles of Sanford will meet Friday at 6:30 p.m. in
Fellowship Hall of the First United Methodist Church, Fifth
and Magnolia, for a pot luck supper. All members are asked
to attend and all singles of the Sanford area are welcome to
come. A program will follow the dinner.
The following have been appointed to serve as temporary
Board of Directors for the club: Georgia Anderson, Lou
Baker, Kay Cull, Paul Erisman, Estelle Humphreys, Susan
Orwig, Miriam Romero, Mike Rowell and Ralph Cowan.
A summer program is to be planned for fun and
recreation for members. Any single age IS or over is invited
to join.

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____
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399
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Mumm's Extra Dry Champ.
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Moat El Chandon Extra Dry Chimp.
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* * CASSELBERRY OPEN SUNDAY

NICOL.AS CHAT. LAMANCEAUiwct
BACCHUS ROSE D'ANJOU
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Crlbarl. Christian Brothers

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66.95 Canadian Mist - 69.95 SmImoll N'
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______________________________
ST JOHANNIS IMAY' WINE.uau*a
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______________________________
WINE &amp; SPIRITS DEALER
AMERICAS LARGEST
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SAVE UP TO 40% - AS MUCH AS $3 A SOT.

ABC HAS ThE LOWER EVERYDAY
PRICE
.

UNDER $400

ABC HAS THE LARGEST SELECTION
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GOOD AT ALL 153 ABC'S IN FLA.

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PREMIAT TARNAVE CASTLE
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ST. CLERMOND RED/WHITEiw

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ORLANDO

KENNEL CLUB
14sI0U.$. 17.,i
0.DsSTmRSP

131.1600
asrr-NaOue

Wednesday, April 15, 1981-lB

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4*race-S.IS,Oi

3TsccOBell

Evening Herald, Sanford, Fl.

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'Creative Job Search' Set
The Office of Community Services at Seminole Community College will offer "The Creative Job Search" class
beginning April 30. Class will meet in Room 1,206 from 7 to
9:30 p.m. for six consecutive Thursday evenings.
The class will be taught by Diane Goshorn. Fee Is 5800.
Registration may be completed in the registrar's office.
For Information, call SCC.

Rummage Sale Scheduled
A Rummage and Bake Sale is scheduled at Ascension
Lutheran Church, Casselberry, April 24 from 8:30 a.m. to 4
p.m. The public is welcome.

Maundy Thursday Service
Maundy Thursday Communion Service is scheduled at
7:30 p.m. (Thursday) at First United Methodist Church,
Sanford, Park Avenue, at Fifth Street. The chancel choir
will sing under the direction of James Thomas, organistdirector. The Rev. Leo F. King will deliver the sermon. The
Lord's Supper will be served. The public is invited.

Violet Show Saturday
An African Violet Exhibition is scheduled Saturday at the
Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce building, 400 E.
First St.
The exhibition is being sponsored by Jean Norris and the
Downtown Merchants Association. There will be door
prizes and prizes to the winning exhibitors given by the
Merchants Association and Mrs. Norris.
All African Violet growers in the surrounding area as well
as local are encouraged to enter. The show will have certain
guide rules to comply with but, it's not a requirement to
know the correct name of your violet.
The main requirement is that the plant be free of any
disease. There will be a panel to inspect all plant for exhibit.
All entries are requested to have their name and address
label on each pot, then cover with a piece of aluminum foil,
dull side out.
Entries will be accepted between the hours of 8 and 9:30
a.m. on April 18. Judging will begin at 9:30 and the
exhibition will be open to the public at 11 a.m. until 5 p.m.
Admission is free. For information and a schedule of the
show call 3224976 or write Jean Norris, 601 Celery Ave.,
Sanford, 32771.

Republican Women To Meet
Sanford Republican Women's Club will meet Saturday at
11 a.m. at Holiday Inn 14 and Interstate 4 and State Route
46. Rocky Pennington, of State Republican Headquarters
will be guest speaker.
Area women are invited to attend the Dutch treat luncheon. speaker and business session.

CALENDAR
THURSDAY, APRIL IS
National Spinal Cord Injury Fotmdatlon, Central
Florida Chapter, Ramada Inn, 4919 W. Colonial Drive,
Orlando. Dinner at the Gangplank Restaurant, 7 p.m.
and program at 8 p.m. featuring three short films.
Open to persons with limited mobility and guests. Call
Joanne Leber at 831-3304 for information.
Cancer Victims &amp; Friends Central Florida Chapter,
7:30 p.m., First Federal Savings &amp; Loan, 2424
Edgewater Drive, Orlando. Speakers from the Central
Florida Macrobiotic Study Group.
SATURDAY, APRIL 18
Sanford Republican Women's Club, 11 a.m., Holiday
Inn, 14 and State Road 46. Speaker, Rocky Pennington
from State Republican Headquarters.
SUNDAY, APRIL 19
Dusty Boots Riding Association, Inc. Open Horse
Show, beginning at 9:30 a.m., Wilco Sales Arena, 4
miles west of 14 on W. State Road 46. Lunch break
Easter egg hunt for ages 14 and Easter egg fun class
for ages 6.13 and 14 and older. Spectators free.
TUESDAY. APRIL21
Annul1 Spring Charity Bana, Winter Park Mall.
Humane Society of Seminole County, 7:30 p.m.,
Longwood Community Center.
Lake Howell High School PTSA, 7:30 p.m. in the
school commons. Presentation by Mike Hargis on
Career Awareness. Election of officers. Refreshments.
Senior CItizens, noon, Sanford Civic Center. Bag
lunch program by Jean Norris on plant culture and
flower arrangements followed by business meeting.
ThURSIAY, APRIL 23
Senior Citizens tour to Ft. Lauderdale for Jungle
Queen boat ride and dinner plus Kennedy Space Center
stop. Leave Casselberry Leeds 10 cm, pick up Sanford
Civic Center 10:30 R.M. Return next day, 5 p.m. Call
322-9148..
FRIDAY, APRIL24
'Wine Tasting Party sponsored by South Seminole
Lioness Club, 7.9 p.m., Quality Inn North, Loswood
Wine and hors d'oeuvres. Proceeds to buy equipment
for Kradle Kan Nursing Home.
SATURDAY, APRIL23
Seminole County Association of Media Specialists'
Seventh Annual Author Luncheon featuring Mildred
Lee, 11:30 am., Lord (,luumley'i Pub, Altamonte
Springs. Call 322-5218 for reservation.

Cook Of The Week

Working Mom:i Find It Hard To Cook '
By JANE AKERS
Herald Correspondent
"As a working mother, I find it hard to cook. There just
aren't enough hours in the day," says Pat Shaver. "I have to
plan and schedule in order to provide good meals for my
family."
This is the era of working women-who have husbands,
children a&amp; interests of their own. Pat Shaver is no exception.
Pat and David Shaver have a 15-month-old son, Geoffry, both
work and both have interests and hobbies of their own.
Like most young women. Pat keeps herself busy. She Is
employed by Seminole County where she is secretary to the
county librarian. Pat is a member of Theta Epsilon Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi sorority where she is vice-president elect.
As a member of the First Presbyterian Church of Sanford,
she is kindergarten Sunday school teacher. 11cr hobbies are
plants, sewing and family.
Pat does a lot of meal preparation ahead of time. 'I set
things out I need for breakfast the night before," says Pat.
When possible, she says she prepares meats and vegetables
in the morning and places them in the refrigerator. After work
she just slide them into the oven. The crock pot is a great way
to prepare a meat and main vegetables while at work, Pat
says.
"David usually gets home before I do," admits Pat. "So he
sets the table and gets things started.
When two people work, it takes team work. "David and I like
to enjoy ourselves, hobbies and each other. If we work together
we have more time for the things we enjoy and love, especially
Geoffry."
Pat suggest the following recipes and most can be prepared
ahead of time.
LASAGNA
1 lb. ground beef
Small onion
Salt, pepper
2 cup Ragu sauce with meat
6 oz. can tomato paste
I carton 0 lb.) ricotta cheese
1 lb. sliced Mozzarella cheese
Parnteasan cheese
Lasagna noodles
Brown beef with chopped onion, salt and pepper. Mix Ragu,
tomato paste and ricotta cheese with meat and simmer until
hot. Meanwhile: cook ½ lb. lasagna noodles. When
ingredients are hot, grease 9x13 pan. Reserve 1 cup Ragu. Add
in layers - noodles, sauce with meat, thin slices Mozzarella
cheese. Repeat until all ingredients are finished. Pour 1 cup
Ragu over cheese and sprinkle with parmeasan cheese. Bake
at 350 degrees for 25-30 minutes.
BARBECUED SPARERIBS
Place 3 lbs. spareribs in baking pan. Bake 350 degrees for 30
minutes. Pour off fat. Meanwhile, combine 1 cup tomato sauce,
¼ cup vinegar, ¼ cup Worchester sauce, ¼ cup brown sugar, 2
tsp. salt, and I tsp. celery seed. Baste spareribs with half of
sauce. Bake 1 hour uncovered. Turn, baste with rest of sauce
and continue baking 3045 minutes or until tender.

'Curry'

COCONUT LEMON BARS
4 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons lemon juice
4 tablespoons shortening
½ teaspoon salt
½ cup brown sugar
1 cup coconut
1 cup sifted flour
1 cup nut meats, chopped
2 eggs
½ cup raisins
1 cup brown sugar
Mix butter, shortening, ½ cup brown sugar. When well
;; .
blended, add flour and blend into crumbs. Sprinkle over 9x13
pan, pressing evenly. Bake 350 degrees for 10 minutes. Cool.
I. S'
.1 I..
Then spread with topping made by combining remaining
S
ingredients. Bake 25 minutes longer until topping is set.
APPLESAUCE CAKE
1 cup unsweetened applesauce
1 teaspoon soda stirred in applesauce
1
1 teaspoon cinnamon
14 cup flour
13 cup butter
1
cup raisins
•
0
1 cup sugar
I egg
.Mix. Bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour.
BLACK BOTI'OM PIE
Crust:
1 cup vanilla wafer crumbs
6 teaspoons melted butter
Blend together. Line 9" pie plate. Bake 300 degrees 10
minutes, then chill.
(I
Chocolate Layer:
2½ teaspoon knox gelatin
1 1-3rd cup milk
2 tablespoons cold water
3 egg yolks
1 2 cup granulated sugar
1½ square bitter chocolate
212 tablespoons cornstarch
34 teaspoon vanilla
salt
Sprinkle gelatin on cold water and let soften 5 minutes. Scald
milk in double boiler. Beat egg yolks lightly, stir in sugar,
cornstarch, salt. Slowly stir in milk. Return to double boiler,
Pat Shaver prepares Black Bottom Pie,
cook, stirring over hot, not boiling water until custard coats
spoon. Remove from heat, add gelatin and stir until dissolved.
MACARONI BAKE
Melt chocolate, remove from heat. Stir in slowly half of the
¼ cup chopped onion
custard, add vanilla. Beat until smooth. Cool until Little
2 tablespoons margarine
custard drops from spoon mounds. Pour into crust. Chill.
1 can tomato soup
RUM CUSTARD LAYER
½ cup water
3 egg whites
I cup shredded cheese
½ cup granulated sugar
2 cups cooked macaroni
cream of Tarter
2 tablespoons butter
2½ teaspoons ruin
Bread crumbs
Beat eggs with cream of tarter until moist peaks are formed.
In pan, cook onion until tender. Stir in soup, water °icup
Add sugar gradually. Beat until stiff. Carefully fold in rest of
cheese. heat until cheese melts. In qt. casserole, mix sauce
custard and rum. Pour on chocolate as much as will hold. Chill.
and macaroni. Top with bread crumbs and rest of cheese.
Add rest of rum custard. Top with shaved bitter chocolate.

H

-.

,

.

..

'

Leftover Pork, Apples

All cuts of pork are reasonable buys. But, what does one do
with leftover pork?
Turn it into a very special curried pork with apples. To do
this you'll need merely a cup of cubed, cooked pork.
Combine this with apple wedges, green beans and cream of
chicken soup, plus seasonings for a special dish to serve with
rice. Add such condiments as toasted coconut, chopped pepper
and sliced green onions to pass.
For a light dessert, serve fresh fruit and almond cookies.
CURRIED PORK WITH APPLES
½ cup sliced onion
¼ cup diagonally sliced celery
1 tablespoon curry powder
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
1 can (104 ounces) condensed cream of chicken soup
½ cup water
1 cup apple wedges
1 cup cooked cut green beans
1 cup cubed cooked pork
1 teaspoon lemon juice
Cooked rice
In saucepan, cook onion and celery with curry in butter until
tender. Add remaining ingredients except rice. Heat; stir
occasionally. Serve over rice. 4 servings,

I.

4

.

.

'.

.,

w4

,

4.0

Curried l'ork

�I

I

-

28—Evening Herald, Sanford, FL Wednesday, April iS, itSi

Evening Herald, Sanford, Fl.

TONIGHT'S TV

I--WEDNESDAY

(R)
(S)EN0S
(1)0 THE GREATEST AMERICAN
HERO The mother of one of
Ralph's students gets herself
Involved In an espionage operation
and Ralph has to get her out.
(35) THE ROCKFORD FILES
(10) HALL OF FAME "Dear
Liar" The legendary 40-year correspondence btween playwright
George Bernard Shea, and British
actress Mrs Patrick Campbell Is
brought to television In a two-act

rm

EVENING

8:00

Cable Ch.

0
0

8

fl(A)(SiO)ONEWS
) (10) irs EVERYSOOY'S BUSt.
HEM
0 (1 7) CAROL BURNETT AND

FRIENDS

8:30'
O(SN$CNEWS
NtWD
5
ABC NEWS
(D
5)SANF0RO AND SON
10) Ire EVERYBODY'S BUM.
NESS
@(17) BOB NEWHAR'T

T63

Independent
Orlando

(3) 0 MORNING WITH CHARLES
KURALT
(7)0 0000 MORNING AMERICA
(! (35) BUGS BUNNY
JD (10) TODAY IN THE LEGISLA-

Independent
Atlanta, Ga.

12(17)FUNTiME

Orlando Public
Broadcasting System

0(J) TODAY IN FLORIDA
(1)00000 MORNING FLORIDA

Cable Ch.

(35)
(1 7)

(ABC) Orlando
(CBS) Orlando
(NBC) Daytona Beach
Orlando

(10)

TURE

7:25

In addition to the channels listed, cableviSIon subscribers may tune in to independent channel 44,
St. Petersburg by tuning to channel S tuning to channel 13, which carries sports and the Christian
Broadcasting Network (CIN).

Ii.ts..ai...•h,,... .., l_—_ &amp;&amp;Ie..
-•
fl4Cfl*Jfl
. 1V'U!IV
117
fliflJ.

Katherine Cornell Theater on the
campus of the State University of
New York at Buffalo.

wider star.

9 (I 7) NIGHT GALLERY

8:30
(17) BASEBALL Atlanta
Ziaves at Houston Astros

- 7;00

10:00
0 (4) QUINCY Sam proves that a
suspected rapist can't be guilty
because his Ieeth marks don't
match those left In the victim (fl)
0 VEGAS While searching for
the p.op'e who killed a man during
a robbery, Dan Stumbles across
casino skimming operation, black$.
mail and attempted extortion
(IJ) (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
) (10) THEY TELL IT FOR THE
TRUTH: OZARK STORYTELUNG
John Altman's documentary
explores the little-known folk Culture 01 the Ozark mountains of
southern Missouri and northern
Arkansas

9:00
(4) DIFF'RENT STROKES
Arnold develops a strong .tIech.
mont to the
eq. who reminds him of his own late
'op'4, (R)
(5) 0 liivla "We're Fighting
Back" (Pr.m.e) Kevin Mahan,
Paul McCran.. A group of Now
York City youths band together "I
tight crime In their neighborhood
(7) 0 ALOHA PARADISE Sydney
rekindles an old love, Elliot and
Dianne band together to Jazz up

7:30
(41 TIC TAC DOUGH
pya,Ui0
FAMILY FEW
5) RHOOA
10) DICK CAVET Guest
Jane Lapotiar•
()l)(17)SANF0RD AND SON

(jØ

their plain exteriors and Everett
attracts a beautiful woman with his
nonexistent wealth,
STREETS OF wi FRAN.

2:20

(4) REAL PEOPLE Featured:

U (4) (5) 0 (1) 0 (11 (1 7)
NEWS
((35)BENNY HILl.
—
TODAY IN THE LEOISLA-

of Mrs. Garrett's charges take a
)oyrlde In a stolen van and wind up
attMpol,c.statlon (Part 1)(R)
0 (10) MARK RUSSELL
America's madcap marksman per.
forms bye from the stane of the

Sarah Purcell takes part In a roller
derby; a seil.stylId gatooeogisl; a
crowing contest for roosters; a
female window cleaner and repairman at the Empire State Building,

(4) TODAY IN FLORIDA
S 0 THE LAW AND YOU (MON)
$ . 0 SPECTRUM (TUE)
5ifl BLACK AWARENESS (WED)
5; 0 THIRTY MINUTES (THU)
5)0 HEALTH FIELD (FRI)
SUNRISE
111(35) JIM BAKKER
it 17) HOLLYWOOD REPORT

MORNING
5:00
(1) 0 MARCUS WELBY, M.D.
(TUE.FRI)
01;(17) MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE
(WED)

8:45
f)(10) A.M. WEATHER

5:05
(I 7) RAT PATROL (TUE)
5:30
(5)0 SUNRISE SEMESTER
11 71UNTOUCHABLES (THU)
(12)(17)
RAT PATROL (FRI)
1112)

7:00
(4) TODAY

loT 'N' CARl VI 1' Tm

hu I rn, WrIr,ht

- -

.

.

()j) (35) FRED FUNTSTONE AND
FRIENDS
U) (10) PACIFIC BRIDGES
2j (17) MY THREE SONS

'

-

I

-

12:15

0(4) HOUR MAGAZINE
($30 DONAHUE

CD (10) ALL ABOUT YOU (NON)
a) (10) MATH RELATIONSHIPS B

(7)0 MOVIE

(TUE. FRI)
a) (10) LETTER PEOPLE I (W ED)
(10) MATH PATROL II (THU)

CD

12:30
14) NEWS
(Si 0 SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
Il 0 RYAN'S HOPE

(11) (35) ANDY GRIFFITH
11)2) ( I 7) GREEN ACRES

((35) GLENN ARNETTE

10:00
0(4) BULLSEYE
(330 RICHARD SIMMONS
ID
(11) (35) ILOVE LUCY
(10) COVER TO COVER (NON)
ED (10) MATH PATROL II (TUE.

a) (I 0) ELECTRIC COMPANY

1:00
J) (4) DAYS OF OUR LIVES
(5) 0 THE YOUNG AND THE
RESTLESS
(7)0 ALL MY CHILDREN
a) (10) LETTER PEOPLE (MON)
ED 10 ALL ABOUT YOU (WED)
CD 10 MATH PATROL Ill (THU)
CD 10 COVER TO COVER I(FRI)
n 1 17 MOVIE

1:15

I

CD 10 LETTER PEOPLE II (MON)
CD 10 BOOKBIRD('TUE)
CD 10 STORYBOUNO (WED, FF11)
CD 10) MATH RELATIONSHIPS B
(THU)

THU)
a) (10) LETTER PEOPLE 11(WED)
U)(10)MATH PATROL III(FRI)

10:30

1:30

O (4) BLOCKBUSTERS
(5) . ALICE(R)
(!ji( 5)D$CKVANDYKE
a) (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY
(MOW, TUE)
G) (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

2:30
a)(10) DICK CAVETT

(NON)

1j (I 7) WHAT IN THE WORLD?

3:00
8(4) TEXAS
(5)0 GUIDING LIGHT
(7) 0 GENERAL HOSPITAL
1J135) THE FLINTSTONES
w io) POSTSCRIPTS
(13) (17) FUNTINE
Ii I 35 DAFFY DUCK

Joe Fnrros.
tea runs into trouble trying to get a
rapist-murderer convicted

)2: 17 SPACE GIANTS

( 4'0 MOVIE (MON. WED-FBI)
(1) SPECIAL TREAT (TUE)
(S) 0 JOHN DAVIDSON
(7) 0 UERV GRIFFIN (NON, TUE
THU, FRI)
17)0 ON THE GO (WED)
iii) 35WOODY WOODPECKER
CD 10 SESAME STREET
11 17 THE FLINTSTONE

4:30

(79 0 AFTERSCHOOL SPECIAL
(WED)
;iI1 (35) TOM AND JERRY
113) ( 17) THE BRADY BUNCH
5:00

(314) SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN
(TUE)
tIi 1351 I DREAM OF JEANNIE
CD 10 MISTER ROGERS(R)
3) 17 ILOVE LUCY

5:30
(S.) 0 MASH
(7)0 NEWS

it U, (35) WONDER WOMAN

El) (10) 3-2.1 CONTACT (R) p

(NON)

CD (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY
(TUE. WED)
CD (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

(THU. FRI)
,12,- (17) BEVERLY HIt,LB1LLIE3

£

Present

I

—

SI

Fun, Prizes,
Entertainment,
.meet the
Easter Bunny
- in person.

831.4405

AREA REPRESEPilA TIVE FOR APiACHE PROSTHESiS

ACCEPTING MOST DENTAL PROGRAMS &amp;
DENTAL INSURANCE

IN PRIVACY OF MY HOME
HOURS 8 A.M. . 9 P.M. Closed Sunday

C

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4*

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ours:
H Mon.-Fri.
$a.m..Sp.m.
Sat. &amp; Evenings
By Appointment

-

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At,.,. Tb. lw..i!.. TI. AIM Iiq..... 5,...
$1000 R,4d,n,1 I. $501) 1A.oh Ti,,. ( .,d

-

Central

Saturday

Florida

f(____

Zoo's

or more

-

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[the Easter bunnyl
-

323-6471

p

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J

in". ix us

''°- It

-

'4

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Great Dog

999 lb.

Franks
Hamburger

WEDNESDAY
IS CHICKEN DAY

obligation.

Most Insurances Accepted

04~ I

Baking Hens 594

Pork
Neckbones

USDA

$2119b.

Sirloin Steak

.

Pig Feet or Tails
4 lbs 1
-

Dutch Holland

99

$1

12 ox.

SMOKED

Generic

t011

Bath Tissue 4

Muffin Mix 4 8pSk0,.I
Southern Roll
Margarine

796

100

$

Sot

Patties

patties

3 lb,

Bananas
Celery
Cabbage

Picnic 1
Shoulder R-C

29

""

Ice Cream

Jiffy Corn

Schlitz Beer
6 pack
cans
warm

'ye

it

99C

296

'l9

U.S. No. 1 White

6-8 lb. avg,
WHOLE
OR

79dt

Cola 5

$'%'l9

5

Potatoes

plus
$' 29
deposit
I

pIg,

Lee Orange,
T.
Punch, Lemon, Lime

Fruit Drinks

,99c

Gal.99c
Pillsbury

Trend
Detergent

Buttermilk

Biscuits

Qualityl Service
oo
:: 4 o. $i
$1I 19 box
I
SavIngsl
1100 West 13th St., Sanford

II

~

IOWA
MEATS

we sell only
Choice

U.S.D.A.

Naturally Aged
Western Beef
OLD FASHION BUTCHER SHOP SERVICE &amp; QUALITY
Fully Cooked
ht:4

"I'm thrilled about the place.
But I won't go back."

dipped 'I

H.ts' ?.futbi,s
U.. nqr .Sn,,t,t to. Boutique
Busy Malhis is a charming lady.
Poised, radiant and confident.
She weighs 113 graceful pounds and
wears a size 7. Just a short time ago.
Bitsy wore a sIze 12 and weighed 133
pounds. She also had 30 extra unwanted
inches.
II was lull about one month ago that
Busy discovered European Weight Loss
Clinics, and our unique program staffed
by experienced nutrition counselors and
trained nurses.
We show you how to loseweight and
the secret of keeping II off. . . without
gIi,imicks
without (ad diets. - with.
out special foods . . . without strenuous
esercises,

11

Two whitefish fillets, our famous chips,
hushpuppies and coleslaw.
A great value from a great little seafood restaurant.
Available at all participating Orlando
and Sanford area Arthur Treacher's.

FAMOUS RECIPE'S REGULAR DINNER

3 pieces honey-dipped fried chicken, mash
potatoes and gravy, colt slaw and 2 hot butter

tastin' biscuits. Honey upon request.

-

c .

-

0-

01

.

ALL FOR ONLY
VALUE $2.50

—

Good All Day Wednesday

[
PSI

1

1

AM";%we

'00

FRIED CHICKEN

OPEN 10:30 am. - 10 p.m. Except Fri 1 Sat. Closing 10:30 P.M.
1509 French Ave.
61 N. Hwy. 17.92
(Hwy. 17.92)
Casselloirry
Sanford

.

-

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-

-

' + '
-

-

p

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-

--

— —

-

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SEAFOOD
/

Try ArthurTreacher's

Call European Wright Loss Clinic to.
day, and set up a free weight loss con.
sullalion. You'll see why we lose more
satisfied customers everyday.
Like Billy.

EUROPIdN

'ireacnczt

ThjArthurTreacher's

"IT'S HONEY DIPPED"

'
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lb.

*1

;;

GOLD Kiss '

-

As You Are

shown above.
While we are accepting new patients, no one need feel any

Hums
r-

'

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SWIA~"L-S
,I!

$119

S-lb.

"1'

ERHUIff

323-8185

/.-Q

Pork Chops

'•

Join us for a traditional Easter Egg Hunt! Saturday, April 18,
10+00. 12:00 until all eggs are found. 3 age groups: limit 5 eggs
per child; all eggs will be numbered and prizes (theater passes,
electronic games, ice cream treats,
sub sandwiches) will be awarded.
Regular admission price includes
V'
admis'on to the zoo and Egg Hunt.
Enl,ertainmenl' Fun!

323-8174

FOOD STAMPS WELCOME

J

EGG

or

ASSORTED

'

APRIL 18

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Girl Scouts Honor
Adult Volunteers

3 BLOCKS NORTH OF DOGTRACK RD.
os HIGHwA%S 17 .4t1
box ION flu sin BRIE HOtW

o~

10

-

WILLIAM V.TOOTLE
William V. Tootle, son of Mr. and
Mrs. William A. Tootle of 1202
Thomas Circle, Casselberry, has
been promoted in the U.S. Air
Forceto the rank of senior airman.
Tootle is a fuel specialist at
Huriburt Field, Fla.

-

-

/

-'

Surprise: 'Come

Future
IflU''t)L At)WCI ON A11. Af'I'AIHS
LIFE .LOVE • MARRIAGE • BUSINESS
BEEN IN BU NESS FOR 50 YEARS

vehicle repair course at Chanute L.
Air Force Base, III.
It
Graduates of the course learned
to service and repair general
purpose vehicles used by the Air
Force, and earned credits toward
an associate degree in applied
science through the Community
College of the Air Force.
Ayers will now serve at Indian
prings Auxiliary Airfield, Nev.

li-s VERY natural-nipple. areola, aeght. sape+ and c:I:r lli ; - n =
are nearing a v0sthesis its totally different near in tf(ultr or seer
bras No pociet needed Available in all sizes Won't slip or press ci s:
No heal build up Won't absorb eater Fantastic for spois

-

-

4:00

CART) . CRYSTAL BALI ULAl)I(,
—

COMPLITELY REALISTIC BREAST PROSTHESIS

I

.
S** .

1:45

-

After Mastectomy

-

so

a) (10) MATH RELATIONSHIPS B
(MOW)

PALM

-

0

a) 10 OVEREASY

MADAME KATHERINE

(DO POLICE STORY

103 West Ohio Avttue, Detind 904-736-1646
Monday-Saturday. 10 AM SPY

-

Co
a) 10 MATH PATROL II (WED)
10 INSIDE/OUT (THU)
a) 10 ALL ABOUT YOU (FRI)

11:00
0(4) WHEEL OF FORTUNE
(3)0 THE PRICE IS RIGHT

interested in them, as most
DEAR ABBY: I'm
were from friends and
courious. flow many hun.
relatives I knew before they
dreds of letters have you
were
born. Some were from
.
Aw
Dear
.
received from gigolos
very
distinguished people
k.
protesting your hurting th eir ^I,.,
whose literary style was quite
_r#I_1l\
Abby wonderful.
business by telling folks that
gigolos do not provide sexual
GEORGE FROM GEORGIA
services?
DEAR GEORGE: If your
%.
/,
FRED M. IN HONOLULU
children aren't interested in
DEAR FRED: None so far. and-so calling" are the ones these Idlers, perhaps their
But I've heard from plenty of who irk me!
children or grandchildren will
readers whn hastened to
IRKED N PALO ALTO one day appreciate them. I(
::
advls' me that I as wrong.
DEAR IRKED: Let's hear burn such letters is to destroy
• l.%
•. '• •
Read on:
.
It from the East Coast:
a part of history. Offer them
:.•
.
DEAR MS. VAN BUREN: I
• •
DEAR ABBY: IRKED IN first to someone in your
.•
was amazed to read your EDEN, N.C., complained family. If you have no takers,
• •
. . •
reply to JUST WONDERING, about
_•$•%sI••
people who let their give them to any interested
.,,•t
.
the 15-year-old girl who asked
/
••
th e phone friend.
•,
.- ,-why a gigolo wasn't con- youngsters
answer
'' tll they
say is, "Who is
sidered the same as a hooker. this?"
.1 I
.
,:
In fact, they are quite
CONFIDENTIAL. TO J. IN
When that happens to me, I
ø ••'liii, ...
similar. The Random House always say, "This is Santa WACO,
TEXAS:
To
Dictionary of the English Claus!"
paraphrase
an
old
J'ewish
1111t.
,.
i
I
That always brings a saying, "From constantly
Language describes a gigolo
Herald Photo by Tom Vincent
as follows:
grownup to the phone quickly rubbing up against a rich
111) a man living off the with plenty of commotion,
man, a poor man will get a
WIDOW AWARDED It's not everyday that a pretty lady receives a
"Man 01 The Year" award. But Vincent Butler, earnings or gifts of a woman,
orro IN CLIFTON, N.J. hole In his sleeve."
DEAR AI3IW: What is your
'MAN OF YEAR'
president of the Lake Mary Chamber of COIn- esp. a younger man supported
Do you have questions
by
an
older
woman
in
return
opinion
of a person who helps
merce makes this presentation to Mrs. Shirley
for his sexual attention and it man cheat on his wife by about sex, love, drugs and the
ltipp in honor of her late husband, Ronald K. Ripp companionship; 2) a male
carrying messages and acting pain of growing up? Get
Sr. Mr. Kipp, a retired fire department lieutenant
professional dancing partner as a go-between for a couple Abby's new booklet: "What
Eve ry Teen-ager Ought to
from the New Orleans area, is the immediate past or escort."
of back-street lovers?
DISGUSTED Know." Send $2 and a long,
While a gigolo might
president of the Lake Mary CC. In making the
stamped 128 cents), selfposthumous award Butler said Mr. Ripp earned defined as the latter, as you
DEAR DISGUSTED: lie addressed envelope to: Abby,
in
the
informed
JUST
WONthe award for his "outstanding work
former for she) probably looks upon Teen Booklet, 132 Lanky
DERING,
the
chamber of commerce. He was a very dedicated
definition is far more It as doing a friend a favor. Drive, Beverly Hills, Calif.
man for the chamber and we all appreciate Willit
prevalent. I feel that a 15- I'm reminded of something 90212.
he (lid."
year-old should be told the my father used to say:
entire definition, as I believe "Never look For an honest flfflhIIliiflhiIIiuhiiIIilIUllffiWtD
that a gigolo is just another person to help you with a
CPrescz1 bed
name for a male prostitute. crooked deal."
I
C ding
INFORMED IN HOUSTON
DEAR ABBY: What should
DEAR ABBY: You missed
By MEDCO
a uniquely different social it with IRKED, who is irked a man of 87 do with a
About 7 a.m. Saturday, "come as you are" coffee.
When planning the social from others held each month when a child answers the collection of interesting old
members of the Social
phone and keeps saying, letters? I had over 1,000 until The Harvard Medical School
August (luring the year.
last
Committee of Xi Theta calendar
today, when I burned over 100. Health Letter recently
In
the
fun-filled
April
Fool's
"Who
is this?"
Epsilon Chapter of Beta something appropriate for an
People who place calls and I felt like a murderer, but reported on several studies
Sigma Phi in two teams of 2 April Fool's theme seemed in mood members joined others
which have indicated a
began ringing door bells of order, according to Ruth in a variety of early morning (to not have the sense or storage space is limited,
My
children
would
not
be
potentially
dangerous link
their sisters to gather for a Gaines, and the desire to plan attire, for chatter, laughs, and courtesy to say "This is sobetween alcohol ingestion
a buffet of breakfast rolls,
and the paüi and feverorange juice and coffee at the
red ucing agent COnlIlionly
Winter Springs home of
.1
DON'T GAMBLE
used in popular aspirin
Norma Wood.
//1
A1
0285
SS1
with your insurance!
substitutes. That agent, aceMs. Early Morning Xi
—CALLtaminophen, and alcohol ap..
Theta Epsilon was crowned
parently produce a reaction
and presented a gift. The
TONY RUSS1
to each other within the liver
crown of gold foil and the gag
At its Annual Meeting on April 11, the Citrus Council of Girl which,
INSURANCE
to
according
gift a small book on ail,.
pearance. Members voted by Scouts honored three members by presenting them with the researchers,
has
the
RU
paper ballot nomination and a highest award given to adults in Girl Scouting.
potential of increasing
This award, the Thanks Badge, is given only for recognition possible hazardous sideV
three way tie was broken by
of the most outstanding service. It is used to honor adult
a second balloting,
Everyone had a fun time, members of the movement whose service has been so effects of the aspirin substi.
tute compound, Research
Mrs. Gaines said, and Un- significant that no other award would be appropriate.
consuming
Th is award requires approval of the council's volunteer suggests persons
derstood why the social
continuous
amounts
k - TION
EXA MI NA
committee, at the April 1 Board of Directors before presen ta tion. Receiving (lie award large or
:"
meeting, indicated the social were Harriet Bolin, DeLand; Doris McCormick, Winter Park; of alcohol should be cautious
''i ".
to restrict the intake of
Dangsr Signals of
printed in the Yearbook for and Martha Grimes, New Smyrna Beach.
..
Harriet Bolin is currently an adult Training Coordinator for aspirin substitutes con- Plnch.d N.rVss
April 11, 7 p.m. had been
01
I, Headaches. Dizziness. Loss .1 Sleep
Volusia-Flagler
counties and a member of th e DeLand Service taming acetaminopphen.
postponed "until probably
11
Check with your doctor as to
2. Neck Pain. Tight Muscles
Team.
sometime in May".
ft'\
3. Pin Down Arms. Shoulder Pain
Doris
McCormick
Is
presently
serving
her
second
term
as
a how much restilction is
Those attend in g were social
#
4. Numbness In Hinds or hit
,/ 1,ôi.p,4 t
chairman
Sherry
Taack,
member
of
the
council's
Board
of
Directors
and
chairing
the
advisable.
PaIn between the Shoulders
"
t Pa i nful JclnIs. Nervousness
social committee members Al Girl Scout committee working wi th the Lady Citrus Golf
I
MEDCO DRUGS
7. Lower lack Pain. Hip Pain. Pain Down Legs
Kurtz, Ruth Gaines, Norma Tournament.
17.92 AT 27th ST.
currently
serving
as
the
council's
First
Why FREE? Thousands of area residents have spine
Martha Grimes is
Wood, members: Tina
SANFORD
related problems which usually respond to chiropractic
Bojanowski, Mary Johnson, Vice-President and is the leader of a Cadette troop in New
care.
Smyrna Beach.
Linda
Dunn,
Diane
Gaul,
uaiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiisiiliillillllllLuI
This is our way of encouraging you to find out if you have a
Also awarded at this meeting were appreciation pins to
Vicki Hall, Linda Morris,
problem that could be helped by chiropractic care. it is
Penny Cunningham, Orlando, and Karen Helm, Cocoa.
Becky Molenaar and Ginny
also our way of acquainting you with our staff and
Receiving engraved plaques for service were Sidney
facilities.
flagan. Only three members
Examination includes a minimum of 10 standard tests for
Easterling, College Park, and Diane Young, Melbourne.
ioiled the social.
evaluating the spine and a contour analysis photo as
f
~&amp;.,

L7
,-LEDIARD'S UNIFORMS =, 0

.:

',

(II)(35) MOVIE
a) (10) MATH RELATIONSHIPS A

(WEDBI)

1:10

a)(10) THE NEW VOICE (FRI)

3:30

a) 10 INSIDE/OUT(UON)
EL) 10 ALL ABOUT YOU (TUE)
CD 10 MATH RELATIONSHIPS A
(WED. FBI)
a)(10)BOOKBIRD('THU)
fl2. (17) FREEMAN REPORTS

9:00

LONOW000

I

1) (4) CARD SHARKS
($10(1 0 NEWS

173 0 0000 MORNING AMERICA

IN THE SERVICE

-

AFTERNOON
12:00

10:15

.

I

8:25

a) (I 0) STORYBOUND (NON)
a) (10) LETTER PEOPLE I (TUE.

12:30
U (4) TOMORROW Guests: sing.
er Michael Murphy; author Stephen
King; stock market analyst Joe
Granville.

-

-

21

a) 10 VILLAALEORE(R)
()) 17 I DREAM OF JEANNIE

Past

-

.

10 MATH PATROL II(WED)
10 LETTER PEOPLE II (FRI)

TIONSHIPS (WED)
OD ( 10) ALL ABOUT YOU (THU)
IZ(17)MOVIE

(DO LOVE BOAT "Cindy" Melts.
sa Sue Anderson, Carolyn Jones;
"Play By Play" Christopher George.
Lynda Day George; "What's A
Brother For?" Patrick Wayne. Tom
Halllck, (6)
135) JIM BARKER
(12 17 MOVIE "On Any Sunday"
(1971) Documentary. Steve
McOueen, Meal Lawwiti

WAYNE M. DUKE
Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Wayne
M. Duke, son of Mr. and Mrs. John
Duke of 311 E. Crystal Drive,
AMALIACHALIOTIS
Airman Amelia Chaliotis, Sanford, recently received a
daughter of Jean D.11utrl of 1626 parachutist badge upon corn
Hastings Court, Casselberry, has pietion of the three-week airborne
graduated from the U.S. Air Force course the first week of training,
electrical power production students underwent a rigorous
specialist course at Sheppard Air physical training program and
received instruction in the theory
Force Base, Texas.
Graduates of the course learning of parachuting. The second week
how to operate and maintain they received practical training by
electrical power generating(umping from 34-foot and 250 foot
equipment, and earned credits towers. The final week included
toward an associate degree in five staticline parachute lumps.
applied science through the
, RONALD It,. tPP, JR.
Community College of the Air
"I run.e aicix 39T. K 411 K.
Force.
Chaliotis will now serve at Ripp Jr., son of Shirley M. R ipp of
270 Almyra Drive, Lake Mary, has
Hancock Field, N.Y.
arrived for duty at Hickam Air
Force Base, Hawaii.
CYNTHIA L.KOLLI
Ripp,a personnel specialist, was
Airman Cynthia L. Kolle,
daughter of retired Air Force previously assigned in Malatya,
Master Sgt. and Mrs. Gerald L. Turkey.
KoIle of 775 Celery Circle W.,
Oviedo, has been assigned to
JOSEPH VECCHIOJR.
Chanute Air Force Base, III., after
Army Pvt. Joseph Vecchio Jr.,
Raymond L. Whitage &amp; wf
completing Air Force basic son of Joseph Vecchio Sr. 01374
Bonnie to Daniel R. Patton &amp; wf
training,
Jefferson Drive, Casselberry, has
Aileen, LI 3. 611 H, Summerset
During the six weeks at completed basic training al Fort
North Sec. 2 $39,100
Lackland Air Force Base, Texas, Jackson, S.C.
Earle M, Oakley lwfMane$tefo
the airman studied the Air Force.
During the training, students
Darwin A. Shea I WI Sandra L.,
mission, orgsnizationand customs
instruction in drill and
Lot 20 1 E½ of it, Edgwood and received special training in receive
ceremonies,
weapons, map
Manor $32,300
human relations,
reading tactics, military courtesy,
Fl. Resid. Comm. to Eugene A.In addition, airmen who com
military justice, first aid, and
Vacanli &amp; wf Florence I., Lot 47,
pletit basic training earn credits
Army history and traditions.
The Highlands Sec. 6. lit Rapt.
toward an associate degree in
TERRY W.DAHLBERO
$15,500
applied science through the
Pvt. Terry W. Dahlberg, son of
Fl. Resid. Comm., Inc. to Mary
Community College of the Air
Chuck Dahlberg of 12007 Student
K. Meehan I Dorothy A. Yelle, Lot
Force.
The airman will now receive Drive, Orlando, and Darlene
23, The Highlands, Sec. Six, lit
Repi, $33,300
specialized instruction In the Dahlberg of Oviedo, Fla., recently
completed One Station Unit
aircraft maintenance field,
Fl, Resid. Comm., Inc. to Mark
Training (OSUT) at the U.S. Army
S. Kleibl I wf Janice E., Lot
Infantry School, Fort Banning, Ga.
PHILLIP M. BENNETT
Tibiron Cove $39,500
OSUT is a 11.week period which
Sgt. Phillip M. Bennett, so.
Fl, Resid. Comm., Inc. to Llrid., Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Bennett combines basic combat training
Q. Herigodt. gdn. for Roseanne of 1200 Angile$ Road, DeBary, has and advanced individual training.
Roberts, Lot 44, The Highlands arrived for duty at Fort Lewis,
The training included weapons
Sec. Six First RepI. $3$
qualifications, squad tactics,
Wash.
Fl. Resid. Comm., Inc. to george
Bennett, an engineir mechanic, patrolling, tancimine warfare, field
L. Lugo I WI Hilda, Lot 31, Tlberon
we; previously assigned at South communications and combat
Cove, $10400
operations. This qualifies the
Korea.
Jim Hughes, Inc. to Frank
soldier as a light-weapons in.
Miller &amp; wf Gloria A., Lot 14$,
fantryman and as an indirect fire
Winter Springs Un. 3, $111,000
crewman.
BILLY 0. DAVIS
Soldiers were taught to perform
$01-Dale Bldrs., Inc. to Arthur P.
Staff Sgt. Billy 0. Davis, whose
any of the duties in a rifle or
McDonald &amp;wf Rosemary D., Lot
wife, Linda, isthedaughtecof T .N.
mortar squad.
203. Winter Springs Un. 3, 5133,100 Stafford of Route 2, Sanford, has
.4enuetF+ C3:rov3&amp;'wtE1i,
compIpatnvArmy wheeled and
MARGA R. CLIFTON
S. to Manuel A. Tor Toro I WI tracked tank. automotive equip.
Airman Margo R. Clillon,
Dora C., Lot 326, Spring Oaks, Un.
mont non-commissioned officer
Navy Senior Chief
3. $41.000
(NCO) advanced course at daughter of
RCA to Randall A. Almond I WI Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md. Petty Officer and Mrs. Gary R.
Karen I... Lot it, Hidden Lake Ph. replace wheeled and tracked tank. Gontermanof 519 Cherokee Circle,
Sanford, has been assigned to
II, Un. I, 514.100
automotive equipment.
Sheppard Air Force Base, Texas,
Students learn to adjust
Bel.Alr. Homes, Inc. to Maril
maintain the mechanical, Alec- after completing Air Force basic
cpiowanski, *91., Lot flu, Bel Aire
trice, air-hydraulic systems il training.
Hills, Un,, 3 $30,000
During the six weeks at
other major components and
FRC Landings Assoc. to Frank
assemblies of wheeled and tracked Lackland Air Force Base, Texas,
Cause Jr I Rochelle Byrne, both
the airman studied the Air Force
vehicles.
igl., Lot 43, The Landings, $11 500
The also perform maintenance mission, organization and customs
Springs Landing Venture to operations n field environmen t. and received special training in
Joseph Kantor I wf MafIa Lot Il.
The advanced course is part of human relations.
Springs Landing, Un Two, 11135,00
in addition, airmen who corn
the continuing education ladder to
Dorothy C. Nicholas, wid., to
keep mid-career NCO$ up-to-date plete basic training earn Credits
toward an associate degree in
Robert A. Corneal, Lot 79, 61k H,
in their specialties,
applied science through the
Longwood Park, $4,900.
Community College of the Air
RICKY LAYERS
Jack W. Cruckshank I wf
Air Force Sgt. Ricky L. Ayers, Force.
Katheleen E. to C. R. GuckinThe airman will now receive
son of Mrs. W.G. McCreless of 209
berger 1 WI Sandra L., Commence
Bamboo Drive, Sanford, his specialized instruction in the ac
at PIE car. of N½ of NW¼ of SW¼
counting and finance field.
graduated from the U.S. Air Force
of Sec. 79 2030 etc. $15,500

,

(TUE. THU)

(B 35 POPE_YE

FBI)
a) (10) MATHEMATICAL RELA-

U (4) TONIGHT Host Johnny
Carson Guests- Dsahann Carroll.
Maureen Murphy.
(5) 0 NBA BASKETBALL Playoff
game
DQ ABC NEWS NIGHTUNE
Qj) (35) WANTEft DEAD OR ALIVE

(QCD) Gary L. Bradford &amp; wf
Pamela L to Gary L. Bradford,
from SE cor. of E½ of 534 of
31.20.32 etc. i100
Robert S. West, Jr. I wf Patricia
to Peter J. Mariano I WI Kathleen
Mariano, Lot 35, Markham Place,
$34000
(QCD) Donna H. McCotter to
Crystal C. Lewis, P4 705.61' of W
110' of E 359.7' of Lot A, Bik I,
Amended Plat of 61k 1, Rest
Haven on Lake Harney of at, 3
parcels $00
Crystal C. Lewis to Donna H.
McCotter, Commence pt intersec
line of E line of Lot A, BIk 1 Rest
Haven on Lake Harney, 2 parcels
$100

MICHAEL D. CHIN
Airman Michael D. Chin,
nephew of Iris Lee of 313 Brittany
Circle, Casselberry, has been
assigned to Chanute Air Force
Base, ill., after completing Air
Force basic training,
During the six weeks at
Lackland Air Force Base, Texas,
the airman studied the Air Force
mission, organization and customs
and received special training in
human relations.
In addition, airmen who corn
pietor basic training earn credits
toward an associate degree in
applied science through the
Community College of the Air
Force.
The airman will now receive
specialized instruction in the
aircraft maintenance field.

ED (10) MATH PATROL Ill (NON)

9:30

6:55
(7) 00000 MORNING FLORIDA

2:00
(3(4; ANOTHER WORLD
51 0 AS THE WORLD TURNS
(lID ONE LIFE TO LIVE
fj) (I 0) FOOTSTEPS (NON, WED)
a) (10) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
(TUE. THU)

2:50

ED (10) MATH RELATIONSHIPS A

4V 1351 OOMER PYLE
ED 10 SESAME_STREET9
(3) 17 HAZEL

6:30
)5) 0 ED ALLEN

a)jlO) LETTER PEOPLE I(FRI)

11:45

(II) (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER

8:30

12:00

+

7:30

0 (4) TODAY
(7)0 GOOD MORNING AMERICA

(4) TODAY

8:00

11:30

REALTY TRANSFERS
J. D. Cassady to J. 0. Cassady,
Randall 0 &amp; WI Julie Roger A. &amp;
WI Pamela, James 0. 1 Sandra C.
Thompson I Robert V. hb, 5½ of
NE 1/4 of SE','1 of NE'!4 of Sec 2220,
20, 5 acres $100
Barbara Jean Jackson to Effie
P. Rose, wid,, Lots 22231 24, 2nd
addn Parkview $500
(QCD) Patricia Pratt (form,
Johnson) 1. Helene M. Pratt to
Marie Pratt I. Helene Meyers
Pratt it. ten Lot I, 61k I, 81k J,
Fosmoor, Un. Two $100.
Edward A. Gregorio &amp; WI Vera
to Patrick J. McGroarty I wf
Carole P., Lot 3, 611 B. Spring
Lake Hills, $160,000
Clare A. Balmer &amp; wf Lilliam to
Austam International Inc., Lots 10
1. Ii, 611 A, Pine View, $6$,000
Ameeri BalawI, Sgt. to Mohamed
A. Sara, Lots $ 1 9, 61k 53,
Sanlando The Suburb Beautiful,
Altamonte Sec. $134,000
Magnolia Svc. Corp to Blue
Ribbon Bldrs., Inc. Lot 35, Wekiva
Club Ests,, Sec. S. $20,000
(QCD) George M. Einsig Jr. to
Eva Mae Einsig, Lot 19, 61k 27,
Suburban Homes $100
Magnolia Svc. Corp., to Ron
Meyer Constr. Co., Lot 52, Wekiva
Club Ests., Sec. S. $31,000
Reed Terry to Lawrence D.
Kelley (rnarr.) Lots S &amp; I 51k C,
Seminole Heights, $100
Lewfield Apts., Inc. to Tina A.
Gibbons, Un. 062517, C.darwood
Village Condo, I, $60,400,
James C. Gamble I WI Eydle J.
to John J. Hoisting, iii Iwf Anne
K., Lot 7, Wefriva Hills, Sec. Six,
$901400
Sabal Point Porp Inc., to Ron
Meyer Constr, Co,, Lot 70, Sugar
Ridge at Sabot Point, $33,900
Alma Jean Judd &amp; hb Bilboy 0.'
to Thomas A. Downs &amp; WI Bernice
A., Lot S. 61k F, Glen Arden
Heights, First Add., $59,900
Sidney A. Young 1. WI Patricia
A.to Allan P. Chin IwfRosemarie
Ann, Portion of Lot 36, Wekiva
Hilts, Sec. 3, 1 Part of Lot 37,
$104,000
F. Scott Kenneth 1 WI Connie to
Gerald D. Patterson I wf Judith
I,.,, Lot 29, 61k 3, North Orlando,
2nd Addn,, $12,900
Dorthy A. Loental, wid., to
Clpude W. Bates &amp; WI Kathleen.,
Lot S 81k 12, repl. part of Townsite
of North Chuluota, $43,000'
Terrence M. Hamilton I vat
Laura &amp; Mabel H., sgl. T. to
Terrence M. Hamilton &amp; wf Laura
W., Lot 39,, Granada South, $21,900
(QCD) David F. Small to Bonnie
P. Small, part of Lot 20, Map of
Lotts Farms, $100
Imogrne G. Gilbert &amp; hb Fred to
Malcolm B..Goslee&amp;wf Lynne A.,
Lot 4, 81k A, River Run, Sec. Two,
su,00

-

8 (J) TODAY IN FLORIDA
(1)00000 MORNING FLORIDA

5:55
(4) DAILY DEVOTIONAL
IT) 0 DAILY WORD

2:50
(7) 0 MOVIE Strike Up The
Band" (61W) (1940) Judy Oarland,
Mickey Rooney.

10:30
0 (35) AMERICAN LIFESTYLE

9:30
0 (4) THE FACTS OF LIFE Some

5:45
2) (I 7) WORLD AT LARGE (MON)

(13 0 NEWS

11:00

8:00

I2)(17) WORLD AT LARGE (TUE)

I

11:30

(5)0 CAPTAIN KANGAROO

2:00
U (4) DAILY DEVOTIONAL
@ (17) BASEBALL Atlanta
Braves at Houston Astros

ED (10) PADDINGTON BEAR
(MON)
CD 10 BEANSPROUTS(TUE)
a) 10 FREESTYLF.(WED. FRI)
CD 10 RAINBOW'S END (THU)
0(4) PASSWORD PLUS
CD 10 MATH PATROL II (NON)
CD 10 iNSIDE/OUT (TUE. FRI)
a) 10 COVER TO COVER (WED.
THU)

8:00

Edward Herrmann and Jane Alex.

U (4) NEWS
(5) 0 P.M. MAGAZINE An eacluSkye Swiss rejuvenation Clinic; a
front-line Navy lot pilot; Chef Tell
has hints on buying carrots; Beverly
Bassoon has some exercises to do
in bed; CathieMann looks at SP
coal effects in TV commercials.
(!) 0 JOKEWS WILD
5) BARNEY MILLER
10) MACNEIL I LFIIRER
REPORT
(17) ALL lN THE FAMILY

+

ulgoloberviceMore
Than Dance Partner

ED (10) INSIDE/OUT (WED)
a) (10) LETTER PEOPLE 11 (THU)

(7)0 LOVE BOAT (R)
(11) (3 5) MIKE DOUGlAS

Wednesday, April IS, 1981-38

WEIGHT LOSS CLINICS INC

I
-

All-You-Can-Eat / Special
SALAD BUFFET CHICKEN SANDWICH
only 1.69
/ only $1.19

Muke She best of your life
for the rest of your life.. Call today for a free
no.obligatiun consultation.
Monday-Friday 7:30a.m. tobp.m.

862.7999
VISA I MASTERCARD WELCOME

Springs Pla n 1402 Montgomery Road Longwood, Florida

$1 "

-

BONELESS
SMOKED HAMS

Whole Or

Young All White Most

TURKEY
BREASTS

-

U.S.D.A. Choice Rolled

SIRLOIN TIP or
RUMP ROASTS
Aged

U.S.D.A. Choice

EYE ROUND
ROASTS

Lb.

Half

$179

U.

n9
4

Lb.

169
Lb.

Our Own Homemade

BULK BREAKFAST
SAUSAGE

Lb.

Fresh Daily Lean

GROUND
CHUCK
-

09

$

$

89
Lb.

210$ S. FRENCH AVE. (17.9)
NEXT TO MR. C'S FRIED CHICKEN

PHONE ORDER AHEAD
Its Ready When You're Ready

3234528

P&amp;urAnft psi

S

&amp;A&amp;^

r.,

�p

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

1$-Hsb 'ntod

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given that I am
rngaged in businr4 at RI 4 801
1760. Hwy 17.92, LongwOod. FL
niso. Seminole County, Florida
under the fictitiouS name of
RENT . RITE INC. OBA
4.ONGW000 AUTO RANCH. .ind
that I intend to register said name
with the Clerk of the Circuit Court,
Sem,note County, Florida in a
cordancewithihe provisions of 11*
Fictitious Name Statutes, ToW.t:
Section $65 09 florida Statutes

CLASSIFIED ADS
Orlando

Seminole

-

CASTING
Need 300 extras for Major Film.
Call Debbie or Jim 10-4
33 19251.

TECHNICIAN TRAINEE for
cutting &amp; polishing optical
crystals. DelIcate &amp; precision
handwork. Apply In person
Quantum Technology 2620
Iroquois Ave., Sanford.

Winter Park

74 Hr. Babysitting in my Home I
Day or Night
Summer I
I
diScounts. 3729110

STOCKMbN- Experienced.
Needed. Food Barn. Inc. 25th
St. &amp; Park Ave.

-

-

29-Rooms

-

AAA EMPLOYMENT

SANFORD
Peas wkiy 8.
monthly rates Util nc Kit 500
Oak. Adults fit 7883
.
Romor Rent
Private Entrance
3?? 3853
-

-

-

Baa

--

Property

O,sner 3?? 0903 .itl
30 pm
r ,Intime liend
_______.
Think.ing about th,,t summer
vacat,fl Get a better car
through the (Ic1SSilid ads in
today's paper

--

I

-

-

COOKS

917

323.5176

-

6-Child Care

Landecephç

Accounting &amp;

Leesburg
when
them here?
can
$5.50
pints
Goes
Cabbage
11
$1.00
Purpose Potatoes
$1.69

)ff:)

61k Duplex. 2 fIR Ea. 539,900.

_____
______

_________

,

321.0759

-- -.

_______

-

Waterbed Shcel
KingancfQueensize.$79
83) 8104

.

3)70779
323 7613 327 5353

.__

I Sanford Vintage 6 Bdrm, 3 Bath
00 Lge. Lot, 355.000. Wm
Malicjowski REALTOR 322
7983. Eves 322 3387
_

________

I'l ST J

322.9283
24 HOUR'.
_____________________
In

.

.

------

__________________

.

--

''

-- -

'
..

-

HAL COL.BERT REALTYI0c
MULTIPLE LISTING RE ALTOR

323.7832
Eve', 322 0612
201 E. 2Mb St.
Quick Sale or Lease. Sanford
Aria, by owner. 2 Bdrm, 1
Bath, Kitchen equip., Washer.
Dryer, Nice quiet neighbor,
hood, 143,I00.3394510.
_____________________

,

_______-

Deltona Lake Front. 20 Acres on
paved Rd., $85,000 wm
Malinzowski Realtor 323 7983

_______________________
For Rent: 2 Bdrm, I Bath New
Duplex, Sanford area. All
appliances, Inside utility,
washer dryer hookup Avaifa
ble April 8 Call Orlando 656
114.4 or 295 6788 Evenings
_________________________-

________-

-

-

REALTORS'

Sanford's Sales Leader

-

ole sum
the
good
merlime it's a great time to
sell something with a
ClassIfied Ad. JuSI dial 322
..26bI .ol .831.9993....br ,a
quirk results

-

WE LIST AND SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN THE
SANFORD AREA
.........

.

"'

JUST LISTED 4 Bdrm, 2bafh,'2
story home in Oreamwotdt
Great room with FP, Ft rm &amp;
dining rm. overlook living rm
from balcony! Lots of extras!
Lovely landscapingt $49,900.

.___

JUST FOR VOW 2 Bdrm,2 bath
home with CHA, large paneled
Fl. rm with FP, split bdrm
plan, spacious master bdrm.
Patio a. morel $51,000.

----------

IV repo IV Zenith Sold orb
3493 15 Bal 3)8) 16 or ill 'no
•,t 339 8386
______________________________

to Buy
______________________________

----

'

Ford I tOira. 919, 7 Door AutO
Air. etc 9500 mi LikO new
831 8253

I

69 VW E xc Cond Custom n
tenor Many new 'teni', Great
Mileage' $1500 322 )al

-

.

'DAYTbN'A AUTO AUCTION
Hwy 92, 1 mite west of Speed
way, Daytona Beach. will holc
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Wednesday atOp rn. If':
theonly one in Florida You sd.
the reserved price. Cell 904.
2558311 for further detact..

68-Wanted

told, Silver, oins. Jewelry, non
ferrous metals, KOK0Mo Tool
Co 910 W 1st St 323 1100
OPEN SAT.9 AM 101 P
__________________________
Antiques--Oriental Rugs
Music Boxes - Slot Machines
Bridges Antiques
323 7801

-

-

76 cHEvy IMPALA .4 Dr Esc
Cond .5)900 or best otter 322
0537 between 58. 6 p.m
1980 Merc. Cougar XR 7. ttilly
loaded. Auto. AC AM FM.
moon root, tiki' new $7800
32) 3147

-

Clean Furniture wanted to buy
or consign. Auction every
Monday night. Sanford AuC
tion, 1215 S. French 323 7340

_______________________
Looking For a New Home'

Checkthe Want Ads for houseS
ol every silt' ,m,md price
tAVERICK '73, 7 Dr 6 Cyt
auto. radio, yellow P. black
looks &amp; runs like new $1,595
or oIler 831 3139
,

ANTIQUE SHOW
Free Admission &amp; Parking
SAT APP If, 9a in to9p m
SUN. APR 19, lO,m in to6p in

'hOLDS CUTLASS Push button
window, Air, PS. AT 8. other
extras, $75 Mo No nmoney
down. Applications by phone
339 9100 or 834 4605

NATIONAL GUARDARMORY
7809 S Fernereek Ave Orlando
t 131k 5 of Michigan St

Surge brakes. $3500 After 6
327 1361

-

-.

59-MusiCal NrchandiSe
_________________________________

---

-

DON'T STORE IT, SELL IT with
a low cost Ct,lSsitiOd Ad

_..

-

75-A-Vans

-

-

___________
'

Closed Office, must sell IBM
typewriters. Model C, from $99
Auto 8. IndustrIal 100
Syn j
up, 862 6177.
thetic lOwlO Motor Oil, j ___________________________________
(,m',e lot $30 JOS 339 605!
I
__________________________
62A.Farm Equipment

-

,

75-Recreational

Equipment Auction

-

GA RAG E
SALE

For Sale: '76 Plymouth window
van, auto, cruise, AC, cur
tam',, bunk. $3700. 322 9178.

Goods

--

ttyoudon'lbSliSVelhItIWiIfltlIdS
bring results. try one, ,mm.d
liSten to your pione ring Dud
372 2611 or 831 9993

i LittIt' want ,m:fs bring big, big
results Just fry one. 327 2611
or 83) 9993.
._,-----

-

1969 Datsun S W. A C. new tires,
,md engine reworked, 5550
373 7288 alter 7 pm.

___________________________

Equlpn'10nt-

-

'72 Opal Rally Good Condition,
SI 100 or best otter See at 203
Slays Dr 372 190? alt 6 p in

_________ ,

'

60-A--Business
--

'7ICIIEVY VEGA lf,mtchback
Auto, Air, I'S. good sticker,
good tires, no rust $995 831
1771

-

72-Auction
r0 , Est,le Com'i,int'r(,,9l &amp;
R"s,dm'ntiCl Auctions &amp; Al)
pr,Iis,,ls Call Dells Aucli
5670

•

Coon Minuet Organ
Good Condition
C,ilt 339 9317
___________________________

.

________

owner, new inside &amp; out. V 8.
,*uto. I'S. P11, (mod sticker,
cold air. $195 831 1274.

C,mll 898 2066
3 &amp; M PROMOTIONS

_______________________________
PiANO Upright antique' piano
Asking 5500 C,mll 373 1552.
F t'llent cond

Vehicles

1978 Jeep Pickup
51dm April 18, 10AM
1912 Prowler Travel Trailer, 21
Partial Listing
ft. inquire at Lot 26 5)700.
30F,nm tractors, 2 handcock 292
Lk. Monroe Pk., DeBari H
FAMILY'S DELIGHT 2 Bdrm, 1
41
i'levalcef scrapers. 9 I? yards,
bath, 2 story home in
1917 ROCKW000 motor home
lit GMC engines Wabco 666
----------Dreamwoldt Upstairs un
22'. Sleeps 1, sell contained,
1978 Cordoba
5l.AFU,'flitUre
grader 1972 Ford F 700 LWI)
We buy equity in Houses,
linished but plumbang in for
awning &amp; root air. 70,318 miles.
ChassiS Cat) new engine. Lt'roi
apartments. vacant land and
bath! CHA. ww carpet, eat-in
Call 372.1115 after 3 p.m.
3 o.
lOS CFM compressor. Atlas
IN
LUCKY
kitchen &amp; lust 3 yrs. old)
Acreagn.
New Singer Bedroom Set.
Copco
170
CFM
deiSel
corn
____________________________
VESTMENTS. P. 0. Box 6)0.
541.9001
Dresser. Mirror, Chest.
presSon. C,,si'lSotrack loading
Sanford, FIa. 32771. 322 4741.
Headboard $399 Dining Room
76 Auto Parts
-.
shovel. Massey 135 Tractor
RIDGE WOOD ACRES! Duplex
1974 hev. Malibu
_________________________________
Table, 4 chains &amp; hutch. $799.
fitted forklift. Lancer Side
lotI Zoned, all utilities, paved
United
Furniture
Sale
331
7288
47-AAortgages
Boughi
REbUILT BATTERIES $1600
Will
loader forklift 3 1970 Ford
SHSI
Near
roads
and Up. Call Richard at 339
I
School Buses 1973 Rio Gar
subordinate for builders. Buy
&amp; SOld
WILSON
MAtER
FURNIIURE.
9100 or 831 1605.
tagetruces 1959 Brockway 10
newt Build now or later!
ton dump BuSh hogs flail
We pay cash for 1st 8. 2nd
Just II lettt From 5)4,175!
1980 Concord 4 dr.
327 5627
311 315E FIRST ST.
I"
TIRES--7 700*154 ply
I
Scraper box,
mower
mortgages. Ray Legg, LiC. -like new Mounted on rims w
ultivator, etc. etc Also Misc.
Mortgage Broker, 1104 E.
-$5995
Dinette set. .1 chairs Beautiful I
tubes, $50 83! 1224
MAYFAIR VILLAS! 2 &amp;
NEW
Items
___________________________________
Robinson, 787 1279.
I
Bdrm., 7 BaUm Condo Villas,
oval
(11,355
table. Consignment
Chairs,
I ................................
ple*iqlas'.
Used 3 monthS
Accepted
Daily
next to Mayfair Country Club.
take that
77-Junk Cars Removed
Gt't lull exposure
Hwy. 92 Daytona Beach,
Cost 5750, Sell 3350 831 8753
Select your lot, 11001' plan &amp;
"For Sale" sign down &amp; run a
904 255 $311
interior decor! Quality COO'
classified ad Call 322 7611 or
Top Dollar Paid br Junk &amp; Used
structed by Shoemaker for
8319992
Year old Code A Phone 1500
cars, truckS &amp; heavy equip
47,200 &amp; up! Open Saturday
4
wheel
WAN
TED
Used
with
device
answering
menl. 322 S990.
10:30.5:00 £ Sun. Noon'S)
I
drive
loader
Leave
remote control, $140 322 2540.
30-MiscellaneouS for Sale
messageatfS98S60
BUY JUNKCARS&amp;TRUCKS
I
It's
From $1010550 or more
BROWSE AND SAVE
TES NEEDEOI New
ASSO
Made
DRAGLINE FOIl SALE
Call 322 1624,322-4460
The Want Ad
easy and fun
or experienced Call Herb
i
61-BUilding
Nteria1s
I
by American. Will handle or
Way
___________________________________________________________
Stenstrom today &amp; disCOver
yard
bucket.
New
GM
success
MAPLE LOveseat 8. chair, large
HEEL BUILDING SALE
Diesel engine &amp; new cables.
sofa. doublewicie chair 8.
30*18' 53.981. 40*72 56,744.
(305) 322 53)3. Ask for Tony,
"
rocker
Best
offer
322
3167
18*96 59.931. 80*150 529.780
CALL ANYTIME
____________________________
'73 Lincoln Mark IV Clean. Best
Call today 33! 4617
Relill Brake Fluid
254)
otter. Luwt.'ry Organ Best
New Pads
52-Appliances
Park
Check Calipers &amp;
offer Load of Flea Market
Machine Rotors
EVERY DAY IS BARGAIN
$
Master Cylinder
MCrchmndiSe. Makeofler 331
New Grease Seals
DAY IN THE WANT ADS 322
4157 Alt 10 a m
26)) or 631 9993
Pack Inner a. Outer Bearin4 1
Ke'nmore parts. service, uSed
CALL ANYTIME
I
washers. MOONEY APPLI
I Come and visit Sanford's newest
JIM LASH'S
ANCES 3230697,
i
62-Lawn.Gardefl
Clothing Consignment store.
_________________________
252%
-_
Serving Ihe entire family.
French
ONE PHONE CALL STARTS A
Quality clothing wanted' Open
FIt L DIRT &amp; TOP SOIL
CLASSIC lED AD ON ITS
4114 Hwy. 17.97 Between Sanford a. Longwood, Phone 171.0741
Monday fhru Saturday 9 a.m
YELLOW SAND
17.12
RE SUL IF IlL, END TIlE
6 pm.
Call Clark &amp; I4irt 37% 7580
Lk. Mary
______
NUMBER 15327761).
_____________________
Rental Cars
Hours 8:00a.m.
SECOND IMAGE
Available
105:30p.m.
310.4 S. Sanford Ave
CLASSIF
lED
ADS
MOVE
REF.
REPO.
16
f't.frost
free.
Co.
REALTORS
_______________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
Corner of Airport Blvd. and i
M0'JNTAINS
of
merchandise
_____________________________________________________
Orig $579, now $205 or $19 mo.
S.antord Ave You're always
every day.
Listing Service
Agent 339 5386.
lirst at Second Image.
-

Investor
Buying
Income'
Property I'rincip,mls onl,' No
brokers Alqrcan, Ito. 1943
Winter Park, Fl 32793
-

1978 Singer Futura Fully auto,
repossessed. used very short
time Original $593, aU $181 or
571 mo Agent 3398386

95

-,----

-

--

_'

$3495

•

____________________________

____________________________

________________________________
-

••

1495

--

------

Iark

Garage so lull there's r.o room
for the car? Clean it out w.Ih a
Want Ad in the Herald. PH.
322 2611 or 831 9993.

--________

-

________________________

-

_____________________________

32-Houses Unfurnlshed

Plae
'0

___________________________________
3 Bdrm. 2 B. Quiet Street or
Mayfair Country Club $350
mo. 1st &amp; last 'v Sec. Dep 322
1365.

Office' (305)3235960
After Hours: (30$) 323 4162
Nice 3 Uclrm 2 Bath Cent H A.
Many extra', on 3 tot', 54.500
,

3 Bdrm, P2 bath Nice yard $310
+ Sec. dep. 1413 W Valencia
Cl. 373 6570.
Lemon Bluff 2 Qcirm. I Bath,
Fenced yard, Dock. $390 mo.
305141 2703.
._-.---____.---------------

':ses

Spotless 3 Bdrm, I') bath With
14*32 If. Family room. Stone
rireplace. Owner will
With financing 5.49.900

THE ULTIMATE CHARMER.
Huge Family Home In Country
on over I Acre, Close to town
but in another world. Gracious
Iargeroomsandstyleto please
all, You'll fall in love with this
one- Has 2 Bdrm Guest house.
$87,900 with owner terms

-

Lovely Furnished house con
venient Dellary location
Reasonable rent Rclir.cd
Adull', preferred 668 S723
_______________________Deitona.
Attractive homes.
Neat, clean No pets I Rdrm,
$200.2 Bdrm, $223 Mo. 1St, last,
security

Link Const.
322.702

___

--------------

___________________

-

REAL ESTATE
REALTOR. 322

5741040

I

-

_______

FRONT DISC BRAKE JOB

-

-

________________________

-

''

Cal I Bart

______

_______
_________ _____________________

322 -2420

Building Lots 53.000.

-'

Furnished

______

I') At i'.'.

-

-- -

._

323 -2222
323 .6363

.'..

-

BLUE BOOK SERVICE CENTER

.

,,

Multiple

San±lastlng

P4uri4ng Cantor

-

-

ndowRspsire

-

WNN

T

The strategic

:

-

.

-

P,wm Cban(ng

Cn*'fl

Tax&amp;Accountlng
Sirces

.

move is to tell It in
the Herald ksinu Review

Convnsrdal
PP.$aa.efW

CALL 322.2611

-u

-

-

-

InwWjon

EwningHeIaId

esi____
.51R.WP11'D

'

-

.

'_i_

...

___

,

.

r.i

LL_.L

-

•

.)

'

_

-

'.L-

.*&amp;1..'.L.'--'

--

A.

--

_______,_,,

-

___________

.

23' TROJAN Cabin cruiser-

vitmyiK'iInSumtSmJWt.ach
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
3?? 579!
hO Santord Av

51--Household

j

ANTIQUE &amp; Modern dolls,
Kewpie dolls 8. figurines,
Alexander dolts. 668 6631

-

....,

-_______

BEEF CALVES Weaned heifers,
bulls steers $170 up Cows &amp;
slaughter beef, Delivery avail.
1904) 719 4155.

- ______________________---

-

i ....

323 1831

. -

_________ _____________-

- ----,
47-Real Estate Wanted

6f PONtIAC U IRE BIRD

II'S like pennies tram beave'r
when you sell "Dont Needs"
with .m want ad

Sales

Sale

-

,.

67-Livestock.PoUltry
____________-

55-Boats

Don't Despair Or Pull Your hair
Use A Want Ad 327 2611 or

'

I

..

&amp; Accessories I
___________________________
35 Hp Motor. Mercury
Good Condition
CalIAft 6 339 1220

.

I

80-Autos for

_

-

--______
______

.

See our beautiful new BROAD
MORE, tronl 8. rear BR's.
GREGORY MOBILE HOMES
lfO3OrlandoDr.
373 S200
VA &amp; FHA Financing
__________________________

it ou don t tell people how .me
they going to know' tell them
with .1 cI,iSSiIied act Ii. c .ill'ng
3172611 or 831 9993

2 Mares
Reasonable
3727972

-

,

42-MobiIe Homes

'79 Plymouth Arrow Pickup 4
Cyl - 5450(3 or $7000 down P.
take over payments of $177
mo 6684011

'-

I

GE TV color. 18*10 cabinet
working, 375. Typewriter.
Royal 800. Excellent, $10 Desk
&amp; Chair 18*2?. OtaS',
excellent, $110 High pr"csure.
hardy 5P'W pump, 5250. 1771
Chrysler New Yorker, 41,000
Loaded, $1795 Several
on
other misc itemS. lOS Allison
st Lonqwood

'
___________
'

79.TrUdcS&amp;Tra0et's

66-Horses

-

of 536 50 on 1 ii Z,m '.('WiIK3
machint' or 7 payments of 56
Cri'ttI M,mn,mut'r 312 9411
S,untontt Plaza

,

-

-

_______

-

BABY COCKATIELS
Pieds &amp; Grays
Call 322 00-44
_____________________________________

--

Layaway Balance

ec. Real Estate Broke
337.5*?'
Fval)3.t$6
NEW LIST ING
WEKIVA RIVER ACCESS
Thi', 2 tldrm, )i bath mobile
home sits on an acre Lots of
tree', &amp; sreened pufcti. tOOi
%75Q
P S You may be ,mble
to assume ,i 10'. interest rate
mortgage' with ,m sizeabte
balance

-

COCKER SPANIEL. Buff, 1 yr.
Old Good for Adult', Pay for
ad. 373 7913

Garage Sale' Furniture, clothes,
tractor l,m wnmowers. I _____________________________
Household items, Plants,
72Auct ion
Saturday Only, 9 5. 2112 S
L'r,lnge Ave off E 25th St. 1st I
ORLANDO'S ONLY MONTHLY
let' alter railroad track

___

_

OSTEE N Small 2 Bdrm home
Newly remodeled, new ,mppli
ances Fenced. Lot 72.1595
516,500 323 0417

I

I

Hospital Bed
$225
- 39s79

0N0A, 1Q76 360
Ii0s Cuod $450
17) 1,1) Call alter S 00
________

Tn
Color Beautiful teatures Call
30S 668 $710 Aft S p m

AKC German short hair poin
tr$ 6 wk', 3 male, $100 ea
Days 323 6413. Eyes. 323 1105

Yard Sale Friday and Salur
day 7800 S Park Ave. Airless
sprayer,
paint
clothes.
cosmetics, furniture. Etc.

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
7541S French Ave
322073)

65-Pets.SupplieS
I Month old Mate Beagle

Small Appliances like new.
Household items, clothing,
purses. shoes. Suitcases, craft
tl14Itenial, misc. Priced to sell.
Friday and S,mlurday 95. 110
Meaclowlark Dr. (Robin Hill).
Altamonte Springs.

C.reasetraps, dry wells
I Window Sills, lintells blocks
F'recaststepS.p.'itioslofle
Miracle Concrete Co
309 Elm Ave
322 57S1

Lc Real Estate Broker
76.40 Sanford Ave

1980 Honda CII 750K wind
ammer equipped $3500 or
51100 und take over payrneOts
of $93 ma 668 .4011

---

Good Used TV's, $258. VP
MILLERS
Ph. 322 0332
2619 Orlando Dr.

54-Garage

___________
''--Brown
rock, sand, cement

BATEMAN REALTY

STE

'

SANFORD Lake Mary area--2
Bdrm. air, nopets. lchild. $240
mo. Call 831 6735.

Remodeling

11.Spsdal

II with extra lot. $41500

-

'

Rabbits tar Sale
Young ,mnd Healthy. Si oath

;.4'T REALTOR,MLS
2201 S. Preoch.
Suite 4
Sanford

Avail 51. New 2 BR,? bath, kit.
appl, carpeted, drapes No
pets. $33S 00. 7535 Ridgewood
Day 2950072. Eve 798 1723.

-

MnI.U.Lod

,'' \ T

31A-Duplexes

Remodeling

-.

10 Acres. Terms $51,000

--

-

Air Conditioner 10,000 IUU
F,'dder'. Used I Mos.. $175..
Lincoln Arc %'.'Ider, 725 Amps.
(60046 cofl(I. 575, B&amp;E Cash
Hp
register new. 3195 i
Compressor and coil, 3115
831 8253

-

7 Bdrm Apartment'
lurnished. Utilities inclodecl
372 4573

:pmssng'

11-afrud1oni

Close in 21 with cottage $39,900

ROBBUE'5
REALTY

,
"

I Bedroom. porch, near town,
5
large yard. $700 mo.
deposit. 322-5889.

No

Uos,dlng&amp;Groonng

Owner financing .1 2 with Pool,
$64,900

-

REALTY

_______________

of an Acre. Terms.

'

owner Eves &amp; Wknds 322 7111

Furnished apantme5)tS for Senior
Citizens 3)8 Palmetto Ave., J.
Cowan No phone coils.

5.

___________________________
VACUUM RAINBOW
RepoSsessed with all at
tachmerlts &amp; power head Like
new warranty Pay 3248 or 318
monthly Financing, no down
payment
1IAKS 1104 N Mills Ill 971
OrlandO 869.3860

,

31-Apannts Furnished

arson Lawn Service

,

_______________

-

S Acres. Wooded Terms 522.500

CALL 323.5774

COUNTRY LIVING. to
from Santord. 4 Bdrm, 3 bath.
fireplace, .1 car gar ceo, H A,
I acre wooded lot $83,500 S

.

Furniture

Care

REALTORS
322 7972
1612W.
1st St.
_____________________________

Spacious I 110PM APT $175
ma Mature Persons. June
P0f1i9 Really, REALTOR 322
8678

Pkrntlng

Hendynan

iY

-

Paintingi
Papsrhonglng

Osteen

BEST MOBILE HOME BUY IN
NORTH SEMINOLE, I 3
Bdrm,2 Bath)? Bdrm, 2 Bath.
Kitchens equipped. 3 Green
Houses, stocked lish pond.
Fenced, security lights and
more on S Acres Plus or minus.
$95,000.

-

CH&amp;A Near hospital &amp; lake
Adults, No pets 372 9253.

Cypress tIth

-

3 Itdrm. 2 Bath, Pool, Cen. H A,
17.28 screen patio, Lot
120*130 559,000 373 1113

41-Houses

SO-4iscelIaneous for Saic

------

YOUR OWN HOME AT LAST 2
story, 2 lldrm PluS nursery; 2
Bath, Eat.in kitchen, Paneled
LivIng Pm. Established area.
Only 53.55e $35,000.

2 Bdrm. Block Home
in Sanford, byowner
Call for App). 574 27)6

.

L.awn&amp;Garden
SeMce

Aluminum Siding &amp;
kmen

.

Wonder what to do With Two?
The quick, easy
Sell One
Want Ad way- The magic
number iS 327 7611 or 8319993.

Spacious Modern? Bdrm 1 bath

'

--

1976 Honda Express
MopedSllS
Call 373 1076

LAWNMOWER SALE. 3 Star
Special Available nowhere
but Western Auto. Sanlord.

-

TV'i FOx PENT
Color &amp; Black 8. white. Free
delivery &amp; pickup. Jimmy's
TV Rental Phone Anytime
3'i3 710
_________
TELEuIIInN
RCA. 19" television XL 100 Solid
Portable.
Color
State
Warranty. Pay $119 or $11
Monthly Financing No DOWn
Payment
BAKS 1104 N. Mills Aye. (17.92)
Orlando 1.196.3140

-

•Apeds

-

.

TELEVISION 2S" RCA
Solid state color console in
Walnut Cabinet. Warranty
Pay 5)59 or $15 monthly
Financinq, no down payment
BAKS 1104 N Mills (17 92)
Orlando 896 3860

EXCELLENT CASH TO MORT.
GAGE on this 3 Bdrm home
Gigantic fenced yard, whole
house like brand new. Terrific
Country setting. 539,300.

__.__

LAKEFRONT APARTMENTS
1, Ii :&amp; 2 Bdrm on Lake Jennie
in Sanford. Pool, rec room,
outdoor BBQ, tennis courts &amp;
disposals. Walk to schools &amp;
shopping centers. 3230712.
_________________________
LUXURY APAR TMENTS.
Family &amp; Adults section
Poolside 2 Bcirms. Master's
Cove Apts. 373.7900 Open on
weekends.
M'ariner's Village on Lake AdS.
1-2 Bedroom Apts, from $720.
Lncated 17-92 just South of
Airport Blvd. in Sanford All
Adults. 3238620.

-

j

53__Tv.Radio.Stereo

FHA &amp; VA BUYERS. HAVE
YOU SEEN THIS HOME?
Low, low down on this 3 Bdrm
home in Pinecrest. Backs up to
beautiful wooded Oaks. Only

,

Enjoy country hying? 2 Bdrm
Apts. Olympic so. Pool.
Shenandoah Village. Open p.s.
323.2920.

-

-

?-Lar'e
.

lIe sooner you place your
cla',silied ad. the sooner you
'.',ill get results
I
__________________________

PLENTY OF ROOM in this 4
Bdrm. 2 Bath. Separate Dining
Rm, Family Pm, Screened
porch, ',plit plan, Fenced yard.
Pinecrest area $40,920.

Santord I'avenna Park t.tveiy 4
Bdrm.
Bath Large fenced
yard, CHA. lamily rm a
playroom, pool with privacy
many extras 157,000.
fence
323 8790 Alt Noon

__________

-

___

waSher rt"f..0 GE deiusc model,
Sold cr0 5409 35. used short
tir,. flal $189 11 or $19 35 mo
\uent 3398326

Harold

-

-

1 nc

S ACRE PAOCELS Geneva and
Osteen Call for information
STEMPER AGENCY
REALTOR 372 1991
373 1302. 319 3100. 322 1959
MUltipl Listing Service

ompletcly redecorated? Bdrm,
1 b.lIh, large dining rm 8.
screened porch. New kitchen 8.
bath with new Central H&amp;A 8.
uw c,rpet Brick tireplace,
large shaded lot on quiet
street Mid 30's Call 327 0216
alter 6 p m

NICE Large 3 Bdrm. upstairs
Apt. $400 Includes all utilities
Inquire dOwnsta,rS
12)9
French Ave Vince or cne
betore S p m Alter S p m 323
1100

MICROWAVE
Brand New. puSh button control
has probe Originally $619,
balance $398. 519 montt.iV
1766
______

Hall Realty
(t- Oncr 3 Bdrm I bath --REALTORS, MLS
Completely returbished 58.000
d'iwn 532.000 Own"r Iinan
cing Owner Associate.
323.5774 Day or Niqht
-- _3?3 6783

FROM $1758. UP
Efticiencies. I &amp; 2 ftdrms Apt',
Shown by appt Call 323 1340.

-

.

I

-

I

COUNTY LIVING 3 Bdrm 2
Bath home, over 2.000 sq ft
surrounded by 7 acres 01
orange grove's $175,000

-._...

Lake Mary area Corner Lot,
sh4ctCd by large Oaks Fishing
and Swimming near by Call
3 4693
OONALDG JACKSON, INC
Realtor 372 5295

I BORM. Washer. Dryer &amp; Pool,
$225. 2 Bdrm 5300 AdultS, NO
pets 217 1897 Orlando

-

(LOSL TO I .1 .1 Iidrm, 2 Bath,
Furnished Mobile home, with
quest cottage, and large lot
5.65.000

'Owlitouse i i

. lit
5.14.500 F 1PM

with Major Hoople

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

The Time Tested F rm
Estate. Broker
Req
loB W.Cur'.mi'rc .11 St
322 6123

M15!
5_

(.,4t.

-

111,1 /\t'ii( 1/

1

-

3oAparTmeflts
Unfurnished

Ewnlng HemJI

.,

"gun

-

EARN EXTRA $$
AFTER SCHOOL
CALL 3fl.2611

II

12

-

-- 41-

P,Irh
.

Golden Opportunity S&amp;'ll Pt
'cited Ga', S4vr tor car'..
bans. trucks, ,'tc Dstrbu?cr
ships Avail 3?? 4019
1'_- ..-.J I

AGES 13•11

1$-HelP

- -

GAME ROUTES

BOYS &amp; GIRLS

-

-

Investment from 32115 Latest
color models Call toll frce, I
800 432
______
4587, Mr Bennett

-

.

Corner Store Lake Mary New I
Carpet. New Drapes, 5250 Mo.
373 $960 869 .6044

-

SPACE INVADER

line

.

-

3portunitIes

SOc a

-

-

37-Business

I WUJ
. _-i.i____---------

----

.

I)

Mociermzjng your Home' Sell no
longer n(.t'dt'rJ bUt uStul items
uth CIassiIi'd Act

24-Business

IN THE 4IRCUIT COURT OF
LPN. Full time 3.11 P.M. Shift.
831-9993
LPN 11.7 Shift
322-2611
FICTITIOUS NAME
E 11TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
Apply Lakeview Nursing
Notice is hereby gven that
IN AND FOR SEMINOLE
Modern geriatric center. Ex.
Center, tlt F. 2nd St.
COSMETOLOGIST
WANTED
intend to engage In business at 1215
RATES
cellent pay &amp; benefits. Exp.
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
COUNTY. FLORIDA
with 3 yrs. cap. 1. following
So French Av., Sanford, FL., CASE NO. il.2U-CA09K
GAS ATTENDANT
only. Call Mrs. McCranie,
itime ...............SOCatins
Call
3231530.
Seminole County, Florida under FLAGSHIP BANK OF ORLANDO,
Long
wood
33
9200.
HOURS
line
3 consecutIve times.
the lictilious name of SANFORD a Florida banking corporation.
PhillIps 46 Station
Production Expeditor with
Office Assistant, and Girl
7COMeCUtivetItTII$ ....... CU
AUCTION REALTY, and that we
Long wood
Plaintiff,
8:00 AM. - 5:30 P.M.
experience in Fiberglass or
Friday. Accurate typing
intend to register said nam. with
Boats helpful. This is an Entry
MONDAY thru FRIDAY iOcofl$eClitiVI?iliW$ .37c a
required,
working
with
writer
the Clerk of the Circuit Court, THOMAS B. CATES and NIJOLE
Good pay, Company benefits.
level job with advancement for
$2.00 Minimum
SATURDAY 9 Noon
and publisher. Call for Ap.
Seminole County, Florida in ac A CATES, his wife, ci at,
Apply 202 N. Laurel Ave.,
the right man. Cobia Boat
Minimum
3
Lines
pointment. 333.6071.
1951
cordancewiththe provisions of the
Sanford.
Company Silver Lake Rd.,
Dendants.
Sag. ERIC TAYLOR
Fictitious Name Statutes, To.Wit:
Sanford, Fla.
NOTICE OF SALE
DEADLINES
1,
I,
IS,
22,
1551
Eap. Waitresses wanted. Apply
Publish Apr.
Section $6309 Florida Statutes
Nurses Aides. 311 11 7. $3.60 per
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
in person. Pizza Boy, Sanford
19 Si.
DEG lu
Quality Control with experience
only.
Experienced
that the real and personal properly
hr.
Noon The Day Before Publication
K-mart
Plaza.
323-3006.
in
Fiberglass
or
Boat
building
NOTICE
TO
PUBLIC
George W. Pinkerton,
Longwood Health Care Center.
located in Seminole County,
helpful. This is a good op.
Peg. RE. Broker
Notice is hereby given that the
339-9200.
rlorida, described as follows:
Sunday Noon Friday
portunity with good benefits
Wayne H. Blecha
Aluminum Installer for screened
Board of Adjustment of the City of
Lot , TRAILW000 ESTATES,
for the hard worker. Cobia
Publish April IS, 22, 29, &amp; May 6, SECTION ONE, according to the
room, carports, and pool
Sanford will hold a regular
Boat Company, Silver Lake
enclosures. Some experience
meeting on April 24, 1911 in the
Plat thereof as recorded in PIat
City Hall at 11:30 A.M. in order to
Rd., Sanford, Fla.
$3 _____ - _______ Book 16, at Pages2l and 21,04 the
required. 3234675.
consider a request for a variance
Public Records 01 Seminole
Fiberglass Mold maintenance
in the Zonina Ordinance as ii
4.PsrIOflhl$
County, Florida.
and Builders needed at once.
pertains to side yard setback
FICTITIOUS NAME
will be sold for cash in hand to the
Good pay for good producers.
WAITRESS-Experienced.
requirements in SRI zoned
Lonely Christian Singles
CAN PUTA SMILE
Notice is hereby given that I am higheSt and best bidder at the West
Cobia Boat Company, Silver
district in Lot 7, 61k F, Country
Days 3220520. Eves. $308710.
Met Christian singles in your
engaged in business at 2633 Der• front doors of the Seminole County
ONYOUR FACE
Lake
Rd.,
Sanford.
Club Manor, Unit 2, P6 II, Pg 100.
Ask for John.
area. Write Southern ChrIstIan
bysttire Road, Maitland, Seminole Courthouse. Sanford, Florida, at
Being
more
specifically
WITH A JOB
1523
Singles
Club,
P.O.
County. Florida under the fic
the hour of 11:00 am. on the $th
Boat Riggers. Steady Work.
SECURITY GUARDS
described as located at ill
Summerville, SC 214$) or call
titious name of SUE'S VIOLET day of May, tIll, by ARTHUR H.
OF YOUR CHOICE
Good pay and benefits for real
Applications
being
taken
for
Mayfair Circle.
1.lO3.1114150 24 trs.
PATCH, and that I intend to
BECKWITH, Clerk of the Circuit
qualified individuals seeking
workers. Cobia Boat Corn.
WARRANTY CLERK
Planned use of the pro.arty:
register t.aid name with the Clerk Court for Seminole County,
___________________________
pony, Silver Lake Rd.,
fuiltimeemploymeflt.MUstbe
Accurate typing, super job,
Carport
with
roof.
Want ads are black &amp; white &amp;
of the Circuit Court, Seminole Florida, pursuant to a Final
WHY BE LONELY? Write "Get
Sanford.
willing to work any hours.
sweetheart for a bosS. $160 to
B. L. Perkins
reed all over.
of
Judgment
County, Florida in accordance Summary
A Mate" Dating Service. All
to
qualify
for
dependable. Able
start.
Chairman
SERVICE personnel wanted:
with the provisions of the Fic
Foreclosure entered In this cause
ages. P.O. Box 6071, Clear.
State Guard License and have
Board of Adjustment
Evening
Herald Paper Route.
Exp. only Weekend, lunch
titi0US Name Statutes, ToWit: bearing date the 9th day of April,
woler, Fl. 33311.
own transportation and phone.
TECH TRAINEE
Publish Apr. I, IS, 1911
shift. Lake Mary restaurant.
Net 5150+ wk. Less than 2½
Section $63.09 Florida Statutes 1911.
Interested applicants can
Polish, cutting &amp; fabricating of
hrs. a day delivery time. Call
DEH2$
_____
323.7150 bet. 2:006:00 p.m.
DATED this 13th day of April,
COMPAT.A.DATE
lIST.
apply at Pinkerton's 3203
crystals. $516 mo
322426$.
Sig. Susan F. Sauter
1911.
Take 1 minute to listen to
Lawlon Rd., Suite ISO Amherst
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, IN
Canvasser. Door to door. Ex.
PubliSh April 15, fl, 29 8. May 6, (SEAL)
recorded message-1103.$7I.
Building, Orlando, Fla Equal
MANAGER TRAINEE
AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
CONVENIENCE STORE
perienced preferred, but not
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH JR.
1911
9152.9151
or
write
Compat.A.
opportunity
Empjpyer
CLERK
Restaurant
background
FLORIDA
Excellent com
CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT
necessary.
DEHIO
Date
P.O.
Box
1123
Sum.
wIi
train
BEAUTICIAN
preferred.
but
Full
time
positions.
Experienced
CIVIL ACTION NO. $1.SO7.CA14.
mission schedule plus gas
COURT
merville, S.C. 3943.
____________________________
Temporary for 2 weeks in May.
Learn all phases. $200 wk. to
preferred. i Locations In
F
allowance. 6614717.
BY: Cynthia Proctor
Call 3227530
IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF
Seminole County. For In.
start.
LONELY? New singles Fla.
NOTICE OF MEETING
As Deputy Clerk
DENESE A. JENKINS
formation call 3233643.
COOKS
AVON BUY OR SELL
mag. $5 + tax; SSSM(16) Box
The Seminole County Industrial Publish April 15, 22, 1911
CLERK TYPIST
Petitioner
orkarcundyour
Experienced only. AM I. PM
U0, Boynton, FL 33435.
Development Authority will hold a DEH 79
Part
tccurate typing, handle busy
SHORT ORDER COOK
,.,II,,'t hr5. 444.3079
and
shifts. Salary commensurate
meeting on Friday, April 30, 1911, -time, will train. Mayfair
phones. $160 wk.
MICHAEL THOMAS JENKINS
with Experience.
NOTICE TO PUBLIC
at the Longwood Village Inn, Stat
Country Club. 3fl2S31.
Respondent:
Notice is hereby given that the
Mm. 55 wpm, handle
Road 427, ISO East Lake Street,
TYPIST
SALAD PERSON
Meet MANY single, dlvoCed,
ROOFERS
NOTICE OF ACTION
orders.
Shorthand
a
LongwoOd, Florida. Time o Board of Adjustment of the City of
phone
Licensed Practical Nurse. 12$
widowed, and separated Men
Part time only, apply in person.
Eap. or will train. $140 &amp; up.
TO: MICHAEL THOMAS
Sanford will hold a regular
plus. Medical, pension and
meeting is 1:30 am.
Deltona Inn, Deitona. 305.514.
and Women by AdvertisIng
shift. Full or part time, San.
sharing.
United
Solvents
Matters for discussion include, meeting on Apr at 21, 1911 In the JENKINS
profit
lord Nursing &amp; Convalescent
with pictures and details about
6693.
WAREHOUSE
RESIDENCE
UNKNOWN
A.
M.
In
order
to
issuance of Industrial Revenue City Hail at 11:30
323-1100.
__________________________
Center. Contact Mrs. Brown.
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS:
you In the weekly newsletter
Forklift experience. Chance to
Bonds for Pacific Pools, Inc. 101 consider a request for a variance
Excellent Opportunity for
WOMEN AD.
3225566.
Single
Scene.
advance. $150 + benefits.
Britney
Hail
No.
376
E.
construction of a new distribution in the Zoning Ordinance as it
persons
1$
or
older
to
make
VERTISE FREE. Mn pay
126 MilIwood Drive,
facility, and any other business to pertains to rear yard setback
Restaurant Help Wanted-'
good money. For appointment
$25.00 for io weeks. 305273
Nashville, Tennessee
CABINETMAKER
FAST FOOD OPERATION
requirements In MR.1 zoned
come before the board.
Minimum wage, must be neat
Cill 323.1258 after 2 p.m.
wood.
$4.10
ARE
HEREBY
4121
anytime
or
P.O.
Box
YOU
Exp.
with
formica
&amp;
Persons are advised that, if they diStrict in Lots I, 29, 30, 3), 31, 35,
l,clean. Apply inpersonl am.
1933
Aloma
Branch,
FL
32793.
will
that
an
action
for
NOTIFIED
hr.
to
start.
No experIence necessary,
decide to appeal any decision 12, II, 10, 39, 3$, 44, 47 $. 11,
too p.m. Stuckey's, St. Rd. 16
We
are
currently
seeking
new
salary,
hospital
dissolution
of
marriage
has
been
made at this meeting, they will Mayfair Villas, Sanford Seminole
train, good
.onsty? Write "Bringing peopia
FRENCH AVE.
&amp; 1.4. No phone calls please.
and experienced Sales
lzation, other benefits. Call
need a record of the proceedings, County, Florida as recorded in PB filed against you, and you are
together Dating Servicel" All
required to serve a copy of your
isociates. For confidential
333.3443.
_____________________
and, for such purpose, they may 22, Ppi 1 10.
ages &amp; Senior Citizens. P.O.
written defenses to it, if any, on
more
specifically
interview call Marcus Brown
Being
CONVENIENCE STORE
Corner of 20th 1. French
need to insure that a verbatim
141,Winter Haven. FIa. 33850.
RN.
Full
time
l.&amp;shlft.
Sanford
CARROLL BURKE, Attorney for
at 311.0100 today.
Good company
Your future our concern
CLERK
recc,rd of the proceedings is made, described s located at Mayfair
Nursing
and
Convalescent
Petitioner, whose address Is 612
benefits. Apply Handy Way
which record includes the Villas.
PARK PLACE ASSOC. INC.
Brown
Center.
Contact
Mrs.
Sanford Atlantic Bank Building,
Planned use of the property:
Food Stores, Sanford area.
testimony and evidence upon
REALTORS
3225546.
Sanford, Florida, and file the
Singlefamily dwellings.
-a
which the appeal is to be used.
original with the Clerk of Circuit
B. L. Perkins
Publish April IS, 1911
t,re you a working Mother? If so,
Court, Arthur H. Beckwith, Jr. on 4
Chairman
OEH ii
call about our Unique Child
or before the 11th day of May,
Board of Adjustment
______________________________
Care Fa44tItY. 333.M24
CONSULT OUR
AD, 1911, otherwIse a default wIll
Publish April I, IS, 1911
be entered against you for the
DEH.27
Loving care for your child by
relief demanded in the Petition.
grandmotherly lady, in my
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
WITNESS my hand and official
home. 3335359.
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
seal on this the 3rd day of April,
PROlATE DIVISION
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA AD. 1911.
Excellent child care facility.
File Number $l.I$4CP
PRORATE DIVISION
(SEAL)
_________
Discounts avail. if you qualify.
BUSINESS SERVICE USIIN6
Division
File Number Il.1$6.CP
Clerk of Circuit Court
Call 333.5490.
I
IN RE: ESTATE OF
Division PROBATE
Seminole County,
______
ROBERT E. RANDALL
babysitting In my home. Infants
IN RE: ESTATE OF
AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
Florida
uç. Lots of TLC. Two hot
______
Deceased ZINN BERTRAM BECK
By June I. Curtis
area.
meals
a
day.
Lake
Mary
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
Deceased
Deputy Clerk
3233799 or $309212
1
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
Publish: April 5, IS, 22, 29, 1981
at
OR
Will babysit children, any age,
CLAIMS
DEMANDS TO ALL PERSONS HAVING flEH.36
during Latter school hrs. Also
AGAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE CLAIMS
DEMANDS
OR
To List Your Business...
PUBLIC NOTICE
during the summer. Call 323
AND ALL OTHER PERSONS AGAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE
tt
Seminole
County
Board
of
The
INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE: AND ALL OTHER PERSONS
5344.
_____
ARE
YOU
HEREBY INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE: County Commissioners as Prime
DIQI 322-2611 or 831 -9993
my Home. Fenced
Care
Child
Sponsor
for
the
Comprehensive
NOTIFIED
that the
ad. YOU ARE HEREBy
thru
Fri.
area.
Mon.
play
Employment and Training Act
ministration of the estate of NOTIFIED
that
the
ad
Voyager St. off Providence.
E.
ROBERT
RANDALL, ministration of the estate Of lint (CETA) announces 11w Submittal
Reasonable 574.5493.
deceased, File Number $1164 CP, Bertram Beck, deceased, Fill of a modification ot the Com
is pending in the Circuit Court for Number 11.116 Ce, is pending ii prehenilve Employment and
Child care in my home for pro.
Sminole County, Florida, Probate the Circuit Court for Seminoli Training Plan (CETP) and
school ages. Weekdays only.
aoams funded under CETA
Division, the address qf which is County, Florida Probate Division
CoOcrets rk
Previous child care counselor.
Seminole County Courthouse, the address of which Is Seminolt through the U. S. Department of
Ravenna Pk. 3235034.
Tax Service
Sanford, FL. The personal County Courthouse, Sanford Ft Labor. Itis the purpos. of the Act
LARGE TREE INSTALLBR
I Mull, QUALITY OPERA1 ION
representative of the estate is 32771 The personal representativi to provide training and em
andscapino, Old Lawns Re.
Larry L. Grimm &amp; AssocIates
RUTH H. RANDALL, whose 1 of the estate is Niiah Bock Brena. ploymnt opportunities for flu
9 yrs. exp. Patios, Driveways,
Wallpaper hanging servlcv.
placed. 365.5501.
301 F. 1st Street
etc. Wayne Beal. 337-12L
address sill E.Firstst..Sanford, whose address is 1221 14th Ave economically disadvantaged,
___
-lNh&amp;SStY
References, Lic. Free Est. $62.
323.1076
Sanford, Fl.
Fl. The name and address of the NIh, Lake Worth, FL 33160. The unemployed and underemployed
1411. After hrs. 569100S.
Driveways,
Patios,
WaIlis,
etc.
persons
in
order
to
enhance
their
personal representatIve's attorney name and address of the personal
DM50
Quality work. No lob too small.
representative's attorney are set economic potential.
are set forth below,
NO LONGER USED CAMPING
Low prices. Free Est. Eves.
The specific purpose of the
All persons having claims or forth below,
100% oure solvent-IA oz. SiLtS
Jr Condition
GEAR IS IN DEMAND. SELL
332537$,
aft.
6
Tom
modification
is
to
revise
the
All persons having claims ot
demands against the estate are
plus $1.50 TP&amp;H. Distributed
IT NOW WITH A
original
grant
applIcations,
LAWN &amp;GAR DEN CARE
required, WITHIN THREE demands against the estate are
by NuRem. We ship
Chris will servIce AC's, refrig,
CLASSIFIED AD.
ree estimates. 10 yrs. ex.
MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF required,W1THTHREEMOP9THS pursuant to directives by the U.S.
anywhere. (303)3234321.
freezers, water coolers, misc,
perience. Insured &amp; bonded.
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF FROM THE DATE OF THE Department of Labor to reflect
Call 323.4727.
323111$
THIS NOTICE, to file with the FIRST PUBLICATION OF THII reduced allocations announced for
SHAKL.EE HERB TABLETS
Quality
Mulch
delivered
to
Top
IF THIS IS THE DAY to buy a
clerk of the above court a written NOTICE, to file with the clerk 01 FY11, as a result of deferral and
WE DELIVER
Lawn
Service
Yds.
$53
home
or
business.
3.3
new car, sea today's Classified
statement of any claim or demand the above court a writter recision action taken by the Ad.
323702
110. Call Dan 323•7726.
esidentlal I Commercial
ads for best buys.
they may have. Each claim must statement of any claim or demanc ministration. Specilic subparts
FONSECA PLUMBING. Con.
323.1354 or 3220314 Aft. 3p.m.
be in writing and must indicate the they may have. Each claim mus being modified and Ihe full funding
SprIng Fever Sale
struclion, Repairs, Emergen.
amount
is
now
as
follows:
name
and
be
in
writing
and
must
indicate
ihi
I
basis for the claim, thi
Right.Way Tree Service
Watkins Products.
cy. Lic., Bonded, Ins. Paul 323.
RefInhhlng
12.I011021,
MODOO2:
$720671
address of the creditor or his agent basis for the claim, the name an
or a Professional and relIable
4073.
333.503,
l2.l011060,MODOO2: 303,953
or attorney, and the amount addreliolthecreditororhisag,n
Rxnn
Tree Service, call Rlght.Way
Freddie Robinson Plumbing 4000
12.1OIIO•S,MOD003:
783,524
claimed. if the claim is not yet or attorney, and the amoun
4oday. Free Est. 322.1153
Hwy E. 46. RepaIr leaking
Jim's FurnIture
Bill I
There Is a 30 day comment
9-Good Thngs to Eat
due, the dat. when It will become claimed. It the claim is not ye
Aluminum Application ServIce.
Refinishing &amp; Restoration. We
faucet .1 water closet,
period
and
Interested
parties
may
due shall be stated. If the claim is due, the date when it will becorn
TRi.ANOIL LAWN SERVIC
Alumn. I. vinyl siding. loffit,
buy 1. sell. Call $313211 after
Sprinklur systems. Service 24
review this grant plan and
contingent or unliquidated, the i due shall be stated. If the claim I
SERVICE
WITH
CARE
screen
rooms,
windows,
doors,
hrs. 131.373S.
STRAWBERRI ES
hrs. Bus. 323-8510, Pies. 323
modification betw.sn the hours of
nature of the uncertainty shall . contingent or untiquidated, th
PHONE 323.7444
gutters. 339.1754 eves.
0706.
5:30 am. and 5:00 p.m. Monday
STRAWBERRI ES
stated. Il the claim is secured, the nature of the uncertainty shell b
through Friday, Planning Section,
security shall be described. The stated. It the claim Is secured, th
STRAWBERRI ES
Looking for garden equipment?
100 East FIrst Street, Sanford,
ciaimant shall deliver sufficient security shall be describ.d. Th
Read today's classified ads for
Beauty
Florida, 32271. Written comments
Complete lawn care. 323.1793
Why go to
copies of the claim to the clerk to claImant shall deliver sufficier
good buys.
concerning this submittal should
enable the clerk to mail on. copy copies of the claim to th. clerk
y'u
or Plant City
be directed to Planning Section,
Handyman. Retired. Will fix
"fl,.
Crockett's Lawn
to each personal representative, enable the clerk to mall one cop
3
TOWER'S BEAUTY SALON
almost anything In the home.
Manpower Division, 100 East First
buy
Beautification and
All persons Interested in the to each personal representativi
FORMERLY
Harriett's
Beauty
323202$.
w
flat.
Maintenance Service
All persons interested in t e Street, Sanford, Florida 32771.
$1.25,
estate to whom a copy of this
Ngok. 519 E. lit St., 322.3742.
Phone 3234330 eat, 103.
tdiL\\. Thep.rsonaltoucht
Noticeol Administration has been estate to whom a copy of th
On
War
Subsequent modifications to the
Mobile Homes, Houses, Roofs,
322.0797
mailed are required, WITHIN NoticeofAdministrationhas bu
Seminole County CETP will not be
or more for $100
Trucks, Trailer, Etc. Portable
.' THREE MONTHS FROM THE mailed are required, WITHI
Al Lawn Care
DATE OF THE FIRST THREE MONTHS FROM TN E subject to these publications and
Unit. Harold Rankin 333.3755.
Lettuce 3 for
T announcement requirements, Any
All Phases, Top Quality
PUBLICATION OF THIS DATE OF THE FIRS
00$ HOME IMPROVEMENTS
AnImal
Haven
Boarding
I
interested
groups,
organizations
Lowprlces.
Roy
5311453
OF
THI
'NOTICE, of Administration: PUBLICATION
5
Carpentry, etc. 17 Yrs. Exp.
All
GroomIng Kennels. Therm.
or individuals desirous
of
'they may have that chalienge the NOT ICE, to file any objecliot 1
FIELD MOWING CLEANUP
Free estlntatsl...322.41$S
Floor
Controlled
Heat.
Off
reviewing
any
such
subsequent
lbs.
10
lbs.
89c;
REASONABLE
validity of the decedent's will, the they may have that challenge II
Sleeping Boxes. We cater to
modification
may
so
notify
the
Complete Home RepairS &amp;
qualilication; of the personal validityofthedecendent'swill,tI
Remodeling I. kepair, Dry *ri.
AFTER 5:30p.m. 333.1151
We Take Food Stamps
fl.57$3.
your
pets.
Prime
Sponsor
in
writing
at
the
Remodeling, PaInting, room
qualifications of the person
Hanging, Textured Ceilings. S.
.representative, or Ihe venue
above
listed
address.
LeRoy Farms, SR 46 &amp;
additions, drywall, etc. 20 yrs.
representative, or the venue I
G. Ballot, 323.4132, 3324463.
Make room In your attic, garage.
jurisdiction of the court.
Publish
April
IS,
1911
sonry
exp, Call 331.5097 eves.
W'I 0
IIU!II
Upsala Rd., Sanford
wI I
ALL CLAIMS, DEMANDS AND jurisdiction of the court.
DENSI
ALLCLAIMS,DEMANDS,AN
JIM'S Home Impr,vsmSatI
Classified Ad. Call a friendly
:0BJEcTI0NS NOT SO FILED
Specialist
Heesepalatiog, plumbing, ptio
adtakeratll25611or131.9993.
All types of Mâion Work.
'WILL BE FOREVER BARRED OBJECTIONS NOT SO FILE D NOTICIOFSHIRIPF'SSALI
We handle the
werb, carpentry. 25 Yrs. Sip.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
Date of the first publication of WILL BE FOREVER BAR RE D
No job too large or too small
Whole Ballot Wax
Date of the first publicatit fl that by virtue of that certain Writ
333.7514.
322.1581 or 3336774
this Notice of Administration:
Brush
OttInq
noticeof Administration: April I 5. of Execution issued out of and
8, 1911.
Tennis Instruction . U.S.P.T.A.
CENTRAL FLORIDA HOME
B. E.
1911.
_______________________
under the seal of the Circuit Court
s Ruth H. Randall
Cerltied. Group or Private
IMPROVIMINTS
Nilah Beck Branan
of
Dade
County,
Florida,
upon
a
CUSTOM
WORK
As Personal Representative
lessons. Children a specialty.
painting, Roofing, Carpentry
As Personal Representati
final judgement rendered in the
Reasonable
Rates.
Free
of the Estate of
Doug Mallczowski. 323.2300.
Lic. Bonded &amp; Guaranteed
I the Estat, of
Financing AvaMable
Estimate.
aforesaid
court
on
the
25th
day
Call
Early
A.
M.
ROBERT E. RANDALL
NEW Concrete Buildings, all
Free Estimates 993.2449
Zmnn Bertram Beck
of
February,
A.
0.
197$,
in
that
323135$
or
(305)3953244.
eye.
Deceased
sizas$30&amp;up.AtI4&amp;SRU.
I.
Deceased
certain case untitled, Marilyn Kay
Notices
4 industrial Park 323-006.1.
ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL
ATTORNEY FOR PERSONA
Fernandez, which aforesaid'
GET THOSE LUXURY ITEMS
REPRESENTATIVE:
REPRESENTATIVE
Sanford Kay and Rebecca Kay, his
FORAFRACTIONOF THEIR
s Douglas Slenstrom, EIQ.
SANDILASTING
EMERGENCY
Douglas Stenstrom
wife, Defendant, which aforesaid
COST FROM TODAY'S WANT
STENSTROM, McINTOSH,
DAVIS WILDING
Stanstrom, Mcintosh, Julian,
Writ
of
Execution
was
delivered
to
ART
SALE
ADSI
QUALITY
ATA
FAIR
PIICEI
JULIAN. COLBERT &amp;
3234799, SANFORD
Colbert &amp; Whigham, P.A.
meas Sheriff of Sentinoli County, Must sell truck load ci art
OUR RATES ARE LOWER
Gin. Repairs &amp; lmprov. 17 yrs.
up
WHIGHAM PA.
Boa 1330, Sanford, FL 337.
Florida,
and
I
have
levied
upon
the
Lakevlew
NursIng
Canter
to
75%
savingsl
Hundreds
of
locally.
Senior
Disc.
3332305.
P.O. Boa 1330, Sanford Fl. 32771 P.O.
otCINIII$
Telephone: (305) 322.2171
following described property
beautiful oil paintIngs. Many
911 E. Second St., Sanford
Telephone: lOS 3223171
PublIsh: April IS, 22, 1951
owned
by
Sanford
Kay,
said
Remodeling
&amp;
Carpentry
priced less then $4. Portraits,
323-C707
Publish April 8, , lIst
DEN CI
property being located In Seminole
RepaIr, screen rooms &amp;
seascapes, landscapes,
_F,4,23
Coun'fj, Florida, more par.
repair.
Shampoo
I
Deep
Steam.
Liv,
Custom
Phone
32.Qd.,
332.
Screen
Rms.
ori.ntals, etc. All reduced.
PsIs*Ing&amp;
ticularly described as follows:
Din. Rm., Hall, 13$. $10 ii.
3506 after 4 p.m.
Rescreenlng. Low Prices. New
Sale prices on frames many
One 1976 Chrysler Cordoba, tan
additional rm. 33)0655.
Window screen, glass &amp;
styles &amp; sizes. You must sse
CARRIER
window repair. 3331741.
in color, ID No. SSZ2MCRI$)O6
______________________
CONSTRUCTION.
these paintings todayt
interIor,
exterior,
repairs,
All types of carpentry,
being stored at 17.92 Shell.
Banquet room
Cavalier
__________________________
painting or staining, spray or
plumbing, elec., roofing, lnt.
Casselberry. Florida.
Motor Inn, 3200 South Orlando
brush, wallpaper, walltex.
exterior
One 197$ Mercury Cougar,
Dalntina,
wall.
Drive (17.92), 10a.m. top.m.,
log and te"Iured ceilings.
papering, tile Nork, cement
black.tan, ID No. $H93H5172S7
Toes thru Sun. (AprIl 1119).
MEINTZER TILE
Residential or commercial.
being stored at Foster's Auto
work, chimney cleaning. Lic.
Newer repair, IekyshoWer$Our
Fo Busipasses ano Individuals.
local references. No Job too
insured &amp; Bonded. Free Fit.
Clinic, Longwood, Florida
E*p.U9'2
specialty 25y1'i.
ElIzabeth A. Grindle C.P.A.
STORING IT MAKES WASTEbig or small, we handle them
Call Paul $31 1011. Re'pair
and the undersigned as Sheriff of
SELLING IT MAKES CASH.
3771145
all. Call, 3220071 or 3237291.
work our specialty.
Seminole County, Florida, will at
PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD
11:00A.M. on the 7th day 04 May,
NOW. Call 332.2611 or S3%trn.
TøpSofl
A. 0. 1911, offer for sale ird sell to
PIk*lng
Hosi shooing
the highest b4dr, for cash,
ALOL MIST
TOP SO$L for yards,
GWALTN&amp;Y JEWELER
subject to any and all existIng
All Products contain stabilized
Heilman PaintIng I Repairs.
liars, at the Front (West) Door of
Potting Soil
Hehoelng.Trirnming
104$. Path Ave.
Aloe Vera enriched w.Vitafnlfl
Quality work. Free Esi. Disc.
Call afterp.m. 333-4102
the Satninule County Courthouse In
3234109
Dave Smith
E &amp; Protein designed for:
to Seniors. 5341410. Refer.
Sanford, Florida, the above
Mornings 333353$
Problem Skin, Body I AgIng
described personal property,
Skin, Health Drink, Cosmetics.
Tree Service
'House Patnter--Ist Class Wor'k.
That said sale is being made to
Free Dent. 3195410.
reasonable prices. IS years
TriCsumty Tree Service.
satisfy the firms of said Writ of
cap. Kenneth Holt. 322 5259
Trimming, removal, clearing,
Execution.
KICK THE STORAGE HABIT.
anytime atler 5.
hauling. Free Eu. 322.9410.
John F. Polk, Sheriff
Models.Prof,sslonai
Studio
Sell these useful, no lon9ef
SAVE ENERGY &amp; DOLLARSI
Seminole County, Florida
establishing file. Prestige
needed items walit a Herald
Professional
PaInti1c-Ex.
HARPER'S TREE SERVICE
Bait &amp; Blown. PRONTO IN.
portfolio
Publish April 15, 32, 29 &amp; May 6.,
&amp;
composIte
332.2611
or
Call
Ad.
Classified
tenor Interior. RemodelIng,
Trimming, removing I LandSULAT ION CO. 3231113cr 134with the sale on May 7, 1951
reasonable
rates.
327.2211.
$31 9993
Lic.. Ins. Free tst.I. 511 *17
scaping. Free 1st. 3330313.
1235 Fr., Estimates.
DEN 11

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lB-Evening Herald, Sanlord, Fl. Wednesday, April iS, 1Si

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111---Evening Herald, Sanford, FL Wednesday, Apr11 15, 1911

4

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Chance Meeting With Shaw Led To Play ART ROW \4
SPRING SALE
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14.00 Each Month For 1 Year
DURING APRIL &amp; MAY ONLY Z

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EACH MONTH ON ANNUAL AGREEMENT

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[ ASK ABOUT OUR DISCOUNT TO
CHURCHES AND OTHER NON-PROFIT
ORGANI7ATIONS,
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF FREE
TERMITE INSPECTION
CALL ABOUT OUR NEW LAWN
CONTROL PROGRAM
ART BROWN PEST CONTRL
ORLANDO
CALL
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Jerome Kilty

reviews the script of his pla' "Dear

Liar."

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"Dear Liar" Is a dramatic adaptation of the intimate, impish, legendary .10-year correspondence between master playwright George Bernard Shaw and celebrated actress Mrs, Patrick
Campbell (shown above). Playing the two are
Edward llerrman and June Alexander (below),
renowned for their television portrayal of
Eleanor and Franklin Roosevelt.

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______________

NIFTY TRAYS
PACK OF 21
11
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DISPOSA ILlS
Adjustable wheels
for 4 cutting
heights

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Grid adjusts to 4 heIghts,
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APPLIANCES
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13 Spied Mixer M24 kg. 13.99 i MVII_I
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322-2821

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(Liquor Closed Sunday)
PHONE 323-9190 RX 321-0250

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Follow recipe for Herbed Oil and Vinegar Dressing. Place
11 2 pounds fresh asparagus (about 36 stalks), cleaned, cooked
in shallow dish. Pour dressing over asparagus. Cover;
refrigerate 2 to 3 hours. Remove from dressing and serve on
lettuce-lined plates. This kitchen-tested recipe makes 6 servings.
(Note: Recipes may be doubled.)

,

10 LBS

cup dark corn 5)TUP
I. cup firmly packed brown sugar
1 smoked whole ham (12 to 15 pounds) fully cooked, with
bone in
In small bowl, stir together corn syrup and brown sugar.
Line large roasting pan with foil. Score ham about ½-inch
deep. Place ham on rack in prepared pan. Insert meat thermometer in tt)ickest part of ham making sure thermometer
does not touch bone. Roast in 325-degree oven 4 to 41i hours or
until internal temperatures reaches 160-degrees. About 30
minutes before ham is done, brush frequently with corn syrup
mixture. Serve warm or cold. This kitchen-tested recipe
makes about 28 to 34 servings.
(Note: 1 smoked whole cook-before-eating ham (12 to 14
pounds) may be substituted for fully cooked ham. Prepare as
above, but roast about 3½ to 4 hours or until Internal temperature reaches 140-degrees.

&amp; UP

-

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PUDDING
3 medium Idaho potatoes
1 teaspoon salt
14 cup margarine
½ cup minced onion
½ cup chicken broth
3 eggs well beaten
½ teaspoon salt
I
teaspoon pepper
3 tablespoons chopped parsley
Wash potatoes and cut Into squares. (Cut into uniform-size
pieces if potatoes vary in size.) Place potatoes In large
saucepan with 1-inch cold water. Add salt. Bring to a boil,
cover, reduce heat, simmer 20 to 25 minutes until potatoes are
tender. Drain; peel potatoes. Meanwhile, In small skillet, melt
margarine; saute onion until soft. In large bowl of electric
mixer, beat potatoes until they are smooth and free of all
lumps. Add chicken broth, eggs, ointon, parsley, salt and
pepper; mix well. Pour mixture Into greased 14-quart
casserole. Bake in 350-degree oven 35 to 40 minutes untiltop Is
puffed and lightly broned. This kitchen-tested recipe makes 6
portions.

L2,$3

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SANFORD.

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HERB VEGETABLE BAKE
1 pa ckage (10 ounces) frozen artichoke hearts
1 cup thinly sliced carrots
1cup small whole mushrooms
1 cup very small white onions
1 cup thinly sliced Zucchini
Herb and Lemon Sauce
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110.11.31

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PROPISSIONAL
10.2-I LIQUID LAWN - TRITHION
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This cornpletir nutritional
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1 cup corn oil
ii cup cider vinegar
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon dry mustard
1 teaspoon paprika
1-2 teaspoon dried tarragon leaves
Dash pepper
In small jar with tight fitting lid, place corn oil, vinegar, salt,
mustard, paprika, tarragon and pepper. Cover: shake,well.
Refrigerate.
Shake thoroughly before serving. Serve on assorted salad
greens. This kitchen-tested recipe makes 11 4 cups.

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100

EASTER M ENU

Parmesan Crumb Topping
Easter is a movable feast and ranks in the Christian world
In small amount of boiling water, separately cook and drain
with the celebration of Christmas.
artichoke hearts, carrots, mushrooms and onions. In I '7-quart
Centuries ago, conflicting calendars (lunar and solar) led to
casserole, toss together cooked vegetables and zucchini. Pour
our current problem of when this most holy of times will be
Herb and Lemon Sauce over vegetables. Sprinkle with Par- GLAZED HAM
observed.
mesan Crumb Topping. Bake, uncovered, in 350.drgree oven 30
The pagan tradition dictated a festival of spring at the vernal
equinox, March 20. The Passover or Jewish Pasch is also minutes or until zucchini is tender. This kitchen-tested recipe ASPARAGUS VINAIGRETTE
makes 4 servings,
celebrated during this season of the year.
SALAD
And it was during the feast of Passover that Jesus, a Jew,
ONSAUCE: m
Insallsaucepan, gradually MARINATED BEAN
HR
Ell BAND
was crucified and rose from the dead.
stir 1 cup milk into 1 tablespoon corn starch until smooth. Add 2
The Christian calendar does not follow the Jewish calendar.
14 teaspoon salt, teaspoon pepper. NO-COOK APPLE RELISH
There were ancient disputes over ecclesiastical authority, and tablespoons
margarine,
Stirring constantly, bring to boil over medium heat and boil 1
we learn that the Christians wanted a Holy Week beginning
with Palm Sunday, proceeding to Good Friday and ending on minute. Remove from heat. Stir in 2 tablespoons lemon juice, 1 PUFFED POTATO PUDDING
teaspoon dried dill and 1 tablespoon chopped parsley. This
/' Easter Sunday commemorating the resurrection. Thus,
kitchen-tested recipe makes 1 1-3rd cups sauce.
HERB VEGETABLE BAKE
Easter may fall anywhere between March 22 and April .
PARMESAN CRUMB TOPPING: In small bowl, stir
However Christian the worship services may be In churches
together I cup soft bread crumbs, 2 tablespoons chopped fresh
throughout the world at Eastertime, pagan elements linger,
parsley, 2 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese and I
' These are a bow to spring and rebirth following the winter
tablespoon melted margarine. This kitchen-tested recipe
A months. The bunny rabbit comes to the forefront as a nonmakes about 2-3rd cup.
religious symbol at Easter representing, from ancient times,
(Note: Recipes may be doubled.)
fecundity, and eggs "colored like rays of the returning sun"
4 abound.
In many families, the baking of the "hot cross bun" repeats
the Christian symbol, the "boon distributed among the faithful," and it would not be Easter without such a bread.
Easter is time for looking forward. A time of feasting... and
one that calls for a gathering of family and friends for a traditional Easter feast, following worship services heralding
-: "Christ is Risen."
MARINATED BEAN SALAD
1 package (10 ounces) frozen cut green beans, thawed
.
1 cup canned chick peas, drained
L cup thinly sliced sweet red pepper
I small red onion, thinly sliced
'..
'i cup olive oil
p ."
14 cup cider vinegar
1 tablespoon prepared mustard
½ teaspoon flavor enhancer
½ teaspoon sugar
- :1 4 teaspoon salt
14 teaspoon crushed dried mint leaves
In teaspoon pepper
In a medium bowl, combine green beans, chick peas, red
-pepper and onion. Ina small bowl or cup, combine oil, vinegar,
-mustard, flavor enhancer, sugar, salt, mint and pepper; mix
well. Pour over vegetables and toss lightly. Cover. Chill 1 hour
fo
before serving. This kitchen-tested recipe makes 6 servings,
+
No-COOK APPLE RELISH
1 tablespoon Dijon-type mustard or seeded mustard
3 tablespoons olive oil
L4 teaspoon paprike
2 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon sugar, or more to taste
'
Juice of 1 medium (3 ounces) lemon
l'i teaspoons cider vinegar
3 to 4 tart apples, peeled and grated
.
Place mustard in a 3-cup mixing bowl. Gradually beat in
olive oil with fork or wire whisk. Stir in remaining ingredients.
-.
Taste and adjust seasoning.
Refrigerate in a tightly covered container if relish will not be
served at one, but bring to room temperature before serving. It
will keep at least 2 months in the refrigerator, but the flavor is
best when used within I month. This kitchen-tested recipe
makes about 2 cups, depending on size of spples used.
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PEST CONTROL

Their meeting was the first in a series of events that led Kitty
It was only a chance meeting with George Bernard Shaw,
to write his best known play, "Dear Liar," the story of the
but it changed the course of Jerome Kilty's life.
Kilty, whose play about Shaw, "Dear Liar," starring Jane correspondence between Shaw and Mrs. Patrick Campbell, the
lexander and Edward Herrmann airs on PBS tonight, tells it woman he loved and the actress for whom he wrote
'Pymalion," later popularized as "My Fair Lady."
This way.
"During the war I met the woman who had smuggled the
"During the war, I was a navigator in the U.S. Air Force
Mationed north of London near Shaw's cottage. Shaw was then correspondence between Shaw and Mrs. Pat out of France in a
'near 90 and on a whim one day, a buddy of mine and I bicycled hatbox just days before the German occupation. I thought the
over to his house and knocked on the door. We were told he letters were very dramatic."
The totters were eventually returned to Mrs. Patrick
liked Yanks."
Campbell's
heirs, but in the early '50s, they were published and
An ancient gentleman with a walking stick and a long white
Kitty got the idea of writing his play.
beard, wearing plus-fours and a Norfolk jacket, appeared.
It took a lengthy court battle, but Kilty was finally given the
"He took us around back to show off his studio," Kitty
rights to produce "Dear Liar."
remembers. •fl was if portable shed on wneels that could be
Kilty and his wife performed readings of the work in
rotated to face the sun as It moved across the sky. It reminded
progress at first. Later he mounted a bigger production of the
me of a gypsy caravan."
play at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago.
Kilty described the interior as an austere, little cell with a
But when Katharine Cornell read the script, she called Kitty
high window. Shaw told the visitors he preferred a window
and said, "I've read your play and I'm going to do it," Cornell
without a view because he hated to be distracted.
Kilty admits he knew little about the famous playwright and and Brian Aherne toured in it for one year including a three
critic at the time — "he was someone from another planet" — month run In New York.
Since then "Dear Liar" has played all over the world, inbut he made an impression on the 19-year-old serviceman.
eluding 40 different productions In Russia where it's still in the
repertory of the Moscow Art theater.
"In Russia, they say the play illustrates the tragic situztions
'n which we let our artists deteriorate in Capitalistic countries," Kitty quips.
This special production of "Dear Liar," made possible by a
grant from Hallmark Cards Inc., was produced by David
Susskind in conjunction with WGBII-Boston.
bAAd

20" Lawnmower

Wednesday, April 15,1911—ic

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POUND

/$1

SAVE 70' PER LB

SAVE 36'

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FVOl U 'I'10 N!
COUNT E RSHOP
-

ALL STORES CLOSED EASTER SUNDAY

�Evening Herald, Sanford, Fl.

The Passover Table Proudly

IC-Evening
..............

Low Sodium

Dietary Rules Limit Foods But Not Imagination

Dis Ii I" I igli In
Taste Appeal

Roasted cashews add their own

The eight-day Passover holidays, which this year begin with
sundown April 18 and end April 26, challenge the most creative
in Jewish cookery.

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distinctive flavor to make Chicken
Cashew, left, anything but bland.

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Braised
duckling, Grecian style, right
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lightly touched with fragrant cumin,

Table salt, chemically sodium chloride, is about 40 percent
sodium. While it plays an active role in many Important
physiological functions, many health professionals believe
Americans consume far too much sodium.

Is a one-dish meal with

.

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Even with strict dietary rules, some of the most beautiful of
Jewish religious ceremonies take place around the dinner
meal. This makes times preceding the holidays busy for those
planning and preparing the Seder and accompanying meals.
Despite these dietary observances, each Passover table is
set proudly with an array of tempting dishes. Many will indude the traditional gefilte fish (ground fish), tzinunes and
potato kugel or pudding during the lovely Passover gatherings,

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dietary guidelines advising Americans to "avoid too much
sodium." The Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and
Human Needs proposed a dietary goal of5 grams Of salt per
day, equivalent of 2 grams of sodium. Americans currently
consume 6 to 16 grams of salt per day, much greater than the

SPINACH BORSCHT OR SCHAV

'

-

.

ANTIPASTO VERDE

1 onion, cut in half
1 teaspoon salt
3 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice
teaspoon sugar
2 eggs, lightly beaten
1 CUP sour cream optional dairy)

This Jewish celebration, commemorating the liberation of
the Hebrews from Egyptian slavery inorethan 3,000s•earsago,
Is unique in its emphasis on the table.

coriander rice and peas.

In the past year, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the
U.S. Department of Health and Human services Issued joint

1 pound fresh spinach
6 cups water

'

2 Granny Smith Apples, unpared, cored, sliced into wedges
I zucchini, unpared, cut into 3-inch strips
I cucumber, sliced flowerets
2 cups raw broccoli
1 large green pepper, seeded, cut into strips
I small bunch scallions, cut into 3-inch lengths
3 ribs celery, cut into 3-inch sticks
Fresh- parsley sprigs
Arrange apple wedges and vegetables on large serving
platter. Garnish with fresh parsley. Serve chilled. This kitchen-tested recipe makes 6 to 8 servings.

Suggested Garnishes:
boiled potato, diced hard.cookegg, diced cucumber,
sliced scallion, chopped radish
Wash and trim spinach; chop coarsely. In large saucepot or
kettle, combine spinach, water, onion and salt. Bring to a boll;
simmer 10 minutes. Add lemon juice and sugar; sImmer 15
minutes longer. Remove Ifront heat. Remove onion. Add small
amount of hot soup to eggs, stirring constantly; return mixture
to kettle; mix well. Serve immediately or chill and serve cold,
Garnish with sour cream, if a dairy meal, and any or all of the
suggested garnishes. This kitchen-tested recipe makes 6 to 8
servings.S

. DIP i Dairy)
1 package 8 ounces, cream cheese, softened at room
temperature
cup sour cream
3 tablespoons minced scallions
2 tablespoons minced parsley

#

Makes 4 servings

2 eggs
¼ cup unslf ted flour
1 tablespoon sugar

D D , %F
.

Dip

I tablespoon water
2 teaspoons dry sherry
2 whole chicken breasts, skinned, boned and divided

1 cup finely chopped dry roasted unsalted cashews
1 cup peanut oil
Beat eggs slightly. Add flour, sugar, water and dry sherry;

PIJSLI

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INSTANT

½tsp. coriander

•

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SHOULDER

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FRESH

GREEN

______

DINNER

hours, or refrigerate for six. Heat oil. Brown duck rapidly over

high heat in Dutch oven. Add wine. Simmer for one hour or
until tender. Remove duck and strain stock. Return 1½ pints of
liquid to pan and bring to boil, Stir in rice. Return to boil.
Reduce heat. Cover. Simmer 20 minutes. Stir In coriander,
peas and additional salt and pepper, if desired. Arrange
duckling on top of rice, Cover. Return to heat for 10 minutes (to

duckling through). Serve with gn salad and

fruit. Serves 4.

$

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Party Pizzas

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Stick Bread

In large saucepan, steam carrots and white potatoes 10

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water, margarine, salt, nutmeg and cinnamon; pour o'er
vegetables; mix well. Bake in a 35(egree oven 50 minutes.

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100

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BLEACH

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SANFORD.2944 ORLANDO ROAD, ZAYRE PLA ZA ATTHE CORNER OF 17.2 &amp; ORLANDO ROAD

sprinkle with paprika, If desired. This kitchen-tested recipe

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REGULAR OR NATURAL

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COUNT. ASSORTED
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Baste often with orange mixture during baking. This kitchen.
tested recipe makes 6 servings.

_

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4 4 cup butter or margarine
½ teaspoon gratod lemon peel
¼ cu ahe
(or thicken stock or water)
1 Western Bose pear, cored and sliced
1 or 2 teaspoons flour
14 to one-third cup water
Paprika, If desired
Rub chicken with lemon, squeezing juice onto thicken;
'sprinkle with salt to taste. [at stand 15 minutes. In skillet,
brown thicken well in butter or margarine, Drain excess fat;
pour sherry over chicken. Simmer, covered, 30 to 40 minutes or
until thicken is tender; turn once during simmering. Add pear,
simmer, covered, S to 10 minutes or until pear is cooked but
firm. Remove chicken and pear to warm serving platter.
Blend flour into drippings; cook until thickened. Add water to

It small bowl, combine concentrated orange juice, honey,

:

008

ed

.

minutes in 2-inches boiling salted water. Add squash and sweet
potatoes; steam 10 minutes longer. (Add more water if
needed.) Drain vegetables; arrange in a 2-quart casserole. In

'

"a lemon

.

I cup water
1 cup pareve margarine, melted
I teaspoon ground nutmeg
Dash ground cinnamon

_______

S

Make a sauce from the drippings to spoon over the thicken
and fruit. Serve with rice or noodles and a green salad. The
russet-toned Boscs are an excellent choice for ft dish and for
baking since they hold their shape well.
LEMONPEARED CHICKEN SUPREME
i(2½ to 3 pound chicken fryer, cut up

.

2/`10g

Ili cups peeled, cubed sweet potatoies
1.3rd cup frozen concentrated orange juice, thawed, un-

94,

________

________

entree.

.

Soy Sauce

' cup hone)'

crisp-tender and1 1 juicy and add a tang to a simple chicken

..

Hubbard)

): KIKKOMAN

FRENCH

diluted

N?

• A different lemony chicken is made with Bose pears added in
the last few minutes of cooking. In this way the pears remain

-

ORANGE SAUCE

8

2LB
PAN

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7bere am many ways to prepare chicken and it makes an
excellent base for a one-skillet dish.

.

In $

_87c

l)aIlOZI1tO10U

U.S. NO. I. FRESH IDAHO GENUINE

Potatoes

$

OVER
3LBS LB

__________

[SA-1 Onions (Gitimm)-2/79"

452
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__________
24o: lilt I'ANIHY PHIDI
12 PAK PANTRY PRIDI
28o CONbITIONIRS OR
minutes, untila knife inserted in center comes out clean. Serve
So: FROZEN PANTRY PRIDE FLORIDA
$139 [
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hot or cold. This kitchen-tested recipe nrikes 6 to 8 servings.
Rolls(PARTY FLAKE)
Shampoo (SUAVE)Juice (ORANGE) 2/88c
2 III PM'. PANTRY PRII)I IIUTHRMII K
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49
2
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El
El Pancake Mix
El R011s (cL0vERLEAF
Dexatrim_
1 cup pared, cubed white potatoes
Bagels ASsoulD._2/1
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PAR
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BUNCH LOCAL GROWN

Folger's Coffee*219

Tomatoes(GTCWEDA90

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SWEET JUICY.

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PACKAGED FRESH DAILY.

*0.1 JAR. INSTANT

Sweet Relish-69" El Blackeye Peas 39

Napkins

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Greens OrSPINACH_98C El

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GENERIC' 17.501

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Green Beans_3Pl El Iced Tea Mix_

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Kosher Dills______79"
GENERIC. 64o:

Pears team well with skillet chicken.

Tomatoes (WHOLE)

BUNCH. LARGE CALIFORNIA
___
Broccoli
FRESH
_______

GENERIC. 32oz JAR

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BAG 1 8
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SAVE 30'

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ROASTS___

HAMS

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JAR

2 cups small pieces broken matzoh
cup orange juice
' cup pareve margarine divided
cup chopped onion
cup chopped celery
2 eggs, beaten
$ cup finely chopped fresh parsley
teaspoon salt
4 large whole chicken breasts, boned, split
Orange Sauce
Place broken matzoh in large bowl; add orange juice; set
aside. In a large skillet, over medium.high heat, melt 2
tablespoons margarine. Saute onion and celery Until tender.
add to matzoh mixture.
Add eggs, parsley, and salt, mix well. Place chicken breasts,
skin-side-down, between two sheets of waxed palter. Pound
until , -inch thick. Place about I I cup ntatzoh stuffing in center
I of each breast. Fold sides over and fasten with footi picks. Melt
remaining 2 tablespoons margarine in same skillet, saute
chicken breasts until lightly brown. Place in shallow baking
pan. Cover withalurninuin foil. Bake ina 3Wegree oven 40 to
45 minutes or until tender. Remove food picks. Serve with
Orange Sauce. This kitchen-tested recipe makes 8 servings.

__

IrlI!uIAIpIIl

I pkg. frozen peas

Blend lemon juice, curnin, salt and pepper. Brush duckling
with mixture. Cover with foil. Leave at room temperature

I.

ftOUj.

a

ONELESS

12 oz. dry red wine
13 01. long grain rice, uncooked

SaitUM

2 tablespoons lime juice
I Granny Smith apple, pared and shredded
Heat cream cheese until fluff)'; beat in sour cream,
scallions, parsley, lime juice and salt. Fold in shredded apple.
Cover. Chill 1 hour before serving. This kitchen-tested recipe
makes about I' cups dip.

STUFFED SEI)ER

S

•

DUCKLINGGRECIANSTYLE

I

.".

CHICKEN 1311FASTS

IF

-

3 tbs. fresh lemon juice
½ tsp. ground cumin seed
½ tsp. salt
s tsp. ground black pepper
1 Wisconsin duckling 4to5lbe.
3 tbs. olive oil

D

closed Easter Sunday

Shop earlys all stores

,'
' (jtI:QI

beat until smooth.
in egg mixture and then coat with
Dip chicken pie
chopped dry roasted Unsalted cashews. Place on wax paper.
Chicken may be covered and refrigerated until just before'
serving.
Heat peanut oil in a large skillet over high heat to 375 degrees
F. Brown thicken In hot oil for 2 to 3 minutes, or until lightly
browned. Drain on paper towels. Transfer to shallow baking
pan and bake at 325 degrees F. for 20 to 25 minutes, or until
done.

$

\SS,

4 medium.slze fresh beets
1 cup apple cider vinegar
' cup sugar
' cup chopped onions
2 teaspoons prepared horseradish
teaspoon salt
Wash beets; cut off tops. 'Cook beets in boiling, salted water
35 to 40 minutes or until tender. Rinse beets in cold water; peel
off skin. Shred beets on coarse grater. You should have about
1 cups. In a medium saucepan, heat vinegar; add sugar and
stir until dissolved. Add onions. shredded beeLi. horseradish
and salt. Boil 10 minutes. Chill thoroughly before serving. This
kitchen-tested recipe makes P2 cups relish.

we wish you a.

fami

F/ ...,rom our family to your

CASHEW CHICKEN

TIT

\

BEET RELISH

Cutting down on our sodium consumption does not mean that
our diet will become bland and lifeless. Judicious use of spices,
herbs and other inwodium ingredients means that we can
keep the sparkle in our mea)s.
The Cashew Chicken recipe suggested here is a good
example of a low-sodium dish that Is high in taste appeal. Dry
roasted unsalted cashews add their own distinctive flavor to
make Cashew Chicken anything but bland.

O

S

SAVORY ,tl'PLE CHEESE

physiological need.

4

Wednesday, April 15,191111-11C

____
____
FREE!
2nd SET OF PRINTS FROM

YOUR KODACOLOR I ILM Al TIMI
OF DEVELOPING AT OUR ______

REGULAR LOW

1 package (12 0:.) pitted dried prunes
2 cups boiling water
3 tablespoons peanut oil
2 pounds lean beef cubes
34 cup chopped onion
3½ cups water
1½ teaspoons salt
teaspoon ground black pepper
1½ pounds medium sweet potatoes, peeled and quartered
½ cup honey
2 whole cloves
14 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 tablespoon potato starch
Place prunes in a small bowl. Cover with boiling water; set
aside. Heat 2 tablespoons peanut oil In a Dutch oven over
medium high heat. Brown beef cubes, in several batches,
removing from pot when done. Add remaining oil to pot and
saute onion until tender. Return meat with water, salt andpepper to Dutch oven. Bring mixture to a boil; cover, 1½ hours

-. •

11011211I35 FILM ONLY'

GOOD TIIRU TUESDAY. APRIL 2*. 1981.

and combine with potato starch until smooth. Return mixture
, to pot; cook and stir until stew is thickened.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, Fl.

4C—Evening Herald, Sanford, Fl.
.1 1ifl

Wednesday, April iS, 911

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HELLMANN'S
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19
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CAN

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5000 APRIL 11-11, 101

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
5000 APRIL 11-IS, 1551

WITH ONE FIL LE D SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
5000 APRIL WE, 1551

.

0000 APRIL 11-15, 1551

CAN

LE SEVER
PEAS

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
GOOD APRIL 11.15, 111

SAVE

30cA'

BLUE RIBBON

THRIFTY MAID

BEER

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PRIaS GOOD

Limit two 6.pks. with $5.00 or
more purshas. excl. ties.

6

PACK
1 2.oz.
CANS

$189

CIACKIN' GOOD ALL VARIETIES
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Pretzels

KAHK$ ALL MIAT &amp; ALL SUP JUMSO

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�SC-Evening Herald, Sanford, Fl.

Make

Dish

Evening Herald, Sanford, Fl.

Wednesday, April IS, 911

Main

This time-saving

Salad

colorful collage

.4-

.itf

-

Ahead

-

If you're looking for an entree that requires no last-minute
preparation, try Make-Ahead Dinner Salad. You can make this
satisfying main dish salad early in the day or a day ahead.
Then when supper time arrives, it will be ready and waiting in
the refrigerator.
This time-saving salad is a great way to include plenty of
protein and vitamins in a meal. It's a colorful collage of hard-

ate An
' agon
Edible W
For Easter

of hard-cooked
eggs, chicken,

.,

Day

I

salad Is a

vegetables,
Mandarin orange
slices and zesty
curry dressing.

cooked eggs, chicken and a variety of crisp vegetables.
Mandarin orange slices and a zesty curry dressing top it off
tastefully.
For family or guests serve Make-Ahead Dinner Salad with
your favorite bread and beverage to complete an appetizing
meal.

1

4
I,.

k.

.

.

•

I pan (5 0!.) popcorn
I..
I cup sugar
½ cup corn syrup
½ cup water
.
I to 2 tablespoons butter or margarine
1 cup dry raisins
The coated popcorn is now ready to form into a wagon.
1 cup dry roasted peanuts
Grease the Insides of a 5"0" baking pan. Grease hands also.
1 can (3½ oz.) flaked coconut
Pack the popcorn around the insides of baking pan to form a 1"
green vegetable dye
Prepare popcorn according to package directions. Save out thick shell. Form a handle by rolling popcorn into a rope,
two popped cups; pour remainder into large bowl or pan. Heat curving slightly. Allow popcorn to sit for iS to 20 minutes.
sugar, corn syrup and water in saucepan to 245-degrees - 250- Meantime, follow directions on can for coloring coconut. Allow
degrees F. or until a drop of syrup forms a hard ball in cold coconut to dry. Remove wagon from baking dish. Attach jelly
water. Save some syrup for attaching decorations; pour rings for wheels. Place dyed coconut in bottom to resemble
remaining syrup over popcorn and mix thoroughly with two grass. Mix remaining popcorn, raisins and peanuts. Pour over
coconut.
large spoons.

Italian
Cheesecake, for some reason, is thought of as an
and
of
17th
dish
delicacy. Actually, it stems from a traditional
with
made
18th century Britain and Ireland. Open tarts were
pastry filled with a blend of cream, egg yolks, lemon or orange
juice or pureed fruit, and were all referred to as
"cheesecakes." The homemade version soon gave way to
pastry shop versions in later eras. Sound familiar?
Homemade cheesecakes today are made quickly with a shell
or crust that is not baked. This version has ba nanas folded into
the body of the cake and bananas used as a topping. The
cheesecake is topped with a special lemon glaze.
BANANA CHEESECAKE SUPREME
1 cup graham cracker crumbs, divided
2-3 cup sugar, divided
3 tablespoons butter or margarine, melted
2 envelopes unvlavored gelatin
2 eggs, separated
½ cup milk
2 teaspoons lemon juice
1 teaspoon grated lemon rind
3 cups (24 ounces) cottage cheese
5 medium bananas, divided
1 cup heavy cream, whipped
Combine s cup cracker crumbs and 2 tablespoons sugar;
blend in butter. Press mixture evenly on the bottom of a 9-inch
springforrn pan. Ch ill.
Mix gelatin and remaining sugar in med ium saucepan. Beat
together egg yolks and milk; stir into gelatin mixture. Stir
over low heat, until gelatin is completely dissolved, about S
minutes. Remove from heat, stir in lemon juice and rind. Beat
cottage cheese on high speed of electr ic mixer until smooth, 4
to 5 minutes; gradually beat In gelatin mixture. Chili, stirring
occasinally, until mixture mounds slightly when dropped from
a spoon. Beat egg whites until stiff, but not dry; fold into
gelatin mixture. Peel 2 bananas and dice; Fold into gelatin
mixture. Fold in whipped cream. Pour into prepared pan. Chill
until firm, about 3 hours. Remove sides of pan. Press
remaining 'i cup crumbs around sides of cake.
Peel 3 bananas and cut into slices; dip in Lemon Glaze.
Arrange slices in rings on top of cheesecake starting at outside
rim of cake and working toward the center. Chill 30 minutes
before serving. This kitchen-tested reci pe makes 12 servings.

This fresh-as-spring salad won't wilt your budget, either.
That's because the main ingredient -eggs -are always an
economical protein buy.
If you want to save both time and money, prepare Make-

110C li,s April 16-22. 198 1)

Ahead Dinner Salad tonight... and enjoy it tomorrow!

MAKE-AHEAD DINNER SALAD
1 can (11 01.) mandarin orange segments
1½ cups mayonnaise
2 teaspoons curry powder
14

P

Olde Smithfield
Sliced Bacon

40!. fresh spinach, washed and dreamed (about 4 cope)
8 hard-cooked eggs, sliced

1 medium cucumber, peeled, halved lengthwise and sliced
½ cup chopped red onion
1 can (8 oz.) sliced water chestnuts, drained
14 cups chopped cooked thicken OR 2 cans (5 oz. each)
boned chicken, undrained
1 package (10 01.) frozen peas (separated by rapping on

Mushroom Sauce
Tops Fish Dishes

S

that extra tang.

FISH TURBANS WITH

(Effective April
(Effective

*3fltr
I

.

P!03

LARGE ROLL DESIGNER,
ASS'T., WHITE &amp; DECORATED

Bounty Towels

1 cup diced celery
I can (8 ounces) tomato sauce
114 teaspoons salt, divided
teaspoon ground black pepper, divided
1 pound fish fillets
Rinse, pat dry and slice mushrooms (makes about 5% cups).
In a large skillet, melt 4 tablespoons of the butter. Add onion
and celery; saute until tender, about 3 minutes. Add
mushrooms; saute until golden about 5 minutes. Add tomato
sauce, ½ teaspoon of the salt and ½ teaspoon of the black
n
pepper. Bring to bolting point; reduce heat and simmer, uncovered, for 5 minutes.

Preheat oven to 350-degrees. Sprinkle fish with remaining 1
teaspoon salt and ½ teaspoon black pepper; dot with
remaining 2 tablespoons butter. Roll up; secure with toothpicks If necessary. Spoon half of the tomato-mushroom sauce
in bottom of a greased 10-by4by24nch baking pan. Place fish
rolls on top; pour remaining sauce over fish. Cover and bake
until fish flakes easily when tested with a fork, about 30
minutes. (Ifs thicker sauce is desired, bake uncovered for last
10 minutes.) Serve with rice and bread sticks. This kitchentested recipe makes 6 portIons.

MUSIIROOMCAPERCAUSE
FOR FISH STEAKS
1 pound fresh mushrooms
6 individual fish steaks (cod, halibut, etc.)
4 tablespoons butter or margarine, divided
1½ teaspoons salt, divided
½ teaspoon ground while pepper
About 1 cup milk
3 tablespoons flour
1 tablespoons capers, drained
Preheat oven to 350-degrees. Rinse, pat dry and slice
mushrooms (makes about 5%cU1$); set aside. Place fish lna
greased 12-by41-by4inch biking pan. Dot with 1 tablespoon of
the butter; sprinkle with 1 teaspoon of the salt and the whits
pepper. Cover and bake until flih flakes easily when tested
with a fork, about minutes. Pour fish stock from b'pan
into a 2-cup measuring cup. Add enough milk to the fish stock
to make 2 cups liquid. Cover fish and keep warm.
In a large saucepan, melt remaining 3 tablespoons butter.
Add sliced mushrooms; saute for 3 minutes. Add flourt cook
and stir for. lmlnule. Blend In fish stock mbrture, capers and
remaining ½ teaspoon salt. Bring to the boiling point. Cook and
stir until sauce is thickened, about 1 minute. Pour over fish

steaks; serve with lemon wedges, If desired. This kitchentested recipe makes 8 portions.

T '
,. td

HALF GALLON
(4 OFF LABEL) LIQUID

8-OZ. PKG.
PHILADELPHIA BRAND

Dairi-Fresh Assorted Flavors

.

Raisins .........

Publix

p.,

,ft Stuffing

650

Honey Wheat
Bread............2

From eggs and candies to hams and roasts.
Publix has everything your family
needs for their happy Easter traditions.

F

•/

.'

$1

Brown IN Serve
Rolls..............2

Chocolate Chip, Oatmeal

Unsalted

Raisin, Peanut Butter or
,.

Dairi-Fresh

In Natural Juice or Syrup,
Dole Sliced, Crushed or Chunk

Dairi-Fresh

Pineapple

Publix Self-Basting (Broth Basted), Broad
Breasted, Government-Inspected, Shipped
Quick-Frozen, Evisc., U.S.D.A. Grade A
(10 to 14-lb. Average)

....

Sour Cream

Seafood Treat, Frozen

Trout Fillets

'

/
/

$269

'

SAVE $1.00, INGLENOOK
CHABLIS, BURGUNDY, ROSE'

Fully Cooked Glazed and
Garnished With Cherries
and Pineapple

CookedHam..

,"

NORTH CAROUNA
1.511t.

Prepared- Just Heat &amp; Serve

Yams &amp; Apples
In Syrup ..........
Corn Souffle'..
Fresh-Baked

Apple..PJ.et...
Delicious

Dinner Rolls

per

B.. for

lb.

"'
I0

$149

h.$14!

Tasty German Bologna - or

Old Fashion
'"
$1 0
Loaf................

Boiled Ham..... "a' $219
Zesty-Flavored

Baked Beans..

b'

69'

U.S.D.A. Choice Beef
BOfl8le$$ (Whole In theBeg)
Rib Eye......... 5' $379

'Fresh-Made

Cuban
Sandwich.......

Ready-to-take-out Southern

-tFried Chicken Ii.

$379

Hot From the Delhi

Veal
Parmesan........

' $289

:

$1 19

-

Cure 81 Fully Cooked

Ham ............... .
Swift Premium Deep-Basted,
Government-inspected, Shipped
Quick-Frozen, Evisc., U.S.D.A
Grade A (6 to 84b. Average)

Pit

Smoked Turkey
Breast.......... ..

1:-ci.

Jimmy Dean Mild, Hot or Sage

Bag Sausage..

: $18

,..
..,

49'
'.'

"Country Stand" Fresh

Mushrooms.. ',''
Dressing

F&amp;P Sweet
!

Aunt Nellies Boiled Whole
' jar '

59°

Onions..........

'I
'I
01

Publix Stuffed, Placed in Jar,
Manzanhlla

$1

Traditional (1 Stem)

Eastsr Liliss - 'Pet" $499
Beautiful (Single Bloom)
Nydrang.as '?
PO $599

I

I0.oi.

Olives........... let
'

$169 Spring Bouquet, Fresh Cut

can

$128

Also Available: Tulips, H acinth . (j.
chantmant U"111, "90f IeonIa., CIA
Flowers, Assorted FolIa9e Plants.

$

I.

J

_

-

WIU

3

JW

Mozzarella .....

Quiche
Lorraine .........

$ 59

Morton Jelly

$329

r'uBLIX
RESERVES

Bridgford (Makes 3 Loaves)

Bread Dough..

or Medium

Be Prepared for Company With

Cheddar.........

Cracked Ice - . -

Breakstofle8

Clark's Breaded Veal Steaks

Ricotta
Cheese ..........

or Chopped

Wisconsin Cheese Bar

Sliced Swiss - -.

$229

'

Dairi-Fresh Small Curd, Large
Curd. Schmierkase or Low-Fat

Cottage
24b
89' Cheese..........

(jJ,1

,.'

9OL5IXS

hen

99

There Is no mystery involved in turning out loaves of crusty,
fragrant bread, just a little time and practice. Once your
kitchen takes on the aroma of homemade yeast breads, and
after you've sampled that first tender bite, you may never go
back to store-bought again.
Basically, yeast breads contain six simple ingredients;
yeast makes the dough rise; flour provides the structure;
liquids give moistness and a warm environment for dissolving
the yeasts; sugar provides food for the yeast to grow; salt
slows down the action of the yeast and adds flavor; fats give

$l.00orMo;.o

Any Candy
1. Iffloclive Ap"I 16 22. 1911111

24-os. Can,

Johnson's Baby Powder

L

69'

200&amp;.

like.

1

19

SAVE 46c, (25c Off Label)

Colgate
Toothpaste ....

1'

SAVE 60c, Johnson's

Baby
Shampoo .......

.

From those basic six ingredients, a whole host of breads can
be prepared by simply changing the proportions and type of
flour used. Add extra ingredients such as herbs, spices,
cheese, nuts, seeds, dried frut or ripe olives, and the
variations are endless.

ps1

2-1b. Sit..
Golden Light Brown or lox
PoIyBag Confections's Powdsrsd

Dliii Crystals Sugar
3i1,i.cl,,.4

Il-fl. 194
-

IM4wcreenstamps
horn,

Pk9.,d
County cured, Sharp Colby or
Fulimoon Longhorn

4.iEt....................
fsch,.APIHIS.22. IUI)..,....
ro
EXTPIA

JWGreenStamps
16-os. Bottle.

Urn. Away Tile Cleaner
5.

I

Publix
SANFORD PLAZA, SANFORD
LONGWOOD VILLAGE CTR
LONG WOOD
THIS AD EFFECTIVE IN THE FOLLOWING COUNTIES:
Bievwd,

rIotla Citrus Cower

Ilt•CU,i Nord $. 55, 19511

a.wto t6.nds

HIlIsbO, lake. Lee, Manatee, Orange, O.csota, Pasco.
Pmvias, Poe, Sarasota a seanol; wiess o*ierwt.e
noted.

I

JWGrreedtanips
. ... ... ...
204b. Bag,

Sparky Charcoal

...6.

.

-

tfl.ch.• £dI Is 31.

._fln..efl.flem

j

-

RA

ree nStamps
7-os. Pkg.. (In Tank)

SaRI Flush Solid

ToNit Bowl CI91fleT
11116cove Aped

Is-fl. INtl

.....fl.•flflt

- -----

HEARTY OLIVE CORNBREAD
1 1 4 cups very hot water
14 cup butter or margarine
3 tablespoons sugar
Pt teaspoon salt
- - --- 1 package active dry yeast
1½ cups pitted ripe olives, drained
1 4-ounce can chopped green chilies
½ cup yellow cornmeal
0j to 5 cups all purpose flour
In large mixing bowl, add hot water to butter, sugar and salt.
Stir until butter melts. let mixture cool to about 110 degrees,
then stir In yeast; cover and let rise in warm place until
-

County Un. Cheese

.,

0,

I

bread its tenderness, taste and moist texture.

YNNU
WIDNISDAY
APR.22ND,
1911 a
CLOUD
SUNDAY

DELUXE, PEPPEROM, SAUSAGE

P

I[III1icGree ii Stamps

I

2Ool.

APL 16TH

SAVE.3O, CELESTE FROZEN

This Cornbread
Needs Kneading

111111 iiGreenSta;ps

THIS AD
IPPICTIVI
THURSDAY

....

59

Rock Cornish
Hen.................

59

Wisconsin Cheese Bar Mild

Beef Steaks

Bait anus make cheesecake supreme.

2 1911odivo Apt" 16 - 27. 'gall

1101.

Donuts
99'

2

I

16.oz.
cans

11A

Young 'N Tender Frozen

Kraft's Casino Brand Cheese

•

89

$5 or More, Excluding mill Thaeee $t.Is)

Quelle Spinach Quiche or

Butter
flat ctn.

per . $279

Diapers ........

.

(Lin* I Pleas., With a" Purchases of

THE PLACE FOR
,.FROZEN FOODS

SWIFT'S
ØROOKF1ELD QUARTERS

1-lb.

..

Toss 'n Soft

TO LIMIT
OUANTITIES
SOLD

SAVE 40$,

Mums............ ' ? $4.1

for Dryers -

THE RIGHT

Lindsay Pitted Extra Large

In Bud &amp; Bloom, Potted

s

1-

34b.$1

(IJotit I Please, Wilfi Other PurchaS°f
$5 or more, Izeluding aU ToaIeO N.m.)

99

sh

y

I

$1

Peas..............3

-

Flowers........bwowk $2"

Made's

'•$
can

Beautiful, Colorful

39° Corsages .....

Onions ..... i....pas.

Avocados ..... 3

crl.co

Orchid

"Sun World" (2 bunch pkg.)

Blue Cheese
':

•..

59°
I&amp;f
Beets............ ''

Olives...........
120

coff"

Cream
Cheese ..........

590

Harvard

$726
Wl'ât. Grap.fnêt..
Florida Valencla
bi $771
Juice Oranges
Florida Seedless
Red GrafruIt ...
'8"
Whft Gr.pfnt .. 4
JuIc. Oranges ..... 8
Red Grap.frisit ... 3

SAVE 384,(20$ OFF LABEL)
VEGETABLE SHORTENING

Philadelphia Brand With
Chives, Onion or Plain, Whipped

Aunt Nellies Pickled Beets
&amp; Onions or Sweet &amp; Sour

44

Florida Green

For Dips or Salads, Flavorful

FREE!

Fruit
Cocktail ....... '•,'

_________________

:99' Green

Lykes Sliced

Cooked Ham..

4 1.,

49' Zucchini....... 11b.

SAVE $1.19, 8-oz. Pkg., Rath
Breakfast Link

Sausage....

..

Tender Florida Squash

Oscar Mayer Meat or Beef

Bologna .........

Cucumbers

Cabbage ...... mm'

Chipped
Meats.............
Oscar Mayer Meat or Beef

sog

89°

g

Fresh Crisp

Buddig (All Varieties)

Bologna .........

69

'

"Virginia" Rome

Sausage......... '
$199

Medium Size

: S 149 Apples ......3

pk

Swift Premium Brown 'N
Serve (All Varieties)

Shoulder
7
06

qag

Tomatoes.-...

Regular or Bun Size

$179 Franks............

U.S.D.A. Choice Beef
Boneless

Flavorful

'

H

Florida Seedless

THEPLACEFOR

......- ................Leg-O-Lamb...

Dole (Mix in a Mold with
Dessert Gelatin)

4/5 Bushel of Fresh Florida Fruht
....Ready to Go....

New Zealand Frozen

U.S.D.A. Choice Beef

Chuck
Roast............

do:sn

-

______
THE PLACE FOR

:

4

Fabric Softener Sheets

189
P,
V
Tea Bags.......'

SAVE 50$, MAXWELL HOUSE
REG., ELEC4PMt AM

(Umit IPI..s.,WNkO*IlPs.U'
it
he
Item)
$5 or More, aoIvdIog sUT.cCO

Have Fun Will Travail

39

$iae
U

BEEF

per
lb.

Swimt

Boneless

_
wvw

b'

b'

bot.

6 1 49

Delicious Vegetables - Ready

VV

59

Angel Food
Cake Mix...... '°'

Jar

POIS 5SIS.

EXCELLENT
BAKED OR CANDIED,

59

09.

-

Mayonn5
19
32-oz.$

EXCELLENT COOKED WITH
TOMATOES AND BACON,
FLORIDA FRESH CRISP

SOLD

doz

59'

SAVE 30s, HELLMANN'S

RIGHT

OLIANTITIES

King Fish
Steak .............

V

1,41
tUmYIS

TO LIMIT

Seafood Treat,

i' ;-

purn.ii

'

...

Cascade.........

SAVE 26, F&amp;P WHOLE KERNEL
OR CREAM STYLE GOLDEN

Pineapple
46oi.
Juice .............ca
fl....i1.
Cw4 IIival
;_,auIv PvuuIw 'iv'
l
Pickles......... ot'. p1"
#--_

(19

Dishwasher Detergent

Pillsbury Plus Assorted

Joy Liquid

Lipton

Whipping
Cream ............

69'

(25c Off Label) Electric

69

cup water

1i' 24-ct. Small, 12-ct. Large
(15c off Label) Duncan Hines or 18-ct. Medium
Deluxe
Luv's

per

1°

s

Combine lemon juice and sugar in medium saucepan, cook
over low heat until sugar is dissolved. Mix cornstarch with
water; stir into saucepan. Cook, stirring constantly until
mixture boils and thickens.

32-or.

Chunk

Frosting ....... ";.r

79'

...

(27c Off Label) Dish
Detergent

In 01101 Water, Chicken of
the Sea Light
790
Tuns.

Dole Delicious

SAVE 7 It. GALA

THIS AD EFFECTIVE:
Napkins
THURSDAY, APR. 10
THRU WEDNESDAY
APR. 22ND 1981 ... SO-ct
CLOUD SUNDAY... 09.

.

Cookies ........

$Ø9

IREAKFAST CLUB FI.A. GRADE A Pillsbury Assorted Frosting
Supreme Ready-to-Spread

Large Eggs

I teaspoon cornstarch

99°

Purex
Detergent.......

Cake Mixes - -

12OZ.Csfls$209
6-ph. cm .

Sugar (l5to 17-oz.)

No Sugar Added, Welch's
Grape Juice. 61-800` $229
Mot

(Plus Tax &amp; Deposit)
ANHEUSER.BUSCH BEER

79'

Pillsbury Slice 'N Bake

79°

Al. Sauce... t

Natural Light

Sunshine Regular 01

Krlspy
1 6-oz.
Crackers.......

per lb.

$1

'

Smuckers

Pillsbury Dinner

Crescent
Rolls...............

of

RC or Diet
1

.

'

Enhances the Flavor of Meats Heavy Duty Liquid Laundry

Quarters of
.

V$asic Sweet Pickles

69° Gherkins......

I''

18-oz.1144191 StrawberrY
8-ph. cm .
Jam ..............

Margarine ...... 3

1.3 cup lemon juice
½ cup sugar

&amp; Osceola Counti

Breakfast Club Regular

Breakfast Club

V~79

79C

49

or 8-oz. Herb or Cornbread

Mustard........

Orange, Lake, S.

11

'

l.cmon Glaze

French's Pure Prepared

Pepperidge Farm 7-oz. Cube

Publix Special Recipe

per lb.

Clorox Bleach 4

Sun Maid Golden Seedless
or Seedless

Ice Cream or
hilt
Sherbet ........ gaaon

ues

16-22. 1198 1)

Apri IS- 22, 198 1)

Cream Cheese

rill ywr
CkAclwa

Swift Premium Fully Cooked
(Either End or Whole)

16-OZ. PKG. GOLDEN LIGHT
BROWN, OLD FASHIONED DARK
BROWN, 4X OR lox POWDERED
CONFECTIONERS SUGAR

Dixie Crystals

wrpwsmcm

--

16. 22, 1981

-

Sugar

(Ett.Chv. April 16-22. 198 11

MUSHROOM CELERY
SAUCE
1 pound fresh mushrooms
6 tablespoons butter or margarine, divided
cup chopped onion

,VAS

5-LB. BAG, PURE CANE
DIXIE CRYSTALS

,

"Fish dinners will make a man spring like a flu," went the
line of a 17th-century song once dear to Sir Henry Morgan's
buccaneers.
The buccaneers were on the right trick, because fish protein
can make a diner feel energetic. Savoring such homemade
delicacies as fish turbans with mushroom celery sauce or fish
steaks with mushroom caper sauce may not have you bounding up the Matterhorn immediately, but fish is an important
ingredient In a healthful diet.
These are practical dishes since both the fish and the sauces
cook quickly. Use fresh or canned mushrooms; In either case
they're cooked In a couple of minutes, ready for completing the
sauce. If you like, you may add other vegetables such as peas,
diced zucchini or diced eggplant. If capers are not readily
available In your area, substitute a finely diced sour pickle for

r

'
;!A

OT;W1;Oz.PKG.,NO SUGAR

teaspoon ground coriander

counter)
Drain oranges, reserving 2 tablespoons of syrup. Set aside.
Blend together mayonnaise, curry powder, coriander and
reserved syrup. Set aside. Tear spinacli Into bite-sized piece
and place in 13 x Ox 2-inch casserole or serving dish. Reserve 1
center egg slice for garnish. Layer remaining Ingredients over
spinach, ending with egg layer. Spread reserved mayonnaise
mixture evenly over salad and garnish with reserved orange
segments and egg slice. Cover and refrigerate several hours or
overnight. For each serving, serve a portion of all layers.
To hard-cook, put eggs in single layer in saucepan. Add
enough tap water to come at 'east 1 inch above eggs. Cover and
quickly bring just to boiling. Turn off heat. If necessary,
remove pan from burner to prevent further boiling. Let eggs
stand covered in the hot water 15 to 17 minutes for Large eggs.
(Adjust time up or down by about 3 minutes for each size
larger or smaller.) Immediately run cold water over eggs or
put them in ice water until completely cooled. To remove shell,
crackle it by tapping gently all over. Roll egg between hands to
loosen shell, then peel, starting at large end. Hold egg under
running cold water or dip in bowl of water to help ease off shell.
YIELD: 8 servings.

(Effective April

(Effective April IS- 22, IWBI)

April iS, 951-iC

Lemon Glaze
Tops Banana
Cheesecake

)

.

EASTER WAGON

Cre

a variety of crisp

7

We all enjoy spring with its special symbols. Daffodils,
crocuses and azaleas burst Into bloom; Easter bunnies appear
everywhere along with new spring wardrobes.
Children especially relish a chance to enjoy sweet treats.
Here's an edible Easter wagon sculptured from popcorn.
We've used the easy pop-In-the-pan kind, then filled it with
popcorn, raisins and colored coconut. . .everything is edible
and delicious.

Wednesday

bubbly, about 15 minutes.

Chop olives coarsely. Stir in olives, chilies, yellow cornmeal
and enough flour to make a thick dough (about 3 cups). Turn
dough onto heavily floured board and kneitd until dough is
smooth and elastic and has lost most of its stickiness (10to20
minutes), adding more flour as needed. Shape dough Into a
ball, place in greased bowl, cover and let rise until doable,
about 1½ hours.
Punch dough down; knead several times. Shape Into two
loaves and place each In a greased k5-inch pan. cover, let rise
in a warm place until almost doubled, about 45 minutes.
Bake in 375 degree oven for 30-35 minutes or until loaves are
browned and sound hollow when tapped. Cool on racks before
serving or storing. Makes 2 Loaves.
Variation: Add 1 cup shredded cheddar cheese to yeast
nind chillcc
,dth

-----

I

�SC—Even i ng Herald, Sanford, Fl.

BLONDIE
,..-

WE NADA
5P8..UP4Cs 1'E5T

Wednesday,

WE HAD A HUN

13, DI1

VOU Gr THEM

PER

Chic Young

by

Aj

GOT
T-4EM AI ,5)

0wowc,

J
___\

Answer to Previous Puzzle
46 Olympic
board (abbr.)
T
1 Bond 48 Time division
11
LI
S Athletic
49 Baby frog
u 1c 1 T1
T1
buildings
53 Oyster eggs
j
I
ICIHII A
57 Flowerless
9 Scamp
NNC
ARA
12 Start off
plant
T Z
I
CK
13 Vast period of 58 Volunteer
time
0 U
0
1
state (abbr.)
1*1016
14 Railroad
EN1
L
N iL0N
60 Protagonist
vehicle
D
9 I
61 Corral
- - - 15 Aleutian
$TL
62 Fibril
T
island
63 Indian tribe
1 r A
16a Station (Fr.) 64 Compass
N 1101*1
tufvtA
0CT
N
F i ri D
17 Scrutinize
point.
18 Throwing disk
35
Potato
65 Goddess of
10 Indian of
fate
38 Cut o ff
Yucatan
20 Rumor
66 Negatives
11 Quarry
40 Springs
22 Curly l etter
19
Phrase
of
un
43
Comfort
24 Snow runner
DOWN
derstanding 12 45 Short dash
25 Balls of fringe
wdi.)
47 Exempt
29 Rains frost
I Joyous
21 Toll
49 Topples
33 Year of
(abbr) 2 Abominable 23 Waste miner 50 Bird class
science
snowman
25 Scrabble
34 Food
51 Force unit
Pools
piece
36 Mountain
City in
India 4 Elicits
26 Advanced in 52 Oklahoma
pass in
years
37 Burning glass 5 Muzzle
54 Air (prefix)
27 Auld Lan
39 Swindles (sI) 6 Slangy
55 Legal
ACROSS

NO

1

RIGHT __)

0 1 WAS

RD5 -A4

IN 50400L
TODAY

AprIl

'-1

;
:J

O!

''ii

•

_____

_______

______

_

BEETLE BAILEY

by
IJUST

YOU MAY
IJ,' 14\
dEALOUS OF MISS 81JXLY
BUT
I'M NOT
_______

SWE '0

CUTE

5

Walker

Mon

Tl-4OUG1T

MAKE

A

5

PINCUS$1I01'4

1'c

Uu

_____

— — — —

1

14

3

15

by Art Sansom

)U 14J 14AT

t.

Ca4kP4

)

-

18 1

-

-

— — —

-

TR !kE!

17

-

-

-

_

-

14

___

_________

———

_

4-to

b

49 50 51

-

-

YOU KNOW

IT WOULDN'T

~6 INVEST

CAN IACQUIRE t6 A) SOME SHARPTHREAZ?S,

-

EITHER'

._...1

RE

-

YOUR

-

— — —

-

-

-

-

47

46
-

-

46

-

53

52

-

-

—

—

———

54 55 56

80

59

,j-

YOUR SNEAKERS,'

65

— — —

I

.

-

—

-

I

-

—

).JO
H2

-

_.

HOROSCOPE

_____________________________________________________

a

,__

7

I

ByIIERNICEBEDEOSOL

-

April16, 1981
EEK&amp; MEEK

or pregnancy. All results were cents with a long, stamped,
negative. Now he wan ts her self-addressed envelope for It
back In a month if her period to me, In care of this
,
P.O. Box
newspaper, po
does not come.
Radio City Station, New York,

.

I

•.

DEAR

READER

— Th ere
young

having

woman to stop

Airman's Medal For Ileroisni was just

'

_.i •',

.

1;k •
,'

.

•,

.

'

.:

.

.

:.,
1 '

.4

0
.

_________

4.

.
.

____________________________________

.

-

.

,.

..a.
'

Take time to think your steps you today. If you're trying to
through before tackling swin g a big deal, discuss it In
complicated projects today. other than a commercial
You're a good worker on ce atmosphere,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
you get everything organized.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) 19) You may not be able to
You may have some an achieve all you hoped to today

__

by Stoffel &amp; Heimdahi

M GO(N 1 GIVE UP '

SLLIN B)jS1S '\
'IQ_WABBITS.

__________

J

early In the day, but things let this disappoint you.
should smooth out by af- Marshall your forces. Charge
ternoon, Hang loose for fun a second time for victory.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21-Feb.
times ahead.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) 19) This should be a auc
Ways can be found today to cessful day because of your
resolve a situation which has ability to treat disturbing
been disturbing you. Luck situations philosophically.

EAST'

• Q tO 9

VQJ97
#KQJ7

4 10952

4' J

4' Q

Pass
Pass

•

Opening lead:4K

CA
'•

-

Something unexpected' may surprise today when someone

1.ik! $'PING

4
a

S

cçEpi'

.

___________

:

at the Lake Mar' City Council meeting

council's March 12 and 26 meetings, but

Fo

ARE THE WARtJK6
'ml
VffiY
_____AROUND ON TW)SE EX
WAY

Th! MAMMO,'I-i$

4

f,

-

by T. K. Ryan

SI I

.

nexatlon ordinance,

"Once there Is sufficient evidence of an
Also tonight, the council is scheduled to adverse Impact, it Is nei th er un-

rearrange the city's water rate strue- constitutional nor unreasonable to

The entire Set
the old jail, parking areas and grounds, will be needed ex.
clusively for county and circuit court functions and the offices

0

of the courts' clerk, the state attorney and public defender by

by

FLETCHER'S LANDING

SRALL

It L)t&amp;Rth

1AIElTi4G,41N

AC

whether the space which is available is suitable and adequate

..&gt;

'-

__________

-

Fos F_ 0

Comics ....................
Dear Abby .....................lB
Dea ths.........................2A
Editorial.......................4A
Florida ........................3A
Ung.Ung Is ready for mating and zoo other in their first encounter Tuesday.
Nation .........................3A spokesman Michael Morgan sa id she
Chia-Chia was brought over from the
O urselves - ..................11148 may stay in heat for only another 24
......................6A.$A
hours
or
so.
He
said
it
would
be
necessary
London
Zoo this spring, because Ling.
Sports
Television .....................38 "to make hay while the sun shines."

Weather .......................2A
World ..........................2A

for conversion of:

— Existing co unty cotnmiF5ion chambers to a jury trial

Construction is to begin immediately

in operation by fall. "For the fields to he up In the freeze on federal funding in

on a water plant and two sports fields at useable, grass has to be planted and for Atlanta," he said.
Sylvan Lake Park so uth of W. Sta te Road the grass to grow we had to have
"Our problem Is not knowing whe th er
46 off Lake Markham Road In the Paola available water," Nelswender said, the freeze will be lifted or when. The

.
asked what It believes is a first priority in their area.
recommendaU
The commissioners ha ve ta ken all
under advisement, and are to make decisions on whether the

restructured system on county government, Secondly, he said,
Seminole's population grew by 115 percent between 10 and
1910.

item can be budgeted In the 1982 fiscal year.
When construction of the new county courthouse was

Signing the resolution were Circuit Judges Kenneth M.
Leffler, chid judge; S. Joseph Davis Jr., Vernon Mize Jr. and

Davis' chambers and the trial clerks' office to an additional planned in the mid and late 1960s, an architect said the

Dominick J. SaUl and County Judges Alan Dickey, Wallace

official court reporter.
— The area now occupied by the law library, Judge Joe

coordinator, juvenile secretary, criminal division secretary, courthouse had to be built in Sanford.

juvenile arbi tration coordina tor, gua rd ian ad litem coordinator.

In December, 1972, county and court offices were moved into

•

Clerk of the Court Ar th ur H. Beckwith Jr. pointed out today
In the resolution the judges declared the conversion of the
ons
in
the
that
two events after the new courthouse opened had
entire courthouse to judicial functions and renova ti
rooms,
e
operation
of
devastating
results as far as space In the facility was con.
Remaining space to a two and possibly three judge suite Interim are "determined to be necessary for th

Affrm

m and two witness
courtroom with jury room, conference roo
—

l rooms, a shared the circuit and county courts of this county."
with chambers, hear in g rooms, secretaria

_________

waiting room and offices for court tthnInlctrative personnel. - The Judges submitted their recommendations as part of the
Ile entire east side for the orderly move of the clerk's

cerned.

First article V of the Florida Constitution went Into effect

on-going hearings the county commissioners twve been having consolidating the court systems into two tiers — circuit aod

present personnel and uses from this area to the same or ad- with various county departments where each department was county — placing all responsibility for providing space for the
4 - ic-

-

-.

...T' •

,•...,', S..

--

.-

5-

.

. _
-

-

-

•-

-,-

- •-

-

.

--

Ling and her American partner, Using-

Using, had failed to produce a cub after
Morgan said Ling-Ling was too tired Mx years of tryin g.
—

The lawsuit questioned whether Sanford was the Legal
space in the old jail.
need.
e
kitchen
county
seat. In 1971 the lawsuit was resolved wi th a Florida
— The area in the old jail which was occupied by th
In th e Interliii four years the judges are asking the corn-S
Supreme
Court ruling that Sanford is the county seat and the
juvenile
missioners to hire an architect or planning group to determine to a grand jury room, offices for court personnel,

______

______

Classified Ads ..............6&amp;7B

WASHINGTON (UPI) — Ling-Ling, Wednesda y to even leave her den, which
e National Zoo's female panda, was too disappointed zoo officials who hoped the
tired Wednesday night to meet her pandas "would pick up where they left off
Chia-Chia, so mat. (Tuesday) and may be get a little farLondon lover,
chmaking zoo officia ls said they would ther."
in g the two toge ther today.
try to br
The two growled and cuff ed at each

jury trial courtroom and judge's suite with chambers, hearing structure should be, adequate for 10 years.
October, 1985.
However, constr uction was delayed while the project was
tarial room, waiting roam and provisions for
Seven of the county's eight resident county and circuit room, secre
ry
to
ilet.
Law
libra
to
the
subject of a lawsuit.
receptionist,
access,
passageways
and
Judges sent to the county commission a resolution citing th is

Craig LeggillItt
HIS

The three men he aided were semi-

Officials Pampering Panda Pair
ZA

it

ditional areas on the first floor of the north wing. Judicial
'
By DONNA ESTES
needs here would be either the law library or domestic
herald Staff Writer
County courthouse at Sanford, including' relations commi ssioner's office, th e tr ial clerk's office and

-t

TUMBLEWEEDS

somebody needed help."

rescue teams had been extremely slow area.

udiciary Needs Ent"ire Courthouse, udges Say

ALTEP LEVELS!

4- Sf

"The first thing I did was try to find out if

was tabled when City Attorney Gary ture, a move which could result in require the developer to prove that the
explaining the need for the water plant. county commission had to make a
area.
Massey asked for a delay, but would not slightly higher water bills for some proposed curative measures will be
County Commissioners agreed to
The county administra tor sa id a grant decision whether it wanted to wait and
users.
adequate," th e court sa id in an opinion
spend $40,000 in budgeted county funds to
publicly reveal his reasons for so doing.
to
pay a good portion of the costs of this not provide active recreation t Sylvan
build the water plant and the ba ll fields
And Sem in ole County Administrator written by Justice Parker Lee
The city lost Its Initial effort to annex
eral
grant
will
work
and for development of a bout 90 Lake Park. It d ecided to move forward,"
McDonald.
th
pe
that
a
f
ed
wi
the
ho
ns
for
Roger
Neiswender
will
outline
pla
ed
a
circuit
court
rul
a cres of the 120 acre site as a nature park Nelswender said.
the property when
"Protection of environmentally sen- reimburse the county for half the cost. has been approved by the state already.
the move would create enclaves — the widening of several roads in and
"If the federal government won't
Roger
County
Administrator
sitive areas and pollution prevention are
pockets of county land surrounded by around tAke Mary.
"The
grant
is
approveable
by
the
reimburse
for the expenditure, so be it,"
Nelswender said today the work has to
The council will meet at 7:30 p.m. In legitimate concerns within the police
city property — which are prohibited by
begin
immediately
if
the
fields
are
to
be
federal
authorities,
but
is
currently
hung
Neiswender
said, — DONNA ESTES
power (of the state),"
city hail, 185 E. Crystal Lake Avenue.
state law. That case is under appeal.

I
1) \

Mind officials said the work of the said methane is common in mines In the

TODAY

(v"

M-IEDD,NG.

brft the first thiree injured miners to Ule

guarantee an ordinance to annex the Heathrow landowners, is also fighting mangroves would pollute the waters of

defenders' third and last trick.

I THINK 60-

the mialinviot. y for the missft miners —

"Those are very gassy mines,"

1,600-acre Heathrow planned unit annexation and have threatened suit If Estero and San Carlos Bays, the court
development will come up for discussion the city gives final approval to the an- said.
tonight.
The matter was set for a vote at the

WE LOWLY
INTERNS WHIT MO

____

Lyle at 9 a.m. (EST). "The situation to

Opponents of the condominium project
Heathrovi On .Lake AAary Agenda compIled substantial and convincing
evidence that th e development and
The Jeno Paulucci family, principal destruction of about 1,800 acresof bla ck
It's on the agenda, but there's no

by Leonard Starr
EH6AGEP IN MPtCARE
WO(JLP SHAPE UP ONCE THEY '
)NEW SOMEONE WAS AFTER
THEM!
HAVE THE
No-

Valley View Hospital at Glenwood said the force of the explosion from deep
Wednesday afternoon.
,•
- ........................Seven
other miners walk ed out or were Springs, a bout 30 m iles to the north, Inside the moun ta in felt hike "a little
hurricane."
where we was in serious condition.
rescued.
He escaped serious injury and was able
Delaney
said
there
was
no
apparent
"There really Isn't much new to report
Herald Photos by Tom Vincent
at this time," said mine accountant Jeff cave-In caused by the explosion, but said to walk out of the mine as well as help

more eggs, (:12 of 'em) than anyone else In her age group during an Easter progressing. The last we heard, the If theysurvived the blast — was the surface.
"It knocked off my hat, but It didn't
egg hunt held for families of Seminole Memorial Hospital employees. Sixty rescue teams still were about 1,400 feet possibi ity of asphyxiation by deadly
methane
or
carbon
monoxide
gas.
He
knock
meover,"he said of the explosion.
dozen eggs were hidden for the hunt staged for children I to 10-years-old, away."

diamond and rutted It. West
overruf fed, but that was the

N

David Chiarello, a miner working 4,100

before the end of the day shift late blast occurred. Three were taken to from where the miners were trapped —

private land toprotect valuable wetlands take another look at the case and tell the the environment.
and prevent water pollution without developer, Estuary Properties Inc.,
Regulations prohibiting massive
hav in g to condemn and buy th e property. exactly what it could to do minimize dredge and filling operations and other
The court overruled the 1st District environmental damage and proceed with protection measures would become
Court of Appeal, which ordered the construction,
useless if the state had to purchase the
Attorney General Jim Smith, during land each time they were used, Smith
Cabinet to approve the construction of a
niultibllllon-dollnr condominium city on oral arguments before the high court a argued.

South made the last three
develop today which could usually not supportive of you
When laying a trumpcon tricks with the ace-king of
spell pe rsonal ga in. It has rallies to your banner. You've tract with a five-card side suit spades and his fifth club.
more potential than Is obvious . ga ined a valuable ally.
to develop, it Is usually cor- (NEWSPAI'EH ENTERI'ftISI ASSN.)

CALLING VsJ 5WP(P!
A 600Q
ME! THE CREATOR OF L_'1'
THE WHOLE lt)IOTIC
'RAY N(EK" (PEA!

__________________________

,
• e-' :'

.

miners who were able to escape

gas at the MidContinent Resource Inc.

.. . . Dutc't Creek No. 1 Mine, occurred shortly were sil closer to the surface when the feet inside the t un nel — about 2,000 feet

a.
TALLA
critical ever in its possible impact on
Florida Supreme Court said today the Myers or purchase the property.
The
justices
did
order
the
Cabinet
to
efforts
by Florida government to protect
sta te can block the development of

in dummy, led dummy's last

ANNIE
by Bob Tha yes

_____

Without Buying Property, Court Says

diamond 10, so West chucked
his last diamond. South ruffed

I'd Alan Sontag

"They're restoring ventilation as they go methane, but that is something that will
dawn today.
ha ve to be ascerta ined ," Delaney sa id.
ane
and$hat's
wha t is taking so long."
th
caused
by
me
ed
Th e blast, believ

_____

State Ca n Block Land Development

West knew that Rast held the

may have a hand In bringing Your attitude is a winner.

_

as they
moved
the tunn'I.
There Delaney said, explaining the company conscious and "real disoriented" when
_____________________________________________________________________________________________ because
of the
needdown
to restore
ventilation
—
have been no signs of life from the uses large fans outside the mine to suck he found them, he said.

control. He led a heart to
dummy's ace and returned to
his hand with the king. West
held the high trump and
declarer an dummy each
held a small one.
South led a fourth club.

2
Pass 4
Pass I'ass

_

child received a candy-filled Plastic egg. More pictures on Page 5A.

Now South was in full

Wt North

_

Prizes were given those who round the most eggs or a silver egg and each

two and three he played his
ace and king of clubs.
West ruffed the king and
could do nothing better than
to play a second diamond
which South rutted. South led
a third club which East won.
East led another diamond and
South rut fed again.

•A K? 4
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

.

_______________ _____
____________________
______

,. ..

COMPETITION

South did just that. At tricks

KS
50653

T

__________

EGGS OUT

success that South work on

3

______
'

'

bad breaks it was essential for

WFb7

PISCES (Feb. 21111-March 20)
about a happy ending.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You could be In for a pleasa nt By Oswald Jacoby

FRANK AND ERNEST

¼__

____________________________________________________

. .

rs

REDSTONE, Cob. (UN) - Rescue missing miners since the explosion, and gases from the tunnels.
The explosion occurred near the end of
teams fighting to reach 15 miners authorities have refused to speculate an
the day shift at th e min e, which slopes at
trapped more than a mile underground the men's chances.
"They're rotating crews and working a 15.degree angle Into a low mounta in In
by a violent mountain coal mine exeir way slowly to th e place where the the scenic Crystal River Valley of
th
king
slow
rt
po
ed
ma
were
re
h)lOSiOfl
jrogress and were still at least 1,400 feet' accident occurred," said company weste rn Colorado.
"The most probable cause was
away from th e accident site shortly after spokesman and attorney Bob Delaney.

.

I

-

in

-

•

area. Neither situation is a

• J 87 3

c

_____

-.

...........j

Trying

,
.

...

in women athletes and in

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23.

Defense IntelUgence.

•

,,

for makeup, but others are

WIN AT BRIDGE

photo-processing for Air Force

Explosion

esc

.

-

.

-.

.

____

• 5062

By

Trapped

#'

amounts

Dec. 21) Business and
sure to specify birth date.
TAURUS J April 20-May 20) pleasure tend to blend well for

BUGS BUNNY

COPPOR

—.

•-

.

PETER J. STANKIEWICZ

uers

you could be fairly certain upset If nature gave them a
they would be some form of little natural eyeshadow.
hormones to stim ulate th e Dark circles can be covered
onset of menstr uation or to wl th makeup, which is fine lfa
help to reg ulate her. These woman wishes to use it, but I
are not cancerous In the also get th is compla in t from
needed for such some men.

4-I5-81
.

Stankiewicz does photography and

Stankiewicz continued efforts to andswinuning while still a young boy.

The truck driver was trapped and

.

Depending

NORTH
•A4 2

Wright family, she said. Wright was the
father of nine children.

stationed here in Sanford when his son
Peter was two years old. As an active
member of the Boy Scouts, the Air
Force hero learned safety procedures

'

..

.

-

noyances to contend with on your first effort, but don't

Y SKIN

4

s

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ballet dancers who have very amount of pigment in that

City Station, N.Y. 10019. Be

AWAY!

lS NOT FP7 S1RItIN&amp;A

river's

Is accepting gifts of money for the

intelligence In the U.S. Navy, Was

1 5

hormone Imbalance will
I get
DEAR READER
u pon
cause this.
often.
It
the nature of the imbalance, this question rather
the doctor may want to always makes me wonder.
prescribe some hormones. If Many women use eyeshadow

Astro-Graph, Box 489, Radio benefit.

KEEP THE
FN1E5

/

Hegel REPSKIN?

regained consciousness, despite efforts
by Stankiewicz and the others to revive
him with mouth-to-mouth and cardiopulmonary resuscitation methods.

retired master chief petty officer

..

l wish l could get rid of this
problem for good.

reet tactics to work on the

HArJ&amp;IrlJ&amp; PM

going

i constant

10 pounds underweight.

side suit before touching
trumps
If hearts and clubs were
going to break 3.2. it wouldn't
matter which suit South started on. But to guard against

__

Y'

CaUs are still coming in from all over
the nation from truck drivers and their
families who want to send money to the
couple, Stankiewics's mother said. He

DEAR DR. LAMB - I have

pitfalls and career for the Everything comes to him who
coming
months are all waits and this principle works
by Ed Sullivan
r'u
r
w
THAT
discussed
in
your
!tstro- In your favor today. Others
WHAT y -ro '
Graph which begins with your will be busy shIfting things
MEDICAL J 6YWNIE5 IN A MEDICAL jjp,ii
birthday. Mall $1 for each to around for your ultimate
A
JUST' RECENTLY.'
SAYI NG?

PJIJL? PM NOT

119 Oakland Avenue, Sanford, Peter

and the four worked Wright free of the Stankiewicz's parents, returned
wreckage in minutes.
Tuesday from the Air Force ceremony
In Washington. John Stankiewicz, a
But the driver, who was submerged
of

StankiewiLi down the embankment,

Stankiewicz was near the Great at the time rescuers got to him, never

dangered his own life in an attempt to

I

luck, resources, possible

Li HAMGIN&amp;RO(i(SJP

denly Jack-knifed through the safety'

rail of the Cabin John Bridge, sending

his

unhealthy and it can affect a
girl's normal functions.

about

he did prescribe medicines

tankiewicz was driving to work that
morning when a tractor-trailer sud-

in
stream of honors and Falls, Va., side of the bridge,
(ILStiflCtiOflS he's received since the the opposite direction when he stop pe d
car and scrambled down the
March 17 rescue.
embankment,
Initiating a four an
wi
ll
Residents in the nation's capital
long remembe r how Stankiewicz en rescue attempt to save Wright's life.
one in

Peter attended All Souls Ca th oli c
School In Sanford before his fa ther was
transferred to Japan In 1967. Born in
Por tsmouth, Va., Stankiewicz and his
wife Ka thleen make their home in
Gaithersburg, Va.

revive Jackson after the others had
unconscious in the partially submerged
given up. He was later admitted to the
cab. With winds of 28 to 46 miles per
hour, Stankiewicz was the first rescuer emergency room of a local hospital
into the 35-degree water, officials said.
be treated for exposure and exhaustion.
Three unidentified motorists who had
Mr. and Mrs. John Stankiewicz Jr., of
also stopped on the bridge, followed

save Arthur B. Wright, a 56-year-old
truck driver,

Potomac River. the cab of the truck and its driver
And last Tuesday 's award ceremon y plunging some 50 feet Into the Potomac
to present Staff Sergeant Peter J. Ri ver.
Stankiewicz with the U.S. Air Force

menstrual periods. It is da rk circles under my eyes. I
l to be understand this resul ts from
common for a gir
g of being thin skinned. Is there
irregular at t he beginnin
and any way besides ma keup to
sexual maturity. Starting
is problem? I am
then stopping Is not unusual. eliminate th
You were correct in having
an examina tion. Sometimes a

Medal For Heroism Given Former Sanford Man

From a bridge into the

hope you have encouraged

SCORPIO (Oct. 14-Nov. 22)

I

wime truck had just phinged 50 feet

your daughter to learn to eat
get involved with pills as
ls
are
properly
and not to have a
understand most p il
her
misconcep
tion about the need
cancerous. I have raised
may be stylish to
th
in.
It
be
to keep away from a ll kinds of to
th in, but too th in is
be
and drugs,

the facts, then your judgment control once again. Assert
will be wise. Romance travel, yourself.

\

,

My daughter refuses to NY 10019.

accurate. Pause to gather all situations will be back in your

__•

.

.

health problem. I suggest you
Fortunately, however, this and more fortunate than usual
Please
review
Th
e
Heal
look
In the mirror and say
th
coming year you will ha ve the today In turning unproductive
17.2, Female every morning, "Aren't you
Letter
number
right people to lean on when situations around Into
something more to your Reproductive Function, that I lucky to have dark alluring
you need them.
am sending you. Others who eyes that make you look a bit
ARIES March 21-April 19) likelng.
want this issue can send 75 different?"
LIBRA JSept. 23-OcL 23
Your understanding of
propositions brought to you Conditions are taking a turn
today may not initially be for the better. Unmanagable

Z

WZOtC..

PRISCILLA'S POP
CALYLE, I TOW N I 'YOU N.'r WM4ME
'iU•" NO eRoJwIES I I TO E HAPPY! YOU
N'T KNOW AeCUT'
BEFORE PINNER'
I
iT14AT OW MEPICAL A
SAWGj
'&amp;

8 SYBIL MITCHELL (',ItNDY
herald Staff Writer
A former Sanford resident has
become the latest hero in Washington
after his daring attempt to save a man

have any more examinations.
Crash die ts and unwise fad
Wi ll her periods begin again
anyway? What kind of diets are a frequent problem
girls these days. I
treatment would the doctor in young

like to rely upon others. You're likely to be cleverer scant fat deposits.

1

Airman's

a

The condition can be
can't say if she needs from a thin skin that permi ts
them. She ma y not, Many the large amount of bluish
young girls stop menstuating venous blood In th is area to
16, 1981
or delay the onset because affect the color. Or it can, and
at first glance, so study it they are too thin. We see that often Is, from the skin

to be independent and doesn't

anut {om A.

-

purposes.

You're the type who strives carefully.

by Howie Schneider

who W deeP14j
afkcted bg

a
.

gynecologist and she was
examined for cysts or tumors

give her? I don't want her to

Herald—( US PS 481.280)—Price 20 Cents

Evening H

32771

caused

For Thursday, April

c4)I'Iter5

Dr.
Lamb

We took her to a

-

-

64

rAPJTSA'Efl'Wt/POW

YOU'RE
RIGHT

MY WAR

'

WARDROBE?

YOUR SHIRT, s4iroN

NEED To ADD SPICE I GUESS

three months.

—

41 40
39
38
______________________________
L
44
45
43

61

YEAH" '1Ou'VEGOr,$fUSF*WON

NAW!! DON'T

TO

-

DEAR DR. LAMB - My
daughter is 16 years old. She
has never had sex or been
involved wi th pills. She has
had her period since she was
14, but a ll of a sudden it
stopped. S he hasn't had it for

are many reasons for a

-

58

57
by Bob Montana

kT -,riij

— —

_______________
_____

ARCHIE

/SOME SPICE TOMY

-

24

23

-

— — —

WWT

-

22

21 1

20

________

42

E!

19

-

37
——

)FT!s SEE

-

14

-

30 31 32
29
28
25 26 27
______________________________
36
35
34
33

FF'1 L4.'

CAPM)I

Alow

-

—

________________________________________________________

— — —

WZ

16

- - - -

— —

9 110 11

16 17 18

13

_____________
________________________________________________________
_________

THE BORN LOSER

I
'
LL. I%M

5

12

1

4.15

2

— — — —

]Hleral4i

Teen s

In

73rd Year, No. 203—Thursday, April 16, 1981—Sanford, Florida

_

document
7 Conventions 28 Eye infection
30 Buckeye State 56 Negatives
8 Creeps
59 Depression ini
31 Alert
9 Applies
hal.
32 Remain
frosting

character
42 Paradises
44 Pleasing
sound

Period

Common

Affirmative

41 Biblical

'

Irregular

'

.'

.•

-

--

--

-

_-r-

.

--

I___

----

.—..

Hall and Hamid F. Johnson, all resident judges in Semino e.

Only Circuit Judge Robert B. McGregor did not sign the
resolution,

Littler said today the need for additional space for court
functions has been th ere for sometime. He pointed out that
currently new Judge Vernon Mi,,. Jr. has only a hearing room
and does not have a chambers.

"When Judge Davis and I determined not to participate In
sentence negotiations with a'tininaI defendants, the result,

was that we were compelled to try more cases. The case load
has been building," Judge Leffler said.
"We would like to switch some other judges to trying
criminal cases, but we do not have the courtrooms to do this,"

LeftIes' said.
ConMiuliomrs have discussed moving tvwAy

ministrative operations to the Five Points area.

ad-

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